Info about subscribing or unsubscribing from this list is at the bottom of this 
message.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6802629/site/newsweek/
‘The Salvador Option:’ The Pentagon may put Special-Forces-led
assassination or kidnapping teams in Iraq

-------------

http://tomdispatch.com/index.mhtml?pid=2109

Iraq: The Devastation
By Dahr Jamail

The devastation of Iraq? Where do I start? After working 7 of the last 12
months in Iraq, I'm still overwhelmed by even the thought of trying to
describe this.

The illegal war and occupation of Iraq was waged for three reasons,
according to the Bush administration. First for weapons of mass
destruction, which have yet to be found. Second, because the regime of
Saddam Hussein had links to al-Qaeda, which Mr. Bush has personally
admitted have never been proven. The third reason -- embedded in the very
name of the invasion, Operation Iraqi Freedom -- was to liberate the Iraqi
people.

So Iraq is now a liberated country.

I've been in liberated Baghdad and environs on and off for 12 months,
including being inside Fallujah during the April siege and having warning
shots fired over my head more than once by soldiers. I've traveled in the
south, north, and extensively around central Iraq. What I saw in the first
months of 2004, however, when it was easier for a foreign reporter to
travel the country, offered a powerful -- even predictive -- taste of the
horrors to come in the rest of the year (and undoubtedly in 2005 as well).
It's worth returning to the now forgotten first half of last year and
remembering just how terrible things were for Iraqis even relatively early
in our occupation of their country.

Then, as now, for Iraqis, our invasion and occupation was a case of
liberation from -- from human rights (think: the atrocities committed in
Abu Ghraib which are still occurring daily there and elsewhere);
liberation from functioning infrastructure (think: the malfunctioning
electric system, the many-mile long gas lines, the raw sewage in the
streets); liberation from an entire city to live in (think: Fallujah, most
of which has by now been flattened by aerial bombardment and other means).

Iraqis were then already bitter, confused, and existing amid a desolation
that came from myriads of Bush administration broken promises. Quite
literally every liberated Iraqi I've gotten to know from my earliest days
in the country has either had a family member or a friend killed by U.S.
soldiers or from the effects of the war/occupation. These include such
everyday facts of life as not having enough money for food or fuel due to
massive unemployment and soaring energy prices, or any of the countless
other horrors caused by the aforementioned. The broken promises, broken
infrastructure, and broken cities of Iraq were plainly visible in those
early months of 2004 -- and the sad thing is that the devastation I saw
then has only grown worse since. The life Iraqis were living a year ago,
horrendous as it was, was but a prelude to what was to come under the U.S.
occupation. The warning signs were clear from a shattered infrastructure,
to all the torturing, to a burgeoning, violent resistance.


Broken Promises

It was quickly apparent, even to a journalistic newcomer, even in those
first months of last year that the real nature of the liberation we
brought to Iraq was no news to Iraqis. Long before the American media
decided it was time to report on the horrendous actions occurring inside
Abu Ghraib prison, most Iraqis already knew that the "liberators" of their
country were torturing and humiliating their countrymen.

In December 2003, for instance, a man in Baghdad, speaking of the Abu
Ghraib atrocities, said to me, "Why do they use these actions? Even Saddam
Hussein did not do that! This is not good behavior. They are not coming to
liberate Iraq!" And by then the bleak jokes of the beleaguered had already
begun to circulate. In the dark humor that has become so popular in
Baghdad these days, one recently released Abu Ghraib detainee I
interviewed said, "The Americans brought electricity to my ass before they
brought it to my house!"

Sadiq Zoman is fairly typical of what I've seen. Taken from his home in
Kirkuk in July, 2003, he was held in a military detention facility near
Tikrit before being dropped off comatose at the Salahadin General Hospital
by U.S. forces one month later. While the medical report accompanying him,
signed by Lt. Col. Michael Hodges, stated that Mr. Zoman was comatose due
to a heart attack brought on by heat stroke, it failed to mention that his
head had been bludgeoned, or to note the electrical burn marks that
scorched his penis and the bottoms of his feet, or the bruises and
whip-like marks up and down his body.

