Iraq Has Only Militants, No Civilians
"Sometimes I think it should be a rule of war that you have to see somebody up close and get to know him before you can shoot him." -- Colonel Potter, M*A*S*H
Name them. Maim them. Kill them.
From the beginning of the American occupation in Iraq, air strikes and attacks by the U.S. military have only killed "militants," "criminals," "suspected insurgents," "IED [Improvised Explosive Device] emplacers," "anti-American fighters," "terrorists," "military age males," "armed men," "extremists," or "al-Qaeda."
The pattern for reporting on such attacks has remained the same from the early years of the occupation to today. Take a helicopter attack on October 23rd of this year near the village of Djila, north of Samarra. The U.S. military claimed it had killed 11 among "a group of men planting a roadside bomb." Only later did a military spokesperson acknowledge that at least six of the dead were civilians. Local residents claimed that those killed were farmers, that there were children among them, and that the number of dead was greater than 11.
Here is part of the statement released by U.S. military spokeswoman in northern Iraq, Major Peggy Kageleiry:
"A suspected insurgent and improvised explosive device cell member was identified among the killed in an engagement between Coalition Forces and suspected IED emplacers just north of Samarra.... During the engagement, insurgents used a nearby house as a safe haven to re-engage coalition aircraft. A known member of an IED cell was among the 11 killed during the multiple engagements. We send condolences to the families of those victims and we regret any loss of life."
As usual, the version offered by locals was vastly different. Abdul al-Rahman Iyadeh, a relative of some of the victims, revealed that the "group of men" attacked were actually three farmers who had left their homes at 4:30 A.M. to irrigate their fields. Two were killed in the initial helicopter attack and the survivor ran back to his home where other residents gathered. The second air strike, he claimed, destroyed the house killing 14 people. Another witness told reporters that four separate houses were hit by the helicopter. A local Iraqi policeman, Captain Abdullah al-Isawi, put the death toll at 16 -- seven men, six women, and three children, with another 14 wounded.
As often happens, the U.S. military, once challenged, declared that an "investigation" of the incident was under way.
And So It Goes
On October 21st, two days before that helicopter strike near Djila, American soldiers, again aided by helicopters, but this time in a heavily populated urban neighborhood, claimed to have killed 49 "armed men" in a "gun battle" in Sadr City, a sprawling Shi'ite neighborhood in eastern Baghdad. Then, too, the military initially insisted "no civilians were killed or injured." A Shi'ite citizens' council and other Shi'ite groups responded that many innocent bystanders had died. Among the 13 dead mentioned in initial reports by local Iraqi police were three children and a woman. Other Iraqi authorities announced that 69 people had been injured.
The U.S. military had no explanation for the widely varying American and Iraqi tallies of casualties.
The official American account went like this:
"The operation's objective was an individual reported to be a long time Special Groups member specializing in kidnapping operations. Intelligence indicates he is a well-known cell leader and has previously sought funding from Iran to carry out high profile kidnappings. Upon arrival, the ground force began to clear a series of buildings in the target area and received sustained heavy fire from adjacent structures, from automatic weapons and rocket propelled grenades, or RPGs. Responding in self-defense, Coalition forces engaged, killing an estimated 33 criminals. Supporting aircraft was also called in to engage enemy personnel maneuvering with RPGs toward the ground force, killing an estimated six criminals. Upon departing the target area, Coalition forces continued to receive heavy fire from automatic weapons and RPGs and were also attacked by an improvised explosive device. Responding in self-defense, the ground force engaged the hostile threat, killing an additional estimated 10 combatants. All total, Coalition forces estimate that 49 criminals were killed in three separate engagements during this operation. Ground forces reported they were unaware of any innocent civilians being killed as a result of this operation."
To be fair, the military admitted that the target of this manhunt was not, in fact, among those captured or killed.
