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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
US raid on mosque leads to massacre in Baghdad
By Bill Van Auken
12 April 2007
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Scores of people were left killed or wounded and bodies littered
the streets of two crowded urban neighborhoods in central Baghdad
following a major battle between US occupation forces and city
residents Tuesday.
The fighting erupted in the predominantly Sunni Fadhil and
Sheikh Omar neighborhoods after what appeared to be deliberate
provocation by US-backed Iraqi troops.
According to residents of the area reached by the New York
Times, the battle erupted early Tuesday morning after the
US and Iraqi puppet forces cordoned off an area and began house-to-houses
searches.
The Iraqi Army raided a mosque and killed two men in
front of other worshipers at the early morning prayers,
the Times reported. It quoted Qais Ahhmed, a laborer who
lives close to the mosque, as saying that one of those executed
was the muezzin, the person chosen to lead the call to prayer.
Then the locals took their guns and went out to fight
the Iraqi Army and the police in reaction to these executions,
Ahmed added.
It was at that point that US troops joined the battle, calling
in helicopter gunships to launch air strikes on the neighborhood.
The episode, which has all the earmarks of a deliberate provocation
aimed at drawing out opponents of the American occupation in order
to slaughter them, provides a revealing glimpse into the reality
of the so-called surge ordered by the Bush administration.
Touted by the White House and the Pentagon as an effort to provide
security for the residents of Baghdad, the escalation
of some 30,000 more troops is, in reality, a last-ditch effort
to drown the growing popular resistance to US domination in blood.
The Sunni-dominated Muslim Scholars Association issued a statement
condemning the killing of civiliansincluding women and childrenin
the operation. The association condemns this horrible crime
carried out by occupiers and the government, the statement
said. It continued, The civilians of this district call
for the free world and human rights organizations to stop this
massacre that does not differentiate between men and women and
children. They call for relief and for help with their injuries.
According to various reports, the number of civilians killed
in the operation numbered in the dozens, with many more wounded.
US-Iraqi military forces prevented ambulances from entering the
area, leaving those injured without care. It was also reported
that an elementary school was struck during the fighting, with
a rocket killing a six-year-old child.
As details of the carnage in Baghdad emerged, a British newspaper
published an account of documents spelling out the Pentagons
plans for a draconian counterinsurgency crackdown that would turn
much of the Iraqi capital into a virtual prison.
The Independents veteran Middle East correspondent
Robert Fisk reported Wednesday that the operation will seal
off vast areas of the city, enclosing whole neighborhoods behind
barricades and allowing only Iraqis with newly issued ID cards
to enter.
As Fisk points out, this strategy has a long and inauspicious
history in the attempts to suppress anti-colonial struggles from
Algeria to Vietnam. In Vietnam, the US military attempted something
similar with its ill-fated strategic hamlet program.
Fisk reports that the strategy was developed by the new US
commander in Iraq, Gen. David Petraeus, during a six-month course
at the Armys command and general staff college in Fort Leavenworth,
Kansas. Among those involved in drawing up the plans were reportedly
at least four senior Israeli officers.
The strategy calls for mass arrests of men of military age,
Fisk reports. Indeed, part of the US troop surge is made up of
2,200 military policemen sent to Iraq to guard the burgeoning
population of detainees.
After neighborhoods have been cleansed of potential resistance
fighters, they are to be walled off and gated, with
only occupants bearing American-issued ID cards allowed in an
out. Meanwhile, US and Iraqi puppet troops will establish fortified
support bases inside these sealed off areas, conducting
regular patrols. Civilians may find themselves inside a
controlled population prison, Fisk writes.
He goes on, however, to quote an unnamed former senior US officers
pessimistic conclusions about the strategy:
Once the additional troops are in place the insurrectionists
will cut the lines of communication from Kuwait to the greatest
extent they are able. They will do the same inside Baghdad, forcing
more use of helicopters. The helicopters will be vulnerable coming
into the patrol bases, and the enemy will destroy as many as they
can. The second part of their plan will be to attempt to destroy
one of the patrol bases ... The American reaction will be to use
massive fire power, which will destroy the neighborhood that is
being protected.
