----- Original Message ----- 
From: Timothy Baer 
To: National Network to End the War Against Iraq 
Sent: Sunday, April 12, 2009 7:47 PM
Subject: MidEast Dispatches: Iraq in Fragments (a must read)




MidEast Dispatches: Iraq in Fragments

Iraq in Fragments

by Dahr Jamail
April 12th, 2009 | Foreign Policy In Focus
 
http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/6028

    “[W]hat lengths men will go in order to carry out, to their extreme limit, 
the rites of a collective self-worship which fills them with a sense of 
righteousness and complacent satisfaction in the midst of the most shocking 
injustices and crimes.”
    -Love and Living, by Thomas Merton

On Wednesday, March 25, Major General David Perkins of the U.S. military, 
referring to how often the U.S. military was being attacked in Iraq, told 
reporters in Baghdad, “Attacks are at their lowest since August 2003.” Perkins 
added, “There were 1,250 attacks a week at the height of the violence; now 
sometimes there are less than 100 a week.”

While his rhetoric made headlines in some U.S. mainstream media outlets, it was 
little consolation for the families of 28 Iraqis killed in attacks across Iraq 
the following day. Nor did it bring solace to the relatives of the 27 Iraqis 
slain in a March 23 suicide attack, or those who survived a bomb attack at a 
bus terminal in Baghdad on the same day that killed nine Iraqis.

Having recently returned from Iraq, I experienced living in Baghdad where 
people were dying violent deaths on a daily basis. Nearly every day of the 
month I spent there saw a car bomb attack somewhere in the capital city. Nearly 
every day the so-called Green Zone was mortared. Every day there were 
kidnappings. On good days there were four hours of electricity on the national 
grid, in a country now into its seventh year of being occupied by the U.S. 
military, and where there are now over 200,000 private contractors.

Upon returning home, I experienced the disconnect between that reality, lived 
by roughly 25 million Iraqis, and the surreal experience of living in the 
United States — where most media pretend the occupation of Iraq is either not 
happening, or uses the yardstick of decreased U.S. military personnel deaths in 
Iraq as a measure of success. In the words of Major General Perkins, “If you 
take a look at military deaths, which is an indicator of violence and lethality 
out there, U.S. combat deaths are at their lowest levels since the war began 
six years ago.” But it’s a less useful metric when one looks at the broader 
picture inside of Iraq: the ongoing daily slaughter of Iraqis, the near total 
lack of functional infrastructure, the fact that one in six Iraqis remains 
displaced from their homes, or that at least 1.2 million Iraqis have died as a 
result of the U.S.-led invasion and occupation of their country.

Seventy-two months of occupation, with over $607 billion spent on the war (by 
conservative estimates), has resulted in 2.2 million internally displaced 
Iraqis, 2.7 million refugees, 2,615 professors, scientists, and doctors killed 
in cold blood, and 338 dead journalists. Over $13 billion was misplaced by the 
current Iraqi government, and another $400 billion is required to rebuild the 
Iraqi infrastructure. Unemployment vacillates between 25-70%, depending on the 
month. There are 24 car bombs per month, 10,000 cases of cholera per year, 
4,261 dead U.S. soldiers, and over 70,000 physically or psychologically wounded 
soldiers.

There’s no normal life in Baghdad. While it’s accurate and technically correct 
to say there is less violence compared to 2006, when between 100 and 300 Iraqis 
were slaughtered on a daily basis, Iraq resembles a police state more than 
ever. U.S. patrols consisting of huge, lumbering mine-resistant vehicles rumble 
down streets congested with traffic. It’s impossible to travel longer than five 
minutes without encountering an Iraqi military or police patrol — usually 
comprised of pickup trucks full of armed men, horns and/or sirens blaring. 
Begging women and children wander between cars at every intersection. U.S. 
military helicopters often rumble overhead, and the roar of fighter jets or 
transport planes is common. There’s no talk of reparations for Iraqis for the 
death, destruction and chaos caused by the occupation.

Neighborhoods, segregated between Sunni and Shia largely as a result of the 
so-called “surge” strategy, provide a blatant view of the balkanization of 
Iraq. Neighborhoods of 300,000 people are completely surrounded by 10-foot high 
concrete blast walls, rendering normal life impossible. The fear of a 
resurgence of violence weighs heavy on Iraqis, as the current so-called lull in 
violence feels tenuous, unstable, and possibly fleeting. Nobody there can 
predict the future, and to hope for a sustained improvement in any aspect of 
life feels naïve, even dangerous.

The title of the film “Iraq in Fragments” by James Longley, which was nominated 
for Best Documentary Oscar at the 2007 Academy Awards, best describes Iraq 
today. The country has been destroyed by decades of U.S. policy that has 
plagued Iraqis. Looking back only to 1980, we see the U.S. government 
supporting both Iraq and Iran during their horrible eight-year war. In 1991 we 
see George H. W. Bush’s war against Iraq, and his, Bill Clinton’s, and George 
W. Bush’s oversight of 12-and-a-half years of genocidal economic sanctions that 
killed half a million Iraqi children. Today, under President Barack Obama, what 
is left of Iraq smolders in ruins, with no real end of the occupation in sight.

All of the recent talk of withdrawal from Iraq is empty rhetoric indeed to most 
Iraqis, who see the giant “enduring” U.S. military bases spread across their 
country, or the U.S. “embassy,” the size of the Vatican City, in Baghdad. The 
gulf between the rhetoric of withdrawal and the reality on the ground spans the 
distance between Iraq and the United States, while the reality is pressed in 
the face of the Iraqi people each day the occupation continues.

Dahr Jamail has reported from inside Iraq and is the author of Beyond the Green 
Zone. He writes for Inter Press Service, The Asia Times, and is a contributor 
to Foreign Policy In Focus.



__._,_.___
 






__,_._,___
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"ShadowGovernment" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/ShadowGovernment
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to