Ishaqi Again: Another Day, Another Atrocity in the Endless Iraq War

August 9, 2011 at 10:04 pm | Posted in Turkmens | Leave a comment
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Ishaqi Again: Another Day, Another Atrocity in the Endless Iraq War

Chris Floyd

August 9, 2011

There was a raid in Ishaqi last week. Armed men crept upon the sleeping
houses in the dead of night. Armed men stirring in the darkness, in a land still
open, like a flayed wound, to violent death and chaos from every direction, many
years after the savage act of aggression that first tore the country to
pieces.

They crept toward the houses. They said nothing, gave no warning, could not
be clearly seen, did not identify themselves. “Thieves!” someone shouted.
Someone grabbed a rifle – one kept ready at hand to guard the sleeping family –
and fired a shot to scare away the raiders.

But men creeping in the darkness were not local thieves. They were soldiers
of the foreign army that still occupied the land. Foreign invaders, accompanied
by forces from the local army they had raised for the government they had built
on the mound of a million rotting corpses.

Armed to the teeth with expensive gear bought with public money from bloated
war profiteers in the invaders’ home country, the creeping men were not to be
frightened off by a rifle shot fired blindly in the darkness. They saw the flash
– and lit up the village with heavy gunfire and grenades. They called in a
helicopter gunship hovering nearby to support them against the rifle of a
villager awakened by the sound of unknown, unidentified, armed men creeping near
his house and family.

In the tumult, a 13-year-old boy began running through the garden,
frightened, confused, trying to escape the hellish metal flying all around him.
But the metal found him; it tore into his fleeing body – the body of this
scared, unarmed boy running away from the well-armed soldiers – the bullets tore
into his body and killed him in the garden where he used to play.

Continue Reading Ishaqi Again: Another Day, Another Atrocity in the Endless Iraq War…

Fallujah, Iraq 2004 – Misrata, Libya 2011

May 6, 2011 at 8:23 pm | Posted in Turkmens | Leave a comment
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Fallujah, Iraq 2004 – Misrata, Libya 2011

Media Lens

 

 

 

  

Fallujah , November 2004

 

May 5, 2011

Operation Phantom Fury

In November 2004, the UN’s Integrated Regional Information Network reported the impact of Operation Phantom Fury, a combined US-UK offensive, on Iraq’s third city, Fallujah:

‘Approximately 70 per cent of the houses and shops were destroyed in the city and those still standing are riddled with bullets.’ (‘Fallujah still needs more supplies despite aid arrival,’ http://www.irinnews.org, November 30, 2004)

An Iraqi doctor, Ali Fadhil, reported of the city:

‘It was completely devastated, destruction everywhere. It looked like a city of ghosts. Falluja used to be a modern city; now there was nothing. We spent the day going through the rubble that had been the centre of the city; I didn’t see a single building that was functioning.’ (Fadhil, ‘City of ghosts,’ The Guardian, January 11, 2005)

Main battle tanks, bombers, attack helicopters and thousands of assault troops were flung into the attack. But this was no Stalingrad. ‘Coalition’ forces faced young fighters in tracksuits armed with assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenades. A US Marine sergeant told a British news team: ‘We’ll unleash the dogs of hell, we’ll unleash ’em… They don’t even know what’s coming – hell is coming! If there are civilians in there, they’re in the wrong place at the wrong time.’ (Channel 4 News, November 8, 2004)

A health centre was bombed, killing 60 patients and support staff. The Independent reported claims that ‘a large number of people, including children, were killed by American snipers’. Refugees also accurately reported that the US had used cluster bombs and white phosphorus weapons. A Red Cross official estimated that ‘at least 800 civilians’ were killed in the first nine days of the assault. Dr Rafa’ah al-Iyssaue, the director of Fallujah’s main hospital, said that more than 550 of 700 bodies recovered were women and children.

Last year, the Independent reported:

‘Dramatic increases in infant mortality, cancer and leukaemia in the Iraqi city of Fallujah, which was bombarded by US Marines in 2004, exceed those reported by survivors of the atomic bombs that were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945, according to a new study.’ (See our media alert for details)

At the time of the offensive, a Times leader was unmoved by the devastation:

‘This is not a struggle that, contrary to how it has been presented in some quarters, the Americans were very gung-ho about. It has, nonetheless, become evident that those either loyal to the old Baathist order or keen volunteers for Islamist terrorism would not cease to use the city as the centre of their operations.

‘In this context, the US military had to act decisively or fail those entitled to its protection.’ (Leading article, ‘Taking Fallujah,’ The Times, November 10, 2004)

The Telegraph applauded Britain’s contribution:

‘The men of the Black Watch are on their way home, their mission accomplished. We should congratulate them not only for their successes in Fallujah and in Operation Tobruk, which they have just completed, but also for their pragmatism and courage in the face of the unknown.’ (Leading article, ‘Mission accomplished,’ Telegraph, December 6, 2004)

On ITV, anchors Nick Owen and Andrea Catherwood talked over animations depicting the high-tech equipment deployed in Fallujah:

‘The marines can call on some of the latest technology, like The Buffalo, that can locate and destroy mines and booby troops using a robot arm.’ (News at 18:30, November 10, 2004 )

An animated Buffalo was shown approaching a cartoon car, which exploded as the Buffalo’s extendable arm touched:

‘They’ve also got the Packbot. It’s a small remote-controlled robot fitted with a camera which can climb stairs and even open cupboards to search houses and other buildings for explosives.’

The slaughter inspired a ‘shooter’ video game for Xbox, Six Days In Fallujah. Too much even for the British press, the game was dropped, but seems to have been resurrected by a different company.   

No weapons of mass destruction had been found in Iraq. There was no evidence of a link to al Qaeda. And yet few in the media questioned the right of the Western army of occupation to destroy a major Iraqi city in the name of ‘protection’.