In other words, the so-called surge will produce a massive
escalation in bloodshed, claiming the lives of countless Iraqis
and many, many more US soldiers.
International Red Cross: suffering of Iraqis
unbearable
The horrific conditions inflicted upon the Iraqi people by
the US war and occupation found fresh confirmation in a stinging
report issued Wednesday by the International Committee of the
Red Cross (ICRC), which effectively dismissed the Bush administrations
hollow claims about progress in Iraq.
The suffering that Iraqi men, women and children are
enduring today is unbearable and unacceptable, ICRC director
of operations Pierre Kraehenbuehl told the media in releasing
the report. Their lives and dignity are continuously under
threat.
He added, in relation to the US military operations, Were
certainly not seeing an immediate effect in terms of stabilization
for civilians currently. That is not our reading.
The conflict in Iraq is inflicting immense suffering
on the entire population, the ICRC report states. Civilians
bear the brunt of the relentless violence and the extremely poor
security conditions that are disrupting the lives and livelihoods
of millions. Every day, dozens of people are killed and many more
wounded. The plight of Iraqi civilians is a daily reminder of
the fact that there has long been a failure to respect their lives
and dignity.
In addition to the daily slaughter that has killed and maimed
hundreds of thousands, while turning millions more into refugees,
the ICRC report cites the destruction of the countrys health
care system and basic infrastructure, creating a humanitarian
disaster.
Health-care facilities are stretched to the limit as
they struggle to cope with mass casualties day-in, day-out,
the report states, adding, Many sick and injured people
do not go to hospital because its too dangerous ...
The ICRC reports that fully half the countrys doctors have
already fled into exile.
The Red Cross report cites growing food shortages and an increase
in malnutrition. It warns that the countrys vastly
inadequate water, sewage and electricity infrastructure is presenting
a risk to public health ... Water is often contaminated owing
to the poor repair of sewage and water-supply networks and the
discharge of untreated sewage into rivers, which are the main
source of drinking water.
The report also confirms that the US occupation is resulting
in the massive detention of Iraqis without charges. Tens
of thousands of people are currently being detained by the Iraqi
authorities and the multinational forces in Iraq. Many families
remain without news of relatives who went missing ... The
ICRC estimates that the number of Iraqis arrested and interned
by the US occupation forces has increased by 40 percent since
early 2006.
Meanwhile, the desperation of the White House and the Pentagon
as they seek to reverse the debacle that the war of aggression
in Iraq has produced for US imperialism is becoming increasingly
apparent.
On Wednesday, Defense Secretary Robert Gates appeared at a
hastily organized Pentagon press conference to announce that the
tours of duty for all regular Army units deployed in Iraq and
Afghanistan are being extended from 12 months to 15 months, effective
immediately. The announcement was one more indication of the immense
strain that the two deployments are placing on the all-volunteer
Army, which some former senior officers are already describing
as broken. The public announcement, before any of
the troops presently deployed in Iraq were informed that they
will spend three more months in combat, will undoubtedly further
erode already plummeting morale.
Also on Wednesday, the Washington Post reported that
White House has been unable to convince anyone to fill a new position
overseeing the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and coordinating the
operations of the Pentagon, the State Department and other agencies.
The newspaper cited at least three retired four-star generals
who rejected the appointment as so-called war czar,
apparently out of disagreement with the administrations
policy or belief that the Iraq war is unwinnable.
The very fundamental issue is, they dont know where
the hell theyre going, retired Marine Gen. Jack Sheehan,
a former NATO commander, told the newspaper. Theres
the residue of the Cheney viewWere gong to win,
Al Qaedas therethat justifies anything we did,
he added. And theres the pragmatist viewhow
the hell do we get out of Dodge and survive? Unfortunately, the
people with the former view are still in the positions of most
influence.
Summing up his decision to refuse the appointment, Sheehan
concluded, So rather than go over there, develop an ulcer
and eventually leave, I said, No thanks.
See Also:
After mass protest in Iraq: US forces
press attack on Sadrist movement
[11 April 2007]
Hundreds of thousands march in Iraq to
demand end of US occupation
[10 April 2007]
As US, British death toll rises: Pentagon
orders 14,000 National Guard troops to Iraq
[7 April 2007]
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