I visited his wife Hashmiya and eight daughters in a nearly empty home in
Baghdad. Its belongings had largely been sold on the black market to keep
them all afloat. A fan twirled slowly over the bed as Zoman stared blankly
at the ceiling. A small back-up generator hummed outside, as this
neighborhood, like most of Baghdad, averaged only six hours of electricity
per day.

Her daughter Rheem, who is in college, voiced the sentiments of the entire
family when she said, "I hate the Americans for doing this. When they took
my father they took my life. I pray for revenge on the Americans for
destroying my father, my country, and my life."

In May of 2004, when I went to their house, a recent court-martial of one
of the soldiers complicit in the widespread torturing of Iraqis in Abu
Ghraib had already taken place. He had been sentenced to some modest
prison time, but Iraqis were unimpressed. They had been convinced yet
again -- not that they needed it -- that Bush administration promises to
clean up its act regarding the treatment of detained Iraqis were no less
empty than those being offered for assistance in building a safe and
prosperous Iraq.

Last year, the empty promises to bring justice to those involved in such
heinous acts, along with promises to make the prison at Abu Ghraib more
transparent and accessible, fell on distraught family members who waited
near the gates of the prison to see their loved ones inside. Under a
scorching May sun I went to the dusty, dismal, heavily-guarded, razor-wire
enclosed "waiting area" outside Abu Ghraib. There, I heard one horror
story after another from melancholy family members doggedly gathered on
this patch of barren earth, still hoping against hope to be granted a
visit with someone inside the awful compound.

Sitting alone on the hard packed dirt in his white dishdasha, his head
scarf languidly flapping in the dry, hot wind, Lilu Hammed stared
unwaveringly at the high walls of the nearby prison as if he were
attempting to see his 32 year-old son Abbas through the concrete walls.
When my interpreter Abu Talat asked if he would speak with us, several
seconds passed before Lilu slowly turned his head and said simply, "I am
sitting here on the ground waiting for God's help."

His son, never charged with an offense, had by then been in Abu Ghraib for
6 months following a raid on his home which produced no weapons. Lilu held
a crumpled visitation permission slip that he had just obtained, promising
a reunion with his son…three months away, on the 18th of August.

Along with every other person I interviewed there, Lilu had found
consolation neither in the recent court martial, nor in the release of a
few hundred prisoners. "This court-martial is nonsense. They said that
Iraqis could come to the trial, but they could not. It was a false trial."

At that moment, a convoy of Humvees full of soldiers, guns pointing out
the small windows, rumbled through the front gate of the penal complex,
kicking up a huge dust cloud that quickly engulfed everyone. The parent of
another prisoner, Mrs. Samir, waving away the clouds of dust said, "We
hope the whole world can see the position we are in now!" and then added
plaintively, "Why are they doing this to us?"

Last summer I interviewed a kind, 55 year-old woman who used to work as an
English teacher. She had been detained for four months in as many
prisons…in Samarra, Tikrit, Baghdad and, of course, at Abu Ghraib. She was
never, she told me, allowed to sleep through a night. She was interrogated
many times each day, not given enough food or water, or access to a lawyer
or to her family. She was verbally and psychologically abused.

But that, she assured me, wasn't the worst part. Not by far. Her 70
year-old husband was also detained and he was beaten. After seven months
of beatings and interrogations, he died in U.S. military custody in
prison.

She was crying as she spoke of him. "I miss my husband," she sobbed and
stood up, speaking not to us but to the room, "I miss him so much." She
shook her hands as if to fling water off them…then she held her chest and
cried some more.

"Why are they doing this to us?" she asked. She simply couldn't
understand, she said, what was happening because two of her sons were also
detained, and her family had been completely shattered. "We didn't do
anything wrong," she whimpered.

With the interview over, we were walking towards our car to leave when all
of us realized that it was 10 pm, already too late at night to be out in
dangerous Baghdad. So she asked us instead if we wouldn't please stay for
dinner, all the while thanking me for listening to her horrendous story,
for my time, for writing about it. I found myself speechless.

"No, thank you, we must get home now," said Abu Talat. By this time, we
were all crying.

In the car, as we drove quickly along a Baghdad highway directly into a
full moon, Abu Talat and I were silent. Finally, he asked, "Can you say
any words? Do you have any words?"

I had none. None at all.


