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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
New York Times calls for more troops and more Fallujahs
By Kate Randall
25 November 2004
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Over the weekend, the New York Times placed its enthusiastic
imprimatur on the US military destruction of Fallujah, arguing
only that more American troops were needed to prevent the resurgence
of Iraqi resistance in the gutted city and to carry out similar
operations in other anti-US strongholds.
In a piece published last Sunday entitled Postcards from
Iraq, Times foreign affairs columnist Thomas Friedman
presented a predictably noxious justification of the mass killing,
hailing it as a great advance in the struggle to democratize
the tortured country. Friedman could barely contain his delight
over the unequal contest between the most powerful and lethal
military force in the world and poorly armed Iraqi patriots who
are prepared to give their lives to drive out the American occupiers
and their Quisling stooges, headed by interim Prime Minister and
longtime CIA asset Iyad Allawi.
Friedman wrote: [M]aybe the most important story in Iraq
was the fact that while Fallujah was exploding, 106 Iraqi parties
and individuals registered to run in the January elections.
This paean to democracy, exemplified by the smoking ruins of a
city whose only crime was to oppose the US military takeover of
Iraq, was the latest in a long line of columns portraying the
subjugation of the country as a crusade for democracy and progress
in the Middle East.
The US, he wrote, is trying to plant the seeds of decent,
consensual government in some very harsh soil. He continued:
We are not doing nation building in Iraq. That presumes
that there was already a coherent nation there and all that is
needed is a little time and security for it to be rebuilt. We
are actually doing nation creating.
In the twisted view of this apologist for US imperialism, nation
creating is synonymous with saturation bombing, the leveling
of mosques, hospitals and homes, and the slaughter of thousands
of civilians. Many of the wounded bled to death, afraid to leave
their homes to seek medical attention because US troops had been
given orders to shoot to kill anything that moved in the streets.
That Friedman speaks for the Times as a whole was underscored
by an editorial appearing the following day, headlined Costly
Troop Deficit in Iraq. The Times editors opined
that the lesson to be drawn from the swift and stunning
American military sweep through Fallujah this month is that
20,000 to 40,000 more soldiers are needed right away.
On the eve of the assault on Fallujah, as the World Socialist
Web Site noted (See: New
York Times calls for more troops in Iraq, November
9, 2004), the Times signaled its approval, in advance,
of the impending slaughter. In the aftermath, with, in the editorials
own words, uncounted residences and public facilities...
pounded into rubble, the voice of the so-called liberal
establishment in America evinces not the slightest remorse or
moral reservations over the bloodletting. On the contrary, it
hails the attack and calls for more of the same.
The Times enthusiastic support for the assault
on Fallujah is further confirmation that the invasion and occupation
of the country are not simply Bush administration policy. The
American seizure of the oil-rich country is backed by an overwhelming
consensus within the US political establishment and corporate
ruling elite, including the Democratic Party.
In lockstep with the Bush administration, the Times holds
up the elections in Iraq, scheduled for January 30, as the justification
for war crimes against defenseless populations. These elections,
as the Times is well aware, are to be held under conditions
of state terror against opponents of the US occupation and the
Allawi government every bit as violent and pervasive as that exercised
by Saddam Hussein.
As US forces continue their offensive in the region south of
Baghdad, Allawi has unleashed massive repression. Dozens of cities
and towns, including Baghdad, have been placed under curfew, and
US and Iraqi government troops have raided numerous mosques, closed
down newspapers, and arrested hundreds of dissidents.
Earlier this week, two prominent Sunni clerics who were outspoken
opponents of the occupation and advocates of a boycott of the
elections were shot and killed by masked gunmen north of Baghdad.
Such methods are the modus operandi of Allawi, who began his political
career as a thug for the Baathist regime, then threw in his lot
with the US and, while on the CIA payroll, organized terror bombings
in Iraq in the mid-1990s. In July, the Sydney Morning Herald
and Age newspapers published eyewitness accounts of how
Allawi personally carried out the summary execution of six prisoners
at a security center in Baghdad the previous month.
The Times strong support for Democratic
presidential candidate John Kerry in the November 2 election highlights
the fact that a Kerry administration would be conducting a no
less brutal policy in Iraq. Notwithstanding the anti-war sentiments
of the vast majority of those who voted for Kerry, there is no
fundamental difference between the two parties on US imperialisms
drive for global hegemony and the use of military violence to
achieve it.
See Also:
The siege of Fallujah
America on a killing spree
[18 November 2004]
US media and liberal establishment: accomplices
in the assault on Fallujah
[9 November 2004]
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