When U.S.
marines carried out the savage and systematic execution of Iraqi
families and small children in Haditha last November, it was initially
reported as a "battle" with "insurgent casualties." A photo of a
kneeling Iraqi civilian moments before he was murdered was taken by a
Marine using his cell phone camera. Other pictures of the corpses of
small children, families lying in pools of blood in their homes,
students gunned down in a taxi are all part of the documentary
evidence. The massacre in Haditha took place one year
after a much larger massacre of civilians in Fallujah. Four to six
thousand civilians are estimated to have been killed in Fallujah in
November 2004, according to credible independent sources reporting from
the ground. The truth of Iraq is that there were other massacres almost
every week in between the events that have made Haditha and Fallujah
famous cities: famous in the way no city wants to become well known
throughout the world. The attack on the people of Iraq and ensuing
occupation by the United States government has caused the deaths of
well over 100,000 Iraqi people (the British medical journal,
The Lancet, reported an excess of 100,000 dead eighteen months
ago).
"Ethics Training" to Prevent Massacres Now
that the butchery in Haditha is making headlines in the United States,
high ranking officials in the Pentagon as well as the President are
promising an investigation. They have even announced "ethics training"
for combat troops. The implication is that something unusual happened
when unarmed civilians, including terrified small children and their
mothers who were trying to shield them, were riddled with bullets by
U.S. soldiers. Were they rogue soldiers lawlessly breaking ranks from
an otherwise pristine mission aimed at liberating Iraqis? That is pure
fiction. Those who criticize the management of the war are talking
complete nonsense when they say that the actions of these Marines will
make it "harder to carry out the mission in Iraq." The
Haditha massacre will not make the Iraqis think differently about the
United States or Bush. It will only confirm their view, an outlook
shaped by the cruel, cold-hard reality of the past years.
A Routine Phenomenon Just
this week, on May 31, US soldiers in Iraq "killed two Iraqi women — one
of them about to give birth — when the troops shot at a car that failed
to stop at an observation post in a city north of Baghdad." The AP
reports that Nabiha Nisaif Jassim, 35, was being raced to the maternity
hospital in Samarra by her brother when the shooting occurred
Tuesday. Jassim, the mother of two children, and her 57-year-old
cousin, Saliha Mohammed Hassan, were killed by the U.S. forces,
according to police Capt. Laith Mohammed and witnesses. Her husband was
waiting for her at the maternity unit of the hospital when Jassim,
pregnant with their child, and her cousin were murdered. Yesterday,
the BBC disclosed new video evidence that U.S. forces massacred another
group of Iraqi civilians in the town of Ishaqi in March. The story,
carried by Knight-Ridder in March, and denied by the U.S. government
thereafter, stated that U.S. troops had rounded-up villagers into a
single room of a house and then "executed 11 people, including a
75-year-old woman and a 6-month-old infant." BBC reported June 1 that
of the eleven people murdered by U.S. troops, five were children. The
soldiers then, "burned three vehicles, killed the villagers’ animals
and blew up the house." In Afghanistan this week,
large masses of people took to the streets throwing rocks at U.S.
military vehicles following another incident in which U.S. military
personnel raced through Kabul and then rammed passenger vehicles
killing at least three people. A top Afghan police officer reported
that U.S. soldiers then opened fire indiscriminately directly into the
crowd killing at least four more people.
Rejecting the Disney Version of U.S. Foreign Policy The
perception of the U.S. in the Arab world is based on actual information
and knowledge of the Iraq war and the war in Afghanistan. The U.S.
financing and support for the ongoing war waged by the Israeli military
against the Palestinian people also contributes to the understanding of
the U.S. role among the people of the Middle East. This perception is
100 percent different than the fantasy promoted in the United States.
In the United States, facts are not allowed to stand in the way of the
official legend. All the mainstream media, the
politicians and even some in the "peace movement" in the United States
uphold the Disney version of U.S. imperialism: a fundamentally
benign force, motivated by democratic values and a vision of freedom,
that is suffering an unexplained outburst of criminality based on
stress caused by poor management of the war. Haditha, and
Fallujah before it, or Abu Ghraib, are registered as deviant behavior
by out of control people. Conveniently they are all rank and file
enlisted men and women. No Generals, Secretary of Defense or President
need worry. That
every exposed crime is widely accepted to be "deviant" or aberrational
in the United States is only a testament to the power of political
indoctrination by the media and the government whose economic resources
for "opinion-molding" are greater than that of any previous empire in
human history. The Perception of U.S. Imperialism from The Middle East "The
deaths in Haditha, a volatile town in western Iraq, have barely caused
a stir in Iraq and much of the Arab world — where American troops are
reviled as brutal invaders who regularly commit such acts," writes AP
reporter Hamza Hendawi, in a story filed on May 30, 2006. The
next day a dispatch from AP reporter Kim Gamel, reports the same
sentiment, "People in Samarra are very angry with the Americans not
only because of Haditha case but because the Americans kill people
randomly especially recently," Khalid Nisaif Jassim said. Closely
connected by language, historical and geographic knowledge, and access
to more comprehensive media reporting, the Arab people consider the
entire war, including its unprovoked initiation by Bush on March 20,
2003, to be a criminal endeavor by large powers against a small but
oil-rich nation. The racist character of the war itself is well
recognized throughout the region. Having battled for a century against
colonial and semi-colonial domination, the Arab people don’t derive
their knowledge about the intentions of Britain or the United States
from FOX News or the New York Times. In the U.S. media,
Iraq is treated as a low-intensity war. When U.S. soldiers are killed
their deaths are accompanied by a small article. The fact that
well more than 100,000 Iraqis have died does not merit blazing
headlines. Iraqi suffering is minimized or usually attributed to
"terrorists." Thus, the people of the United States are shielded from
that which the Arab people know all too well about the criminal
character of the war of aggression.