 

 

Massacre In Misrata

By contrast, last month, The Times published a leader with the title, ‘Revealed: The full horror of Misrata’:

‘While the suppression of dissent is commonplace in Libya, the bombardment of Misrata’s estimated 300,000 inhabitants has been exceptionally cruel.’ (Leading Article, ‘Revealed: The full horror of Misrata,’ The Times, April 10, 2011)

The editors added:

‘Two Sunday Times journalists – the first from Britain inside the besieged city – find Colonel Gadaffi’s pitiless troops slaughtering civilians and leaving children to die.’

This week, Murdoch’s humanitarians again lamented Misrata’s grim fate:

‘Colonel Gaddafi’s forces are still bombarding Misrata, a city that has seen terrible human suffering as the besieged inhabitants, without food, medicine or shelter from the artillery and missiles, endure daily casualties.’ (Leading article, ‘The cost of stalemate,’ The Times, May 2, 2011)

The Telegraph has shared the Times’ outrage:

‘Not content with deploying tanks, rockets, and snipers, the Libyan dictator has now taken to using cluster bombs – a weapon banned in most countries because of the risk they pose of indiscriminate injury.’

Back in 2005, Aljazeera reported:

‘Dr. Khalid ash-Shaykhli, an official at Iraq’s health ministry, said that the U.S. military used internationally banned weapons during its deadly offensive in the city of Fallujah.’ The official reported evidence that US forces had “used… substances, including mustard gas, nerve gas, and other burning chemicals in their attacks in the war-torn city.”‘ (‘US used banned weapons in Fallujah – Health ministry,’ March 3, 2005, http://www.aljazeera.com)

Despite this and copious other evidence, the BBC’s director of news, Helen Boaden, told Media Lens in March 2005 that her reporter in Fallujah, Paul Wood, had seen ‘no evidence of the use of such weapons’. The issue is much more clear cut in Misrata, it seems. The BBC commented recently:

‘The wounded arrive with horrific injuries – the result of mortars, grenades, and snipers. An increasing number have lost limbs – which may be the result of cluster bombs.

‘The use of what look like cluster bombs explains some of the horrific injuries doctors are seeing. We found remnants of these widely banned weapons attached to a makeshift barricade in a district near the front line. The rebels there told us they had been used on homes and a supermarket.’

The BBC’s Lunchtime News of April 27, referred to unspecified ‘reports’ that ‘put the death toll at over 450’ in Misrata. Curiously, a piece in the same broadcast put the toll at 400. But then there is no need to make sense of the figures or to provide sources – or to consider arcane issues of methodology – when the bad guys are doing the killing.  

Elsewhere, Campaign Against Arms Trade asks: ‘Why is the British Government surprised at what Colonel Gaddafi has done with the weapons it has sold him?’ Kaye Stearman comments:

‘UKTI DSO [UK Trade & Investment Defence & Security Organisation, the Government’s arms export unit] set up a permanent office in Tripoli to facilitate arms company activities. Libyan top brass were invited to attend Farnborough International Airshow in 2010 and Defence Security Equipment International  arms fair in London in 2009.

‘In turn, British arms companies exhibited at arms fairs in Libya. Britain had the largest pavilion at Tripoli’s Libyan Defence and Security Exhibition in 2010.

‘In 2009, EU arms exports to North Africa doubled from 985 million euros to two billion euros. In Libya, they reached 343 million euros (compared to 250 million euros the year before). The main suppliers in the five years 2005-09 were Italy, France and the UK…’

Cluster Bombs – Some Awkward Facts

The US website Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR) noted that the New York Times had reported:

‘Military forces loyal to Col. Moammar el-Gadhafi have been firing into residential neighborhoods in this embattled city with heavy weapons, including cluster bombs that have been banned by much of the world.’

The NYT strongly suggested that the use of cluster bombs helped justify Nato’s cause:

‘The use of such weapons in these ways could add urgency to the arguments by Britain and France that the alliance needs to step up attacks on the Gadhafi forces, to better fulfill the United Nations mandate to protect civilians.’

The newspaper mentioned as an aside:

‘At the same time, the United States has used cluster munitions itself, in battlefield situations in Afghanistan and Iraq, and in a strike on suspected militants in Yemen in 2009.’

The reality is far uglier, as FAIR noted:

‘The U.S. was criticized by Human Rights Watch for using cluster bombs in populated areas in Afghanistan, killing and injuring scores of civilians (Washington Post, 12/18/02). Amnesty International (4/2/03) called the U.S.’s use of cluster bombs in civilian areas of Iraq “a grave violation of international humanitarian law.” (See FAIR Action Alert, 5/6/03.) NATO employed cluster bombs in its bombing of Serbia during the Kosovo War, with one attack killing 15 civilians in the town of Nis (BBC, 5/7/99); more than 2,000 unexploded munitions from cluster bombs are estimated to remain on Serbian territory, continuing to endanger civilians (AFP, 3/10/09).

‘The “suspected militants” attacked by a cluster bomb in Yemen in 2009 turned out to be “21 children and 20 innocent women and men” (NewYorkTimes.com, 12/9/10)–all killed in the U.S. attack.’

FAIR added, ‘You can be sure that none of these examples of U.S. use of cluster bombs in civilian areas prompted the New York Times to suggest that they justified military attacks on the United States in order to protect civilians.’

There is also the embarrassing fact that British and American officials colluded in a plan to hoodwink parliament over a proposed ban on cluster bombs. WikiLeaks revealed that David Miliband, Britain’s foreign secretary under Labour, approved the use of a loophole to manoeuvre around the ban and allow the US to keep the munitions on British territory.

In a straightforward propaganda piece in the Guardian, Xan Rice wrote:

‘In their attempt to end the uprising, Gaddafi’s forces have killed at least 1,000 people. Around 90% are civilians who have died because of indiscriminate shelling or shooting, doctors here say.’

Again, no need to provide serious evidence for the figures.

