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Analysis : Middle
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Is the US military preparing another massacre in Tal Afar?
By James Cogan
8 September 2005
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The largest US military offensive on an urban area since the
attack on Fallujah last year has been underway since September
2 in the city of Tal Afar, an ancient metropolis with a predominantly
Sunni Muslim, ethnic Turkish population of some 300,000.
Situated in the north of Iraq along the Euphrates River and
just 40 kilometres from the Syrian border, Tal Afar has been largely
outside the control of the occupation forces since the 2003 invasion.
In September 2004, the US military carried out a major operation
to impose its authority over Tal Afar, but was forced to withdraw
by November in order to redeploy troops to the heavy fighting
in Fallujah and Mosul. In the 10 months since, Tal Afar has become
one of the centres for the anti-occupation guerilla struggle in
the north.
A US officer told the Washington Post: The September
operation basically made people angry, which the insurgents were
able to take advantage of. [It] had the opposite effect than was
intended. We created a power vacuum and they filled it.
The details of what is taking place in Tal Afar since last
Friday are shrouded in secrecy. The few available reports indicate,
however, that at least 5,000 US and Iraqi government troops have
sealed off the old centre of the cityan area known as Saraiand
are preparing for an assault against an estimated 400 to 500 resistance
fighters who are said to be entrenched in the narrow streets of
the district.
The US push into the city was preceded by airstrikes and artillery
shelling, and spearheaded by Abram battle tanks and Bradley fighting
vehicles. The Al Jazeerah website reported on Monday that at least
four mosques have been bombed. F-16s destroyed alleged insurgent
safe-houses with 500 and 1,000-pound bombs. The Iraqi newspaper
Azzaman reported: Eyewitnesses, refusing to be named,
spoke of scores of casualties due to indiscriminate
bombing.
The numbers of dead and wounded are unknown. Colonel H.R. McMaster,
the commander of the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment that is leading
the operation, told the Washington Post on the weekend
that as many as 200 insurgents had been killed in
the first three days of fighting.
The events unfolding in Tal Afar have all the makings of another
horrific crime against the Iraqi masses, paralleling the atrocities
committed in Fallujah last year. In just nine days, thousands
of Fallujans were killed and their bodies left to rot in the streets
or to be consumed by dogs. US snipers murdered desperate civilians
trying to get water for their families.
More than 60 percent of the city was reduced to rubble and
over half its famous mosques bombed out. Nearly one year later,
less than half of Fallujahs 250,000 residents have been
able to return, with most still living in ruined buildings and
squalor.
As was the case in Fallujah, a significant proportion of the
people included in the body count in Tal Afar will actually be
civilians killed by bombing, gunned down by the occupation forces
or caught in crossfire. As US and Iraqi troops passed through
suburban areas this week, they smashed into houses with sledge
hammers or explosives, searching for guerillas. Buildings where
Iraqis fired back were laid waste by heavy machine-gun and tank
fire.
Thousands of civilians have fled from the city and nearby towns
and villages into the desert toward Mosul, 70 kilometres to the
east. Sunni political parties are erecting camps to house the
refugees, whose numbers may exceed 100,000.
Thousands more Tal Afar residents, however, are trapped inside
Sarai by the cordon of tanks and barbed wire that has been flung
up around the district to prevent resistance fighters escaping.
On the outskirts of the city, US forces have constructed an 80-mile
network of earth barriers, or berms, to stop vehicles getting
out across country. Colonel McMaster told the Washington Post:
The idea is to trap them in Sarai or force them toward our
checkpoints to the south. We dont want them to slip out.
The operation against the city is part of the broader offensive
that has been waged by the US military since the formation of
the Iraqi government in April. Far from the armed resistance to
the occupation subsiding following the formation of a US puppet
regime, millions of Iraqis remain bitterly opposed to the American
presence in the country and are sympathetic to the insurgency.
