While the US military claims to have killed roughly 200
“terrorists” in the operation, reports from the ground
state that most of the fighters inside the city had long since
left to avoid direct confrontation with the overwhelming
military force (a basic tenet of guerrilla warfare).
Again like Fallujah, most of the families who fled are
staying in refugee camps outside the city in tents amidst
horrible conditions in the inferno-like heat of the Iraqi
summer.
The LA Times reported that Ezzedin Dowla, a Turkmen leader
in the area said, “Families are homeless and the government
has not provided any shelter, food or drink for them.” Nor
has the US military.
The targets of this military operation are the Sunni
Turkmen who are politically on the side of the Sunni Arabs.
Most Sunnis will be voting against the constitution during the
coming vote of October, 15th.
The Cheney Administration is desperate for something it can
spin as “good news” from Iraq; thus, it most certainly
behooves them to have the referendum on the constitution to
boast about. But in order to do so, the voting ability and
power of the Sunni (and Sunni Turkmen) must be severely
compromised, as well as punishment meted out for rightfully
assuming what will be a Sunni no-vote on the constitution.
Both the Cheney Administration and its current
puppet-government in Iraq benefit from destroying the voting
(and living) ability of the majority of people in the “Sunni
triangle,” so we have the operation in Tal-Afar, most likely
to be followed by similar operations in Al-Qa’im, Haditha,
Samarra, and possibly more.
In Tal-Afar, the propaganda spewed by the US military (and
Iraqi “government”) was that the operation was to fight
terrorists coming into Iraq via Syria. If that were true, why
did the US military remove troops from the border with Syria
who were supposed to be preventing infiltration by foreign
fighters? Instead of guarding the border, as they should, they
engaged in the operation against Iraqi Sunni Turkmen. Working
in unison, the US military launched the heavy-handed attack
with the “authorization” of Prime Minister Ibrahm Jaafari,
the leader of the Shia Dawa Party. Jaafari even went so far as
to venture to Tal-Afar on Tuesday to visit troops and have his
photograph taken.
“Authorization” was given by the Iraqi government for
the attack on Tal-Afar, just as “authorization” was given
by then interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi for the November,
2004 massacre in Fallujah. “Authorization,” when the US
military would never, ever allow any foreign power
jurisdiction over American forces, least of all a puppet
government.
Correspondents with Azzaman media in Tal-Afar miraculously
made it into the city and reported that residents are
disputing reports that US and Iraqi soldiers have killed
scores of “insurgents.” Like Fallujah, these residents of
Tal-Afar are reporting that most of the people killed were
civilians who had no place to go so they chose to stay in
their homes. People also stayed because they feared
persecution at the hands of the Peshmerga and Badr Army.
I recently interviewed an Iraqi man from that area at the
Peoples’ UN conference in Perugia, Italy. He told me,
“Most people in Mosul and Tal-Afar would rather be detained
by the Americans now, because they know if Iraqi soldiers or
Iraqi police detain them they will be tortured severely, and
possibly killed. This gives you an idea of how bad it is with
these Iraqi soldiers, even in the shadow of what the Americans
are still doing in Abu Ghraib.”
As for “foreign fighters,” one of the Azzaman
correspondents quoted a resident of Tal-Afar as saying, “We
used to hear (from news reports) of the presence of some Arab
(foreign) fighters in the city, but we have seen none of
them.”
Life in Iraq remains a living hell. Blood flowed in the
streets of Khadamiya yesterday as a horrendous car bomb killed
112 people in the predominantly Shia neighborhood. And once
again, calls of solidarity were made from the nearby Sunni
neighborhood of Adhamiya and residents emerged from their
homes to help their brothers and sisters across the river,
just as they did after the panic and chaos which recently took
the lives of nearly 1,000 Shia.
The horrendous totals from yesterday were 160 dead, 570
wounded Iraqis as the result of the string of attacks and at
least a dozen car bombs. The blowback from the Jafaari
“authorized” state-sponsored terrorism in Tal-Afar took
little time to materialize in the capital city.
If Jafaari was more honest with his press appearances,
along with his photo-op in Tal-Afar he should have had his
photo taken amidst the charred, smoking body parts strewn
about the streets of Khadamiya, which was a result (albeit
just as horrific) of his Tal-Afar “authorization.”
On that note, Jalal Talabani, Iraq’s puppet president,
was in a press conference in Washington D.C. with Mr. Bush
just hours before the blowback began.
Meanwhile, one of my friends in Baghdad writes me, “Dear
Dahr, how are you dear pal? I am very sorry for what happened
after Hurricane Katrina. It is a real tragedy. I hope none of
your friends or family was affected. It is a tragedy which
makes one speechless.”
This when he goes to work each day hoping to make it home
alive to see his wife and newborn daughter.
And another of my friends in Baghdad wrote me recently,
“I’m so sorry that I didn’t email you the previous
days…the situation in Tal-Afar has become so much worse for
the people. It is terrible what is going on there and nobody
can say anything because as usual the military operation is
still going on and they are trying to keep all the media out.
They have also started another operation in another area of
Al-Anbar province and they will soon start one in Samarra.”
My interpreter when I’m in Iraq, Abu Talat, has been
willing to take the risk of working with me there. To give you
an idea of the lengths he’s willing to go to, he gave me the
green light to come to Iraq last November, just before the
massacre in Fallujah began. It is safe to say times were quite
tense then, with kidnappings and beheadings having long since
become the norm.
“The Minister of Defense is threatening not only Fallujah
but all of the Ramadi Governorate, I can tell you very surely
about that,” he wrote in a recent email to me and a
colleague who was hoping to enter Iraq to work as a reporter.
(Today, US warplanes began dropping bombs inside the city of
Ramadi.)
“No one can support you working here. We are having a
very critical situation. For this reason, I think that coming
to Iraq in this critical time is not accepted. I was very,
very welcoming to any of your friends, Dahr, but not in this
time. Sorry, but for your own safety. Take good care of
yourself.”
Today at least 30 more Iraqis have died in violence across
their occupied country and it will only continue to worsen.
Copyright: Dahr Jamail