Having previously lauded ‘a war in Libya with the noble aim of protecting civilians,’ the Independent’s Patrick Cockburn now looks on as ‘Justifiable action against impending massacre turns into imperial intervention.’ The notion that the war has suddenly turned ‘into imperial intervention’ might salve Cockburn’s conscience, but in fact there has been no change, no turn, because there never was a ‘noble aim’. As Richard Keeble reported in a recent guest media alert, the West has been trying to topple Gaddafi for four decades. Likewise, over many decades, the West has been utterly ruthless in using violence to secure the region’s natural resources. It makes no sense to view the current war in isolation from the long, abysmal historical record, and the obvious drivers and goals of US-UK foreign policy. Former British ambassador to Uzbekistan, Craig Murray, blogged the point that matters:

‘Bahrain is putting 47 doctors and nurses on trial for treating wounded and dying protestors. Again there is total silence from the UK and US governments at this sickening human rights abuse by our “ally” in the Gulf. There is no discussion of sanctions against Bahrain or Saudi Arabia. There no longer seems to be even the slightest attempt to disguise the double standards. Human rights are merely an excuse to attack those who oppose UK and US interests, meaning corporate wealth; those who promote those interests can rape, kill and pillage whosoever they please.’

On April 20, we challenged the BBC’s Jonathan Marcus on his coverage of the war in Libya:

Hi Jonathan

I’m sure you believe your reporting is completely neutral. You write: “there seems to be a general sense that something more must be done…” to help rebels “defeat their government opponents on the ground”. You ask “But what? None of the options are quick or simple”. You then provide three military options: [Nato ‘boots on the ground’, ‘equip and train’ rebels and ‘advice and support’ for rebels].

Can you see that, to be neutral, you would have to pen a companion article outlining military options that would help pro-Gaddafi forces defeat the rebels and Nato? Inconceivable, of course.

Best wishes

David

Marcus responded the same day:

Sorry I disagree with your logic. I don’t believe my reporting is neutral – I know it is. We must leave it at that – we are not going to agree.
JM

He added: “I am paid precisely not to have strong views but to try to analyse events fairly which I have done.”

We replied, again on the same day:

Thanks Jonathan. It’s not about agreeing; it’s about providing reasonable arguments to justify important positions. To be balanced, the BBC would have to outline options that might enable pro-Gaddafi forces to win the war. This the BBC would never do because it would be seen as an endorsement for Gaddafi’s cause. And this is why your report was not neutral – it’s fine to offer a de facto endorsement for the rebels’ cause, even though the BBC doesn’t just believe, but knows it’s neutral.

It’s just a rational argument – you’re free to ignore it, of course.

Best wishes 

David

Our point – an obvious one, we would hope – is not at all to suggest that we support Gaddafi’s tyranny or his atrocities. Our point is that, time and again, our ostensibly independent mass media fall into line when the state declares war. When the official enemy attacks civilians our media howl with righteous outrage. But when our own governments, the people we elected, do the same or much worse –  when they reduce a major city to utter ruins – our media applaud the tough choices made by a ‘warrior president’, or celebrate the clever, high-tech tools that make the task that bit easier.

As long as our compassion is filtered through a screen of self-interest, so that we notice suffering when it suits us and ignore it when it does not, our world will be filled with violence and the lucrative industries it spawns.

Suggested Action

The goal of Media Lens is to promote rationality, compassion and respect for others. If you do write to journalists, we strongly urge you to maintain a polite, non-aggressive and non-abusive tone.

Write to Jonathan Marcus

Email: jonathan.marcus@bbc.co.uk

Write to Xan Rice

Email: xan.rice@guardian.co.uk


:: Article nr. 77465 sent on 06-may-2011 19:46 ECT

www.uruknet.info?p=77465

Orphans of Tal Afar

April 22, 2011 at 10:50 am | Posted in Turkmens | Leave a comment
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Orphans of Tal Afar

Article published in News Week

http://www.newsweek.com/2005/03/27/orphans-of-tall-afar.html

by Owen Matthews

March 28, 2005

 

Chris Hondros / Getty Images

Audio: Chris Hondros on Iraqi Orphans. CLICK ON PHOTO TO VIEW GALLERY.

Editor’s Note: Award-winning photojournalist Chris Hondros died in Misurata, Libya, on April 20, 2011, along with his colleague Tim Hetherington.

Army investigators in Iraq have cleared Apache Company’s soldiers of any wrongdoing. The men did what they were trained to do under the circumstances. Yet that’s small comfort to the Hassan orphans. “If it were up to me, I’d kill the Americans and drink their blood,” says Jilan, 14. Her 12-year-old brother, Rakan, was discharged from Mosul General Hospital this month. Doctors said his best hope of walking again is to seek treatment outside Iraq. At least he can move his legs. As far as he knows, his parents are in the hospital, recovering from the shooting. No one dares to tell him the truth.

The Hassan family might have vanished into the war’s statistics if Chris Hondros hadn’t been at the scene that evening. The Getty Images photographer had spent the day on patrol with Apache Company. Readers have been asking NEWSWEEK about the Hassan orphans ever since we ran their picture in our Jan. 31 issue. We finally managed to find the youngsters in Mosul, sharing a three-room house with a married sister, her husband and at least three members of his family. It’s hard to see the Hassan shooting as anything but a horrible accident of war. Nevertheless, the story offers some insight into why Iraq remains one of the most dangerous places on earth two years after the fall of Saddam Hussein, and why the United Stateshas had such difficulty winning Iraqi hearts and minds.

The whole incident took barely 15 seconds. Night was falling on Jan. 18, and Apache’s men had almost finished their day in Tal Afar, a rundown city of 200,000 near the Syrian border. Insurgents practically own the town after dark. Even in the daytime,U.S. soldiers routinely travel in convoys of at least three Strykers. That evening, Apache’s armored vehicles had pulled over near the town’s main traffic circle while the men patrolled on foot. As they stood by the road, a set of headlights swung into the boulevard and accelerated in their direction. “We have a car coming!” shouted one of the men. Away from their Strykers and on foot, they were perfect targets for a suicide bomber. They gestured frantically at the driver to stop. He didn’t. Someone else yelled, “Stop that car!”

