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Just Another Day in Iraq: 100 More Fathers, Mothers, Sons and Daughters Killed
KHANAQUIN, DIYALA PROVINCE, Iraq - The United States surge, the use of the American troop reinforcements to bring violence in Iraq under control, is bloodily failing across northern Iraq. That was proved again yesterday when a suicide bomber detonated a truck packed with explosives in Kirkuk killing at least 85 people and wounding a further 183. The truck bomb blasted a 30ft-deep crater in a busy road full of small shops and booths near the ancient citadel of Kirkuk, setting fire to a bus in which the passengers burned to death and burying many others under the rubble. Dozens of cars were set ablaze and their blackened hulks littered the street. Some 25 of the wounded suffered critical injuries and may not live.
In Baghdad, at least 44 people were killed or found dead across the city, police said. They included the bullet-riddled bodies of 25 people, apparent victims of sectarian death squads.
The attack is the latest assault by Sunni insurgents on Kurds who claim Kirkuk as their future capital.
Adnan Sarhan, 30, lost both his eyes and had his back broken in the blast. He lay on the operating table as his anguished mother, Mahiya Qadir, sat nearby with her daughter-in-law. "Will I ever see my son alive again?" she asked.
Two more car bombs blew up later in Kirkuk but caused few casualties.
The dispatch of 28,000 extra troops to Iraq starting in January, and the more aggressive deployment of the US army in the country, is not working. At best it is moving violence from one area of Iraq to another. The US is allying itself to local tribes and militias against guerrillas but that is angering the government in Baghdad and deepening the violence.
In Diyala, a mixed Shia-Sunni-Kurdish province south of Kirkuk and north-east of Baghdad, the US launched an offensive against al-Qa'ida and Sunni insurgent forces three weeks ago. It claimed to have killed many guerrillas and forced others to flee.
Hamdi Hassan Zubaydi, the Sunni leader of the Iraqi Islamic Party in Diyala, painted a very different picture. He described how some of the Sunni tribesmen had joined US troops to storm al-Qa'ida-held villages and had killed 100 insurgents. But when the US withdrew, al-Qa'ida returned and drove the tribesmen out.
Mr Zubaydi, who was jailed by Saddam Hussein in the 1980s, quivered with disgust as he explained the bloody complexities of sectarian war in Diyala.
The tough-looking former teacher in his fifties said 20 Sunni students on a bus had been abducted and he feared they would be killed. He said he knew who had carried out the kidnapping: "It was the emergency police forces led by Captain Abbas Waisi and Lt Zaman Abdul Hamid. I told the American special forces but they have done nothing."
We met Mr Zubaydi in the office of the Mayor of Khanaqin, a Kurdish enclave in northern Diyala, where he had come to ask for help. We had reached there through Kurdish-controlled territory along the right bank of the Diyala river that runs parallel to the Iranian border. Kurdish control ends at a dishevelled town called Khalar where we crossed the river over a long, rickety metal bridge with old tyres marking places where metal slats had fallen into the waters below. We picked up armed guards and then circled round behind Khanaqin to enter from the east.
Mr Zubaydi had a shorter but more dangerous route to Khanaqin from a town called Muqdadiyah, a few miles to the west of Khaniaqin, which he accurately described as "the most dangerous place in Iraq". His house had been attacked five times in the past month.
He was beset by the Sunni insurgents of al-Qa'ida on one side and the Shia militia of the Mehdi Army on the other. He gave an impressive list of the Iraqi security forces available in Muqdadiyah, in addition to a US battalion, including 1,200 police and 1,600 army.
The problem is that nobody is quite sure on which side the Iraqi security forces are planning to fight. Often they do nothing: "The house of the deputy police chief is just 10 metres from a police station but somebody blew it up," Mr Zubaydi said scornfully. He ran through a list of police and army commanders in Diyala, all of whom were Shia and unlikely to help the Sunnis.
There are at least three different wars being fought in northern Iraq: Sunni against Americans; Shia against Sunni; Arabs against Kurds. Alliances can switch. The Kurds are the Americans' only sincere ally in Iraq but many of them are also convinced that the Americans in Kirkuk city have a tacit understanding with the Arab insurgents not to attack each other.
The US does not want to be seen as siding with the Kurds in their struggle to join Kirkuk and its oil fields to their semi-independent enclave, the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), in a referendum due at the end of the year. The US is restraining the Kurds but this may be more difficult after yesterday's bombings. "If we wanted to do so, we [Kurds] could secure as far as Khalis," a town far to the south of Kirkuk in Diyala Fuad Hussein, the chief of staff of Massoud Barzani president of the KRG, told me.
The US is caught in quagmire of its own making. Such successes as it does have are usually the result of tenuous alliances with previously hostile tribes, insurgent groups or militias. The British experience in Basra was that these marriages of convenience with local gangs weakened the central government and contributed to anarchy in Iraq. They did not work in the long term.
© 2007 Independent News and Media Limited
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18 Comments so far
Show AllSo we're going to wait and see how the surge works, huh? How many more pictures like this will we see?
A peaceful revolution? Hmmmm. I've got my torch ready just in case.
I don't think the insurgents are going to give up. Remember that gulf war one was 16 years ago. Any babies born then are surely anti-US now. Dont let CNN dupe you. What we need is MEDIA REFORM.
adamwestfakey@yahoo.ca
From CNN! (your trusted news source :P)
updated 28 minutes ago
Report: Al Qaeda may use Iraq operatives to hit U.S.
Al Qaeda will try to tap its resources and capabilities in Iraq in its efforts to exact another terrorist attack on U.S. soil, according to a top government intelligence report released today.