After the "operation," television news outlets broadcast images of grieving families in the streets of Sadr City. One man reported that his neighbor's 6-year-old child had been killed, and a 2-year-old wounded. Arab television outlets caught scenes of ambulances with wailing sirens carrying the injured to the Imam Ali hospital, the largest in Sadr City, where doctors were shown treating the casualties, including children.
Typically with such incidents, those 49 dead "criminals" turned back into civilians when local police began checking, including two (not three) children in their final count.
Iraqi Prime Minister Nour al-Maliki vowed an investigation for which U.S. military officials offered to form a joint committee; but, as is so often the case in such "investigations," there have been no follow-up reports. In this "incident," the U.S. military, as far as we know, still stands by its assertion that no civilians were killed or wounded.
Two months earlier, in a similar incident, the U.S. military claimed 32 "suspected insurgents" killed during an air strike, also in Sadr City, a claim disputed by Iraqis in the neighborhood, followed by the usual promise of an investigation -- of which, once again, nothing more was heard.
"Tactical Perception Management"
For perspective, let me take you back to Iraq in November 2003. I had been there less than a week on my first visit to that occupied country when the U.S. military reported a raging firefight between American forces and 150 of Saddam Hussein's former Fedayeen paramilitary fighters. According to General Peter Pace, then vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, American soldiers, on being attacked by the group, had responded fiercely and killed 54 of them. "They attacked and they were killed, so I think it will be instructive to them," General Pace had smugly observed.
Most of the Western media simply chalked up the number of "insurgent" dead at 54 and left it at that. Local media in Baghdad, as well as outlets like Al-Jazeera, were, however, citing very different figures taken directly from the hospital in Samarra where the wounded were being treated. Doctors there announced a count of eight killed in the incident, including an Iranian pilgrim, and 50 Iraqis wounded.
I traveled to Samarra that week, visited the morgue at Samarra General Hospital, spoke with wounded Iraqis at the hospital, and interviewed one of the leading sheikhs of the city as well as several eyewitnesses to the event. What I found was general agreement that a U.S. patrol had, in fact, come under attack -- but by only two gunmen while delivering money to a downtown bank. Jumpy American soldiers had responded with a spray of fire that had killed neither of the attackers, but eight civilians, while wounding 50 others. The streets in the city center, where the firing took place, were riddled with bullets.
The military, nonetheless, stood by their figure -- 54 dead -- and insisted that the enormous force of "insurgents" had attacked with mortars, grenades, and automatic weapons.
A man I interviewed, who had been in his tea stall in the vicinity and witnessed most of the incident, summed up the local reaction this way:
"The Americans say the people who fought them are al-Qaeda or fedayeen. We are all living in this small city here. Why have we not seen these foreign fighters and strangers in our city before or after this battle? Everyone here knows everyone, and none have seen these strangers. Why do they tell these lies?"
Another man, at the scene had drawn my attention to a parked car scarred with 112 bullets. As I was photographing it, a man with two children at his side approached. They were, he said, the children of his brother who had been killed by the gunfire.
"This little boy and girl, their father was shot by the Americans. Who will take care of this family? Who will watch over these children? Who will feed them now? Who? Why did they kill my brother? What is the reason? Nobody told me. He was a truck driver. What is his crime? Why did they shoot him? They shot him with 150 bullets! Did they kill him just because they wanted to shoot a man? That's it? This is the reason? Why didn't anyone talk to me and tell me why they have killed my brother? Is killing people a normal thing now, happening every day? This is our future? This is the future that the United States promised Iraq?"
My life as an independent reporter in his country was just beginning and his questions felt like so many blows to the gut. Of course, I was the only American reporter there to hear him and I was then writing for an email audience of under 200. This is what it means, in Pentagon terms, to dominate not only the battlefield, but the media landscape in which that battlefield is reported. And that sort of domination was, it turned out, very much on Pentagon minds in that period.