The US response has been indiscriminate violence. Hundreds
of civilians have been killed or maimed in bombing raids or sweep-and-search
operations through cities, towns and villages over the past several
months. Thousands of men have been rounded up and thrown into
US-run prison camps. In advance of the October 15 referendum on
a draft constitution that has been rejected by Sunni, ethnic Turkomen
and major Shiite organisations, the political repression against
areas under their influence is being stepped up.
All indications are that the US military is preparing a full-scale
assault on Tal Afar in the next few days, regardless of how many
civilians are killed as a result. On Sunday night, helicopters
dropped leaflets over the area, giving all noncombatants until
Tuesday afternoon to flee the area via southern roads that lead
into areas that are under the clear control of the occupation
forces. US troops are physically preventing any civilians leaving
via the north toward Mosul, where the majority of the population
is opposed to the Baghdad government.
In one of the few on-the-spot accounts coming out of the area,
the Washington Post reported yesterday that many civilians
have refused to leave to south due to fear of what the Iraqi government
forces will do to them. Many of the government troops in the area
are former militiamen for the Shiite fundamentalist parties and
Kurdish nationalist parties that dominate the Baghdad regime.
Sunni- and Turkomen-based political and religious organisations
have accused the US-backed security forces of sectarian killings,
arbitrary detentions and torture in cities such as Baghdad, Basra
and Mosul.
An elderly man declared: I would rather die from American
bombs in my home with my family than walk south. People are saying
the Shiites will kill you or kidnap you. That is a disgrace.
The Washington Post recounted that about 1,000 men,
women and children who had assembled at a US checkpoint turned
around and went back into Sarai on Tuesday rather than risk getting
on American trucks that might deliver them into the hands of the
government forces.
The chilling conclusion of the article read: About 3
p.m., Lieutenant Colonel Christopher Hickey, the squadron commander,
arrived to make a final plea. I am trying to help you to
get out of a very dangerous situation. You are going to be in
danger if you stay here, I am telling you. Please, this is your
last chance. As he turned away from the crowd, one family
emerged, with nine adults carrying baggage and eight children
in tow. Anyone else?, Hickey asked, beckoning. Okay,
then we will save these people, he said, and walked away.
Significant parts of Tal Afar are already reported to be in
ruin. Electricity and phone services have been cut off and hospitals
are breaking down. The Iraqi Human Rights Centre has issued an
urgent appeal to the Iraqi government to stop the assault and
allow rescue teams to access the area to deliver food, water and
medical supplies and evacuate the wounded.
As well as inflaming northern Iraq, the attack on Tal Afar
risks further destabilising the surrounding region. Last September,
the Turkish government, under pressure from mass domestic opposition
to the US invasion of Iraq, threatened to break off all cooperation
with the occupation of Iraq unless the attack on ethnic Turks
in Tal Afar was ended. This week, a Turkish government spokesman
declared that Ankara had reiterated our sensitivity about
the operation and asked US authorities to pay the
maximum attention to avoid civilian casualties.
Instead, with US and Iraqi troops poised to storm into the
old city, a massacre appears to be looming.
At the same time, the American military is intensifying its
aerial bombardment of Qaim, a city south of Tal Afar and also
on the Euphrates River and close to the Syrian border. Airstrikes
last week, which killed at least 56 people, have been justified
with claims that the area has fallen under the control of Islamic
extremists linked to Al Qaeda. The organisation Doctors for Iraq
announced that a medical clinic was bombed and that electricity
had been cut to the main hospital.
US marine aircraft have carried out more strikes over the past
three days, bombing two main bridges over the Euphrates and destroying
houses allegedly occupied by insurgents. With as many as 7,000
American and Iraqi government troops reported to be in the vicinity,
a bloodbath in Tal Afar may be followed quickly by an offensive
against Qaim.
See Also:
Iraq's draft constitution:
a recipe for neo-colonial rule
[30 August 2005]
Shiite factions clash as opposition
mounts to the draft Iraqi constitution
[26 August 2005]
Bush's campaign on Iraq: more
lies in defense of war
[24 August 2005]
Further into the Iraqi quagmire:
US intensifies repression
[20 August 2005]
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