.

"Go Out From Our
City..."
The Washington Post has a bloodcurdling
report on one of the two most crucial Iraqi nuclear sites - just
outside Baghdad, no less - which was thoroughly looted before the
other day American troops were finally sent in. Okay, so you skip the
National Museum and the National Library, the local hospitals and the
various governmental ministries, but the Baghdad Nuclear Research
Facility? Not a patrol, not a tank, not a single guard? Earth to Bush
administration…
compiled and edited by Tom
Engelhardt
05/04/03: (Nation
Institute) What follows is an Iraq update. It's important to keep
in mind right now that knowledge of the future is no more within the
grasp of the Bush administration - even were they to probe it with
JDAMs and Moabs, Bradley fighting vehicles and Predator drones -- than
any of the rest of us. Despite neocon dreams of a remade Middle East
and a remade world (which, if they came true, would certainly make us
the empire of empires, though we might well be presiding over a ruined
world), their actual planning simply for postwar Iraq seems to this
point to be proving woeful indeed. Even on issues of the greatest
concern to them - the oil of Iraq and the much proclaimed weapons of
mass destruction of the Saddam Hussein regime - they have so far
proved dreadful postwar planners. The oil fields were looted after the
war and, far more terrifying, so were crucial sites where weapons of
mass destruction, or at least unknown quantities of dangerous
materials, might conceivably have been found.
The Washington Post has a bloodcurdling report on one of the
two most crucial Iraqi nuclear sites - just outside Baghdad, no less -
which was thoroughly looted before the other day American troops were
finally sent in. Okay, so you skip the National Museum and the
National Library, the local hospitals and the various governmental
ministries, but the Baghdad Nuclear Research Facility? Not a patrol,
not a tank, not a single guard? Earth to Bush administration….
But this has, in fact, been a pattern of our occupation in its very
early days. ABC News (Lost
Viruses?) reported on April 17, for instance, that at Baghdad's
Central Public Health Laboratory,
"Dangerous strains of cholera, black fever, HIV, polio and
hepatitis may have been lost during the postwar looting of Iraq's
key disease-control facility, ABCNEWS has learned. The U.S. military
is worried they may be used as weapons…. Scientists say looters
took refrigerators full of the deadly viruses last Friday, but
they're not sure what's actually missing. 'They are in containers,
all of these things taken together, cholera, AIDS and black fever,'
chemist Rasa Al-Alaq said. 'The viruses that are lost, we have no
idea where they went.'
"U.S. Marines were sent to guard the facility today after
Iraqi scientists reported the dangerous material had been removed by
looters. U.S. officials admit they have no idea what was in there,
how much was taken or where it is now."
Below, in addition to the Washington Post report, I include
an assessment of postwar America's first steps in and out of Iraq by openDemocracy's
Paul Rogers as well as a first-hand account by ever-reliable Observer
reporter Ed Vulliamy on the results in Fallujah of American troops
firing into crowds of protesters ("Go Out From Our City....
Because You Are Come Here For Petrol Not for Freedom") - perhaps
a taste of things to come in Iraq – and, from the Foreign Policy
in Focus website, an assessment by Ahmed Rashid, author of the
definitive book, Taliban, and another reliable reporter on
Islam and the region, on the rise of Islamic feeling in Iraq. None of
this was foreseen before the war as in Iraq's immediate
"future." Tom
Losing the peace
By Paul Rogers
openDemocracy
May 1, 20003
Donald Rumsfeld's visit to the Middle East involved only the
briefest of stops in Iraq, but it was evidently an occasion for
celebrating a famous victory. In doing so, he made it clear that
destroying the Saddam Hussein regime was only the first example of
the US strategy of pre-empting possible threats.
This argument may lose some of its potency as a result of the
failure to find the supposedly ready-to-use weapons of mass
destruction, but this problem is hardly going to interfere with a
triumphal 'good news' story.
After all, a brutal and repressive regime in Iraq has been
destroyed and a people liberated. Once again, the irony that in a
previous existence, Donald Rumsfeld was leader of a US mission to
Baghdad when Saddam Hussein was a valued ally can be conveniently
forgotten....
To
read more Rogers click here
Bloodshed and bullets fuel rising hatred of Americans
By Ed Vulliamy
The Observer
May 4, 2003
For 15 years, the three al-Ani brothers have run a taxi business
from their adjacent houses, opposite the local school. It was a nice
place to live, recalls Raid al-Hati, their neighbour and cousin, a
quiet part of town.
The brothers shared one vehicle. 'It was a living,' said Osama,
now in hospital and rasping through the pain of gunshot injuries to
his head and side.
The family has been torn to shreds after their homes were sprayed
by American gunfire during an incident that represents a turning
point in the invasion of Iraq, as hostility to the US military
intensifies.
A crowd gathered outside the al-Ani's house last week, demanding
that the Americans leave the school over the road so that children
can return. The military opened fire, killing 13 and wounding some
35; they claimed they were shot at first.
To
read more Vulliamy click here
Shiite And Sunni Muslims Struggle To Fill Leadership Void In
Iraq
By Ahmed Rashid
Foreign Policy in Focus
May 2, 2003
Anti-American protests in Iraq, such as the April 28 incident in
Fallujah that left an estimated 15 Iraqis dead, should not come as a
surprise to Washington. Most Iraqis don't share the U.S. vision of a
reconstructed Iraq resting on a foundation of Western-style
democracy. For many, the end of Saddam Hussein's regime has prompted
a yearning for a religious and cultural revival, raising the
prospect of an Islamic state based on conservative Shiite beliefs.
Although it appears certain that Iraq is set for a revival of
Islamic values, at present there remains ample room for religious
developments to move in many directions. The revival could move
toward the recognition of Iraq's Islamic legacy while making it
compatible with greater freedom, economic development, and openness
to the outside world….
Ahmed Rashid is a journalist and the author of Jihad: The Rise of
Militant Islam in Central Asia and a contributor to Foreign Policy
in Focus (online at www.fpif.org)
and to Power Trip: Unilateralism and Global Strategy after September
11 (Seven Stories, 2003). This first appeared on EurasiaNet (online
at www.eurasianet.org).)
To
read more Rashid click here
Iraqi Nuclear Site Is Found Looted
U.S. Team Unable to Determine Whether Deadly Materials Are
Missing By Barton Gellman
The Washington Post
May 4, 2003
NEAR KUT, Iraq, May 3 -- A specially trained Defense Department
team, dispatched after a month of official indecision to survey a
major Iraqi radioactive waste repository, today found the site
heavily looted and said it was impossible to tell whether nuclear
materials were missing.
The discovery at the Baghdad Nuclear Research Facility was the
second since the end of the war in which a known nuclear cache was
plundered extensively enough that authorities could not rule out the
possibility that deadly materials had been stolen. The survey,
conducted by a U.S. Special Forces detachment and eight nuclear
experts from a Pentagon office called the Direct Support Team,
appeared to offer fresh evidence that the war has dispersed the
country's most dangerous technologies beyond anyone's knowledge or
control.
To
read more Gellman click here
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