Within days of the incident, for instance, the New York Times published an article about how the Pentagon had awarded a contract to SAIC, a private company, which was to investigate ways the Department of Defense could use propaganda for more "effective strategic influence" in the "war on terror." The Pentagon referred to this potential propaganda blitz (which would eventually come back to haunt Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld) as a "tactical perception management campaign." The title of the document SAIC produced was "Winning the War of Ideas."
On December 2, 2005, the U.S. military would admit that the Lincoln Group, which described itself as "a strategic communications & pubic relations firm providing insight & influence in challenging & hostile environments," had been hired by the Pentagon to plant pro-American good-news articles in the new Iraqi "free" press that the Bush administration was just then touting. This was exposed during a briefing with Senator John Warner of Virginia, head of the Senate Armed Services Committee.
The admission would not, as one might have expected, prove a step towards deterrence. Not only did the Lincoln Group get further contracts, but a wide range of similar tactics continue to be employed by the military in Iraq today with even greater impunity. In Iraq, the propaganda and misinformation have, in fact, been continual and on a massive scale. And, of course, the regular announcements of Iraqi "insurgent" or "criminal" deaths in American operations have never stopped, nor have the announcements of "investigations," when those claims are seriously challenged on the ground -- investigations which, except in a few cases, are never heard of again. All this is a reminder of something George W. Bush once said: "See, in my line of work you got to keep repeating things over and over and over again for the truth to sink in, to kind of catapult the propaganda."
The Military Wrist is Slapped
Even when one of those investigations did lead somewhere, that somewhere was almost invariably a dead end. Take Haditha. Witnesses told reporters that, on November 19, 2005, in the western town of Haditha, 24 Iraqi civilians had been slaughtered by U.S. Marines. It was no secret that the Marines had shot men, women, and children at close range in retaliation for a roadside bombing that killed one of their own.
The Washington Post quoted Aws Fahmi, a Haditha resident who was watching from his home as Marines went from house to house killing members of three families. He had heard Younis Salim Khafif, his neighbor across the street, plead in English for his life and the lives of his family members. "I heard Younis speaking to the Americans, saying: 'I am a friend. I am good,'" Fahmi said. "But they killed him, and his wife and daughters."
A Post special correspondent and U.S. investigators in Washington reported that some of the dead were women attempting to shield their children. According to death certificates, the girls killed in Khafif's house were aged 14, 10, 5, 3, and 1.
After the news broke in the U.S., the military ordered a probe of the incident. An Iraqi had actually managed to film the interiors of the blood-soaked houses as well as scenes of the wounded at the Haditha hospital, and had recorded statements of eyewitnesses to the massacre.
Even now, two years after the massacre, investigations continue. Anonymous Pentagon officials having admitted to reporters that there is an abundance of evidence to support charges against the accused Marines of deliberately shooting civilians, including unarmed women and children. Currently, Marine Corps and Navy prosecutors are reviewing the evidence, and will likely ask for further probes.
As for the charges levied against the soldiers involved in the massacre, on April 2nd of this year, all of the charges against Sgt. Sanick P. Dela Cruz, who was accused of killing five civilians, were dropped as part of a decision that granted him immunity to testify in potential courts-martial for seven other Marines charged in the attack and in its alleged cover-up. On August 9th, all murder charges against Lance Cpl. Justin Sharratt and charges of failing to investigate the incident against Capt. Randy Stone were dropped by Lt. Gen. James Mattis, well-known for claiming of fighting in Afghanistan, "It's fun to shoot some people." On August 23th, the investigating officer suggested that charges against Lance Cpl. Stephen Tatum be dropped as well. On October 19th, Tatum's commanding officers decided the charges should be lowered to involuntary manslaughter, reckless endangerment, and aggravated assault. More recently, on September 18th, all charges against Capt. Lucas McConnell were dropped, and the investigating officer recommended that charges be similarly dropped against Lance Cpl. Stephen Tatum.
