worldwideWAMM May 2006

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Reports from Iraq Reflect War’s Bitter Course

by Kristina M. Gronquist, W A M M

Child victim of U.S. attack in Isahaqi. Photo from CBS News.
War is assuredly the darkest abyss into which humanity can descend. Iraq is no exception. A small percentage might still hold the illusion that the United States has brought liberation and good cheer, whistling soldiers cobbling shoes for poor Iraqi children, school bells ringing, etc. But the eternal credo that “war is hell” rings truest. Those who have willingly sent America’s youth to die, kill, and maim in this abysmal quagmire are audience to a drama from which they keep a safe distance. The majority of the war’s supporters have paid no personal price for the illegal misadventure, have sacrificed nothing, and take no responsibility whatsoever for the blood their tax dollars have helped spill. In place of missing WMD and a link to 9/11, two things remain: lies and lives lost.


Reporting from Samarra:
the Senseless Killing of Wissam Abbas
Tom Lasseter of Knight Ridder Newspapers, on assignment in Iraq, gives a lucid account of life and death in Samarra, Iraq, one week before the bombing of the Golden Shrine Mosque, which took place on February 22. He reports how, after a gunfight, soldiers of the 101st Airborne Division retrieve the bodies of Iraqi resistance fighters. One soldier yells, “Strap those motherf——s to the hood like a deer,” and so they do. As they drive out of the area with the dead men strapped to the roof, Iraqi families stand and glare. In the same news story, Lasseter later tells how a jumpy 21-year-old soldier named Michael Pena from Texas shoots an innocent 31-year-old man named Wissam Abbas, with a .50-caliber machine gun. Abbas suffers terribly in front of the soldiers while a tearful medic tries to stuff his organs back into his body. Abbas later dies at the local hospital. Lasseter ends the news report by saying that, although Pena didn’t say a word about the man he’d killed, he blurts out in frustration: “No one told me why I’m putting my life on the line in Samarra, and you know why they didn’t? Because there is no f—— reason.” A young soldier has murdered an innocent man, a precious life is lost, for nothing, Pena will be forever scarred psychologically, and he admits he does not have a clue as to why he is in Iraq, carrying out his government’s apocalyptic mission. (for the entire article click here, opens new window)


British Soldiers Refuse to Fight with U.S. Troops
British SAS (Special Air Services) soldier Ben Griffith, after three months in Baghdad, told his commanders (this March) that the Iraq war was illegal and he was no longer prepared to fight alongside American troops, who he said committed “dozens of illegal acts.” The decision marked the first time a SAS soldier refused to go into combat and quit on moral grounds. The soldier’s refusal to stay and fight in Iraq ended Griffith’s exemplary, eight-year career. Facing court-martial, he felt certain he would be labeled a coward and imprisoned, but instead he was discharged with a testimonial describing him as a “balanced, honest, loyal and determined individual who possesses the strength of character to have the courage of his convictions.” Mr. Griffith said the American military’s “gung ho and trigger-happy mentality” and tactics undermined any chance of winning the hearts and minds of Iraqis

Most chilling is Griffith’s belief that U.S. troops viewed all Iraqis as “untermenschen”—the Nazi term for races regarded as subhuman. Griffith says, “As far as the Americans were concerned, the Iraqi people were subhuman, untermenschen. You could almost split the Americans into two groups: ones who were complete crusaders, intent on killing Iraqis, and the others who were in Iraq because the Army was going to pay their college fees. They had no understanding or interest in the Arab culture. The Americans would talk to the Iraqis as if they were stupid, and these weren’t isolated cases, this was from the top down.” (for the entire article click here, opens new window)


Also in Britain, this April, a military court found a British air force doctor guilty of disobeying orders after he challenged the legality of the war in Iraq, and he was sentenced to eight months in prison and dismissed from the service. The Houston Chronicle reports that Flight Lt. Malcolm Kendall-Smith said U.S. actions in Iraq were on a par with those of Nazi Germany. He was convicted by a panel of Royal Air Force officers after a three-day court-martial. Kendall-Smith formed his belief that the war was unlawful after serving tours of duty in Kuwait and Qatar at the time of the invasion. “I have evidence that the Americans were on a par with Nazi Germany with (their) actions in the Persian Gulf,” he told the court. (for the entire article click here, opens new window)


March 15th Massacre in the Small Town of Isahaqi
The U.S. military has launched an investigation into the killing of Iraqi civilians by U.S. forces in a raid March 15th in Isahaqi, Iraq, near the city of Balad. Iraqi police have accused American troops of murdering eleven civilians in the assault. According to an Iraqi police report first obtained by Knight Ridder, the villagers were killed after U.S. troops herded them into one room of a house. After the shootings, the house was blown up. The dead included five children and four women ranging in age from six months to 75 years old. Local medics said the bodies had bullet wounds to the head. (The U.S. military contends that only four civilians were killed in the raid after the troops came under fire while trying to capture an al-Qaeda suspect.)