Fallujah and Hue City, Vietnam The
issue of Fallujah is a case in point. Fallujah is emblematic of the
war. It is well understood throughout the Arab world but treated like
ancient history by the U.S. media. On the eve of the
assault on Fallujah, the A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition sent out an email to
anti-war activists (November 7, 2004) under the headline: "Top U.S.
Marine in Iraq Calls for Massacre in Fallujah." It reported that
Sgt. Major Carlton W. Kent gave an emotional pep-talk to 2,500 Marines
who were poised to attack the city. The marines had just notified the
people of Fallujah that any male between the age of 15-55 who dared go
outside would be automatically killed. "You’re all in the process of
making history," the Sgt. Major exhorted his soldiers. "This is another
Hue City in the making. I, have no doubt, if we do get the word, that
each and every one of you is going to do what you have always done kick
some butt." (AP, November 7, 2004) Evoking the events in
Hue by U.S. officers, as a motivation for today’s troops, shows the
macabre criminality inherent in imperialism’s war for
conquest. Hue was a city in South Vietnam
that was a scene of horrific war crimes by military personnel when it
was captured by U.S.-led forces in March 1968. U.S. Under-Secretary of
the Air Force, Townsend Hoopes, admitted that Hue was left a
"devastated and prostrate city. Eighty percent of the buildings had
been reduced to rubble, and in the smashed ruins lay 2,000 dead
civilians …" (Noam Chomsky’s forward to the papers of the 1967
International War Crimes in Vietnam Tribunal.)
The Machinery of Racism How
can 100,000 people die, how can children be murdered, how can the
devastation and destruction of an entire society occur at the hands of
the U.S. government without there being a huge outpouring of
indignation and condemnation in the U.S. mass media, much less even
acknowledgment by so many in the "loyal opposition"? Because the U.S.
mainstream media is a corporate dominated propaganda machine that is
part and parcel of the imperial establishment and shares its interests.
It uses the instrument of racism, a tool that has been fine-tuned by
the forces of militarism in the United States for nearly four
centuries. The racist demonization of conquered and targeted people has
been crafted with the idea of dehumanizing the victims so as to prevent
the forging of human solidarity in opposition to the crimes of conquest
and Empire. The mass media, always willing to exploit the emotional
appeal of death and tragedy that occurs within the United States, can
ignore or define the experiences of the people of Iraq as somehow less
worthy, the death of Iraqi children as less agonizing, their lives less
valuable. Bush Proclaims that Iraq "is only the beginning" of Endless War The
day after the NY Times front page story revealing the graphic details
of the Haditha massacre, George W. Bush said these words about the Iraq
war to the West Point graduating class of 2006: "This is only the
beginning. The message has spread from Damascus to Tehran that the
future belongs to freedom, and we will not rest until the promise of
liberty reaches every people, in every nation." Reiterating his and
Cheney’s theme that the U.S. is now engaged in "endless war," Bush told
the young cadets: "The war began on my watch, but its going to
end on your watch." While
Bush was exhorting the next generation of privileged military
officers to enthusiastically embrace his imperial crusade, the reality
is that this administration sees in every rank and file enlisted man
and woman nothing more than pawns. For the working class youth who make
up the bulk of the military, the Bush administration has only callous
disregard. Bush is willing to send these young people to kill and be
killed while it carries out vicious cut-backs in education, job
training and veterans benefits. The rich are always ready to have the
working class and poor people do their fighting and dying. The
crimes of the U.S. soldiers in Iraq are as inevitable as the crimes
committed by soldiers in imperial armies throughout history. The
conquered people refuse to accept their fate. They rise up, they form
resistance organizations. They take up arms and conspire to oust the
foreign occupiers. They are then branded as terrorists and criminals by
the Empire. To the extent that they enjoy popular support among the
indigenous population, the population itself is considered "suspect" by
the occupiers.
Civilians thus become a danger. Children and
young teenagers can become the "enemy." The vehicles carrying expectant
mothers to the hospital can thus become a threat because they must
travel quickly, too quickly for the comfort of the occupying soldiers
who are fearful of car bombs.
