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: News &
Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Letters to US newspapers reflect widespread revulsion over
Fallujah attack
By Rick Kelly
11 November 2004
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As the US continues its assault on the Iraqi city of Fallujah,
the American media maintains its systematic exclusion of any expression
of opposition or criticism of the criminal operation. The pro-war
propaganda, by both the so-called liberal and overtly
right-wing print and broadcast media, is being disseminated despite
the deep hostility towards what is happening in Iraq felt by millions
of ordinary Americansa sentiment of which the media establishment
is well aware.
The only place where revulsion over the slaughter in Fallujah
finds scattered expression is in the letters to the editor
pages of some US newspapers. These same newspapers carry news
reports that retail the press handouts of the Pentagon, and editorials
that echo the government line equating the Iraqi resistance to
terrorism and justifying the crushing of popular opposition
to the US occupation and its puppet government as essential to
the creation of stability and democracy
in Iraq.
Many of their readers, however, clearly reject this framework,
and oppose the mass killing being carried out in the name of the
American people. This is evident in responses to the attack on
Fallujah. On November 8, the New York Times published an
editorial calling on the Bush administration dispatch 40,000 more
troops to bolster the occupation. (See New
York Times calls for more troops in Iraq.)
The following day the newspaper published four letters on the
events in Iraq. Three of these were fiercely opposed to the Fallujah
assault, while the other proposed an Iraqi referendum on the timing
of the withdrawal of US troops.
Let us be clear about what is going on: taking
Fallujah means destroying it, and this is exactly what is about
to happen, Lawrence Houghteling wrote to the Times.
In Vietnam, one of our military leaders once remarked that
his troops had been forced to destroy a village in order to save
it, and many of us were horrified. Now we are destroying a medium-sized
city in order to save it. How long will it be until we destroy
an entire country in order to save it?
Another reader, David Greenstein, wrote: As American
troops begin the attack on Fallujah, may we stop for a moment
to ask what offense its inhabitants have committed? We all know
that they did not attack American soil on 9/11 or at any other
time. We know that they did not threaten the world with weapons
of mass destruction. It seems that their only crime is resistance
to occupation by a foreign army. Isnt this something that
the United States, with its own history of rebellion against a
foreign occupier, should respect?
The fact that all of the letters on Iraq published by the Times
on Tuesday expressed opposition to the attack on Fallujah
and the war as a whole suggests that the newspaper has been inundated
with letters expressing opposition to US policy and anger over
the pro-war stance of the New York Times itself.
On Tuesday, the Los Angeles Times published an editorial
endorsing the attack on Fallujah. Iraqi insurgents based
in Fallujah presented US military forces with two choices, one
bad and the other worse, the editorial read. Marines
opted for the bad one Monday, assaulting the city with the understanding
that civilians as well as fighters would be killed and Arab passions
would be inflamed far outside Fallujah and Iraq. The worse option
was to do nothing, cede the town to the guerrillas and make it
a model for other cities in Iraq.
This grotesque line was immediately challenged by readers of
the newspaper. The following day, the Los Angeles Times
published three letters on Iraq, all of which angrily condemned
the Bush administration and its policies in the Middle East.
Evan Puziss noted how the attack on Fallujah was held off until
after the US presidential election. One can only conclude
that the Bush administration has played partisan politics with
the blood of our troops and innocent Iraqi civilians, he
wrote. There is a word to characterize such behavior, and
it is a word that the administrations evangelical supporters
are quick to use against political opponents. That word is evil.
Ruth Caper wrote: [B]arely six days after winning the
election, the battle of Fallujah has been restarted, martial law
is declared in Iraq and, to add to the cynical stew, the world
is presented with another front-and-center from the man who brought
us Abu Ghraib: the one and only Donald Rumsfeld. And they won
the elections because of their moral values. Darkness
descends.
Other letters opposing US operations in Iraq were published
across the country. Lt. Col. Val Johnson wrote to the Seattle
Times on Wednesday: I was a lifelong Republican until
this last election. It will be interesting to see how our commander-in-chief
ends the war in Iraq that has already killed over 100,000 civilians.
I learned long ago in Vietnam that it was impossible to ram our
way of life down the throats of individuals using 1,000-pound
bombs and napalm. It might be necessary to kill every Iraqi who
does not agree with our definition of freedom to end this war,
and that could take many years. I am sorry we never learned a
single lesson from another misguided and costly war that was also
started by manipulating intelligence.
Virginia Lore wrote to the same newspaper: Last night
I saw a picture of a toddler wounded in the attack on Fallujah
and he looked so much like my own son. It broke my heart. I understand
the current administrations goal to secure the city so that
Iraq can have a democracy, but I dont understand how anything
good can emerge out of destroying neighborhoods, breaking up families,
dropping huge bombs and killing civilians. Does the end justify
the means? How can anyone who has lost a child to US bombs welcome
an imposed democracy? Its not just ironic; it seems futile.
Beyond futile. Wrong.
On Wednesday, the San Francisco Chronicle published
a letter from Scott Failor. Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld was indeed right when he explained at his Monday news
conference with a calm certainty that Iraqi citizens will turn
against the violent foreign extremists as the atrocities
and slaughter mount, it read. The catch is, the violent
foreign extremists in the eyes of most Iraqis and much of
the world are the US Marines.
These responses to the crimes of US imperialism in Fallujah
and Iraq provide a small but telling indication of the chasm that
separates millions of ordinary Americans from the entire political
establishmentDemocratic as well as Republicanand the
corporate-controlled media.
See Also:
US assault leaves Fallujah in ruins and
unknown numbers dead
[11 November 2004]
US massacres civilians in Fallujah
[10 November 2004]
US media and liberal establishment: accomplices
in the assault on Fallujah
[9 November 2004]
US troops begin slaughter in Fallujah
[9 November 2004]
Massacre looms in Fallujah following
the US election
[5 November 2004]
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