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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
General who led US Marines in Iraq says Its fun
to shoot some people
By Jerry White
7 February 2005
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A three-star Marine general gave an indication of the homicidal
ethos guiding the US occupation forces in Iraq and Afghanistan
when he declared during a military conference in San Diego Tuesday
that Its fun to shoot some people.
Responding to a question about fighting the Iraqi resistance,
Lieutenant General James N. Mattiswho is in charge of developing
Marine war-fighting doctrine and tacticssaid, Actually,
its a lot of fun to fight. You know, its a hell of
a hoot. Its fun to shoot some people. Ill be right
up front with you, I like brawling.
The general, also known as Mad Dog Mattis, led
the 1st Marine Division during the initial invasion of both Afghanistan
and Iraq, and returned to command marines during the occupation
of Iraq, where he led the initial attack on Fallujah in April
2004.
He presented the invasion of both countries as a civilizing
mission, denounced Muslim men and reveled in killing them. You
go into Afghanistan, he told his audience, and you
got guys who slap women around for five years because they didnt
wear a veil. You know, guys like that aint got no manhood
left anyway. So its a hell of a lot of fun to shoot them.
This last comment drew loud laughter and enthusiastic applause
from the audience attending the panel discussion hosted by the
Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association.
Despite his yen for killing, Mattis warned that overwhelming
military superiority had failed to subdue the popular resistance
in Iraq. Our very dominance of certain forms of warfare
have driven the enemy into historic forms of warfare that we have
not mastered, he said. Dont patronize this enemy,
he said of the guerillas. They mean business. They mean
every word they say.... Theyre killing us now. Their will
is not broken.
Presenting the fight as a twilight struggle between good and
evil, Mattis insisted in order to defeat such an enemy the Marines
had to recruit and train the right peoplei.e.,
those who had no compunction about killing.
Striking a more moderate tone, Mattis concluded,
As much emotional...satisfaction as you may get from really
whacking somebody, the main effort, ladies and gentlemen, is to
diminish the conditions that drive people to sign up for these
kind of insurgencies.
Mattiss fun-to-kill statements were caught
on audio tape by San Diego news reporters and soon became headlines
throughout the world, causing some embarrassment for the White
House. Asked about the remarks at a press conference Thursday,
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld dodged the question, saying
he hadnt read them yet.
The executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations
called on the Pentagon to discipline Mattis, saying, We
do not need generals who treat the grim business of war as a sporting
event. These disturbing remarks are indicative of an apparent
indifference to the value of human life.
In a statement issued Thursday, General Michael W. Hagee, commandant
of the Marine Corps, said, Lt. Gen. Mattis often speaks
with a great deal of candor. I have counseled him concerning his
remarks, and he agrees he should have chosen his words more carefully.
While I understand that some people may take issue with the comments
made by him, Hagee claimed, I also know he intended
to reflect the unfortunate and harsh realities of war.
Other military officials defended Mattis, saying his record
showed that he valued human life and had instructed
his troops to respect Islamic culture and protect innocents during
military operations.
This is not the first controversy concerning Mattis. After
his marines seized an airstrip in southern Afghanistan in November
2001 at the beginning of the war, the general declared, The
Marines have landed, and we now own a piece of Afghanistan.
Those comments reportedly caused consternation with Rumsfeld and
other Pentagon officials, who were trying to present the war as
liberating the Afghan people from the Taliban, not
seizing land in a Muslim country.
Mattis was lauded as a hero for leading his 1st Marine Division
in a high-speed advance from Kuwait to Baghdad in the early days
of the Iraqi invasion. An account by two senior Marine Corps officers
under his command gives a picture of the bloody methods he instructed
soldiers to employ against anyone who resisted the US invasion.
Writing in the 2003 book The March Up: Taking Baghdad with
the 1st Marine Division, authors Bing West and
Major General Ray Smith, said, The jihadis asked
no quarter and the Marines gave them none. The Marines knew the
difference between these jihad fighters and the militia. Consequently
the Marines shot them in the ditches and in the field. They threw
grenades into the bulrushes and shot the fighters when they ran
out. They threw grenades into the drainage pipes running under
the road.... A few of the foreign fighters surrendered, but most
did notthey had come to Iraq to die, and die they would.
As one Marine put it, this was the perfect war. They want
to die, and we want to kill them.
The US media generally treated Mattiss comments as an
unfortunate slip-up rather than a revelation of the essence of
American policy in Iraq and Afghanistan. Like the Pentagon, the
media claimed that the generals remarks were contradicted
by his actions.
The Los Angeles Times, for instance, reported that Mattis
had embraced a hearts and minds posture during his
second tour in Iraq, laying down strict rules when troops could
fire and required commanders to seek his permission before using
artillery. After leading the initial assault on Fallujah in April
2004, Mattis reportedly counseled against a full-scale attack
on the city, which came later in November 2004, under the direction
of another military commander.
If Mattis is a more restrained officer, one can only imagine
the degree of bloodthirstiness that permeates the military command
in the face of the growing insurgency and increasing popular demand
that US troops leave Iraq.
Fear and racist hatred of Arabs has been deliberately inculcated
by the Bush administration and the Pentagon from the beginning
of its war on terror in order to dehumanize US soldiers
and create the conditions for such atrocities as the torture in
Abu Ghraib and the Afghan prisons and the destruction of Fallujah.
Last November, US Marine Colonel Gareth Brandl claimed that
the sacking of Fallujah was necessary because Satan lived in the
town of 300,000. The marines that I have had wounded over
the past five months have been attacked by a faceless enemy. But
the enemy has got a face. Hes called Satan. He lives in
Fallujah. And were going to destroy him, BBC embedded
reporter Paul Wood quoted Brandl as saying on the outskirts of
Fallujah.
With its lies about weapons of mass destruction and terrorist
connections exposed, the Bush administration is increasingly relying
on the same racist and backward attitudes that have always been
used to justify the colonial oppression of another people.
See Also:
The siege of Fallujah:
America on a killing spree
[18 November 2004]
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