|
Iraq:
What Went Wrong?
Talk
delivered
July 22, 2004
to Roslindale
Neighbors for Peace and Justice
by Stephen Soldz
)
07/26/04
-- After
invading
Iraq
, the leader of the conquering army proclaimed:
"Our
armies do not come in your cities and lands as conquerors or
enemies, but as liberators ... I am commanded to invite you to
participate in the management of your own civil affairs."
Was
this George Bush, Tony Blair, Paul Bremer, or Lt. Gen. Ricardo
Sanchez? No, it was conquering British General Stanley Maude, in
1917.1,2
This was
after
Iraq
was conquered, during the First World War.
Soon,
thereafter, their hopes for independence betrayed, the Iraqis
launched a rebellion. The British used their superior weaponry
to suppress it, including the new poison gas, recommended by T.
E. Lawrence, Lawrence of Arabia.3 Winston Churchill
commented:
"I
do not understand this squeamishness about the use of gas... I
am strongly in favour of using poisoned gas against uncivilised
tribes."3
Approximately
450 British troops died while suppressing the rebellion. While
then, as now, no one counted Iraqi deaths, estimates range from
8,000 to 10,000.1
Forty-seven
year old Winston Churchill was appointed to come up with a
solution. A ruler was found. He wasn't Iraqi, but from
Saudi Arabia
, but that didn't matter. Prince Faisal became a
British-appointed king. A regime was set up with the minority
Sunni religious group dominant and the majority Shiites kept
largely powerless.
After
a 40 years, the British lost control. But the Americans retained
influence, helping the Ba'ath party attain -- including young
Saddam Hussein -- attain power and giving them lists of
thousands of Iraqis, communists and others, to be assassinated.4
We
Americans may choose to ignore history, but Iraqis absorb these
facts with their mother's milk.
Fast
forward. The
US and Britain invade Iraq based on trumped up charges, as we
now are all aware, but at the time, only those who read
independent reporting knew.
Looting
sweeps the country. The
US
does nothing to stop it. US Defense Secretary Rumsfeld likens
the chaotic situation in Iraq to post-revolutionary America.5
Rumors and eyewitness accounts abound that at least some US
troops encouraged looters.6, 7 Much of the Iraqi
infrastructure is destroyed. Most government buildings are
destroyed, with the exception of the Planning Ministry (with its
intelligence files) and the Oil Ministry, which the
US
saw fit to protect.8, 9
While
Americans are warily welcomed in parts of postwar
Iraq
, in others, they are not viewed so positively.
April 28, 2003
. 15 people are shot and killed by American troops in Falluja,
who claimed they were fired upon. A reporter from the British
paper the Independent examines the building the
US
troops were in and find no signs of bullet holes that could have
come from the crowd outside.10 The US press ignores
this. A few days later, more Fallujans are shot by
US
troops.11 Sheik Talid Alesawi, a Sunni cleric says:
"We understood freedom by making demonstrations. But the
shooting that greeted us was not freedom. Are there two types of
freedom, one for you and one for us?"11
The
Iraqi summer arrives. Temperatures often get to 120F, sometimes
140. Much of the country has electricity for only a few hours a
day, so Iraqis get little relief from air conditioning.12
Many take to the traditional method of sleeping on the roof.13
Sometimes they get killed by US troops who can't distinguish
12-year old children from insurgents.14
US
companies get billions of dollars in reconstruction contracts,
but the electricity doesn't flow. It never consistently gets up
to prewar levels, which were already low, due to over a decade
of US-inspired UN sanctions.15 In oil rich Iraq,
lines for gasoline stretch miles and take many hours to
navigate.
Crime
sweeps
Iraq
. Murders, kidnapping abound. The
Baghdad
morgue fills up with hundreds of corpses of murdered Iraqis each
week. The occupation authorities resolutely respond, by banning
reporters from entering hospitals or mortuaries without
permission, which they refuse to give.16, 17 No one
knows how many Iraqis have died or are dying. British reporter
Robert Fisk estimates nearly a 1,000 people a week are dying
from crime, American errors, the settling of feuds, and other
reasons.18 In September, 2003, Fisk estimates the
death toll under occupation as at least 10,000, but nobody knows
for sure.18 The Ministry of Health starts to count
civilians killed during the war, but they are ordered by their
so-called Iraqi Governing Council and the US occupation
authorities to stop counting.19
Many
Iraqis are afraid to leave their homes. Women, in particular, no
longer feel safe to leave their homes unaccompanied.20
Many teen-age girls spend most of the next year seldom leaving
home. [Imagine your daughters forced to stay home for a year.