Hussein Hassan was hurrying to get home. His wife, Kamila, sat beside him in the family Opel; their five youngest children, 2 to 14, were squeezed in the back seat with a 6-year-old cousin. They had been at his brother’s house, but now curfew was 15 minutes away, and Tal Afar’s streets are no place for a family after dark. Hussein turned off Tal Afar’s main traffic circle onto Mansour Boulevard. Rakan was first to spot the soldiers in the deepening dusk. They were waving their arms and raising their assault rifles. The boy jumped up in the back seat. Before he could open his mouth to warn his father, a storm of gunfire struck the car, killing both parents and covering the children with their blood.

The Opel rolled to a stop, its engine blown out, headlights somehow still shining. The silence was broken by the sound of children wailing. One soldier moved warily to the car and pointed a light inside. What the beam showed was anything but insurgents. “Civilians!” a squad leader shouted. The soldiers ran to the car.

Jilan scrambled out of the back seat with her hands up. “No, mister!” she yelled. “No, mister!” Most Iraqi children have learned at least a little English. Rakan tried to follow her, but he fell to the pavement. His legs wouldn’t work. Their sisters Rana, 6, and Samar, 7, were screaming, their hair full of blood and smashed glass. Baby brother Muhammad and cousin Rajhda made scarcely a sound.

A man in an American uniform approached. His face was wrapped in khaki cloth. Apache Company’s interpreters try to hide their identities, to keep insurgents from targeting their families. The masked man said something in Arabic, but the children, ethnic Turkomans, didn’t understand. The Americans offered water and pistachios to the kids. “We threw them in [the soldiers’] faces,” recalls Samar. “We wouldn’t talk to them.” Medics dressed a bloody gash in Rakan’s back. In the darkness, they couldn’t see that it was an exit wound. Bullet fragments had entered Rakan’s abdomen just above the bladder and blasted out through his spine, damaging his three lowest vertebrae. One of the soldiers carried him in his arms as they rode to Tal Afar’s General Hospital. The rest of the kids were driven home by a relative, an ambulance driver. Muhammad, not yet weaned, cried all night for his mother.

The soldiers headed back to base. Partway there, they pulled over for a huddle. “This is bad,” said the unit’s commander, Capt. Thomas Seibold. “But I will protect you. There’s going to be an investigation. The only thing we can do is to be honest. We did nothing wrong.” He asked who had fired. Six men spoke up. He asked who had shot first, and he got no response. A couple of men said they fired the second shot. They climbed back into their Strykers and drove on.

Back on base, the men filled out sworn statements. Apache’s officers and NCOs hurried to reassure them. “Put yourself there,” says Maj. Dylan Moxness. “You’re an 18-year-old kid from Tennessee. You don’t even understand why these people don’t speak English anyway, you’re shouting ‘Stop!’ and the car’s still coming at you–you’ve got to fire.”

The next morning, Maj. Brian Grady set out for the Hassans’ home, escorted by a dozen soldiers. As the 2-14 Cavalry’s civil-affairs officer, he makes cash grants to build schools and clinics in Tal Afar. (The funding is disguised as money from the Iraqi government so insurgents won’t target the projects.) But most of his budget is devoted to compensation offered, with few questions, for civilian deaths, injuries, property damage or false imprisonment. “It’s not an admission of guilt,” says Grady. “It’s an admission that suffering has occurred, and it’s an expression of sympathy.” The standard sum for a noncombatant’s death–and the maximum for a motor vehicle–is $2,500. Claimants can still file for the full amount of material damages to property, like houses and cars, but solid proof is required, and processing can be slow.

Grady paid $7,500 to a family elder named Abdul Yusuf, who promised to take responsibility for the orphans. But the children ended up with their eldest sister, Intisar, 24, and her husband, Haj Natheer Basheer, 50, in a tiny, rundown house in Mosul. Haj Natheer says he visited the base in early March with Jilan and Samar. He says Captain Seibold broke into tears talking to the children. Natheer thought it was a charade, and launched into a diatribe against the occupation. The translator finally warned the Iraqi to be quiet or risk getting locked up. “They are only tolerating you because the kids are here,” the translator said. Natheer hasn’t seen the Americans since. Captain Seibold declines to comment on the incident.

Most of Apache’s men were on patrol again the day after the shooting. “The mentality of the cavalry is, ‘Put it in a box and go back to battle’,” says Capt. John Montalto, 34, a psychologist fromManhattan’sUpper East Side. “The repercussions happen later.” The Reserves called Montalto up last June to treat combat stress-cases in Tal Afar. He says the 2-14’s commanding officer, Lt. Col. Mark Davis, has spoken to him just once, with a warning: “Don’t ruin my combat power.” None of Apache’s members went to him after the shooting.

The men can only shake their heads over the incident. “The car seemed to be speeding up,” says one. “Ask them why they were coming on so fast. They should have stopped.” The unit’s chaplain, Capt. Ed Willis, says there’s no reason to feel guilty: “If you kill someone on the battlefield, whether it’s another soldier or collateral damage, that doesn’t fit under ‘Thou shalt not kill’.” “You don’t want [your men] second-guessing their actions,” says Moxness. “You want them to keep themselves alive.” The sleepless nights can wait until the men get home safe. For whatever peace of mind it may offer anyone, a Seattle businessman and evangelical Christian named Malcolm Mead has set up a Web site in the name of relief for the Hassan family. If the money reaches the right hands, Rakan might someday walk again.