On October 3rd, an investigating officer of an Article 32 hearing (a proceeding similar to a civilian grand jury) recommended that Staff Sgt. Frank D. Wuterich be tried for negligent homicide in the deaths of two women and five children, and that the murder charges for his involvement in the killing of 17 innocent civilians, be dropped. In other words, so far, no one has gone to jail for the massacre in Haditha.
It is now commonplace for such investigations, regarding heinous crimes against Iraqi civilians, to drag on for months or even years. Equally commonplace: On completion of these investigations, the low-level soldiers, who are charged with the crimes, are often either cleared entirely or given laughably light sentences by military courts.
On November 8th, for instance, Staff Sgt. Michael Hensley, a sniper, was found not guilty by military judges on three charges of premeditated murder for killing three Iraqi civilians. He was instead convicted only of placing an AK-47 rifle with the remains of a dead Iraqi during one of his missions -- as evidence that the man was an "insurgent."
In January 2004, 19 year-old Zaidoun Hassoun, and his cousin Marwan Fadil were forced off a ledge into the Tigris River in Samarra at gunpoint by U.S. soldiers. Fadil survived. He testified that the soldiers, after forcing the two into the water, had stood by laughing as Hassoun drowned.
Sgt. 1st Class Tracy Perkins was the only soldier tried in the case. Defense attorney Captain Joshua Norris suggested that Perkins could not be convicted of manslaughter because there was "no body, no evidence, no death." He was, in fact, cleared of the involuntary manslaughter charge in a military court on January 9, 2005 and instead was reduced in rank by one grade and sentenced to six months in a military prison for assault.
Similarly, on June 6, 2006, three British soldiers were cleared of charges of killing 15-year-old Ahmed Jabber Kareem in May 2003 by forcing him into a Basra canal.
Iraqis Dehumanized
None of this -- from the unending "incidents" themselves to the way the Pentagon has dominated the reporting of them -- would have been possible without a widespread dehumanization of Iraqis among American soldiers (and a deep-set, if largely unexpressed and little considered, conviction on the American "home front" that Iraqi lives are worth little). If, four decades ago, the Vietnamese were "gooks," "dinks," and "slopes," the Iraqis of the American occupation are "hajis," "sand-niggers," and "towel heads." Latent racism abets the dehumanization process, ably assisted by a mainstream media that tends, with honorable exceptions, to accept Pentagon announcements as at least an initial approximation of reality in Iraq.
Whether it was "incidents" involving helicopter strikes in which those on the ground who died were assumed to be enemy and evil, or the wholesale destruction of the city of Fallujah in 2004, or the massacre at Haditha, or a slaughtered wedding party in the western desert of Iraq that was also caught on video tape (Marine Major General James Mattis: "How many people go to the middle of the desert.... to hold a wedding 80 miles from the nearest civilization? These were more than two dozen military-age males. Let's not be naive."), or killings at U.S. checkpoints; or even the initial invasion of Iraq itself, we find the same propaganda techniques deployed: Demonize an "enemy"; report only "fighters" being killed; stick to the story despite evidence to the contrary; if under pressure, launch an investigation; if still under pressure, bring only low-level troops up on charges; convict a few of them; sentence them lightly; repeat drill.
At the time of this writing, the group Just Foreign Policy has offered an estimate of Iraqis killed since the U.S.-led invasion and occupation. Their number: 1,118,846. Consider that possibility in the context of the latest round of news from Iraq about lessening violence.
The estimate is based on figures from a study conducted by researchers from Johns Hopkins University in the U.S. and al-Mustansiriya University in Baghdad, and published in October 2006 in the British Medical Journal, The Lancet, which found 655,000 Iraqis had died as a direct result of the Anglo-American invasion and occupation. The report methodology has been called "robust" and "close to best practice" by Sir Roy Anderson, the chief scientific advisor to Britain's Ministry of Defense. Since that time, in addition to Just Foreign Policy, the British research polling agency Opinion Research Business has extrapolated a figure of 1.2 million deaths in Iraq. Based on this, veteran Australian born journalist John Pilger wrote recently, "The scale of death caused by the British and U.S. governments may well have surpassed that of the Rwanda genocide, making it the biggest single act of mass murder of the late 20th century and the 21st century."
