October 25, 2005
US military officials in Iraq are suppressing information on
an incident last month in a town in the Sunni Triangle in which
four American contractors were killed by insurgents and their
bodies dragged through the streets, while crowds denounced the
US occupation.
The incident took place September 20 in Duluiya, a town on
the Tigris River, when a convoy of contractors for Kellogg, Brown
& Root (KBR), the construction subsidiary of Halliburton Corporation,
took a wrong turn while traveling to an Army base. According to
a report October 22 in the Daily Telegraph, a conservative
British newspaper, "As the lorries desperately tried to reverse
out, dozens of Sunni Arab insurgents wielding rocket launchers
and automatic rifles emerged from their homes."
Two contractors were killed in the firefight that ensued. Two
more survived the initial shooting but were then dragged from
their pickup trucks, forced to kneel on the street in front of
the insurgents, executed and their bodies set on fire. Residents
began clapping and chanting in support of the resistance and threw
straw and other inflammable materials on the fire. Two other contractors
survived the attack and were rescued by US soldiers.
The violence at Duluiya reveals far more about the real sentiments
of the Iraqi people—their hatred of the US occupation force
and its civilian servants—than all the ballots cast in the
referendum staged by the Bush administration and its stooge regime
in Baghdad.
The popular celebration over the deaths of the contractors
recalls the attack that killed four Blackwater Security contractors
in Fallajuh in the spring of 2004. That event was given enormous
publicity by the Bush administration and the American media, with
videotape of the burning bodies of the contractors shown incessantly
on US television in order to depict the Iraqi insurgents as savages.
(No similar video has ever been shown of Iraqi civilians incinerated
by US bombing raids).
Fallujah was twice targeted for full-scale invasions, first
in April 2004, just after the contractors were killed, when the
resistance proved so ferocious that the US military pulled back
and negotiated a ceasefire. The second attack, in November-December
2004, used massive firepower to level the city. Virtually the
entire population fled the city, and barely half have since returned.
According to the Telegraph, which has fervently supported
both the Bush administration and the war in Iraq, the Pentagon
had political reasons for keeping quiet about the Duluiya killings.
"Perhaps fearful of public reaction in America, where support
for the war is falling, US officials suppressed details of the
Sept 20 attack," the newspaper wrote. The attack came less
than a month before the referendum on a new constitution for Iraq,
during a period when the Bush administration was at pains to claim
great progress was being made in pacifying the country.
The Telegraph added that conditions in the Sunni Triangle,
despite official optimism, were actually becoming more difficult
for the occupation. Both Iraqi and foreign fighters were able
to move freely through the region, relying on popular support
in towns like Duluiya.
"If the Americans do not close off these boltholes, it
seems unlikely the war can be won. But hopes for progress are
growing more remote. The insurgency in eastern Salahuddin province
[where Duluiya is located] is growing more intense, more deadly
and more sophisticated," the newspaper noted. "Even
routine patrols are fraught with danger."
After the report on Duluiya was published in London, a US military
spokesman confirmed the details of the incident, but would give
no explanation of why more than a month passed before the news
was made public. A total of 320 non-Iraqi civilian contractors
have been killed in Iraq since the war began in April 2003, according
to one estimate.
A major factor in the decision to keep the Duluiya attack quiet
was undoubtedly concern over the collapse of domestic political
support for the war.
Over the past ten days, there has been a constant stream of
unfavorable news from Iraq. This has been largely overshadowed,
in the volume of US press coverage, by reports on the referendum
vote and the brief hearing for Saddam Hussein and several co-defendants
October 19. But the indices of deteriorating conditions on the
ground are far more significant.
The New York Times reported October 14 that Pentagon
officials had increased the estimate of the number of Iraqi security
forces required to defeat the insurgency by 20 percent, from 270,000
to 325,000 by 2007. The current total of US-controlled security
forces is 356,000, at least on paper, when 156,000 American troops
are combined with the 200,000 Iraqi military and police, whose
loyalty and effectiveness are doubtful.
The next day the US command headquarters in Baghdad released
figures showing that the number of insurgent attacks per week
has steadily increased from April 2003 to the present, belying
claims of progress in the military counterinsurgency campaign.
In February and March 2004, attacks averaged under 200 per week.
That figure doubled over the next year, and continues to soar,
hitting 723 in the first week of October.
On October 16, the Washington Post, another fervent
editorial supporter of the US war, reported in passing that anti-American
guerrillas are operating openly in the Iraqi capital city. "In
insurgent strongholds, such as Baghdad’s southern neighborhood
of Doura," the newspaper said, "gunmen sometimes take
to the streets by the score."
Four days later, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that American troops could
be fighting in Iraq indefinitely. She refused to declare that
US troops would be out of Iraq in five or even ten years. In response
to questions from senators expressing pessimism about the US effort
in Iraq, she conceded, "I understand that, yes, it might
not work."