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If one watches corporate media or listens to Cheney Administration
propaganda, one is either not getting information about Iraq at all, or hearing
that things are looking up as the U.S. approaches another “phase”
in the occupation.
Just taking a brief look at the “security incidents” reported by
Reuters for today, 12 February, gives a little clue as to how the occupation
of Iraq, aside from being immoral and unjust, is a dismal failure.
RAMADI - Six insurgents were killed and another wounded
on Saturday when U.S forces conducted an air strike in the city of Ramadi,
110 km (68 miles) west of Baghdad, the U.S military said on Sunday.
MUQDADIYA - Clashes between insurgents and Iraqi army soldiers
conducting a raid killed one rebel in Muqdadiya, 90 km (50 miles) north east
of Baghdad. The army arrested 40 suspected insurgents in the same operation.
BAGHDAD - A 53-year-old male detainee at Abu Ghraib prison
died on Saturday as a result of complications from an assault by an unknown
number of detainees,
MAHAWEEL - The bodies of three people, bound and shot in
the head and chest, were found in Mahaweel, 75 km (50 miles) south of Baghdad,
police said. The bodies showed signs of torture.
ISKANDARIYA - The bodies of two people, bound and shot
in the head and chest, were found in Iskandariya, 40 km (25 miles) south of
Baghdad, police said. The bodies showed signs of torture.
BAGHDAD - Three police commandos and a civilian were killed
and four commandos wounded when a suicide bomber wearing an explosive belt
blew himself up near a check point in southern Baghdad, police said.
KIRKUK - Gunmen killed four policemen while they were driving
in a civilian car in the main road between Kirkuk and Tikrit, 175 km (110
miles) north of Baghdad, police said.
KIFL - Gunmen wearing police uniforms killed a civilian
on Saturday in Kifl, a town about 150 km (100 miles) south of Baghdad, police
said.
NEAR LATIFIYA - Police retrieved the body of a dead person
from the river on Saturday near Latifiya, south of Baghdad.
BAQUBA - A director of sport education of Diyala province
was killed by gunmen
YATHRIB - Gunmen kidnapped three truck drivers who were
carrying equipment to a U.S military base on Saturday in Yathrib, a region
near Balad, 90 km (55 miles) north of Baghdad, police said.
BAIJI - Gunmen blew up a gas station on Saturday near the
oil refinery city of Baiji, 180 km (112 miles) north of Baghdad.
BAGHDAD - Twelve civilians were wounded when two roadside
bombs exploded in quick succession near an Iraqi police patrol in central
Baghdad, police said.
SAMARRA - The Iraqi army found three Iranian Shi'ite pilgrims
who were among a group of 12, including an Iraqi driver, kidnapped by gunmen
in Samarra on Friday, Iraqi army officials said.
HAWIJA - Gunmen shot dead a doctor and wounded an employee
working in the main hospital in Hawija, 70 km south west of the northern city
of Kirkuk, on Saturday, police said.
KIRKUK - Four policemen were wounded when a roadside bomb
went off near their patrol in the northern city of Kirkuk, 250 km (155 miles)
north of Baghdad, police said.
KIRKUK - The corpse of a Kurdish contractor working with
the U.S army was found on Saturday in Kirkuk, police said.
KIRKUK - Two civilians were wounded by a roadside bomb
near their patrol in Kirkuk, police said.
BAGHDAD - Two civilians were killed, including a child,
and three were wounded, when a roadside bomb targeting police commandos exploded
in a northern district of the capital, police said.
A brief glance at recent events in Iraq shows that violence only continues
to escalate and the infrastructure which U.S. taxpayers supposedly paid billions
of dollars to repair is in shambles.
While the Cheney Administration blame Iraqi resistance attacks and sabotage
for the lack of reconstruction, I would like to remind people that at least
$8.8 Billion of the money meant for reconstruction efforts remains unaccounted
for. Stuart Bowen, the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction, said
this is because “oversight” on the part of the Coalition Provisional
Authority “was relatively nonexistent.”
Meanwhile, the U.S. military is over a quarter of the way towards having the
3,000th soldier killed in Iraq, as 2,267 have now been killed. 25 of those deaths
have occurred this month.
But as usual, it is the Iraqis who are paying the highest price.
Looking at Arab media outlets, evidence of this abounds.
According to Al-Sharqiyah television:
“The head of the Al-Fallujah Municipal Council was killed by gunshots
on February 7, Iraqi Al Sharqiyah TV reported that day. In its 1100 gmt newscast,
the TV said: "Unidentified armed men this morning assassinated Shaykh Kamal
Shakir Nizal, head of the Municipal Council of Al-Fallujah, western Iraq.”
The U.S. backed puppet Iraqi government continues its state-sponsored civil
war. Aside from the numerous bodies found in the aforementioned Reuters report,
this past week Sharqiyah also reported:
“Iraqi and US security forces raided the Iraqi Islamic Party’s
headquarters in the Al-Amiriyah area in western Baghdad. The Islamic Party,
which is one of the Iraqi entities operating under the banner of the Iraqi Al-Tawafuq
Front, issued a press statement today saying that last night, Iraqi forces,
backed by US troops, assaulted the headquarters’ guards and the party
members who were there at the time, destroyed the headquarters’ furniture
and contents, seized the licensed weapons carried by the guards, and confiscated
sums of money belonging to the party.”
Of course atrocities continue at the hands of occupation forces. Video has
been released which shows a group of British soldiers brutally beating and kicking
defenseless Iraqi teenagers inside a military compound, and Iraqis recently
released from prisons like Abu Ghraib are reporting ongoing torture at the hands
of U.S. forces. This, however, should come as no surprise since Secretary of
“Defense” Donald Rumsfeld issued a memo over two years ago specifying
which types of “harsh interrogation techniques” he wanted used in
Iraq.
This is just a brief overview of recent events in Iraq.
When Israeli/U.S. warplanes begin dropping bombs on Iran, will Iraq
fade to the back pages of the news as has Afghanistan? With the corporate media
coverage of Iraq at this sorry state already, it’s difficult to imagine
that not occurring.