For more of Tim Hetherington’s work, click here.

http://www.newsweek.com/2005/03/27/orphans-of-tall-afar.html

IRAQ FOREVER POLLUTED BY DEPLETED URANIUM

September 16, 2010 at 4:23 pm | Posted in Turkmens | Leave a comment
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IRAQ FOREVER POLLUTED BY DEPLETED URANIUM

 

A must watch

PLEASE CLICK ON THE LINK BELOW TO WATCH THE VIDEO

http://www.sbs.com.au/dateline/story/watch/id/600687/n/Iraq-s-Deadly-Legacy

 

TRANSCRIPT :

IRAQ’S DEADLY LEGACY

It is seven years since the invasion of Baghdad and only now is the US withdrawing its forces from Iraq, but the Iraqi people themselves, meanwhile, are having to deal with what appears to be a more immediate and devastating legacy from the war – stories are now emerging of increased deformities in the country’s newborn babies as well as a dramatic rise in the number of children with cancer. Dateline’s Walkley Award-winning reporter Fouad Hady, an Iraqi-Australian, went back home to investigate. As you know, Dateline always warns it’s viewers when they are about to show images or sequences that they think you might find upsetting. Well, George Negus had a long look at Fouad’s piece and it’s definitely upsetting – confronting, in fact. Nevertheless, he urges you to stick with it. It says a lot about the ethical dilemma of modern armed conflicts like Iraq. 

REPORTER:  Fouad Hady

I’m travelling to Falluja – about two hours drive west of Baghdad – the scene of fierce fighting between Sunni insurgents and US forces in 2004. My driver is Mohammed, a mechanic who lives here, he remembers a happier time.

MOHAMMED, DRIVER (Translation):  This is our city, Falluja.  Every Monday and Tuesday it used to celebrate weddings, happy occasions, newborn babies and young men and women getting married…..

He says that has all changed now.

MOHAMMED (Translation):  They don’t have very high hopes of marrying and starting a family because they are scared to have children.  This is the stricken Falluja city.

Mohammed and his new bride stayed in Falluja throughout the fighting. They say there is a terrible legacy.

MOHAMMED (Translation):  She was two months pregnant when the battles with the American forces started.  They were fierce battles and the American forces moved into the houses.  There was heavy aerial bombing and armoured vehicles came in.  A while later Zahraa was born disabled –she has six digits in her hands and feet – here are her hands and here are her feet. They are the effects – the doctors would not give us reports.  She also had general paralysis and obesity, an allergy in the trachea, asthma, cross-eyed and also has mild mental retardation.

Continue Reading IRAQ FOREVER POLLUTED BY DEPLETED URANIUM…

Beyond Hiroshima: Fallujah’s cancer catastrophe

September 13, 2010 at 3:03 pm | Posted in Turkmens | Leave a comment
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Beyond Hiroshima: Fallujah’s cancer catastrophe

http://stopwar.org.uk/content/view/2064/27/

 

A recent report documenting how the US-British offensive on Fallujah in November 2004 — named “Operation Phantom Fury” — left in its trail a horrific increase in cancer, infant mortality and birth defects, has been ignored by virtually all the American and British media.


By Editors
Media Lens
August 2010


 

The International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, a leading medical journal, published in August 2010 a study, ‘Cancer, Infant Mortality and Birth Sex-Ratio in Fallujah, Iraq 2005–2009,’ by Chris Busby, Malak Hamdan and Entesar Ariabi.

Noam Chomsky commented the study’s findings are “vastly more significant” than the Wikileaks Afghan ‘War Diary’ leaks.

After all, the cancer crisis reported in the study is impacting thousands of people in one of Iraq’s largest cities and is so severe that local doctors are advising women not to have children.

In the Independent, Patrick Cockburn wrote:

“Dramatic increases in infant mortality, cancer and leukaemia in the Iraqi city of Fallujah, which was bombarded by US Marines in 2004, exceed those reported by survivors of the atomic bombs that were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945, according to a new study.”

The survey of 4,800 individuals in Fallujah showed a four-fold increase in all cancers and a 12-fold increase in childhood cancer in under-14s. It found a 10-fold increase in female breast cancer and significant increases in lymphoma and brain tumours in adults. Researchers found a 38-fold increase in leukaemia. By contrast, Hiroshima survivors showed a 17-fold increase in leukaemia. According to the study, the types of cancer are “similar to that in the Hiroshima survivors who were exposed to ionising radiation from the bomb and uranium in the fallout”. (Ibid.)

Infant mortality was found to be 80 per 1,000 births compared to 19 in Egypt, 17 in Jordan and 9.7 in Kuwait.

The study’s authors commented:

“These results support the many reports of congenital illness and birth defects in Fallujah and suggest that there is evidence of genetic stress which appeared around 2004, one year before the effects began to show.”

Dr Chris Busby, a visiting professor at the University of Ulster and one of the authors of the survey, said it was difficult to identify the exact cause of the cancers and birth defects. But, he said, “to produce an effect like this, some very major mutagenic exposure must have occurred in 2004 when the [US] attacks happened”. (Cockburn, op.cit.)

US troops launched a major attack on Fallujah in March 2004 and then joined with British forces to storm the city in a much bigger offensive, Operation Phantom Fury, in November of the same year. On November 30, 2004, the UN’s Integrated Regional Information Network reported the aftermath:

“Approximately 70 percent of the houses and shops were destroyed in the city and those still standing are riddled with bullets.” (‘Fallujah still needs more supplies despite aid arrival,’ http://www.irinnews.org, November 30, 2004)

In January 2005, an Iraqi doctor, Ali Fadhil, reported of the city:

“It was completely devastated, destruction everywhere. It looked like a city of ghosts. Falluja used to be a modern city; now there was nothing. We spent the day going through the rubble that had been the centre of the city; I didn’t see a single building that was functioning.” (Fadhil, ‘City of ghosts,’ The Guardian, January 11, 2005)

On March 3, 2005, Aljazeera reported:

“Dr. Khalid ash-Shaykhli, an official at Iraq’s health ministry, said that the U.S. military used internationally banned weapons during its deadly offensive in the city of Fallujah.” The official reported evidence that US forces had “used… substances, including mustard gas, nerve gas, and other burning chemicals in their attacks in the war-torn city.” (‘US used banned weapons in Fallujah – Health ministry,’ March 3, 2005, http://www.aljazeera.com)

American documentary film-maker Mark Manning told of “American forces deploying – in violation of international treaties – napalm, chemical weapons, phosphorous bombs, and ‘bunker-busting’ shells laced with depleted uranium. Use of any of these against civilians is a violation of international law.” (Nick Welsh, ‘Diving into Fallujah,’ Santa Barbara Independent, March 17, 2005)

Despite this and copious other evidence, the BBC’s director of news, Helen Boaden, told Media Lens in March 2005 that her reporter in Fallujah, Paul Wood, had seen “no evidence of the use of such weapons”. Wood added, with considerable naivety:

“The character of the fighting that I saw was bloody, old-fashioned clearing of houses and buildings street by street, block by block, the kind of fighting which is done with little more than an M16 and a handful of grenades. It doesn’t make sense to use mustard gas, nerve agents, other chemical agents or nuclear devices — to quote the Al Jazeera story — in such a small space also occupied by your own forces.” (Boaden, email to Media Lens, March 7, 2005)

See our previous alerts for details:Doubts cast on BBC, BBC silent on Fallujah, BBC still ignoring evidence

While the recent survey was unable to identify the weapons used by US forces, the extent of genetic damage suffered by residents in Fallujah suggests the use of uranium in some form. Dr Busby said: “My guess is that they used a new weapon against buildings to break through walls and kill those inside.” (Cockburn, op. cit.)

The authors concluded:

“This study was intended to investigate the accuracy of the various reports which have been emerging from Fallujah regarding perceived increases in birth defects, infant deaths and cancer in the population and to examine samples from the area for the presence of mutagenic substances that may explain any results. We conclude that the results confirm the reported increases in cancer and infant mortality which are alarmingly high. The remarkable reduction in the sex ratio in the cohort born one year after the fighting in 2004 identifies that year as the time of the environmental contamination.”

Media Performance

We can find exactly one mention of the Fallujah cancer and infant mortality study in the entire UK and US national press – Patrick Cockburn’s article in the Independent. The story has simply been ignored by every other US-UK national newspaper.

The study +has+ been reported elsewhere. Cockburn’s piece was reprinted in The Hamilton Spectator in Ontario, Canada on July 24 and in the July 25 Sunday Tribune in Ireland. The July 27 Frontier Post in Pakistan ran an excellent piece on the US military’s use of depleted uranium in several theatres of war, including Fallujah. So did the July 30 Irish News. The August 3 edition of New Nation in Bangladesh also covered the issue. It is much more difficult for us to assess TV and radio performance. To its credit, the BBC did give the story some attention.

The destruction of Fallujah is only one small item on an almost unbelievable list of horrors heaped by the United States and Britain on Iraq – crimes that are rarely considered individually and almost never as a whole. Readers might like to consider how often they can recall the mainstream media summing up the recent history of Iraq in the way that US dissident writer Bill Blum did last week:

“… no American should be allowed to forget that the nation of Iraq, the society of Iraq, have been destroyed, ruined, a failed state. The Americans, beginning 1991, bombed for 12 years, with one excuse or another; then invaded, then occupied, overthrew the government, killed wantonly, tortured … the people of that unhappy land have lost everything — their homes, their schools, their electricity, their clean water, their environment, their neighborhoods, their mosques, their archaeology, their jobs, their careers, their professionals, their state-run enterprises, their physical health, their mental health, their health care, their welfare state, their women’s rights, their religious tolerance, their safety, their security, their children, their parents, their past, their present, their future, their lives …

“More than half the population either dead, wounded, traumatized, in prison, internally displaced, or in foreign exile … The air, soil, water, blood and genes drenched with depleted uranium … the most awful birth defects … unexploded cluster bombs lie in wait for children to pick them up … an army of young Islamic men went to Iraq to fight the American invaders; they left the country more militant, hardened by war, to spread across the Middle East, Europe and Central Asia … a river of blood runs alongside the Euphrates and Tigris … through a country that may never be put back together again.”

Mainstream journalists see things differently. The BBC’s correspondent Paul Wood reported from Iraq in June 2005:

“After everything that’s happened in Fallujah, the Americans aren’t going to find an +unambiguous+ welcome. But Fallujah +is+ more peaceful than it’s been in a long time. Its people like that.” (Wood, BBC 1, 18:00 News, June 22, 2005)

After Hiroshima and Nagasaki, there was Fallujah

April 8, 2010 at 11:12 am | Posted in Turkmens | Leave a comment
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AND TELAFER!!!

 

The United States takes the matter of three-headed babies very seriously.

 By William Blum

2010/04/08

by kanan48

Via: The Anti-Empire Report.

When did it begin, all this “We take your [call/problem/question] very seriously”? With answering-machine hell? As you wait endlessly, the company or government agency assures you that they take seriously whatever reason you’re calling. What a kind and thoughtful world we live in.

The BBC reported last month that doctors in the Iraqi city of Fallujah are reporting a high level of birth defects, with some blaming weapons used by the United States during its fierce onslaughts of 2004 and subsequently, which left much of the city in ruins. “It was like an earthquake,” a local engineer who was running for a national assembly seat told the Washington Post in 2005. “After Hiroshima and Nagasaki, there was Fallujah.” Now, the level of heart defects among newborn babies is said to be 13 times higher than in Europe.

The BBC correspondent also saw children in the city who were suffering from paralysis or brain damage, and a photograph of one baby who was born with three heads. He added that he heard many times that officials in Fallujah had warned women that they should not have children. One doctor in the city had compared data about birth defects from before 2003 — when she saw about one case every two months — with the situation now, when she saw cases every day. “I’ve seen footage of babies born with an eye in the middle of the forehead, the nose on the forehead,” she said.

