Untitled Document
When troops are cut, we'll still be bombing the hell out of the place
In every war, some things are seen more clearly than others and are therefore
reported more fully. The air war in Iraq is not one of them. American air power
has been dominant in most of the modern wars, but bombing and strafing take
place either completely out of sight or in areas not accessible to close observation
by the press. Rarely does the military allow reporters to go along on combat
sorties.
In the Vietnam War, some of the bombing was kept secret, such as the heavy raids
in 1969–70 on North Vietnamese sanctuaries inside Cambodia, before that
country was drawn full-bore into the war by the Nixon "incursion"
in the spring of 1970. Military records were altered to make it appear that
all this carpet bombing was carried out inside Vietnam.
Little is known or seen of the air part of the American war of today, in Iraq.
One of the reasons is that the press, with less mobility because of security
risks, has to be focused on what's happening on the ground, where the damage,
human and material, is taking place. A more crucial reason is that the Pentagon
and the CIA prefer to tell us as little as possible about air war operations.
Recently, but only in bits and pieces, military officials in Washington have
acknowledged that after the U.S. and Britain withdraw the bulk of their ground
troops, the American air component will be kept in the region to support the
American-trained Iraqi ground forces who will be taking over the ground war.
While the Pentagon doesn't say anything about increasing air power in Iraq,
other military sources—speaking anonymously because the information is
classified—confirm that the plans call for the air war to be beefed up
and kept that way for years to come. These sources also point to Iran and its
nuclear ambitions as a reason for keeping air power at a high-alert level in
the region.
Since air strikes cause a significant percentage of civilian casualties, the
air war's continuance ensures that the U.S. will wear a bull's-eye on its back
indefinitely in the Middle East. It also means that the American press will
have to push harder to provide more detailed and regular coverage of the air
war.
Some reporters have already made the air war a separate, high-priority subject.
The Washington Post's Ellen Knickmeyer, in a lengthy article this past December
24, described the air-strike toll on civilians during Operation Steel Curtain
in far western Iraq. In the town of Husaybah alone, one week into the operation,
a doctor, Zahid Mohammed Rawi, said medical workers had recorded 97 civilians
killed. Rawi said "at least 38 insurgents" were also killed. "I
dare any organization, committee, or the American Army to deny these numbers,"
Rawi told Knickmeyer. Her story pointed out that the military and Iraqi civilian
casualty reports "often diverge sharply." She also clearly explained
that the insurgents, in this mostly urban war, forcibly embed themselves amid
civilian families—both as a shield and to make sure that the Americans
will be unable to avoid killing civilians.
What we need is more reporting like hers, from the field and from Washington.
The Pentagon does give out some basic information about the Iraq air war. It
says that roughly 45 U.S. and British warplanes are in the air daily, plus helicopters
from the Army, Marines, and Special Forces. Most strikes are made by American
F-15s and F-16s, which fly in from bases outside Iraq—and also by F-14s
and F/A-18s that take off from aircraft carriers in the Persian Gulf. British
attack jets—GR-4s and GR-7s—fly bombing missions as well.
The munitions used by the U.S. planes, according to the Pentagon, are mostly
precision-guided bombs, usually of the 500-pound variety. Strafing runs are
also employed, using 40mm cannon fire. Unmanned Predator drones use missiles.
The number of officially reported air strikes has risen sharply in recent months.
Until August, the Pentagon figure was about 25 a month. By November it had risen
to 120, nearly five times the old rate.
After most American ground troops leave Iraq, a sizable number, perhaps a few
thousand, will stay behind to be embedded as advisers with the Iraqi forces.
Seymour Hersh, in a recent New Yorker piece, reported that some military sources
are expressing concern that Iraqi commanders will eventually be given the power
to select targets for the American planes. The worry is that in ethnically fragmented
Iraq, targets might be chosen to settle old scores, thus increasing civilian
casualties and endangering the embedded U.S. advisers.
Publicly, the Pentagon insists that target selection will be in American hands.
My own experience in Indochina tells me it's rarely that neat and tidy.
Keep in mind that no nation-state gives out complete military information.
The Pentagon is no different; it's not overly trusting, especially not at a
time when anyone can chat on the Internet and unthinkingly give away information
that could cause harm.
Also, the Pentagon spins information like any other government power center.
For example, in the early stages of the Iraq war, U.S. forces hit Iraqi troops
with incendiary bombs that exploded into fireballs like napalm and stuck to
human skin and kept burning—just like napalm. American officers on scene
told reporters it was napalm. The reporters wrote stories. Higher officials
denied it was napalm. The Pentagon insisted that napalm—in response to
international protests about its use in Vietnam and U.N. strictures approved
in 1980—had been removed from the American arsenal. The last batch of
napalm in storage, it said, had been destroyed on April 4, 2001.
Some reporters, notably James Crawley of The San Diego Union-Tribune, kept
digging. Five months later, in August 2003, the Pentagon finally admitted that
while it wasn't exactly napalm, it was a very close relative. The napalm formula
used in Vietnam was made from polystyrene (the jellying agent), benzene, and
gasoline. After the protests and the U.N. ban, the military substituted jet
fuel for the gasoline and benzene—and were now calling the weapon a Mark
77 firebomb. Its effects on a target were "remarkably similar" to
the old napalm, the Pentagon said, but this version had "less of an impact
on the environment."
The Pentagon's moral of the story: We did not seek to deceive. If only the
reporters had referred to the device by its correct name, there would have been
no confusion.