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President George W. Bush’s practiced smiles and his cronies’ anxious
denials can’t hide the truth: Exposures of prisoner abuse, the military
recruiting crisis, the instability of Washington’s client regime in Baghdad,
and especially the powerful resistance movement are slamming the U.S.-led occupation.
Inexorably, inevitably, the skein of lies holding together the occupation of
Iraq is coming undone.
Resistance fighters have doubled their daily attacks since April, the Pentagon
admitted on May 31. At least 77 U.S. troops were killed in May.
That is the highest number since January, when U.S.-sponsored national elections
were held, Reuters reported. The Associated Press put the number of U.S. casualties
for the month at 80.
Military actions by the resistance slowed briefly after the Jan. 30 elections.
That led Bush & Co. to virtually crow, “Mission accomplished,”
all over again. The military brass spoke of reducing troop numbers by the end
of the year—not as a move to end the occupation, but because they believed
Iraq would shortly be “pacified.”
Instead, it appears the resistance had made a strategic decision: to retreat
temporarily, giving the new occupation-sponsored government time to expose its
true character to any Iraqis who might have harbored hopes that the election
would herald the end of foreign occupation.
Today U.S. “experts” are singing a very different tune.
“Those who believed that the elections would be a decisive turning point
undermining the insurgency are disappointed yet again,” admitted Ted Carpenter,
a defense analyst for the Cato Institute. “The insurgency seems as capable
as ever.”
Daniel Goure of the Lexington Institute predicted Washington would have to
keep “significant numbers” of troops in Iraq “at least for
the next five years. The reality is we have discovered, despite all our propaganda,
that we are facing a very tough, resilient and smart adversary,” said
Goure. (Reuters, May 31)
May also marked the highest monthly death toll so far for members of the Army
National Guard and the military reserves. Some 31 of them died. (AP, June 4)
Most of these part-time soldiers were recruited under the slogan, “One
weekend a month, two weeks a year.” Few ever ex pect ed to be deployed
halfway around the world, much less to be on the front lines.
But that’s exactly what is happening more and more—as the 150,000
U.S. occupation troops on the ground are stretched thinner, and dissatisfaction
grows over extended stays, stop-loss orders, and former servicepeople being
pulled out of retire ment under the fine print of their contracts.
“The death toll among the Guard and Reserve underscores an important
aspect of their recruiting problems,” wrote AP military analyst Robert
Burns. “More potential recruits, citing concern about being sent to the
war zone, are opting for other careers. The Army Guard missed its recruiting
target last year and has fallen even farther behind this year.”
The Guardian of Britain reported June 5: “The U.S. military has stopped
battalion commanders from dismissing new recruits for drug abuse, alcohol, poor
fitness and pregnancy in an attempt to halt the rising attrition rate in an
army under growing strain as a result of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
“An internal memo sent to senior commanders said the growing dropout
rate was ‘a matter of great concern’ in an army at war. It told
officers: ‘We need your concerted effort to reverse the negative trend.
By reducing attrition 1 percent, we can save up to 3,000 initial-term soldiers.
That’s 3,000 more soldiers in our formations.’”
Officially, the U.S. military says that at least 1,668 soldiers had died in
Iraq by June 4. But many believe the death toll is actually much higher.
On May 29 the Spanish-language daily newspaper El Diario/La Prensa reported
that its independent review of military documents provided to the government
of Puerto Rico put the number of deaths at 4,076.
Washington says it doesn’t keep a tally of Iraqis killed by U.S. operations.
Iraqis refuse to serve
The U.S. occupation and its client regime are having an even harder time recruiting
Iraqis to enforce the new status quo.
On June 5, Reuters reported that an Iraqi National Guard unit, the 90-member
Defense Force of Rutba, was disbanded after its members refused to participate
in training overseen by U.S. advisers.
“We refused to go because we were afraid that when we came back to Rutba
we would be killed,” said Taha Allawi, a member of the unit. “The
people here would believe that we were cooperating with U.S. forces and that
is a reason for anyone to be killed.”
An unnamed U.S. official who oversees the training said that Iraqis who refused
to attend the courses would be dismissed. Then, almost as an afterthought, the
official added that it was of course the Iraqi defense ministry’s decision.
Similarly, U.S. forces are in the driver’s seat of “Operation Lightning,”
the much-heralded door-to-door sweep of Baghdad and surrounding areas to detain
suspected “insurgents.” At least 900 men between the ages of 15
and 55 had been rounded up by June 6.
“In Latifiyah, 20 miles south of Bagh dad,” AP correspondent Antonio
Casta neda reported June 5, “Iraqi forces were in the forefront of Saturday’s
sweep through the semi-rural region, [but] it was clear the U.S. military was
still the driving force.
“About two hours into the operation, for example, American forces voiced
concern that an area covered in tall grass had not been searched. ... ‘This
is a dangerous area. We need helicopters and the American army,’ Iraqi
Brig. Gen. Najim al-Ekabi said. The U.S. soldiers, who had spent months training
Iraqi soldiers, tried to persuade al-Ekabi to send his troops, saying it was
likely that weapons were hidden in the fields and alongside an irrigation canal.
...
“Al-Ekabi asked for a private meeting with the Americans and departed
shortly afterward in a large convoy, ostensibly to conduct the search. Maj.
Ronny Echelberger later went into the area with American forces and searched
a few homes, saying [he] was not sure the Iraqi search had been sufficiently
thorough.”
On June 5, U.S. Marines said they had discovered a well-equipped bunker used
by the resistance at a quarry in Karma, near Falluja. The bunker allegedly contained
a large stockpile of weapons, as well as air conditioning, showers and other
facilities for guerrilla fighters.
The Bush administration immediately tried to spin the discovery as evidence
of “foreign terrorists” being at the heart of the resistance. In
reality, though, the bunker illustrates the indigenous resistance movement’s
high level of organization. It also reveals how carefully the former Iraqi government
prepared before the U.S. forces invaded in March 2003.
In the months leading up to Wash ing ton’s “Shock and Awe”
campaign, the government of President Saddam Hus sein had distributed arms and
provided training to the civilian population, among other preparations for long-term
resistance.
The contrast with the disorganized, demoralized forces under the Iraqi colonial
government’s flag couldn’t be greater.
Growing anger
The Bush administration is rolling the dice on its ability to co-opt the leaders
of various Iraqi religious and political factions into its “democratic
process.” Objectively, on the other hand, conditions increasingly fuel
popular support for the militant resistance.
Unemployment is well over 50 percent throughout the country.
The colonial occupation is neglecting the task of rebuilding infrastructure
and medical care, decimated by the war and more than a decade of devastating
U.S./United Nations sanctions.
The number of long-term prisoners detained at Abu Ghraib and Camp Bucca, near
Basra, has more than doubled since last August. There are now more than 10,000
such prisoners, according to the June 5 Los Angeles Times:
“Military sweeps have netted many guerrillas but also thousands of others
whose offenses were nonexistent, minor or impossible to prove. They often are
held for months, only to be released without explanation.”
Next, the U.S. occupiers will try to divert growing anger in Iraq and worldwide
with the announcement that Saddam Hussein, the demonized former president of
Iraq, is to stand trial on 12 charges this summer. It’s up to the anti-war
movement here to keep the public focus on the real issue: the demand that U.S.
and all foreign occupation troops immediately, unconditionally leave Iraq.