It is an indication of the success of an effective Pentagon "tactical perception management campaign," of the way the Bush administration has continued to "catapult propaganda," and of the dehumanization of Iraqis that has gone with it, that the possibility of the number of dead Iraqis being in this range has largely been dismissed (or remained generally undealt with) in the mainstream media in the United States. Add to that the refusal of the U.S. military to bring justice to those charged with some of these heinous crimes, the lack of accountability, and an establishment media which has regularly camouflaged the true nature of the occupation, and we have the perfect setting for a continuance of industrial-scale slaughter in Iraq, even while the news highlights the likes of Britney Spears and Lindsay Lohan and their adventures in various rehab clinics.
In what could reasonably serve as a summary of the American occupation of Iraq, the eighteenth century philosopher Voltaire wrote, "It is forbidden to kill; therefore all murderers are punished unless they kill in large numbers and to the sound of trumpets."
Dahr Jamail. an independent journalist, is the author of the just-published Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches from an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq (Haymarket Books, 2007). Jamail reported from occupied Iraq for eight months as well as from Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, and Turkey over the last four years. He writes regularly for Tomdispatch.com, Inter Press Service, Asia Times, and Foreign Policy in Focus. He has contributed to The Sunday Herald, The Independent, The Guardian, and The Nation, among other publications. He maintains a website, Dahr Jamail's Mideast Dispatches, with all his writing.
Copyright 2007 Dahr Jamail
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31 Comments so far
Show AllPEACEMAKER - Jay Leno's jokes are another qualified source.
Consider how much worse things will have become when they kill off the "court jesters", and turn what's left of the lights into DARKNESS?
Namaste
__ __ __ __ We must be the change
__ __ __ __ we wish to see in the world __ Gandhi
I've noticed that for a long time now. No one is ever a civilian they are all called terrorist's of one form or another in our media. Here recently Bush has started using the term al Qaeda I noticed. It makes him sound like he is doing his job that he should have been doing 6 years ago. No doubt the fringe lunatics love it. After all isn't that supposedly why he invaded Iraq?????? Because it was a haven for al Qaeda? There isn't a single solitary thing involving Iraq that I believe. Our media is so skewed to the right and what Bush wants to hear that most of the news only qualifies as right wing propaganda. So I spend my time on the Internet and reading books to get a half way clear picture of what's going on in this world. The only news I get on television comes from Keith Olbermann and Jon Stewart. That is truly a pathetic state of affairs when one has to look to entertainment to get a even half way accurate picture of what is going on in this country.
thewonderingyou; Leave the word 'karma' out...its okay by me. Its an easier way of saying, 'the consequences of one's actions'. But I agree.
I like your thought on the Dahr Jamail Iraqi connection. Thanks for the idea.
The best to you and yours.
principessaflamenco November 27th, 2007 11:20 am
I humbly believe it inevitably will...Who on earth would like to be walking George Bush or Dick Cheney's [etal] shoes...vengance is the "Lords" as is quoted in the Old Testement. Not that I want to get all biblical mind you. But these vilians have occurred through out History. They all seem to meet the same unsavoury or untimely demises.
simonhhh,
That's right. This veterans pay a high price for their crimes in the Middle East. Once they come home they have to suffer the hell of being maimed or PTSD. If only this karma went all the way back to the "leadership"...
No one, I repeat no one escapes the Karma they sow...including countries. Call it societal Karma.
If you want some proof of this,
[Go to]
"Pentagon Cover Up: 15,000 or More US Deaths in Iraq War?"
by Mike Whitney
"The Pentagon has been concealing the true number of American casualties in the Iraq War. The real number exceeds 15,000 and CBS News can prove it.
