Untitled Document
On the morning of February 14, 1991, when I turned the TV on to see
the latest lies being told to the public about the U.S. bombing of Iraq, I saw
a chaotic situation in Baghdad. The Amiryah bomb shelter had just been struck
by two 2,000-pound superbombs. Information was sketchy, but it was evident that
many people lost their lives.
The first statement from the U.S. administration was that the U.S. hit an Iraqi
command and control post and the dead were military. Then, the cameras showed
charred bodies of women and children, to the U.S. story had to be revised. The
administration then said that the building was a military target in which Saddam
Hussein placed civilians to protect the military personnel.
Remember that the current vice-president of the U.S., Dick Cheney, was the
U.S. Secretary of War in 1991. He said, "We blame the Iraqi leadership
for putting civilians in harm’s way." That statement was not only
a lie, but one of the most absurd allegations one could make because it denigrated
the hundreds of humans who lost their lives. Current occurrences show that Cheney
can’t tell the difference between a small bird and a person, so nothing
is new about his lack of brainpower or eyesight.
For a couple of hours, the world was told that the Iraqis led civilians to
their deaths by putting them into a military target. Then, the truth began to
emerge.
The Amiryah bomb shelter was built as a civilian bomb shelter during
the Iran-Iraq War. Even the engineer who designed it came on television and
told the world that there was no way it could be a military asset.
After the lies were put to rest, it became evident that the U.S. had mistaken
the target as a military venue, or it had deliberately bombed it knowing it
was a bomb shelter. To this day, not one U.S. government spokesperson has ever
mentioned the truth. In fact, after February 14, 1991, the subject has been
left unspoken: even the lies.
Those inside the bomb shelter died horrific deaths. First, a 2,000-pound
bomb crashed through the shelter creating a massive tunnel in which the second
2,000-pound bomb then came. Both blew up leaving a huge hole and killing more
than 400 people. Only seven humans survived the attack. Those who died actually
saw the first bomb and had a few seconds of life left before the second burrowed
its way into the shelter. Such an attack transcends the barbarity of a bombing
in which the people die immediately.
The lines of burnt dead bodies lining the street presented a horrific
scene reminiscent of Hiroshima after it was nuked by the U.S.
This is the 15th anniversary of the bombing of the shelter, yet few words have
been written as a reminder of the horrific act. Before March 2003, at least
Iraq commemorated the event and remembered the dead. The stooges in power today
don’t want to remind the world of the lack of caring for human life the
U.S. displayed in 1991 in the bombing of Iraq. Most weren’t even in the
country then. No matter how much they stick their heads in the sand, nothing
will never ease the pain of one of the most barbaric terrorist attacks in history.
The silence from the U.S. and the Iraqi quislings is deafening.