And Iraqi houses are, of course, smaller than most American
ones.]
Iraq
is a very family-oriented society. People typically travel to
visit their varied family members. But, in liberated
Iraq
, travel on a highway is an extremely dangerous activity.
Criminals, referred to as Ali Babas, roam the highways. Over
150,000 American and other foreign troops do little to make the
roads safe. In fact, the resistance is setting IED –-
Improvised Explosive Devices –- along the roads, to bomb
American tanks and armed personnel carriers. The Americans take
to moving in convoys, often slow-moving. Iraqi drivers who try
and pass these convoys frequently find themselves shot, or even
crushed, by confused, terrified, American troops.21
Others die in other "accidental"
US
shootings.22-25
The
new
US
rulers of
Iraq
live in a special area, called the Green Zone, centered on one
of Saddam Hussein's former palaces. Staff and consultants are
largely chosen for their political affiliations and have little
expertise in
Iraq
history or culture.26, 27 As the Washington Post
reported: "[M]ost CPA hiring was done by the White House
and Pentagon personnel offices, with posts going to people with
connections to the Bush administration or the Republican Party.
The job of reorganizing
Baghdad
's stock exchange, which has not reopened, was given in
September to a 24-year-old who had sought a job at the White
House."15 There are few Arabic speakers. Soon,
it is too dangerous for most Americans to venture outside the
Green Zone. Why would they want to, anyway? It has US stores and
fast food joints selling chicken nuggets and ribs.28
In a Muslim country, where many view drinking as a sin, the
Green Zone has bars for each agency involved in the occupation.29
The CIA has its own bar, so its agents aren't inconvenienced by
leaving the Green Zone for Iraq. As many Iraqis turn to Islam
for comfort and support in tough times, American women in the
Green Zone jog in their shorts and sports bras.30 If
the occupiers want a taste of local color, they can always go to
the market and buy Middle Eastern knives and swords.28
An American officer says of the occupation officials "Our
soldiers call them the League of Frightened Gentlemen."31
And
those
US
troops, many of whom had never been to another US state, are now
in a foreign country. They can't speak the language. The army
had only about 70 Arabic translators in total32 and
at most 1,300 active duty soldiers could speak any Arabic.33
Unlike when the
US
army went into
Germany
,
Japan
, or
Korea
, when they invaded
Iraq
, they did NOT create any crash course to train Arabic
translators. Over and over again, confused messages at
checkpoints lead to Iraqi deaths.23, 34, 35
US
officials disband the Iraqi army, an army that largely didn't
fight the American invaders, throwing hundreds of thousands of
Iraqis out of work with the stroke of a pen.36 In a
country with a state-dominated economy, tens of thousands of
members of the ruling party are forbidden from working for the
state, becoming essentially unemployable.37
A
bunch of exiles, many out of the country for 30 years, are flown
in and appointed to a so-called Iraqi Governing Council, but are
given no power. Among them is Ahmed Chalabi, a convicted felon
in
Jordan
, whom the US Pentagon expected would become ruler of
Iraq
. His private militia is flown in by
US
planes.38 He assumes, without
US
objection, personal control of files on hundreds of thousands of
former Ba'athists, allowing him to settle old scores39
and gain influence through using them for blackmail.40
Chalabi's relatives are appointed to many positions in the new
society. They start businesses, making money off reconstruction
efforts. His nephew is appointed to be in charge of prosecuting
deposed President Saddam Hussein. Iraqis start routinely
referring to the "Governing Council' as the "Puppet
Council". Many members of this Council spend most of their
time traveling out of the country and never bring their families
back to
Iraq
.
US
administrator Paul Bremer complains that at least half of them
are out of the country at any given time and often only four or
five show up for meetings.41 When the Council was
disbanded in June, 2004, many members immediately flew back into
exile, having no further interest in the "new
Iraq
."