CBS's Investigative Unit wanted to do a report on the number of suicides in the military and "submitted a Freedom of Information Act request to the Department of Defense". After 4 months they received a document which showed--that between 1995 and 2007-- there were 2,200 suicides among "active duty" soldiers.
Baloney.
The Pentagon was covering up the real magnitude of the "suicide epidemic". Following an exhaustive investigation of veterans' suicide data collected from 45 states; CBS discovered that in 2005 alone "there were at least 6,256 among those who served in the armed forces. That's 120 each and every week in just one year."
That is not a typo. Active and retired military personnel, mostly young veterans between the ages of 20 to 24, are returning from combat and killing themselves in record numbers. We can assume that "multiple-tours of duty" in a war-zone have precipitated a mental health crisis of which the public is entirely unaware and which the Pentagon is in total denial.
If we add the 6,256 suicide victims from 2005 to the "official" 3,865 reported combat casualties; we get a sum of 10,121. Even a low-ball estimate of similar 2004 and 2006 suicide figures, would mean that the total number of US casualties from the Iraq war now exceed 15,000.
That's right; 15,000 dead US servicemen and women in a war that--as yet--has no legal or moral justification. CBS interviewed Dr. Ira Katz, the head of mental health at the Department of Veteran Affairs. Katz attempted to minimize the surge in veteran suicides saying, "There is no epidemic of suicide in the VA, but suicide is a major problem." [excerpt]
Global Research, November 18, 2007
I work with a 'respectable' American physician every day who ridiculed my expressed concern for the violent deaths of Moslem children in Iraq and Afghanistan caused by American bullets and bombs:"If Moslem children get killed by American bombs...don't blame us. Blame the parents (of these children) for not practicing responsible birth control." He is president of a Rotary Club, on hospital boards and can do no wrong in the eyes of most of his colleagues and subordinates, who share some level of his racism. Fascism is deeply ingrained in American society-and as long as there are no repercussions for such views and behaviors - it will continue to dominate our culture. This is precisely why no American soldiers - no matter how disgusting and criminal their behavior - have really been punished for acts which would be considered capital crimes in civilian life. They will never allow the system to be put on trial.
PDA (Progressive Democrats of America) is conducting this straw poll to determine which of the currently declared Democratic Candidates our membership is supporting for President.
Polling is open until 3pm Eastern time on December 4.)
https://www.pdamerica.org/polls/poll-pres-2008-1.php
STEPFOUR - I believe that you see the puppet rightly so,
but neither the strings nor the controlling (purposely unseen) hands.
THE WONDERING YOU - the weight of said debt is likely much larger than many know, due to so many BLACK OPS. If someone is tortured in an empty forest, can we hear their anguished cries? No, we can only see this indirectly on this plane of existence, but the score is nonetheless counting - and BALANCE is nature's temperament.
The burden will be uplifted out of compassion, intimacy (shared commitments), and LOVE -- so that survival will prevail, and ironically we'll evolve into Reagan's 'thousand points of light' (but little else will stand). The absurdity of his delusion becoming real, of that, and the end of 'big government' too. A real hoot.
Namaste
__ __ __ __ We must be the change
__ __ __ __ we wish to see in the world __ Gandhi
peaceman:
"The United States has a heavy karmic debt to pay." It's rare that ten words in a CD comment carry so much weight beyond the initial read, but all Americans should think long and hard about those words. If you don't believe in karma (I don't) then strike that word out and let the other nine resonate deeply. Well said. We will (and should) all share the burden.
Siouxrose:
I like your "balance" idea, but I can only wish it were true. There's another way of looking at it (Kaku's book will fill you in on the details in much better depth and prose than I could) and it is this: order - disorder = 0
For this purpose, you can ascribe all the wonderful and beautiful and good things to the variable "order" and all the terrible, ugly, and bad things to "disorder." While I don't think we're soon headed for a "tipping point" or "threshold" in any permanent sense, I think that my lifetime and yours will see an ever-increasing level of violence, misery, disaster, and pain. I think that, but I don't fully believe that. However, the pockets of goodness will likely become ever more separated over the next decade, with climate change abetting the disparity. And the despair. My only hope is that connections can be forged and held true amongst the hopeful, the positive, the good, the compassionate. Connections that can keep the pockets from drifting too far, like galaxies in universal expansion, for light to pass between them.