Yeah. Right.
Although, if that were me, carrying one of my kids wounded in an attack. I'd be coming after everyone responsible. One at a time. dead. dead. dead.
"Energy Security" sure is nasty and disgusting business.
stinger said:
From CNN! (your trusted news source :P)
updated 28 minutes ago
Report: Al Qaeda may use Iraq operatives to hit U.S.
Al Qaeda will try to tap its resources and capabilities in Iraq in its efforts to exact another terrorist attack on U.S. soil, according to a top government intelligence report released today.
Yeah. Right."
CNN preparing the ground for an incident, Martial Law and Fascism.
" What would have happened if millions of American and British people, struggling with coupons and lines at the gas stations, had learned that in 1942 Standard Oil of New Jersey [part of the Rockefeller empire] managers shipped the enemy's fuel through neutral Switzerland and that the enemy was shipping Allied fuel? Suppose the public had discovered that the Chase Bank in Nazi-occupied Paris after Pearl Harbor was doing millions of dollars' worth of business with the enemy with the full knowledge of the head office in Manhattan [the Rockefeller family among others?] Or that Ford trucks were being built for the German occupation troops in France with authorization from Dearborn, Michigan? Or that Colonel Sosthenes Behn, the head of the international American telephone conglomerate ITT, flew from New York to Madrid to Berne during the war to help improve Hitler's communications systems and improve the robot bombs that devastated London? Or that ITT built the FockeWulfs that dropped bombs on British and American troops? Or that crucial balI bearings were shipped to Nazi-associated customers in Latin America with the collusion of the vice-chairman of the U.S. War Production Board in partnership with Goering's cousin in Philadelphia when American forces were desperately short of them? Or that such arrangements were known about in Washington and either sanctioned or deliberately ignored?"
Charles Higham, researcher, about U.S.-Nazi collaboration during WWII
"Media manipulation in the U.S. today is more efficient than it was in Nazi Germany, because here we have the pretense that we are getting all the information we want. That misconception prevents people from even looking for the truth."
Mark Crispin Miller
"If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State."
Joseph Goebbels, German Minister of Propaganda, 1933-1945
Fascism is on the march today in America. Millionaires are marching to the tune. It will come in this country unless a strong defense is set up by all liberal and progressive forces... A clique of U.S. industrialists is hell-bent to bring a fascist state to supplant our democratic government, and is working closely with the fascist regime in Germany and Italy. Aboard ship a prominent executive of one of America's largest financial corporations told me point blank that if the progressive trend of the Roosevelt administration continued, he would be ready to take definite action to bring fascism to America."
former Ambassador to Germany William Dodd, 1938
ezeflyer
THANK YOU.
Hadn't heard much of this and I will look into it.
Taxation without representation has never been more apparent nor more appauling than it is right NOW!!!
May the revolution be as swift as it is peaceful.
Peace to you and yours.
trying to fight and restore peace in a a tribal society. Not going to happen.
If America were invaded and occupied by an imperial power for the purpose of controlling our national resources and building military bases how long...and with what tactics...would we resist? What is more offensive, that America is called The Great Satan...or the fact that it is true?
"The US does not want to be seen as siding with the Kurds in their struggle to join Kirkuk"
I thought the alliance between both groups was pretty well established. The connection is seen very much in the Turkish opinion.
Even when one totally agrees (and I am discussing the POSTS here, not the original
article), a tract and diatribe remains
a screechy tract and diatribe.
Give us the strength, man (or God--choose one)-- and it isn't easy-- to take the many benighted ones we still encounter every day individually off to the side and carefully explain after ten minutes of neutral conversation about baseball, in the calmest and silkiest tone possible, how they are accessories to murder.
Hopefully, this will get the message across better. It seems like less of a pulled punch to me.
Killing for oil,whats wrong with that?Bush said they are collaterail damage. Makes you wonder if his money is ivested in peanuts or baby food. Somebody should ask him at the next press conferance,think?
Accepting the terminology of the fascists in Bu$h the inferior's administration and the corporate media hides just how evil this Iraq occupation is. Insurgents my ass. They are citizens of Iraq occupied as surely as the French were occupied by the Nazi's.
"America should never get involved in a land war in Asia."
Words of wisdom spoken decades ago by some (in?)famous American who was either always wise or had become wise after getting American ass kicked in Asia.
What is that baseball expression that you Americans use all the time? Ah yes:
"Three strikes and you are out."
Korea, Vietnam, Iraq.
Aymon
Sunshine says "And, you all think America's morality is so above all other nations, right? WRONG!!!!" Just who is the "you all" to which you refer? Your message of condemnation seems directed to the wrong audience here, most on this forum would not feel part of that "you all", we are mostly the dissenters who are completely disgusted with our government, this war, and the lemmings who continue to follow along in their comfortable arm chairs, watching the war on TV like unreality show from a distant place.
You need to speak these truths to the general populace, we all need to do this!
It looks like the U.S. will be leaving Iraq sooner than later. With the different Iraqi groups killing each other to the tune of 150+/a day, I wonder how bad the killing will be with no monitoring agency left behind. Perhaps the other arab countries could put their money where their mouth is and organize a peacekeeping force.
America, what have you done? Can not Americans see the pain in this boy's face, and that of thousands of other kids, and say "Enough! Not in my name!"?
This was published in Common Dreams on 8 August, 2003. Sadly, it has proved itself in spades and been illustrated by almost four years of steadily increasing horrors.
http://www.commondreams.org/views03/0809-03.htm
What will make us learn?