IRAQ WAR - LOOKING GLASS NEWS
View without photos
View with photos


US "Fireballs" Threaten Iraqi Flora
by Samir Haddad    IslamOnline.net
Entered into the database on Saturday, June 04th, 2005 @ 21:21:22 MST


 

Untitled Document

BAGHDAD, June 4, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – US Apache helicopters have become a nightmare for Iraqi farmers and villagers who had thousands of acres of their farmlands destroyed by the flash bombs poured on them almost every day.

“These damned Apaches daily fire their flash bombs, burning vast swathes of land,” Abu Mohammad, who owns a farmland near the northern city of Mosul, told IslamOnline.net.

“These bombs remain glowing as they are fired from low altitude with date palms taking the brunt.”

He said the fireballs, as Iraqis call them, have burnt and razed thousands of donums of malt and wheat in his Rabiea village.

American attack helicopters usually fired the flash bombs from low altitude, turning the night sky into morning in search for potential resistance fighters.

The bombs have also scorched thousands of date palms spreading along the riverbeds of the Tigris and the Euphrates.

Some villagers see the Apache raids as some sort of punishment because the occupation troops repeatedly accused them of giving resistance fighters safe haven in their farmlands.

Insomnia

The deafening sound of the Apaches, which hover over the rooftops of Iraqi houses, has also deprived many Iraqis of a nice sleep since the start of the US occupation in April 2003.

These rooftops used to be the perfect place for Iraqis in summertime to escape the stifling heat and moisture at home. They are not any longer.

“My children are panicked by the disturbing sound of the Apaches and the Chinooks,” Abdel Salam, from southern Baghdad, told IOL.

“Every night I woke up to the sound of these warplanes, reckoning that a US tank had stormed my home,” added Munir Al-Hamdani.

The hard time given by the US warplanes to civilians make them cheer at the news of a helicopter crash or downing by resistance fire.

Up to 25 US helicopters and warplanes crashed or were brought down since the start of the US occupation of the oil rich country.

International human rights watchdogs have frequently said that the indiscriminate US raids into Iraqi cities have added insult to injury.

Amnesty International in September harshly criticized the US for killing dozens of civilians in a number of deadly consecutive air strikes into the war-battered city of Fallujah.

Press reports and medical sources said that women and children were among people killed in the predawn missile attacks on the resistance hub