We'll bear the burden, peaceman, but if we stick together we'll survive. Everyone: contact Jamail and ask how you can form a connection with someone in Iraq. When the American Empire is dead and gone (and it will be) we will need those connections.
The blame for all this belongs with the embedded mass media. They goaded America into violent military occupation, they disinformed America about the consequences, and they continue to pass on government lies about every engagement. There must be a bullet out there somewhere with Ted Koppel's name on it.
mirf59:
1 million dead due to Clinton in Iraq? It was Bush 41 who blasted the infrastructure to pieces, and began the blockade and oversaw the 1st 2 years. Bush deserves majority blame for the deaths. This is not to absolve Clinton, who took years to allow the "oil for food" program to make things somewhat better.
Thanks Dahr Jamail, for your continued
brave work. Real info is very rare, my hat
is off to you, Brother.
And another thing- we've been reading reports like this where the americans are attacked, they "engage the enemy" a"fierce fire fight" ensues, and there are 54, 87, 103 dead "enemies"but no american casualties. what does a "fight" like that look like? if you keep reading sooner or later you'll learn air strikes were called in, and artillery. That's what we call "fighting". hitting people with weapons they don't have, from a comfortable distance. unbelievable how they can keep reporting this stuff with a straight face.
Dahr Jamail has done a great job of reporting from Iraq, never accepting the military story, always going to the scene of the crime and listening to the Iraqi people. And telling the truth. What a guy.
Tyrants and despots love to do God's work. In fact most wars are fought for God's sake. The question is, has God taken a hiatus for too long?
Satan has been working overtime. It needs a rest and some Kool-Aid.
Bush is doing God's work in Iraq, just ask him. In the book of Job, it explains that ALL Arabs, ___ ALL,___ men women and children are the sons of Satan and must be destroyed. ___ "So there ya go, don't have to woory about that Karma fellow, Yup,yup,yup,yup." Bush might likely say.
Of course the Bible was re-written for a King James, I imagine a few words were lost or modified in the process.
Sounds like ten gallons of blood and pain and misery for every gallon of oil, gas or deisel. Americans, I ask you quite simply, is it really worth that much to you?
It really hurts to be sorry that you were a soldier ......... so it goes.
And we wonder why "they hate us"...
Poo-tee-weet.
ezeflyer; Good news, girl! There was an article in the newspaper last week that said the Iraq/Middle East movies aren't doing so well at the box office. (GOOD!) Could it be the 'public' is catching on quicker than we think?
siouxrose; Correct! Not one jot or one tittle goes un-noticed.
lillulu; armed force is not to be glorified. Movies and tv shows have saturated the viewing audience with murder and violence. Kids grow up on this trash and want to imitate their 'movie heros'. Keep the faith.
jmacneil; Colin Powell was the investigative officer in the My Lai massacre. One foot follows the other. A cover-up in Vietnam and a lie at the UN about Iraq.
"Sometimes I think it should be a rule of war that you have to see somebody up close and get to know him before you can shoot him." — Colonel Potter, M*A*S*H
Great quote. The MSM is for spreading jingoism, superstition, consumerism and for sedating the poor and dwindling middle class, not for showing body bags and bullet riddled kids. How else can they get ours to pillage and murder for the oligarchy?
Although there is something to be said for counting, giving faces to the dead, I wish to remind CD readers that these egregious deeds, cold-blooded murder, are NOT gotten away with. Our universe IS a sentient entity. Just as the tiny chips inside our computers hold enormous amounts of DATA, whatsoever is done unto the least of these is recorded by the Spiritual hierarchy, the Lords of karma, and so forth. WE design our future incarnations by how we live today: how we treat others figuring substantially on that esoteric "balance sheet."