Broken Infrastructure

Everything in Iraq is set against the backdrop of shattered infrastructure
and a nearly complete lack of reconstruction. What the Americans turn out
to be best at is, once again, promises -- and propaganda. During the
period when the Coalition Provisional Authority ruled Iraq from Baghdad's
Green Zone, their handouts often read like this one released on May 21,
2004: "The Coalition Provisional Authority has recently given out hundreds
of soccer balls to Iraqi children in Ramadi, Kerbala, and Hilla. Iraqi
women from Hilla sewed the soccer balls, which are emblazoned with the
phrase ‘All of Us Participate in a New Iraq.'"

And yet when it came to the basics of that New Iraq, unemployment was at
50% and increasing, better areas of Baghdad averaged 6 hours of
electricity per day, and security was nowhere to be found. Even as far
back as January, 2004, before the security situation had brought most
reconstruction projects to the nearly complete standstill of the present
moment, and 9 months after the war in Iraq had officially ended, the
situation already verged on the catastrophic. For instance, lack of
potable water was the norm throughout most of central and southern Iraq.

I was then working on a report that attempted to document exactly what
reconstruction had occurred in the water sector -- a sector for which
Bechtel was largely responsible. That giant corporation had been awarded a
no-bid contract of $680 million behind closed doors on April 17, 2003,
which in September was raised to $1.03 billion; then Bechtel won an
additional contract worth $1.8 billion to extend its program through
December 2005.

At the time, when travel for Western reporters was a lot easier, I stopped
in several villages en route south from Baghdad through what the Americans
now call "the triangle of death" to Hilla, Najaf, and Diwaniyah to check
on people's drinking-water situation. Near Hilla, an old man with a
weathered face showed me his water pump, sitting lifeless with an empty
container nearby -- as there was no electricity. What water his village
did have was loaded with salt which was leaching into the water supply
because Bechtel had not honored its contractual obligations to
rehabilitate a nearby water treatment center. Another nearby village
didn't have the salt problem, but nausea, diarrhea, kidney stones, cramps,
and even cases of cholera were on the rise. This too would be a steady
trend for the villages I visited.

The rest of that trip involved a frenetic tour of villages, each without
drinkable water, near or inside the city limits of Hilla, Najaf, and
Diwaniya. Hilla, close to ancient Babylon, has a water treatment plant and
distribution center managed by Chief Engineer Salmam Hassan Kadel. Mr.
Kadel informed me that most of the villages in his jurisdiction had no
potable water, nor did he have the piping needed to repair their
broken-down water systems, nor had he had any contact with Bechtel or its
subcontractors.

He spoke of large numbers of people coming down with the usual list of
diseases. "Bechtel," he told me, "is spending all of their money without
any studies. Bechtel is painting buildings, but this doesn't give clean
water to the people who have died from drinking contaminated water. We ask
of them that instead of painting buildings, they give us one water pump
and we'll use it to give water service to more people. We have had no
change since the Americans came here. We know Bechtel is wasting money,
but we can't prove it."

At another small village between Hilla and Najaf, 1,500 people were
drinking water from a dirty stream which trickled slowly by their homes.
Everyone had dysentery; many had kidney stones; a startling number,
cholera. One villager, holding a sick child, told me, "It was much better
before the invasion. We had twenty-four hours of running water then. Now
we are drinking this garbage because it is all we have."

The next morning found me at a village on the outskirts of Najaf, which
fell under the responsibility of Najaf's water center. A large hole had
been dug in the ground where the villagers tapped into already existing
pipes to siphon off water. The dirty hole filled in the night, when water
was collected. That morning, children were standing idly around the hole
as women collected the residue of dirty water which sat at its bottom.
Everyone, it seemed, was suffering from some water-born illness and
several children, the villagers informed me, had been killed attempting to
cross a busy highway to a nearby factory where clean water was actually
available.

In June, six months later, I visited Chuwader Hospital, which then treated
an average of 3,000 patients a day in Sadr City, the enormous Baghdad
slum. Dr. Qasim al-Nuwesri, the head manager there, promptly began
describing the struggles his hospital was facing under the occupation. "We
are short of every medicine," he said and pointed out how rarely this had
occurred before the invasion. "It is forbidden, but sometimes we have to
reuse IV's, even the needles. We have no choice."