The
Iraqi woman blogger, Riverbend, described the Council thus42:
"Of
course they're outside of the country -- many of them don't have
ties in it. They have to visit their families and businesses in
Europe
and
North America
. For some of them, it
sometimes seems like the 'Governing Council' is something of an
interesting hobby -- a nice little diversion in the monthly
routine: golf on Saturdays, a movie with the family in London on
Fridays, a massage at the spa on Tuesdays, and, oh yes --
nation-building for 5 minutes with Bremer on the Xth of each
month.
"People
here never see them. Most live in guarded compounds and one
never knows what country they are currently in. For example,
Chalabi is presently missing. I haven't seen him on the news
for... I don't know how long. If anyone has seen him, please
send an email -- I'm dying to know what he's up to.
"I
can imagine Bremer preparing for a meeting with the pioneers of
Iraqi democracy, the pillars of liberty ... the Iraqi Puppet
Council. He strides in with his chic suit, flowing hair and
polished shoes (the yellow nation-building boots are only for
press conferences and photo shoots in Iraqi provinces). He is
all anticipation and eagerness: today will be the day. *This*
meeting will be the productive meeting which will make
headlines.
"He
strides into the lavish room, Italian heels clicking on the
marble floor -- there will be 25 faces today. Twenty-five pairs
of adoring eyes will follow him around the room. Twenty-five
pairs of eager ears will strain to hear his words of wisdom.
Twenty-five faces will light up with... but where are the 25? He
stops in the middle of the room, heart sinking, ire rising in
leaps and bounds. Why are there only 5 unsure faces? Did he have
the schedule wrong? Was this the wrong conference room?!
"And
Bremer roars and rages -- where are the Puppets? Where are the
marionettes?! How dare they miss yet another meeting! But they
all have their reasons, Mr. Bremer: Talbani is suffering from
indigestion after an ample meal last night; Iyad Allawi is
scheduled for a pedicure in Switzerland this afternoon; Al-Hakim
is jetting around making covert threats to the Gulf countries,
and Chalabi says he's not attending meetings anymore, he's left
the country and will be back when it's time for the
elections..."
The
resistance picks up steam. Surprisingly, the birthplace of
civilization, the home of Babylon and Nineveh, is not thrilled
about being occupied by foreign troops, from another continent,
of a different religion, who do not speak their language, who
fail to improve life for Iraqis, who seem especially interested
in Iraq's oil and strategic importance. The Americans fight
back, setting up huge concrete walls around the former
dictator's palaces, where they set up camp. Houses are raided in
the middle of the night by US troops who can only yell a few
words. Women and children are handcuffed and held at gunpoint.
Thousands of people, mostly, but not all, men, are taken away,
many to the former dictator's Abu Ghraib prison and torture
center. Rumors spread that the Americans are themselves
torturing prisoners, at Abu Ghraib and elsewhere. Women
prisoners smuggle out a letter asking the resistance to bomb the
prison and kill them all because of the shame they feel after
being raped.43 Detained male children are sodomized
and this treatment is videotaped.44-46
Meanwhile,
thousands of Iraqi families who's members were arrested or just
disappeared, search for their loved ones, usually in vain. The
United States
, with all its high tech supercomputers, doesn't bother to keep
useable, accessible records of those they detain.47, 48
What few lists do exist are in English, not Arabic and are full
of errors. When people are released, days, weeks, or months
after being detained, in many cases after never having even been
questioned,48 they are frequently just dumped on the
streets outside the prison, in some cases in their underwear.
American intelligence officials tell the International Committee
of the Red Cross that 70%-90% of detainees are completely
innocent.49
The
occupying force talks of bringing democracy to
Iraq
. They describe how this democracy will become a beacon for the
Middle East
. Yet, a Governing Council primarily of exiles with few roots in
the country is appointed by the occupiers. Local elections are,
in many cases, scheduled, then cancelled.50, 51
Mayors and governors, often former Iraqi military officers, are
appointed. In some cases these appointees are from different
parts of the country and are known to be corrupt and/or brutal.
