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WSWS
: News &
Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Film documents American use of chemical weapons in Iraq
By Rick Kelly
11 November 2005
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The Italian state television network, RAI, has broadcast a
documentary that contains footage and testimony proving that the
American military has used chemical weapons in Iraq, including
in civilian areas. The film, titled Fallujah: the hidden massacre,
specifically examined the use of white phosphorous, an incendiary
and corrosive chemical agent, during the US assault on Fallujah
in November 2004. Former US soldiers, Iraqi doctors and international
journalists were interviewed, and graphic images were shown of
Iraqi civilians killed by chemical weapons.
The filmmakers spoke with former army specialist Jeff Englehart,
who participated in the Fallujah offensive. He was asked if US
forces had used chemical weapons. From the US military,
yeah, absolutely, Englehart replied. White phosphorus,
possibly napalm may or may not have been used, I dont know.
I do know that white phosphorus was used, which is definitely,
without a shadow of a doubt, a chemical weapon.
The former soldier, who is now strongly opposed to the war,
described how he saw the corpses of those killed by phosphorous.
Burned. Burned bodies. I mean, it burned children, and it
burned women. White phosphorus kills indiscriminately. Its
a cloud that will within, in most cases, 150 metres of impact
will disperse, and it will burn every human being or animal....
The gasses from the warhead of the white phosphorous
disperse in a cloud. And when it makes contact with skin, then
its absolutely irreversible damageburning of flesh
to the bone.... If you breathe it, it will blister your throat
and your lungs until you suffocate, and then it will burn you
from the inside. It basically reacts to skin, oxygen, and water.
The only way to stop the burning is with wet mud. But at that
point, its just impossible to stop.
The documentary contained footage shot by a team of Iraqi doctors
who entered Fallujah after the offensive to assist with the burial
of the dead. The films narrator described the horrific images:
The bodies of civilian casualties, of women still clutching
the masbaha, the Islamic rosary, their bodies showing strange
injuries, some burnt to the bone, others with skin hanging from
their flesh. There is no sign of bullet wounds. The faces have
literally melted away, just like other parts of the body. The
clothes are strangely intact... Some animals are also dead without
any apparent injury.
The documentary also broadcast a number of still images collected
by Mohamad Tareq al-Deraji, the director of the Centre for the
Study of Human Rights in Iraq. The photographs showed men and
women burned beyond recognition, their skin either caramelised
or completely dissolved. In some cases little more than the victims
skulls and teeth remain. None of the clothes on the bodies are
burnt, indicating that conventional weapons could not have been
responsible.
After independent journalists first reported the accusations
of Fallujah residents that chemical weapons were used against
them, the US military issued a formal denial in December 2004.
US forces have used [phosphorous shells] very sparingly
in Fallujah, for illumination purposes, the statement declared.
They were fired into the air to illuminate enemy positions
at night, not at enemy fighters. The Italian documentary
proves this to be a liethe chemical shells killed both resistance
fighters and civilians.
The offensive use of white phosphorous is a clear breach of
international law and represents yet another war crime committed
by US forces in Iraq. The 1980 UN Convention on Certain Convention
Weapons outlaws the use of incendiary and chemical weaponry in
civilian areas.
Speaking on the Democracy Now! radio program, Lieutenant
Colonel Steve Boylan, US military spokesman in Iraq, attempted
to deny this. [The filmmakers are] calling white phosphorous
an illegal weapon, he said. And that is an error.
Its a perfectly legal weapon to use by all conventions of
land warfare. He also insisted that the dead civilians shown
in the documentary could have been killed by conventional explosives.
Boylan could not explain, however, how the clothes of the dead
could have remained intact.
The militarys use of chemical weapons in Fallujah was
part of its collective punishment of the citys entire population.
Fallujah became one the main centres of the resistance after April
2003, when US forces shot into crowds of unarmed protestors on
two occasions, killing 16 people. In April 2004, US commanders
were humiliated when resistance fighters repulsed a ground offensive
that was aimed at regaining the occupation forces control
over the area.
The subsequent massacre in November was intended to serve notice
to the entire Iraqi people, warning them against supporting the
resistance. Once the assault on Fallujah began, no males aged
between 15 and 55 were permitted to leave the city. Despite earlier
US demands for a mass evacuation, an estimated 100,000 civilians
were either unable or unwilling to leave. Insurgents armed with
little more than AK-47s and rocket-propelled grenades were pounded
by massive artillery fire from ground and air. US forces shelled
and bombed the entire city, reducing much of it to rubble.
The US army subsequently claimed to have killed 1,200 insurgents,
but refused to issue any estimate of civilian casualties. Those
killed were quickly buried, many in mass graves, and to this day
no one knows exactly how many died. Shortly after US forces recaptured
the city, Iraqi Red Crescent spokesman Muhammad al-Nuri estimated
that at least 6,000 people had been killed.
Jeff Englehart described the rules of engagement he was issued
before the November attack. I was personally involved with
escorting a commander to Fallujah for Operation Phantom Fury,
he told RAI. We were told [before] going into Fallujah,
into the combat area, that every single person that was walking,
talking, breathing was an enemy combatant. As such, every single
person that was walking down the street or in a house was a target.
When asked what he would tell his child about the operation,
the former soldier replied, It seemed like just a massive
killing of Arabs. It looked like just a massive killing.
Englehart also confirmed that the assault was timed so it would
not interfere with President George Bushs re-election campaign.
That was definitely the case, he declared. Even
in the ranks, in the military ranks, we knew it was going on.
They told us that we were going to wait [until] after the election,
the American election, before going into Fallujah. And we had
already set up the whole operation, like it was ready to go. And
we were waiting for two or three days for this election to be
over with.... When Kerry conceded, though, it was like within
a matter of a day, it was going, it was happening. That was definitely
the case.... We were told directly from the Pentagon to wait until
after the election before going into Fallujah, and thats
exactly what we did.
The Italian-produced documentary also examined the use of MK-77
by US forces, an incendiary explosive, which, in composition and
effect, is almost identical to napalm. The Pentagon has admitted
employing the weapon during the 2003 invasion, though it maintains
that the chemical was used only against Iraqi military targets.
The use of chemical weaponry by the US-led forces in Iraq is
indicative of the criminal character of the entire war. Chemical
weapons are indelibly associated with many of the most barbarous
episodes of the twentieth centuryfrom the use of mustard
gas in the trenches of World War I to the indiscriminate unleashing
of napalm and Agent Orange in the Vietnam War. History will soon
come to remember the Bush administrations crimes in Iraq
alongside these atrocities.
* * *
Fallujah: the hidden massacre, produced by Sigfrido
Ranucci and Maurizio Torrealta, is available in English translation,
and can be downloaded here: http://www.rainews24.rai.it/ran24/inchiesta/video.asp
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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