Untitled Document
'Western Embedded Reporters in Iraq'
Published in the Iraqi newspaper Azzaman, this article purports to
be written by a man - apparently a young man - from a neighborhood of Haditha
- and describes operations by U.S. forces there. According to Western news reports
that the U.S. has not commented on, Haditha is a rebel stronghold where the
insurgents are a law unto themselves
(Note from Azzaman: For nearly a week early this month, U.S. troops attacked
the city of Haditha, 270km northwest of Baghdad. The city’s 90,000 residents
were targeted by massive shelling from helicopters, tanks and artillery. This
article is written by a resident of Haditha who saw what went on in one of its
neighborhoods. The writer’s name has been withheld for security reasons.)
It was Friday, August 5, when the bombs started falling on our city. They came
like heavy rain and their thunder broke the silence and early morning calls
to prayer from the mosque’s minarets.
|
A Marine Inspection on the
Road to Haditha in February |
The Pentagon called this new military offensive Operation Quick Strike. There
were warplanes, tanks, explosions and shrapnel. Many of us began reciting verses
from the holy, Koran pleading with the Almighty to save us from the U.S. fire,
as we had nowhere to hide and nothing to defend ourselves with.
We were subject to a terror attack by the United States. The operation could
be called nothing but terror.
On that same day the U.N. Security Council passed a resolution condemning terrorist
attacks in Iraq. The government’s U.N. representative in New York, Samir
al-Sumaidi, himself born in Haditha, was quoted over the radio as thanking the
council for adopting the resolution.
[Editor’s Note: Samir al-Sumaidi was a member of the Iraqi Governing
Council. There is no information that indicates he has ever been U.N. Ambassador
or ‘representative.’]
When the shelling subsided, U.S. commanders ordered their Marines to storm
the city. They searched Haditha quarter-by-quarter, house-by-house and arrested
scores of young men and even women and prevented us from holding Friday afternoon
prayers.
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A Car Bomb and the Consequences in Hadith Last Year; |
In one bloody incident I saw the Marines kill two unarmed people. One of them
was in his bed in the Sheikh Hadid district, where Sumaidi was born. The second
was killed as he strolled in his garden.
More residents began falling. In our area alone, the Marines killed five people,
all of them unarmed and having no connection to the insurgents.
For us, those killed by the United States are martyrs. The long line of Iraqi
martyrs is growing, as innocent blood flows out or from the Iraqi artery the
U.S. has torn.
Sumaidi, other senior Iraqi officials and the world have said nothing of the
five innocent people killed by U.S. troops in our neighborhood. However, the
world knows of the victims and Sumaidi and his government know who the murderer
is. But no one utters a world of protest.
Still there are many who would like us to stand behind the government and give
the U.S. and its Marines a chance.
Rather, we would have rallied behind Sumaidi and his government if they had
stood up to denounce the American occupation and the U.S. military’s random
and barbaric killing of innocent people.
What does the world expect from us? What does the government expect? Do they
want us to thank the United States for sending its Marines, Apache helicopters
and F16s to destroy our homes, kill our children, detain our women and break
our bones?
We have set our own standards on how to deal with them. Since the government
supports the U.S. occupation forces, whose fire tears the bodies of our martyrs
into pieces, there is nothing it can do to regain our trust.