In
the fall of 2003, the Iraqi Ministry of Planning develops a
proposal to create a registry of voters within 10 months.52
The US authorities veto the idea and, reportedly, never even
tell the "Governing Council" of the proposal. A UN
team says elections could be organized within 6 months.52
Later, when revered Shia religious leader Ali Sistani calls for
elections, the
US
rulers say these are impossible because there is no electoral
roll. When, after 15 months of direct rule, the
US
cedes nominal sovereignty to a new Iraqi government, no progress
has been made toward creating an electoral role. Not even a plan
has been formulated.
The
occupation authority, called the Coalition Provisional Authority
(CPA) despite the fact that the
US
rulers even ignore the opinions of their British "Coalition
partners," says its only purpose is to create a free
Iraq
and return sovereignty. They deny plans for any permanent
occupation, though US generals keep on upping the length of time
US troops will "have to stay" in Iraq. Meanwhile, 4,
or is it 14, permanent military bases are being constructed.53,
54 Very few articles have occurred in the mainstream US
press on the construction of these permanent bases. To replace a
prewar army of perhaps 400,000, which fought a many years war
with neighboring
Iran
, the
US
proposes to create, over a number of years, a new Iraqi army of
35,000. This new army will have no tanks, no heavy artillery55,
no air force to defend a country that is surrounded by countries
-–
Iraq
,
Turkey
,
Kuwait
,
Saudi Arabia
-– with whom there has either been recent conflict or who have
territorial or other conflicts with
Iraq
. Iraqis wonder how a lightly armed army of 35,000 is supposed
to defend their country, were the Americans ever to leave. The
first
US
ruler of
Iraq
, Jay Garner, compares the
US
presence in
Iraq
to the century-long
US
presence in the
Philippines
:
"Noting
how establishing
U.S.
naval bases in the
Philippines
in the early 1900s
allowed the
United States
to maintain a 'great
presence in the Pacific.' Garner said. 'To me that's what
Iraq
is for the next few
decades. We ought to have something there ... that gives us
great presence in the
Middle East
. I think that's going
to be necessary.'"56
While
unemployment figures are hard to come by, estimates put Iraqi
unemployment at between 40% and 60%, with a recent survey
putting it at 70%.57 At the time of the occupation,
most large businesses were state-owned. The
US
"Administrator" of
Iraq
makes a priority of privatizing the economy, removing tariffs
and implementing a flat tax that the Republican ideologues can't
get the
US
to accept:
"'The
highest individual and corporate income tax rates for 2004 and
subsequent years shall not exceed 15 percent.' Paul Bremer wrote
in Coalition Provisional Authority Order Number 37, October,
2003."58
And,
as he was getting ready to depart
Iraq
, in June, 2004, Bremer told the Washington
Post that:
"[a]mong
his biggest accomplishments ... were the lowering of
Iraq
's tax rate, the
liberalization of foreign-investment laws and the reduction of
import duties."15
As
a result of these measures,
Iraq
is flooded with cheap consumer goods from abroad, hurting local
industry.
April,
2004. Four American "contractors" [really mercenaries]
are brutally killed in Falluja. The
US
decides to exact retribution and destroy resistance in the town.
They lay siege, set up snipers who claim to only target rebels,59
but actually shoot at anything that moves.60 British
law student Jo Wilding, who helped bring a circus to
Iraq
to brighten Iraqi children's lives decided to go into a Falluja
under siege:
"I'll
spare you the whole decision making process, the questions we
all asked ourselves and each other, and you can spare me the
accusations of madness, but what it came down to was this: if I
don't do it, who will?..."
She
describes what she sees:
"Snipers
are causing not just carnage but also the paralysis of the
ambulance and evacuation services. The biggest hospital after
the main one was bombed is in US territory and cut off from the
clinic by snipers. The ambulance has been repaired four times
after bullet damage. Bodies are lying in the streets because no
one can go to collect them without being shot."
She
gets personal experience:
"We
stop, turn off the siren, keep the blue light flashing, wait,
eyes on the silhouettes of men in US marine uniforms on the
corners of the buildings. Several shots come. We duck, get as
low as possible and I can see tiny red lights whipping past the
window, past my head. Some, it's hard to tell, are hitting the
ambulance. I start singing. What else do you do when someone's
shooting at you? A tyre bursts with an enormous noise and a jerk
of the vehicle.