A Pertinent Revelation this Week: 50 Years After the Fact In
the Korean War, U.S. soldiers gunned down hundreds and possibly
thousands of South Korean civilians as they tried to escape the horrors
of war. For five decades, the Pentagon and each successive U.S.
administration denied these facts. South Korean survivors who tried to
press their claims against the United States were labeled traitors and
North Korean spies and put into prison for many years. After the
killings of No Gun Ri in July 1950 were exposed decades later in the
U.S. media, the Pentagon even carried out an "exhaustive" investigation
and concluded that the actions were those of inexperienced soldiers.
"The deaths and injuries of civilians, wherever they occurred, were an
unfortunate tragedy inherent to war and not a deliberate killing....
Soldiers were not ordered to attack and kill civilian refugees in the
vicinity of No Gun Ri." (Department of the Army Inspector General, No
Gun Ri Review, Jan. 2001) But just this week, as the
Pentagon begins its new "investigation" into Haditha, a document has
come to light that not only reveals the truth of the massacre of
Koreans but that it was an act of official U.S. war policy. The day of
the mass killings, the US Ambassador to South Korea sent a letter to
State Department official Dean Rusk about the military decision arrived
at a meeting on July 25, 1950 announcing that Korean war refugees would
be shot if they approached US lines. The day after the decision the 7th
U.S. Cavalry Regiment killed hundreds of civilians at No Gun Ri in
South Korea. The Logic of War Crimes There
was a military rationale for killing the civilians at No Gun Ri and in
scores of other sites throughout Korea during the war. The U.S.
soldiers could not tell whether the civilians were sympathetic to the
North Koreans or whether they would permit North Korean soldiers into
their midst. The Geneva Conventions expressly
prohibit the targeting of civilians under any circumstances. But the
Pentagon had a bigger political concern than adhering to international
law. The fundamental fear of the Pentagon and the White House in Korea,
as it was in Vietnam and during the first and current war against Iraq,
was that public opinion at home would turn against the imperialist
adventure and tie the hands of the warmakers. The logic of their
political calculus was that U.S. public opinion would turn against the
war directly as a result of a large number of U.S. casualties. This
thought took them to the next murderous conclusion: if civilians pose
even a remote risk to U.S. soldiers it is better to shoot the civilians
first and ask questions later. Dead Korean or Vietnamese or Iraqi
civilians will not be as politically damaging back home as dead
American soldiers.
There is one more side to the logic of war crimes.
If the civilian population is sympathetic to the resistance fighters it
is necessary to terrorize the civilians as punishment for providing aid
or shelter to a guerrilla army. This is not a new story. The Japanese
wiped out whole villages and nearly some cities in China as a warning
against aiding the communist-led resistance during World War II. The
Nazi's policy in Serbia was to kill one hundred Serbs for every German
soldier killed by the resistance. Under the direction of John
Negroponte, current Director of US Intelligence services, the
Salvadoran military carried out large-scale massacres of peasant
communities that were considered supportive of the FMLN resistance
fighters in El Salvador during the 1980’s. In Vietnam, the CIA
organized the Phoenix Program, a clandestine war that assassinated as
many 50,000 south Vietnamese who were considered to be members or
sympathizers of the National Liberation Front. The People of the United States Must Act to Stop Imperialist War There
is no investigation, no new training, or change in the way the war and
occupation is administered that can stop massacres like Haditha,
Fallujah and the day in and day out killings of Iraqis and destruction
of their society. The only change that can bring about the hope of
building a new future for Iraqis, one of self-determination and
eventual peace, is to end the foreign occupation of Iraq and remove the
invading army. Every day the U.S. and other troops remain in Iraq the
situation grows more dire for the Iraqi people. We must demand that the
troops be brought home now and reach out to our friends, families,
co-workers and schoolmates to make this demand a powerful and
undeniable force. The majority of people of the U.S. now oppose the war
in Iraq - but at this very moment, many in the peace movement are
urging that all focus turn towards the elections, just as they did two
years ago. This is the road to irrelevance and it must be
rejected.
The war in Vietnam was not ended because "better
politicians" were elected. No one could assert that Richard Nixon was
better than anything or anyone. What mattered was that millions of
people used every avenue to intensify the mass struggle in the streets
and in every community throughout the country. The Vietnamese people
were clearly determined to fight until their homeland was free from
foreign occupation. Ultimately, the U.S. soldier was only fighting to
return to his or her home. The congruence of these factors and the
ever-widening mass anti-war movement made the nearly genocidal conflict
unsustainable for the Pentagon brass and the occupant of the White
House. We must learn and re-learn these lessons and apply them to
today. That is the challenge and obligation of the next period.
Mara Verheyden-Hilliard is a civil
rights attorney and co-founder of the Partnership for Civil
Justice. Brian Becker is the National Coordinator of the A.N.S.W.E.R.
Coalition.
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