IRAQ WAR - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
US military massacres dozens in wake of Iraq referendum |
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by James Cogan World Socialist Web Site Entered into the database on Tuesday, October 18th, 2005 @ 14:57:00 MST |
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In the space of a few hours on Sunday, less than a day after voting
finished on the draft constitution in Iraq, the US military used laser-guided
bombs and helicopter gunships to massacre as many as 70 people in two incidents
in the predominantly Sunni Arab city of Ramadi. The killings expose the utterly cynical character of the Bush administration’s
propaganda that the October 15 referendum marked a genuine step toward democracy
and sovereignty. Iraq is a conquered country, where US occupation troops are
using the most ruthless methods to intimidate any opposition by the Iraqi people
and force them into accepting neo-colonial American rule. In the first incident, at least 25 people were blown to pieces when an F-15
dropped a bomb on a crowd that was gathered around the wreckage of an American
humvee. It had been destroyed on Saturday by an insurgent roadside bomb, killing
five marines and two soldiers of the Iraqi government armed forces and taking
the total of US fatalities in Iraq to 1,976. The US military asserted the airstrike resulted in the “death of terrorists”
who had been planting another bomb. Witnesses and Ramadi hospital staff, however,
have insisted that the casualties were young people and children who were pulling
parts from the wreck. Ahmed Fouad told the Washington Post that his son and eight-year-old daughter
were among the dead. “She was killed with her brother when they were near
the humvee. Her mother had a stroke out of shock,” he said. A local police
officer told Reuters: “Their bodies were completely ripped apart.” On Sunday evening, at least another 50 people were killed in the village of
Al-Bu Faraj, on the outskirts of Ramadi. The US military claimed that helicopter
gunships monitoring an alleged “terrorist safe house” killed 10
armed men who fired on them. The house was then destroyed by a precision-guided
bomb dropped by an F/A-18 fighter, claiming the lives of a further 40 people. Witnesses told Associated Press that at least 14 of those killed in the house
were civilians. A local told Reuters: “The planes came and bombed us right
after prayers. These are innocent civilians. To hell with this constitution.” Usage of the word “terrorist” has assumed the same character in
Iraq as the term Viet Cong or “VC” during the Vietnam War. It is
the convenient label applied to any casualty caused by the occupation forces.
As far as the US military is concerned, the entire population is the enemy in
areas such as Ramadi. Civilians are being butchered and their deaths included
in the body-counts reported by the Pentagon to try to convince the American
people that the war is going well. The reality is that Sunday’s attacks—like the numerous atrocities
committed against civilian communities in Vietnam—are acts of collective
punishment by the US military for opposition to the occupation and the support
in cities like Ramadi for the armed Iraqi resistance. Ramadi is the most populous city and capital of the western province of Anbar,
which has a predominantly Sunni Arab population and has been a focus of the
insurgency since the 2003 invasion. The province has endured continuous repression.
Tens of thousands of people—men, women and children—have been killed
or wounded, or dragged off to US-run concentration camps. The city of Fallujah
was laid waste last November by American marines. Ramadi has also been the target
of brutal anti-insurgency operations. Over the past several months, towns and villages along the Syrian border and
in the Euphrates Valley have been subjected to US offensives, aimed at disrupting
the ability of Sunnis to vote in the referendum. Tens of thousands of civilians
have been forced to flee from cities such as Tal Afar, Qaim and Haditha by operations
named “Iron Fist” and “River Gate”. Contradicting the constant propaganda claims of the White House that the insurgency
is the work of “foreign terrorists”, marine Major General Stephen
Johnson told a press conference on October 7 his troops had been fighting “largely
locally based insurgents”: “[T]he insurgent we fight here is from here, he’s from those communities
in which we are engaging them. They are generally young people, 20 to 30-years
old. They are day laborers, agricultural workers. They are disaffected and there’s
a lot of unemployment. But they’re local people and they can come and
go within the community.” The chaos, dislocation and instability caused by the US operations ensured
that as many as one third of the polling stations in Anbar province did not
open on Saturday. Nevertheless, those who could vote, overwhelming opposed the
constitution. In Fallujah, where initial results have been reported, 97 percent
rejected the document, while at the same time making clear they viewed the entire
process as illegitimate. The British Guardian reported on October 17: “Voters in Fallujah said
they would continue supporting the insurrection. ‘The resistance will
go on,’ said Hamid Jassim, 60, queueing to vote at al-Khansa primary school.
Those within earshot nodded vigorously. ‘God willing it will go on,’
they said.” Initial reports indicate a similar rejection of the constitution
in other Sunni areas and determination to continue fighting the occupation. The massacres on Sunday are a foretaste of what is to come over the coming
weeks and months. Iraqis of all backgrounds—Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish—face
disastrous conditions of life, none of which will be altered by a constitution
or the new government to be elected in December. While at present the resistance
is concentrated in Sunni areas, it can only spread as the resentment and hostility
to the occupation and the political parties collaborating with US imperialism
intensifies across the country. In order to crush the opposition to its war aims, and to a puppet government
in Baghdad that hands over territory and oil to US interests, the American ruling
elite is prepared to slaughter tens of thousands more Iraqis. |