She
witnesses the effects of the humane fighting touted by the
American military:
"I
am outraged. We are trying to get to a woman who is giving birth
without any medical attention, without electricity, in a city
under siege, in a clearly marked ambulance, and you are shooting
at us. How dare you?...
"We
take off the blue gowns as the sky starts exploding somewhere
beyond the building opposite. Minutes later a car roars up to
the clinic. I can hear him screaming before I can see that there
is no skin left on his body. He is burnt from head to foot. For
sure there is nothing they can do. He will die of dehydration
within a few days.
"Another
man is pulled from the car onto a stretcher. Cluster bombs, they
say, although it is not clear whether they mean one or both of
them. We set off walking to Mr Yasser's house, waiting at each
corner for someone to check the street before we cross. A ball
of fire falls from a plane, splits into smaller balls of bright
white lights. I think they are cluster bombs, because cluster
bombs are in the front of my mind, but they vanish, just
magnesium flares, incredibly bright and short-lived, giving a
flash picture of the town from above."60
The
US
arrests a close aide of Muqtada al-Sadr, a Shia leader who is
extremely popular among the millions of poor Shia living in the
Baghdad
slum known as
Sadr
City
in honor of his father, martyred by Saddam Hussein.
US
authorities announce they will get him, living or dead. Their
Iraq agents in the Ministry of Justice print posters saying that
Sadr was killed while resisting arrest and post some on walls in
Sadr City,61 but then fail to capture him as he
launches an insurrection and proclaims solidarity with the
Falluja rebels. Thousands of Iraqis die in the next weeks, but
the strongest power in the history of the world fails to
suppress either the Falluja or al-Sadr insurrections, though US
troops kill over 700 civilians in Falluja, who are buried in
sports fields.
US
military leaders brag of killing over 1,000 of al-Sadr's militia
members, mostly poor Shia youth from
Baghdad
slums.62, 63
In
a poll of Iraqis in six cities conducted for the US/CPA in May
2004,64 67% of Iraqis say they Strongly Support (32%)
or Somewhat Support (35%) al-Sadr, making him the second
most supported person in Iraq, only behind the 70% support
expressed for Ali Sistani. Iyad Allawi, the man the US imposed
as the Prime Minister of the "sovereign" Iraqi
government was Supported by 23% (5% Strongly Support)
in that poll, with 61% of those surveyed saying they Somewhat
(21%) or Strongly (40%) Opposed him. The man who
would soon be appointed President was so revered he wasn't even
listed among the 14 top figures included in the survey.
In
that same poll 11% expressed a Fair Amount or a Great Deal (2%)
of confidence in the US Coalition Provisional Authority, with
85% having Not Much (11%) or None Confidence (78%) in the
institution that had ruled them for over a year. Only 28%
expressed a Fair Amount or a Great Deal of Confidence
in the US-chosen Governing Council, with 66% having Not Much or None
(55%). 81% answered No Confidence in the Coalition
Forces that were fighting the insurgency, killing people at
roadblocks, invading homes in the middle of the night, and
holding thousands of Iraqis prisoners in Abu Ghraib and other
hell holes.
Then,
on June 28, 2004, in a secret ceremony, the CPA, with its 11%
confidence, handed "sovereignty" to the new government
it had hand-picked, largely from the Governing Council with its
28% confidence, thus undermining a months-long process by UN
official Lakhdar Brahimi, leading Brahimi to say of US
Administrator Paul Bremer: ""Bremer is the dictator of
Iraq." he said. "He has the money. He has the
signature."65
Of
course, "sovereignty" doesn't mean control.
US
troops are free to act as they please, without any effective
control by Iraqi authorities. In one of his last acts, Paul
Bremer granted them total immunity for any actions, including
torturing prisoners, they commit in the "sovereign"
Iraq
. He also granted immunity to private contractors while they are
working in Iraq.66, 67
And
the new government doesn't control the economy, regulate the
media, or have many of the other powers sovereign governments
usually have.