And then, of course, he -- like the other doctors I spoke with – brought
up their horrendous water problem, the unavailability of unpolluted water
anywhere in the area. "Of course, we have typhoid, cholera, kidney
stones," he said matter-of-factly, "but we now even have the very rare
Hepatitis Type-E…and it has become common in our area."

Driving out of the sewage filled, garbage strewn streets of Sadr City we
passed a wall with "Vietnam Street" spray painted on it. Just underneath
was the sentence -- obviously aimed at the American liberators -- "We will
make your graves in this place."

Today, in terms of collapsing infrastructure, other areas of Baghdad are
beginning to suffer the way Sadr City did then, and still largely does.
While reconstruction projects slated for Sadr City have received increased
funding, most of the time there is little sign of any work being done, as
is the case in most of Baghdad.

While an ongoing fuel crisis finds people waiting up to two days to fill
their tanks at gas stations, all of the city is running on generators the
majority of the time, and many less favored areas like Sadr City have only
four hours of electricity a day.


Broken Cities

The heavy-handed tactics of the occupation forces have become a
commonplace of Iraqi life. I've interviewed people who regularly sleep in
their clothes because home raids are the norm. Many times when military
patrols are attacked by resistance fighters in the cities of Iraq,
soldiers simply open fire randomly on anything that moves. More commonly,
heavy civilian casualties occur from air raids by occupation forces. These
horrible circumstances have led to over 100,000 Iraqi civilian casualties
in the less than two year-old occupation.

Then there is Fallujah, a city three-quarters of which has by now been
bombed or shelled into rubble, a city in whose ruins fighting continues
even while most of its residents have yet to be allowed to return to their
homes (many of which no longer exist). The atrocities committed there in
the last month or so are, in many ways, similar to those observed during
the failed U.S. Marine siege of the city last April, though on a far
grander scale. This time, in addition, reports from families inside the
city, along with photographic evidence, point toward the U.S. military's
use of chemical and phosphorous weapons as well as cluster bombs there.
The few residents allowed to return in the final week of 2004 were handed
military-produced leaflets instructing them not to eat any food from
inside the city, nor to drink the water.

Last May, at the General Hospital of Fallujah, doctors spoke to me of the
sorts of atrocities that occurred during the first month-long siege of the
city. Dr. Abdul Jabbar, an orthopedic surgeon, said that it was difficult
to keep track of the number of people they treated, as well as the number
of dead, due to the lack of documentation. This was caused primarily by
the fact that the main hospital, located on the opposite side of the
Euphrates River from the city, was sealed off by the Marines for the
majority of April, just as it would again be in November, 2004.

He estimated that at least 700 people were killed in Fallujah during that
April. "I worked at five of the centers [community health clinics] myself,
and if we collect the numbers from these places, then this is the number,"
he said. "And you must keep in mind that many people were buried before
reaching our centers."

When the wind blew in from the nearby Julan quarter of the city, the
putrid stench of decaying bodies (a smell evidently once again typical of
the city) only confirmed his statement. Even then, Dr. Jabbar was
insisting that American planes had dropped cluster bombs on the city.
"Many people were injured and killed by cluster bombs. Of course they used
cluster bombs. We heard them as well as treated people who had been hit by
them!"

Dr. Rashid, another orthopedic surgeon, said, "Not less than sixty percent
of the dead were women and children. You can go see the graves for
yourself." I had already visited the Martyr Cemetery and had indeed
observed the numerous tiny graves that had clearly been dug for children.
He agreed with Dr. Jabbar about the use of cluster bombs, and added, "I
saw the cluster bombs with my own eyes. We don't need any evidence. Most
of these bombs fell on those we then treated."

Speaking of the medical crisis that his hospital had to deal with, he
pointed out that during the first 10 days of fighting the U.S. military
did not allow any evacuations from Fallujah to Baghdad at all. He said,
"Even transferring patients in the city was impossible. You can see our
ambulances outside. Their snipers also shot into the main doors of one of
our centers." Several ambulances were indeed in the hospital's parking
lot, two of them with bullet holes in their windshields.

Both doctors said they had not been contacted by the U.S. military, nor
had any aid been delivered to them by the military. Dr. Rashid summed the
situation up this way: "They send only bombs, not medicine."

