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Analysis : Middle
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Another round of US airstrikes on Fallujah
By Peter Symonds
29 September 2004
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American warplanes once again mounted heavy strikes on the
Iraqi city of Fallujah on Saturday in what has become a daily
exercise aimed at terrorising the rebel stronghold and its population
of some 300,000 people into submission.
The bombing began late on Friday night when US aircraft attacked
an offensive obstacle belt composed of concrete and
earthen barriers. The warplanes returned later when a US base
on the outskirts of the city was fired on by insurgents
using fired rocket-propelled grenades and mortars. At least six
houses were demolished in what were described as precision
raids.
A US military spokesman declared that seven insurgents
had been killed in the attacks and that there were no noncombatant
injuries or deaths. No information was provided as to how
the targets had been selected. Nor did the military explain how,
in the dead of night, it had been able to count the dead and determine
whether they were hostile fighters.
Dr Abdalrahman Mohammed of Fallujah Hospital contradicted the
US claims, stating that at least eight people had died in the
raids, among them two women, three children and an elderly man.
Reuters TV showed images of an injured baby being taken out of
the rubble of a bombed house and a woman covered in blood, who
was alive, after being pulled out. An Associated Press report
put the number of casualties higherat 15 dead and more than
30 wounded.
The repeated discrepancies between official US statements on
these precision strikes and the casualty figures released
by hospitals have become so glaring that the US military has felt
the need to respond.
Speaking to the Los Angeles Times over the weekend,
a senior US military official condemned reports of civilian
deaths in Fallujah [as] propaganda and suggested that
local hospitals have been infiltrated by insurgent forces.
He brushed aside video images of the injured declaring we
cant authenticate that the individuals in the hospital are
in the hospital because of [a US] attack that day.
The absurdity of these self-serving claims is highlighted by
the double standards applied. Hospital officials struggling to
cope with the daily toll of dead and wounded are accused of manufacturing
propaganda for insurgent forces. But those
responsible for the indiscriminate killings offer no justification
for their claims whatsoever and are not challenged by the media.
Fallujah has now been pounded from the air for weeks. On Sunday,
Air Force Brigadier General Erv Lessel boasted to the media that
more than 100 insurgents from the Tawhid and Jihad
network run by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi had been killed. Were
confident that, through these airstrikes, we have been able to
thwart many large-scale attacks and suicide bombings that were
in the planning process.
But Al-Zarqawi and his followers, if they are present in Fallujah
at all, have simply become the pretext for savage ongoing attacks
on a city that has become a symbol of resistance throughout Iraq.
US troops were forced to call off an offensive to seize the town
in April when confronted with determined armed opposition and
growing outrage over the ferocity of the destruction. As a face-saving
device, control was handed to the Fallujah Protection Brigade,
led by a former Baathist officer, but this force has all but disappeared.
Neither US nor Iraqi troops have been able to enter the city for
months.
The US is now preparing a major military offensive to retake
the city, along with other no-go areas of Iraq including
Ramadi, Samarra and Sadr City, the impoverished Shiite suburb
of Baghdad. In interviews on Sunday, US Secretary of State Colin
Powell, after admitting that the insurgency was getting
worse and that there was an increase in anti-Americanism
in the Muslim world, indicated a major thrust
was being planned in the near future to deal with these
so-called no-go zones.
Interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi echoed Powells comments
on Monday, warning that a decisive military solution
could be carried out if a political one was not reached. I
think we [have] waited more than enough for Fallujah, he
said in comments to the Al-Arabiya network.
Powell attempted to dismiss the growing armed resistance as
a last ditch effort to halt national elections scheduled for January.
But like previous claims that the insurgency would die away following
the handover of sovereignty in June, there is no reason
to believe that stage-managed elections in January will stem the
opposition to the US occupation any more the installation of the
US puppet Allawi did.
The overwhelming majority of the Iraqi people are deeply hostile
to the US subjugation of their country. The daily US abuses and
killing of Iraqis are simply adding to the reservoir of anti-US
sentiment and providing a fresh stream of recruits and sympathisers
to the various armed resistance groups. The methods used by the
US in Iraq are no different from the Nazi occupiers during World
War II or the colonial powers of the 19th century: their aim is
not to win over the Iraqi people, but to cow them into submission.
In a sign of the mood in US ruling circles, a comment in the
Washington Post entitled From Jenin to Fallujah?
on Monday argued for the application of Israeli methods to Iraq.
After noting that suicide bombings in Israel have declined following
Sharons relentless warfare including the flattening
of the Jenin refugee camp, the writer concluded:
The Israeli experience does suggest that its wrong
to insist, as many in Washington do, that a military campaign
against the terrorist bases could not substantially improve security
conditions for both Americans and Iraqis. The visuals would be
awful and the outcry loud, on al-Jazeera and maybe at the United
Nations. But if the reality were modest civilian casualties and
heavy enemy losses, the result might be an opportunity to pursue
the nation-building that now is stymied.
As plans for a bloody US military offensive are being prepared,
the aerial punishment of Fallujah continues unabated. In the early
hours of Monday morning, US warplanes fired rockets into the city.
A US military spokesman claimed that only illumination rounds
had been used. But Dr Walid Thamer of the Fallujah General Hospital
insisted that at least three people had been killed and nine wounded
in that attack. According to hospital officials, another three
people died and six were injured in air raids on Tuesday.
Sadr City has been added to the list of targets with successive
air strikes on Monday and Tuesday. According to the US military,
precision strikes were carried out on positively
identified militant hideouts. Residents told the media that
the pre-dawn air raids on Monday lasted for hours. Dr Qaddem Saddam
at the Imam Ali hospital said that at least five people were killed
and 40 wounded, including 15 women and five children.
See Also:
US military launches bloody attacks on
rebel strongholds in Iraq
[11 September 2004]
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