As
the Wall Street Journal
reported:
"As
Washington
prepares to hand over
power,
U.S.
administrator L. Paul
Bremer and other officials are quietly building institutions
that will give the
U.S.
powerful levers for
influencing nearly every important decision the interim
government will make. In a series of edicts issued earlier this
spring, Mr. Bremer's Coalition Provisional Authority created new
commissions that effectively take away virtually all of the
powers once held by several ministries. The CPA also ... put in
place a pair of watchdog institutions that will serve as checks
on individual ministries and allow for continued
U.S.
oversight. Meanwhile,
the CPA reiterated that coalition advisers will remain in
virtually all remaining ministries after the handover....
"The
authority to license
Iraq
's television
stations, sanction newspapers and regulate cell phone companies
was recently transferred to a commission whose members were
selected by
Washington
. The commissioners'
five-year terms stretch far beyond the planned 18-month tenure
of the interim Iraqi government that will assume sovereignty on
June 30."68
Or
as the New York Times
summed up the matter:
"Top
aides to Mr. Bremer have said in recent days that the American
troops will act as the most important guarantor of American
influence. In addition, they said, the $18.4 billion voted for
Iraqi reconstruction last fall by the United States Congress --
including more than $2 billion for the new Iraqi forces -- will
give the Americans a decisive voice."69
And
who is this new Iraqi government that the
US
imposed? The man with the power, or whatever power Iraqis are to
be allowed, is Iyad Allawi, a man of whom the BBC said:
"he
has the advantage ... of being equally mistrusted by everyone in
Iraq
's multifarious
population."70
He
boasts of having taken money from over a dozen intelligence
agencies, including the CIA and the British MI6. He helped
Saddam Hussein get into power, and acted as a spy on anti-Saddam
Iraqi exiles in
Europe
; there are reports that he killed some of these dissidents.
After a break with Saddam, he started working for the CIA, among
others. He is evidently a terrorist, using a strict definition
of this much-misused term. The
New York Times reported that the CIA got him to conduct a
bombing campaign in
Iraq
in the 1990's.71 About this campaign the article
comments:
"One
former Central Intelligence Agency officer who was based in the
region, Robert Baer, recalled that a bombing during that period
'blew up a school bus; schoolchildren were killed.' Mr. Baer, a
critic of the
Iraq
war, said he did not
recall which resistance group might have set off that bomb."
As
I was preparing this talk last week, the July 17 Sydney
Morning Herald of Australia reported further evidence
of what type of man the
US
forced upon
Iraq
. The article is entitled: "Allawi
shot prisoners in cold blood: witnesses."72
A few excerpts:
"Iyad
Allawi, the new Prime Minister of Iraq, pulled a pistol and
executed as many as six suspected insurgents at a
Baghdad
police station, just
days before
Washington
handed control of the
country to his interim government, according to two people who
allege they witnessed the killings.
"They
say the prisoners -- handcuffed and blindfolded -- were lined up
against a wall in a courtyard adjacent to the maximum-security
cell block in which they were held at the Al-Amariyah security
centre, in the city's south-western suburbs....
"But
the informants told the Herald that Dr Allawi shot each young
man in the head as about a dozen Iraqi policemen and four
Americans from the Prime Minister's personal security team
watched in stunned silence.
"
Iraq
's Interior Minister,
Falah al-Naqib, is said to have looked on and congratulated him
when the job was done. Mr al-Naqib's office has issued a verbal
denial....
"The
prisoners were against the wall and we were standing in the
courtyard when the Interior Minister said that he would like to
kill them all on the spot. Allawi said that they deserved worse
than death - but then he pulled the pistol from his belt and
started shooting them....
"There
is much debate and rumour in
Baghdad
about the Prime
Minister's capacity for brutality, but this is the first time
eyewitness accounts have been obtained....
"Neither
witness could give a specific date for the killings. But their
accounts narrowed the time frame to on or around the third
weekend in June -- about a week before the rushed handover of
power in
Iraq
and more than three
weeks after Dr Allawi was named as the interim Prime
Minister....
"One
witness justified the shootings as an unintended act of mercy:
'They were happy to die because they had already been beaten by
the police for two to eight hours a day to make them talk.'...
