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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Three years since Bushs Mission Accomplished:
Torture, corruption, growing resistance in Iraq
By Patrick Martin
2 May 2006
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May 1 marks three years since President George W. Bush landed
on the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln for a rally, choreographed
by White House spin-doctors, to celebrate Mission Accomplished
in the US war against Iraq. Organized military resistance by the
regime of Saddam Hussein had collapsed. Fewer than 150 American
soldiers had been killed in the successful invasion, in which
the United States seized control of a country boasting the worlds
second largest oil reserves.
Fast forward to today: nearly 2,300 more US soldiers have died
since Bush declared major combat at end, while the Iraqi death
toll has soared to well over 100,000. US efforts to exploit Iraqs
oil wealth have been stymied by guerrilla attacks and the corruption
and incompetence of the US occupation regime and its Iraqi stooges.
The country is sinking into a nightmare of incessant terrorist
attacks, indiscriminate US air and ground raids, and ethno-religious
civil war.
A series of recent reports have documented the deteriorating
security and social conditions in the occupied country. According
to a State Department report issued April 28, the number of terrorist
attacks in Iraq tripled in 2005, up to 3,500 from 866 in 2004.
Another report, by the Government Accountability Office, found
that insurgent attacks against American-led forces and infrastructure
increased by 23 percent from 2004 to 2005. The GAO found that
security conditions were serious or critical in 7 of Iraqs
18 provinces, compared to the usual Bush administration claim
that only 4 provinces are in difficulty. Iraqi Vice President
Adel Abdul Mahdi said in an interview last week that more than
100,000 people had been displaced from their homes by violence,
largely Sunni-versus-Shiite clashes.
The dimensions of the disaster in Iraq are almost incalculable.
Last week, for example, four major reports on the state of affairs
in Iraq appeared in the Washington Post and New York
Times, the two leading US newspapers, that document the atrocious
consequences of the Bush administrations aggression.
Torture in Iraqi jails
On Monday, April 24, the Washington
Post published a front-page report on conditions in jails
throughout the country run by the Interior Ministry, which is
dominated by members of the two largest Shiite militias, the Badr
Organization, affiliated with the Supreme Council for Islamic
Revolution in Iraq, and the Mahdi brigade, loyal to Shiite cleric
Moqtada al-Sadr.
The article by Ellen Knickmyer reported that since last November,
when US soldiers found 173 prisoners, tortured and emaciated,
at a secret Interior Ministry bunker in central Baghdad, there
have been six further joint US-Iraqi inspections of detention
centers. All of these inspections have found evidence of torture
or severe abuse. But in a shift in US policy, most of the abused
prisoners have not been removed from the detention centers. Instead,
they have been left at the mercy of their torturers after some
perfunctory warnings.
The inspections only scratched the surface, focusing on 5 of
the 1,000 or more detention centers operated by the US-imposed
Iraqi government (one center was inspected twice). What was found
was just as gruesome as the conditions reported last November.
A US military spokesman told Knickmyer: At one of the sites,
thirteen detainees showed signs of abuse that required immediate
medical care. The signs of abuse included broken bones, indications
that they had been beaten with hoses and wires, signs that they
had been hung from the ceiling, and cigarette burns.... There
were several cases of physical abuse at one other inspection site.
These included evidence of scars, missing toenails, dislocated
shoulders, severe bruising, and cigarette burns.
Another US spokesman said that only prisoners whose wounds
were fresh, indicating abuse in the days immediately preceding
the inspection, were removed to other locations for their own
safety. No prisoners were hospitalized for immediate treatment.
The result was to leave the vast majority of beaten and tortured
men in the hands of their torturers.
As Knickmyer points out, this change in policy underscores
the significance of a public dispute between Marine General Peter
Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Secretary of
Defense Rumsfeld. At a November 29 news conference after the first
US raid on an Interior Ministry torture center, Pace said that
American soldiers encountering such abuse had the obligation to
intervene immediately to stop it. Rumsfeld corrected him, declaring,
I dont think you mean they have an obligation to physically
stop it; its to report it. Pace reiterated, If
they are physically present when inhumane treatment is taking
place, sir, they have an obligation to try to stop it.