As I walked to our car at one point amid what was already the desolation
of Fallujah, a man tugged on my arm and yelled, "The Americans are
cowboys! This is their history! Look at what they did to the Indians!
Vietnam! Afghanistan! And now Iraq! This does not surprise us."

And that, of course, was before the total siege of the city began in
November, 2004. The April campaign in Fallujah, which resulted in a rise
in resistance proved -- like so much else in those early months of 2004 --
to be but a harbinger of things to come on a far larger scale. While the
goal of the most recent siege was to squelch the resistance and bring
greater security for elections scheduled for January 30, the result as in
April has been anything but security.

In the wake of the destruction of Fallujah fighting has simply spread
elsewhere and intensified. Families are now fleeing Mosul, Iraq's third
largest city, because of a warning of another upcoming air campaign
against resistance fighters. At least one car bomb per day is now the norm
in the capital city. Clashes erupt with deadly regularity throughout
Baghdad as well as in cities like Ramadi, Samarra, Baquba and Balad.

The intensification is two-sided. With each ratchet upwards in violence,
the tactics by the American military only grow more heavy-handed and, as
they do, the Iraqi resistance just continues to grow in size and
effectiveness. Any kind of "siege" of Mosul will only add to this dynamic.

Despite a media blackout in the aftermath of the recent assault on
Fallujah, stories of dogs eating bodies in the streets of the city and of
destroyed mosques have spread across Iraq like wildfire; and reports like
these only underscore what most people in Iraq now believe -- that the
liberators have become no more than brutal imperialist occupiers of their
country. And then the resistance grows yet stronger.

Yet among Iraqis the growing resistance was predicted long ago. One
telling moment for me came last June amid daily suicide car bombings in
Baghdad. While footage of cars with broken glass and bullet holes in their
frames flashed across a television screen, my translator Hamid, an older
man who had already grown weary of the violence, said softly, "It has
begun. These are only the start, and they will not stop. Even after June
30." That, of course, was the date of the long-promised handover of
"sovereignty" to a new Iraqi government, after which, American officials
fervently predicted, violence in the country would begin to subside. The
same pattern of prediction and of a contrarian reality can now be seen in
relation to the upcoming elections.

Three weeks ago, a friend of mine who is a sheikh from Baquba visited me
in Baghdad and we had lunch with Abdulla, an older professor who is a
friend of his. As we were eating, Abdulla expressed a sentiment now widely
heard. "The mujahideen," he said, "are fighting for their country against
the Americans. This resistance is acceptable to us."

The Bush administration has recently increased its troops in Iraq from
138,000 to 150,000 -- in order, officials said, to provide greater
security for the upcoming elections. Such troop increases also occurred in
Vietnam. Back then it was called escalation.

What I wonder is, will I be writing a piece next January still called,
"Iraq: The Devastation," in which these last terrible months of 2004 (of
which the first half of the year was but a foreshadowing) will prove in
their turn but a predictive taste of horrors to come? And what then of
2006 and 2007?


Dahr Jamail is an independent journalist from Anchorage, Alaska. He has
spent 7 of the last 12 months reporting from inside occupied Iraq. His
articles have been published in the Sunday Herald, Inter Press Service,
the website of the Nation magazine, and the New Standard internet news
site for which he was the Iraq correspondent. He is the special
correspondent in Iraq for Flashpoints radio and also has appeared on the
BBC, Democracy Now!, Free Speech Radio News, and Radio South Africa. This
is his first piece for Tomdispatch.com.

_____________________________

Note: This message comes from the peace-justice-news e-mail mailing list of 
articles and commentaries about peace and social justice issues, activism, etc. 
 If you do not regularly receive mailings from this list or have received this 
message as a forward from someone else and would like to be added to the list, 
send a blank e-mail with the subject "subscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
or you can visit:
http://lists.enabled.com/mailman/listinfo/peace-justice-news  Go to that same 
web address to view the list's archives or to unsubscribe.

E-mail accounts that become full, inactive or out of order for more than a few 
days will be deleted from this list.

FAIR USE NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the 
information in this e-mail is distributed without profit to those who have 
expressed a prior interest in receiving it for research and educational 
purposes.  I am making such material available in an effort to advance 
understanding of environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy, 
scientific, and social justice issues, etc. I believe this constitutes a 'fair 
use' of copyrighted material as provided for in the US Copyright Law.

Reply via email to