"The
Herald has established that as many as 30 people, including the
victims. May have been in the courtyard. One of the witnesses
said there were five or six civilian-clad American security men
in a convoy of five or six late model four-wheel-drive vehicles
that was shepherding Dr Allawi's entourage on the day. The
US
military and Dr
Allawi's office refused to respond to questions about the
composition of his security team. It is understood that the
core of his protection unit is drawn from the
US
Special Forces
units (emphasis
added)....
"The
two witnesses were independently and separately found by the
Herald. Neither approached the newspaper. They were interviewed
on different days in a private home in
Baghdad
, without being told
the other had spoken. A condition of the co-operation of each
man was that no personal information would be published.... The
witnesses were not paid for the interviews."
To
conclude, imagine yourself an Iraqi. You've suffered terribly
under a ruthless dictator. The Americans invade your country
under false pretenses. They promise democracy but don't organize
elections. They appoint exiles to rule you, exiles who spend
most of their time out of the country and the rest in a few
highly protected areas. The occupiers break into your homes in
the middle of the night and arrest your men, who then disappear,
with no accountability. They shoot Iraqis at roadblocks and from
convoys. They declare war on the second most popular man in the
country, announcing his death in advance. They open the economy
to US corporations and give them sweetheart contracts, ignoring
local business. Then they write hundreds of laws and establish
commissions limiting any future government. They build permanent
military bases on your soil. Then they turn your country over to
a former associate of Saddam Hussein, also a former CIA agent,
known for his ruthless brutality. Imagine that was your country.
What would you do?
References
1.
J. Kifner. "
Britain
Tried First.
Iraq
Was No Picnic Then." New
York Times.
July 20, 2003
.
2.
S. Maude. "The Proclamation of
Baghdad
." Harpers Magazine
[Web
posting].
Dec. 4, 2003
.
3.
D. Blair. "Meddling in
Mesopotamia
was always risky." Telegraph.
March 18, 2003
.
4.
R. Sale. "Saddam key in early CIA plot." United
Press International.
April 10, 2003
.
5.
M. B. Norton. "The Founders and the Fedayeen." New
York Times.
July 19, 2003
.
6.
O. Rothenborg. "
USA
encouraged ransacking." Dagens
Nyheter.
April 11, 2003
.
7.
W. Sommerfeld. "Plundering of Museums in
Baghdad.
" Süddeutschen
Zeitung.
May 8, 2003
.
8.
A. Gumbel and D. Keys. "US Blamed for Failure to
Stop Sacking of Museum." Independent.
April 14, 2003
.
9.
R. Fisk. "Americans defend two untouchable
ministries from the hordes of looters." Independent.
April 14, 2003
.
10.
P. Reeves. "At least 10 dead as US soldiers fire on
school protest." Independent.
April 30, 2003
.
11.
S. Wilson
. "
U.S.
Forces Kill Two During Iraqi Demonstration." Washington
Post.
April 30, 2003
.
12.
P. Cockburn. "Powerless Iraqis rail against
ignorant, air-conditioned
US
occupation force." Independent.
June 22, 2003
.
13.
Riverbend. "The Roof...." Baghdad
Burning [blog].
June 1, 2004
.
14.
S. Peterson. "For US troops in
Iraq
, safety vs. diplomacy." Christian
Science Monitor.
June 30, 2003
.
15.
R. Chandrasekaran. "Mistakes Loom Large as Handover
Nears: Missed Opportunities Turned High Ideals to Harsh
Realities." Washington
Post.
June 20, 2004
.
16.
FAIR. "White House Whining on
Iraq
Coverage." Fairness
& Accuracy In Reporting.
Oct. 30, 2003
.
17.
R. Fisk. "Don't Say We Were Not Warned About This
Chaos." Independent.
Sept. 5, 2003
.
18.
R. Fisk. "Secret slaughter by night, lies and blind
eyes by day." Independent.
Sept. 14, 2003
.
19.
N. Price. "
Iraq
's Health Ministry ordered to stop counting civilian dead from
war." Associated
Press.
Dec. 10, 2003
.
20.
M-L. Colson. "Iraqi women have lost the post-war:
Rapes, sequestrations, and a return to the veil develop." La
Liberation.
Sept. 2, 2003
.
21.