While Paces remarks reflected the past official policy
of the Pentagon, based on the Geneva Convention, Rumsfelds
position has clearly prevailed in practice. This is a further
demonstration that the abuses at Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib,
to say nothing of the systematic torture in the Shiite-run detention
centers, are not excesses committed by rogue
soldiers. Rather, they are the result of a deliberate Bush administration
policy of authorizing and encouraging the torture of prisonersa
war crime under international law.
Corruption and incompetence in reconstruction
The April 25 issue of the New
York Times carried a lengthy examination by James Glanz
of the performance of KBR, a subsidiary of Halliburton, on a contract
to restore the main Iraqi oil pipeline crossing of the Tigris
River at a location called Al Fatah, 130 miles north of Baghdad.
A key component of the $2.4 billion no-bid reconstruction contract
the Army awarded KBR in 2003, the project came to a halt in the
summer of 2004 after expending nearly $75 million and accomplishing
nothing.
The project was required in the first place because US warplanes
had destroyed the bridge at Al Fatah that previously carried pipelines
that allowed oil from fields near Kirkuk to be pumped west and
north into Turkey and then to the world market. An initial plan
to rebuild the bridge was scrapped, and a new method had to be
found to carry the pipeline past the river.
KBR decided to dig holes and push pipe under the Tigris, despite
warnings from several technical specialists that the terrain was
unsuitable. After months of effort, the holes were repeatedly
blocked by shifting rock, and the work was ultimately abandoned.
According to a report by the Special Inspector General for Iraq
Reconstruction, issued in early 2006, the geological complexities
that caused the project to fail were not only foreseeable but
predicted.
The Halliburton subsidiary operated with zero accountability
in Iraq thanks to its powerful political protector, Vice President
Dick Cheney, the companys CEO until he joined the Republican
ticket in 2000. Even today, after years of reports and exposures
of KBR/Halliburton overcharging and non-performance in Iraq, Army
Corps of Engineers officials were unwilling to go on record criticizing
the companys work.
But a consultant for the Corps, geologist and former oilman
Robert Sanders, told the Times about one of the technical
reports warning KBR of the unfeasibility of its drilling project
at Al Fatah. You just dont see a consultants
report like that that is totally dismissed, he said. That
put them on notice. When they didnt take that notice, they
accepted what I would call culpable negligence. Sanders
also criticized KBRs efforts to gag its subcontractors and
workers, who were told not to communicate with the Corps except
through KBR managers.
Ultimately, the project was re-bid to another group of companies,
who decided on a costly but less risky method, dredging part of
the river and laying pipeline in the exposed bed, then covering
it with concrete. But oil has yet to flow through the Al Fatah
crossing, despite well over $100 million in construction costs.
A war more expensive than Vietnam
The April 27 issue of the Washington
Post carried a report on the analysis of Iraq war costs
by the Congressional Research Service, distributed to members
of Congress earlier in the week and then made available to the
newspaper. CRS estimated that the cost of the war would reach
$320 billion with passage of the current emergency spending bill,
with an additional $371 billion in phase-out costs even if gradual
troop withdrawals begin this year. Add in the costs of the war
in Afghanistan and the total rises to $811 billion, far more than
the $549 billion cost of the Vietnam War, when adjusted for inflation.
Aside from the gargantuan total figure, the most significant
finding of this report is the rapid escalation in the costs: $51
billion in 2003, $77.3 billion in 2004, $87.3 billion in 2005,
and $101.8 billion this year. In other words, it is twice as expensive
to maintain the occupation of Iraq by 130,000 troops than it was
to conquer the country in the first place with a larger number
of troops.
