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Iraq: US military lays waste to Tal Afar
By James Cogan
13 September 2005
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Early Saturday morning Iraqi time, as many as 4,000 US and
6,000 Iraqi government soldiers and police launched a final assault
to seize control of the Sarai district of Tal Afar. The area was
the last part of the northern Iraqi city still in the hands of
resistance fighters after a two-week US siege and protracted fighting
in surrounding towns and villages.
The remaining fighters could offer little resistance against
helicopter gunships, tanks and overwhelming troop numbers. The
Iraqi newspaper Azzaman reported that the occupation forces
carried out heavy artillery shelling and air bombardment
before moving into areas where they suspect the insurgents might
be holding out. The New York Times described military
helicopters firing rockets into buildings where vastly outnumbered
bands of insurgents were holed up. Journalists covering
the operation have reported only scattered clashes since Saturday
afternoon.
The city, an ancient metropolis located 40 kilometres from
the Syrian border, had a predominantly ethnic Turkomen and Sunni
Arab population approaching 300,000. Now it has been depopulated
and laid waste to. Entire quarters of Tal Afar are being described
as ghost towns. Last week, in the lead-up to the weekend
offensive, the residents of Sarai were ordered by US-led forces
to get out or risk death. As much as 90 percent of the population
is believed to have left the city.
While thousands of families in outlying areas had already fled
to nearby cities such as Mosul, the Sarai populace has been forced
to take refuge in squalid tent camps to the east and south of
the city. A Turkomen leader, Ezzedin Dowla, told the Los Angeles
Times: Families are homeless and the government has
not provided any shelter, food or drink for them. Conditions
in the camps are reported to be desperate.
While most residents fled, thousands of families stayed, primarily
due to fear of sectarian persecution at the hands of the Shiite
and Kurdish militiamen that make up the bulk of the Iraqi government
forces. As was the case during the assault on Fallujah last November,
the US military made no attempt to avoid casualties among the
civilians remaining in the city. The head of the Red Crescent
in Tal Afar, Doctor Mohammed Qassem, told Azzaman: We
are aware of civilians being wounded by falling debris, the result
of US shelling and the collapse of their houses.
The Red Crescent reported that 170 people from Tal Afar have
been made sick by curious poisons resulting from inhaling
gases. A website linked to alleged Al Qaeda leader Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi accused the US military of using chemical weapons during
the assault on the city and has threatened retaliation.
There are no reliable casualty figures and no reports on the
number of civilian fatalities. The US military claimed on Sunday
that 141 guerillas had been killed in Tal Afar since August 26,
and another 211 captured. An Iraqi government defense ministry
spokesman on Monday gave figures of 157 killed and 291 taken prisoner.
The surviving fighters are believed to have escaped via a network
of tunnels or by blending in with non-combatants fleeing the fighting.
The limited media reports indicate that the US-led offensive
has left hundreds of homes, shops, offices and mosques severely
damaged. US and Iraqi troops have rampaged through every home
in Tal Afar searching for surviving insurgents or weapons caches.
When residents are able to return to their houses, they will find
their doors and windows kicked in, their furniture smashed and
their personnel effects ruined or looted.
Iraqi officials predict that the sweep through the entire city
will be completed by Thursday. Thousands of interior ministry
police commandos, who are widely accused of having carried out
extra-judicial killings, torture and arbitrary detention against
opponents of the occupation, will take over security in Tal Afar.
The Bush administration and its puppet regime in Baghdad have
sought to justify the operation with lurid accusations that the
insurgents are terrorists and Islamic extremists coming
into Iraq from Syria. Without providing a shred of evidence, the
US ambassador in Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad, accused the Syrian government
of allowing guerilla training camps to operate on its soil and
youngsters misguided by Al Qaeda, from Saudi Arabia, from
Yemen, from North Africa, to fly into Damascus international airport.
US patience, he threatened, was running out with Syria.
Khalilzads claims are crude propaganda. Even as the Iraqi
government declared the northern section of the Syrian border
closed indefinitely, Al Jazeerah reported that American troops
based at the crossing near Sinjar were pulled out to join in the
assault on Tal Afar, leaving the border wide open.
To the extent there are foreign fighters in Tal
Afar, they are men from across the region, fighting in an Arab
country against Washingtons attempt to place Iraq under
long-term American domination. In the eyes of many Iraqis, the
real foreigners are the US and allied troops occupying
their country.
The bulk of the resistance fighters in Tal Afar, however, are
Iraqis. Iraqi journalist Nasir Ali told Al Jazeerah there were
very few foreigners in the area. Drawing attention to the false
US allegations of Al Qaeda terrorists controlling Fallujah before
last years attack, Ali declared: Every time the US
Army and the Iraqi government want to destroy a specific city,
they claim it hosts Arab fighters and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
Following the destruction of Fallujah, large numbers of guerillas
dispersed to cities such Mosul, Tal Afar and Ramadi, and other
areas in northern and central Iraq, in order to continue the armed
resistance to occupation. The insurgency enjoys broad popular
support among the Sunni and Turkomen population in northern Iraq.
As well as sharing an anti-colonial sentiment, millions of Sunni
and Turkomen Iraqis fear the domination of Kurdish nationalist
forces that are seeking, with US backing, to expand their sphere
of political control.
The assault on Tal Afar is part of a broader offensive by the
US military and the Baghdad government to suppress the widespread
opposition to both the presence of US troops in the country and
the draft constitution that is to be voted on at a referendum
on October 15.
In the weeks since the draft constitution was ratified, Sunni
and Turkomen organisations have campaigned for their communities
to register and to vote down the constitution at the referendum.
Hundreds of thousands of Sunnis, who boycotted the elections in
January, have registered to vote across the Sunni heartland of
central and western Iraq over the last several months.
A two-thirds No vote in just three provinces would
be enough to defeat the proposal and force the US-led occupation
to restart the entire process of elections, forming a government,
drafting a constitution and holding a referendum.
Sunni and Turkomen communities form the overwhelming majority
of the population in at least four provinces, including Tal Afars
province of Ninevah, and Anbar province, where Fallujah and Ramadi
are located. If Shiite movements such as that led by cleric Moqtada
al-Sadr also backed a No vote, the referendum could
be defeated in other provinces as well, throwing the Bush administrations
agenda in Iraq into further disarray.
Tal Afar is an indication of the methods being unleashed to
prevent such an outcome. The cities and towns along the Euphrates
River, where anti-occupation sentiment is strong, are going to
be subjected to a military onslaught over the coming month in
order to disrupt the efforts to mobilise No votes.
Thousands of people will be turned into refugees and the cities
placed under martial law by the interior ministry and Iraqi government
troops loyal to the Shiite fundamentalist and Kurdish parties
supporting the constitution.
The list of targets to follow Tal Afar has already been named.
On the weekend, Iraqi Defence Minister Sadoun Dulaimi declared:
After the Tal Afar operation ends, we will move on Rabiyah
(a town on the Syrian border) and Sinjar (also on the border)
and then go down to the Euphrates valley. We are warning those
who have given shelter to terrorists that they must stop, kick
them out or else we will cut off their hands, heads and tongues
as we did in Tal Afar.
In another statement, Dulaimi ominously warned: We tell
our people everywhereRamadi, Samarra, Rawa and Qaimthat
we are coming.
See Also:
Is the US military preparing another
massacre in Tal Afar?
[8 September 2005]
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