Dahr Jamail is an extraordinary reporter and I have listened to him on kpfa.org (on the internet) or on kpfa radio, 94.1 fm out of Berkely, Ca. for some years, and his excellent coverage of Iraq.
The last sentence in his fine article, a quote by Voltaire, kind of summed up 'war' in general. It reminds me of a sign at an anti-war march. "Kill one person, it's murder. Kill thousands and it's foreign policy".
mirf59; As told to some relatives of mine many years ago by a US Army Brigadier General who worked in the Pentagon in WW2, he said that in 1944, Japan knew the war was lost and sent envoys to several countries looking for an 'honorable' surrender. Our defense industries were booming, and they preferred keeping the war going for another year or so. I mentioned this several months ago.
When asked about a half a million Iraqi babies and young children who died because of Clinton's economic sanctions, she said something to the effect of, 'that's the way it goes'. Did she feel the same way about the starving Germans in the latter days of WW2 when they took the food from the Jewish detainees at the slave labor camps to feed there own families? We've all seen the skin and bone films and photgraphs. Two wrongs never add up to one right.
The 'hippies' had it together when they said, "make love, not war".
Before 9/11 and before Operation Iraqi Freedom, or whatever it is being called now, let's not forget that the Clinton Administration set the bar for mass killing with relentless bombing of Iraq.
It has been estimated that as many as 1 million innocent Iraqis died as a result of bombings and economic sanctions under Clinton, so that set the precedent even before 9/11 that an Iraqi life was of no strategic importance.
Anyway, you can follow this line back to the bombing of Tokyo in WWII, after Hiroshima and Nagasaki and FAR worse at more than 1 million dead. Then, all the way back to the slaughter of Native Americans, the slaughter of Mexicans on the flimsiest of pretexts, and indeed to the landing of the murderous imperialist Christopher Columbus.
From the very first moment up until now, we have been a murdering people. And, it is quite clear that it shows no sign of slowing and there is no evidence that we have advanced socially one iota.
And don't you just know that the writers of the us army recruiting show JAG (gag), if they're not on strike right now, will be writing nice fluffy fictions about how the few bad apples in one rgmt or another get their just deserts by being sent to jail. While the heroic patriots of the tv show dispence candies to the local kids. Ahhh, if only they'd actually try to film the episode in Iraq, of course then there'd be news of how evil Iranian backed al-Queda groups massacred the tv crew and the stars were maimed by a roadside bomb.
Wishing you luck as you continue to tell honest tales from Iraq Mr. Jamail.
One hopes that those who live by the sword also die by the sword, one countries insurgents are another countries patriots, anyone with half a brain knows from which country the real terrorists come from
It's astounding to a civilized mind how the United States continues to get away with killing suspects. No proof needed. Just kill them -- the same way Iraq was attacked. There was no proof that the Iraqis were dangerous and planned to attack the world's super power. There is also no proof that Iran is a danger. What a lawless, greedy, bigoted bunch the Bush-Cheney Crime Syndicate is!
The United States has a heavy karmic debt to pay.
Yeah, we've seen it all before. With Calley and the My Lai incident in Vietnam and with the Body Count. It's nothing new and, in fact, it can never be any different for those kind of worthless and valueless human specimens because there is, ultimately, only one way to achieve their evil ends, and that is to kill and destroy and appropriate. But this time is different. This time their evil deeds have been seen by the light of day and they will never be forgot or condoned. This time that vile scum is going to descend into the hell which they so rightly deserve and there is no force on this planet which will prevent that just reward.
According to the US, anyone who is opposing their agenda of stealing resources in the ME is called a terrorists. Just call them AQ, or AQ-linked organizations and we are good. Same thing with Israel and Palestine......nothing new here.....this is the way to legitimize all the thieving and murder or land and black gold.