These numbers provide a yardstick for measuring the progress
of the US counterinsurgency campaign. They demonstrate, first
and foremost, that the guerrilla war being waged by Iraqis today,
against both the US occupation and the stooge government in Baghdad,
is more effective than the military resistance by the regime of
Saddam Hussein. It causes more damage and takes more out of the
occupying power.
The largest increases are in two categories of spending: operations,
maintenance and procurement costs, up from $50 billion in 2004
to $88 billion in 2006, mainly because of rising costs of body
armor, equipment maintenance and fuel; and in investment costs,
which have tripled from 2003, from $7 billion to $24 billion,
because so much equipment must be replacedarmored vehicles,
radios, sensors and other high-tech gear.
There are two other factors that can be inferred though not
proven from the CRS numbers. Corruption and profiteering likely
account for a disproportionate share of the increased spending.
Iraq has become a honey pot for American and foreign military
contractors, supplying everything from equipment to bodyguards
for enormous profits. In addition, as one military analyst suggested
to the Times, the Pentagon may well be padding its budget
in anticipation of future cuts by congressional appropriators
as public opposition to the war intensifies.
The occupiers under siege
The last of the four articles appeared in Saturdays Washington
Post, It was devoted to the US program to train Iraqi
troops in Anbar province, the western region of Iraq, heavily
Sunni, which has been the center of armed resistance to the occupation.
Reporter Jonathan Finer describes the efforts of US soldiers
in the town of Hawijah, where they train soldiers and policemen
recruited from the local population in a seemingly futile effort
to win hearts and minds. Despite all the differences
in terrain, history and military tactics, the politics of occupation
is very similar to that in Vietnam 40 years ago.
It is increasingly difficult, Finer explains, for American
soldiers to distinguish between friend and foe: In a town
where the local population is hostile to the American presence
in Iraq, US soldiers have developed a deep distrust of their Iraqi
counterparts following a slew of incidents that suggest the troops
they are training are cooperating with their enemies. One
sergeant told Finer, Theres two kinds of Iraqis here,
the ones who help us and the ones who shoot us, and theres
an awful lot of em doing both.
The top local Iraqi army commander was arrested and sent to
Abu Ghraib last November, on suspicion of informing insurgents
about US convoy routes. Hawijahs police chief was fired
and arrested for alleged refusal to target the insurgents. Some
14 policemen were caught planting roadside bombs, while another
60 police are on the US watch list as suspected insurgents. Presumably
all these men are among the 250,000 Iraqi soldiers and policemen
that the Bush administration now claims have been trained and
deployed.
Even without the daily provocation of US occupation, the conditions
in Hawijah, a town of 40,000, would be enough to provoke massive
violence. Unemployment is estimated at nearly 90 percent.
The hostility is so open that local police posted a banner
on a bridge, in both Arabic and English, declaring that they would
not accompany US troops on patrol because the police existed
to protect people and not to protect coalition soldiers.
Finer describes one incident in which the police commander told
US officers that the town was quiet. When asked to accompany them
on a drive through town, he suddenly remembers he got a
tip about an IED.
The impact on the US soldiers has been predictable: 11 killed
in the 1st Brigade Combat team in its six months of duty. Sixty-four
soldiers, nearly 10 percent of the total, have been wounded. Local
US commanders were so hard-pressed that they contemplated shifting
an Iraqi battalion from Kirkuk, made up largely of Kurds, to help
them patrol the Arab town, a measure that risked provoking ethnic
civil war.
These are the conditions as described by two newspapers that
support the US conquest and occupation of Iraq: the Post,
openly and brazenly pro-war; and the Times, which, despite
shamefaced criticism of the Bush administration, nonetheless has
insisted that the US maintain its grip on the tortured country
to assert its claim to global pre-eminence. Even these pillars
of the corporate-controlled media are hard put to find a positive
gloss on the wreckage created by American aggression.
See Also:
As support for Bush plummets,
no alternative from Democrats
[28 April 2006]
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