Fifteen Civilians Executed in Haditha Last November
The investigation into the Isahaqi killings comes not long after a U.S. Navy criminal probe into reports that Marines intentionally shot fifteen civilians dead near the western town of Haditha last November. A young Iraqi girl has given a frightening account of what witnesses claim amounts to mass murder by U.S. troops in the war-torn country. Ten-year-old Iman Walid lost several members of her family in the attack. Iman tells of screaming soldiers entering her house, spraying bullets in every direction. Fifteen people in all were killed, including her parents and grandparents. Her account has been corroborated by other eyewitnesses, who say it was a revenge attack after a roadside bomb killed one Marine. Time reported on April 11th that three Marine officers involved have been relieved of command and reassigned. At first, the Marines issued a statement saying that a roadside bomb had killed fifteen civilians, while eight insurgents had been killed in a later gun battle, but U.S. military officials have since confirmed the fifteen civilians were actually shot dead. (for the entire article click here, opens new window)


All the Blood Spilled in Iraq Is a Direct Consequence of One Decision
The known massacres in Haditha last November and Isahaqi this March have claimed the lives of
23 civilians. Mathew Scofield, who is European bureau chief for the Knight Ridder news agency, was the first to obtain the report from the Iraqi police, and he provides a detailed accounting in an interview with Amy Goodman on Democracy Now. Goodman asks what he thinks about the President’s notion that the media is only telling the “bad news” about the war. Schofield replies, “If you’re looking at these two stories as isolated incidents of times when Iraqis believe Americans have gone out of control and killed people, that’s missing the mark by a wide margin . . . the belief over here is that this is happening all the time.” He adds, “Now, if Bush wants to come out and say that we’re ignoring the good news, I think there is, on the other side, an effort to ignore the depth of the bad news here.” (for the entire article click here, opens new window)

The question must be asked: How many more civilian executions have occurred over the last three years that have been covered up or not reported, for a variety of reasons? In addition to charging those involved in the massacres, justice must also be found for those Iraqis whose lives have been taken as a result of: U.S. aerial bombing; confusing checkpoints; coalition/resistance crossfire, sectarian attacks; suicide bombings; kidnappings; lack of proper medical care, depleted-uranium poisoning; etc. Every death in Iraq, from the thousands slaughtered on the trek to Baghdad, to Margaret Hassan, to U.S. soldiers, to Iraqis fighting to defend their country, to 100,000 innocent civilians, to dozens of journalists, to Tom Fox, all of these deaths have resulted directly from that one disastrous decision by our misguided policy-makers: the decision to invade Iraq.

Our daunting task, as peace activists, is to continue to reveal the ugly truths of this war and shed light on the fact that the decision to start the war is at the core of every death, all civil strife, and every atrocity that unfolds now on a daily basis. History tells us, all too clearly, that modern guerrilla wars are unwinnable. Many worry that this illegal intervention has the potential to lead to a long and painful Lebanon-style civil war. We need to continue our passionate call to stop the madness, to demand that foreign troops withdraw, to support a genuine Iraq-driven peacemaking process, and to seek justice and reparations for all the Iraqi victims, including, but not limited to, 31-year-old Wissam Abbas, cut down by U.S. machine-gun fire, in Samarra, Iraq, in the prime of his life.

International Events

Operation Refuse War, a week of action uniting resisters.
May 11-16, New York City and Washington DC.
This will be an opportunity for conscientious objectors, anti-war activists and military families to come together to share strategies and build community. In celebration of International Conscientious Objector Day. FFI: online.

A Conference on the Treatment and Prevention of Torture
June 2-4, 2006, Guilford College, Greensboro, NC.
Sponsored by the Quaker Initiative to End Torture (QUIT)
Program and registration online. at: www.quit-torture-now.org.

International Conscientious Objector Day
May 15
FFI and/or lobbying packets: email or 202-483-2220.

March on Washington D.C., Hands off Venezuela and Cuba
Saturday, May 20, 10:00 a.m. Malcolm X Park, Washington D.C.
A call to end the United States government’s campaign of lies, threats, and sanctions against Venezuela and Cuba. March from Malcolm X Park to Lafayette Park for a rally in front of the White House at 2:00 p.m. Sponsored by: the May 20 Coalition.
FFI: the May 20 Coalition (national) email or the Minnesota Cuba Committee (local) 612-624-1512 or 651-771-1793.

Global Network: World Peace Forum
June 23-28, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Theme: “Cities and Communities: Working Together to End War and Build a Peaceful, Just and Sustainable World.”
FFI: online.

© 2006 Women Against Military Madness. All rights reserved.

Complete May 2006 Index - click here

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