Hd. Quetteville. "US soldier 'killed taxi occupants
for passing convoy'." Telegraph.
Jan. 10, 2004
.
22.
S. Faramarzi. "Jittery
U.S.
Soldiers Kill 6 Iraqis." Associated
Press.
Aug. 10, 2003
.
23.
J. Huggler. "Family shot dead by panicking US
troops." Independent.
Aug. 10, 2003
.
24.
P. Beaumont. "Farah tried to plead with the
US
troops but she was killed anyway." Guardian.
Sept. 7, 2003
.
25.
M. Georgy. "Grisly death enrages town in
Iraq.
" Reuters.
July 7, 2003
.
26.
AFP. "Bush appoints supporter to run Iraqi corporate
sector." AFP.
Aug. 8, 2003
.
27.
B. Wootliff. "Bush pals hired to rewrite Iraqi
law." Observer.
Aug. 31, 2003
.
28.
J. R. Carroll. "Life in the Green Zone:
Iraq
's nerve center is haven for allies." Louisville
Courier-Journal.
Feb. 2, 2004
.
29.
J. Krane and L. Navarro. "Raucous bar scene emerges
in
Baghdad
's sealed-off 'green zone'." Associated
Press.
June 14, 2004
.
30.
H. Hamoudi. "Jogging in the twilight zone." Asia
Times.
May 27, 2004
.
31.
P. Cockburn. "The Pretence of an Independent
Iraq.
" Independent.
June 22, 2004
.
32.
P. Sperry. "
U.S.
miscalculations left troops vulnerable: Pentagon underestimated
number of MPs, Arabic translators needed." WorldNetDaily.com.
July 10, 2003
.
33.
AP. "Language lag still hampers government:
U.S.
needs more Arabic speakers." Associated
Press.
Nov. 19, 2003
.
34.
Child is killed in
US
checkpoint shooting." Scotsman.com.
July 6, 2004
.
35.
B. Whitaker. "'You didn't fire a warning shot soon
enough!'" Guardian.
April 1, 2003
.
36.
P. Slevin. "Wrong Turn at a Postwar Crossroads?
Decision to Disband Iraqi Army Cost
U.S.
Time and Credibility." Washington
Post.
Nov. 20, 2003
.
37.
R. Moran. "
U.S.
eases rules for ex-Baathists." Knight
Ridder Newspapers.
April 24, 2004
.
38.
R. Sale. "CPA handlers suspected in espionage."
UPI.
May 25, 2004
.
39.
O. Bowcott. "Secret Baath files may help Chalabi
settle old scores." Guardian.
May 8, 2003
.
40.
M. Hirsh. "Crime and Politics." Newsweek.
May 20, 2004
.
41.
R. Wright and R. Chandrasekaran. "Alternatives to
Iraqi Council Eyed: Inaction of Hand-Picked
Baghdad
Officials Frustrates
Washington
." Washington
Post.
Nov. 9, 2003
.
42.
Riverbend. "Iraqi Governing Council...," Baghdad
Burning [blog].
Nov. 13, 2003
.
43.
L. Harding. "The other prisoners." Guardian.
May 20, 2004
.
44.
G. Sealey. "Hersh: Children sodomized at Abu Ghraib,
on tape." Salon.com.
July 15, 2004
.
45.
J. Coman. "US soldiers 'seen raping woman' in new
jail photos." Telegraph.
May 9, 2004
.
46.
J. Borger. "US general linked to Abu Ghraib abuse:
Leaked memo reveals control of prison passed to military
intelligence to 'manipulate detainees'." Guardian.
May 22, 2004
.
47.
A. Rodriguez. "
U.S.
holding Iraqis at notorious prison -- Families are barred and
very few inmates have been allowed to see lawyers." Chicago
Tribune.
Aug. 6, 2003
.
48.
R, Miller. "'Disappearing' Iraqis: Why Are So Many
Citizens Arrested and Detained by the American Occupying
Force?" River
Cities' Reader.
Sept. 10 2003
.
49.
USA
Today. How innocent Iraqis came to be abused as
terrorists." USA
Today.
June 9, 2004
.
50.
W. Booth and R. Chandrasekaran. "Democracy will have
to wait, US tells
Iraq.
" |