A spokesman for the US military, Michael Kilpatrick, said it always took public health concerns “very seriously”, but that “No studies to date have indicated environmental issues resulting in specific health issues.” 1

One could fill many large volumes with the details of the environmental and human horrors the United States has brought to Fallujah and other parts of Iraq during seven years of using white phosphorous shells, depleted uranium, napalm, cluster bombs, neutron bombs, laser weapons, weapons using directed energy, weapons using high-powered microwave technology, and other marvelous inventions in the Pentagon’s science-fiction arsenal … the list of abominations and grotesque ways of dying is long, the wanton cruelty of American policy shocking. In November 2004, the US military targeted a Fallujah hospital “because the American military believed that it was the source of rumors about heavy casualties.” 2 That’s on a par with the classic line from the equally glorious American war in Vietnam: “We had to destroy the city to save it.”

How can the world deal with such inhumane behavior? (And the above of course scarcely scratches the surface of the US international record.) For this the International Criminal Court (ICC) was founded in Rome in 1998 (entering into force July 1, 2002) under the aegis of the United Nations. The Court was established in The Hague, Netherlands to investigate and indict individuals, not states, for “The crime of genocide; Crimes against humanity; War crimes; or The crime of aggression.” (Article 5 of the Rome Statute) From the very beginning, the United States was opposed to joining the ICC, and has never ratified it, because of the alleged danger of the Court using its powers to “frivolously” indict Americans.

So concerned about indictments were the American powers-that-be that the US went around the world using threats and bribes against countries to induce them to sign agreements pledging not to transfer to the Court US nationals accused of committing war crimes abroad. Just over 100 governments so far have succumbed to the pressure and signed an agreement. In 2002, Congress, under the Bush administration, passed the “American Service Members Protection Act”, which called for “all means necessary and appropriate to bring about the release of any US or allied personnel being detained or imprisoned by … the International Criminal Court.” In the Netherlands it’s widely and derisively known as the “Invasion of The Hague Act”. 3The law is still on the books.

Though American officials have often spoken of “frivolous” indictments — politically motivated prosecutions against US soldiers, civilian military contractors, and former officials — it’s safe to say that what really worries them are “serious” indictments based on actual events. But they needn’t worry. The mystique of “America the Virtuous” is apparently alive and well at the International Criminal Court, as it is, still, in most international organizations; indeed, amongst most people of the world. The ICC, in its first few years, under Chief Prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo, an Argentine, dismissed many hundreds of petitions accusing the United States of war crimes, including 240 concerning the war in Iraq. The cases were turned down for lack of evidence, lack of jurisdiction, or because of the United States’ ability to conduct its own investigations and trials. The fact that the US never actually used this ability was apparently not particularly significant to the Court. “Lack of jurisdiction” refers to the fact that the United States has not ratified the accord. On the face of it, this does seem rather odd. Can nations commit war crimes with impunity as long as they don’t become part of a treaty banning war crimes? Hmmm. The possibilities are endless. A congressional study released in August, 2006 concluded that the ICC’s chief prosecutor demonstrated “a reluctance to launch an investigation against the United States” based on allegations regarding its conduct in Iraq. 4 Sic transit gloria International Criminal Court.

As to the crime of aggression, the Court’s statute specifies that the Court “shall exercise jurisdiction over the crime of aggression once a provision is adopted … defining the crime and setting out the conditions under which the Court shall exercise jurisdiction with respect to this crime.” In short, the crime of aggression is exempted from the Court’s jurisdiction until “aggression” is defined. Writer Diana Johnstone has observed: “This is a specious argument since aggression has been quite clearly defined by U.N. General Assembly Resolution 3314 in 1974, which declared that: ‘Aggression is the use of armed force by a State against the sovereignty, territorial integrity or political independence of another State’, and listed seven specific examples,” including:

The invasion or attack by the armed forces of a State of the territory of another State, or any military occupation, however temporary, resulting from such invasion or attack, or any annexation by the use of force of the territory of another State or part thereof; and

Bombardment by the armed forces of a State against the territory of another State or the use of any weapons by a State against the territory of another State.

The UN resolution also stated that: “No consideration of whatever nature, whether political, economic, military or otherwise, may serve as a justification for aggression.”

The real reason that aggression remains outside the jurisdiction of the ICC is that the United States, which played a strong role in elaborating the Statute before refusing to ratify it, was adamantly opposed to its inclusion. It is not hard to see why. It may be noted that instances of “aggression”, which are clearly factual, are much easier to identify than instances of “genocide”, whose definition relies on assumptions of intention. 5

There will be a conference of the ICC in May, in Kampala, Uganda, in which the question of specifically defining “aggression” will be discussed. The United States is concerned about this discussion. Here is Stephen J. Rapp, US Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes Issues, speaking to the ICC member nations (111 have ratified thus far) in The Hague last November 19:

I would be remiss not to share with you my country’s concerns about an issue pending before this body to which we attach particular importance: the definition of the crime of aggression, which is to be addressed at the Review Conference in Kampala next year. The United States has well-known views on the crime of aggression, which reflect the specific role and responsibilities entrusted to the Security Council by the UN Charter in responding to aggression or its threat, as well as concerns about the way the draft definition itself has been framed. Our view has been and remains that, should the Rome Statute be amended to include a defined crime of aggression, jurisdiction should follow a Security Council determination that aggression has occurred.

Do you all understand what Mr. Rapp is saying? That the United Nations Security Council should be the body that determines whether aggression has occurred. The same body in which the United States has the power of veto. To prevent the adoption of a definition of aggression that might stigmatize American foreign policy is likely the key reason the US will be attending the upcoming conference.

Nonetheless, the fact that the United States will be attending the conference may well be pointed out by some as another example of how the Obama administration foreign policy is an improvement over that of the Bush administration. But as with almost all such examples, it’s a propaganda illusion. Like the cover of Newsweek magazine of March 8, written in very large type: “Victory at last: The emergence of a democratic Iraq”. Even before the current Iraqi electoral farce — with winning candidates arrested or fleeing 6— this headline should have made one think of the interminable jokes Americans made during the Cold War about Pravda and Izvestia.

Notes

  1. BBC, March 4, 2010; Washington Post, December 3, 2005
  2. New York Times, November 8, 2004
  3. Christian Science Monitor, February 13, 2009
  4. Washington Post, November 7, 2006 <
  5. Diana Johnstone, Counterpunch, January 27/28, 2007
  6. Washington Post, April 2, 2010

http://kanan48.wordpress.com/2010/04/08/the-united-states-takes-the-matter-of-three-headed-babies-very-seriously/

Website ‘shows video of US attack on civilians in Iraq

April 5, 2010 at 8:36 pm | Posted in Turkmens | Leave a comment
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Website ‘shows video of US attack’
 
 
The website released footage of what it said was a 2007 US military attack in Baghdad [Wikileaks] 

 

One of the internet’s biggest sources of classified government information has released video of what it says is a US helicopter firing at civilians in Iraq.

WikiLeaks, a website that publishes anonymously sourced documents, released what it called previously unseen footage, on Monday.

It said the footage filmed from a helicopter cockpit shows a missile strike on a crowded square in a Baghdad neighbourhood in July 2007.

The website said 12 civilians were killed in the attack, including two journalists, Namir Nour El Deen and Saeed Chmagh, who worked for the Reuters news agency.

The two men appear to survive the first strike and attempt to get away, but the helicopter returns a second and third time.

There was no immediate comment from the US military on the video.

Witnesses corroborated

Julian Assange, the editor of WikiLeaks.org, said there is strong evidence to suggest that the video is genuine.

in depth
  Blog: WikiLeaks vs the Pentagon
  Listening Post: WikiLeaks

 

“There was a Washington Post reporter who was with that US military unit on the ground on that day,” Assange told Al Jazeera, referring to David Finkel, a journalist who was embedded with the US military in July 2007.

“He wrote a chapter in a book, which was published last year, called The Good Soldiers, which correlates directly to the material in that video.

“Also, Reuters conducted a number of investigations and interviewed two ground witnesses at the time.

“That story wasn’t really taken seriously, [with] nothing to back up the witnesses, but now we have the video that shows that those witnesses were correct.”

‘Under surveillance’

Separately, WikiLeaks said last month that it had obtained a classified document that originated from the US Central Intelligence Agency.

The 32-page document outlined a public relations strategy to keep the French and German public behind their troop deployments in Afghanistan, the group said.

The CIA has not confirmed or denied whether the document is genuine.

But officials at WikiLeaks have said the US state department wants the document, and that company staff members were placed under surveillance while on a recent visit to Reykjavik.

The US defence department has discussed making it illegal to look at the site, according to a document leaked to the website in 2008.

Corporations around the world are also suing to have the site shut down.

 

http://english.aljazeera.net/news/americas/2010/04/201045123449200569.html

IRAQ: Nothing But Shit Strewn Everywhere

February 28, 2010 at 9:18 pm | Posted in Turkmens | Leave a comment
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Nothing But Shit Strewn Everywhere

Malcom Lagauche

 
Headless Iraqi soldiers: trophy photo for U.S. troops

 

 February 27, 2010

Nineteen years ago, one of the most diabolical slaughters in war history occurred in Iraq. Despite the assurances of the Bush I regime that retreating Iraqi soldiers would not be attacked, just the opposite happened. Iraqi soldiers and civilians were massacred after Saddam Hussein called for their exit of Kuwait.

More than 100,000 Iraqi soldiers were killed in five weeks, the majority during the 100-hour ground war. You may say, “This is war and people get killed.” That’s true, but tens of thousands of Iraqi soldiers were killed by illegal weapons in a most brutal manner that contradicted international laws that apply to war.

When then Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Colin Powell, was asked about the number of deaths the Iraqi military suffered, he said, “I don’t have a clue and I don’t plan to undertake any real effort to find out.” This is the same man who stated several months after Desert Storm that his goal was to “make the world scared to death of the United States.”

Continue Reading IRAQ: Nothing But Shit Strewn Everywhere…

Book: Cultural Cleansing in Iraq

December 15, 2009 at 2:58 am | Posted in Turkmens | Leave a comment
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Middle East Studies

Click to enlarge image

 If you are looking for a textbook that provides a …

(Gilbert Achcar, Professor at the School )

  If you are looking for a textbook that provides a view of Middle East politics free of colonial bias, … [this] book plainly fulfil this fundamental requirement. Informed by the empathy of belonging as well as by a critical objectivity enhanced by a long experience in teaching the region to students … , this book is a safe guide to the political intricacies of the Middle East.

(Gilbert Achcar, Professor at the School of Oriental and African Studies of the University of London)

  Cultural Cleansing in Iraq
Why Museums Were Looted, Libraries Burned and Academics Murdered

http://www.plutobooks.com/display.asp?K=9780745328126&CID=BRUSSELLS

Product Description

Why did the invasion of Iraq result in cultural destruction and killings of intellectuals? Convention sees accidents of war and poor planning in a campaign to liberate Iraqis. The authors argue instead that the invasion aimed to dismantle the Iraqi state to remake it as a client regime.

 Post-invasion chaos created conditions under which the cultural foundations of the state could be undermined. The authors painstakingly document the consequences of the occupiers’ willful inaction and worse, which led to the ravaging of one of the world’s oldest recorded cultures. Targeted assassination of over 400 academics, kidnapping and the forced flight of thousands of doctors, lawyers, artists and other intellectuals add up to cultural cleansing.

 This important work lays to rest claims that the invasion aimed to free an educated population to develop its own culture of democracy.

 About The Author

Tareq Y. Ismael is a professor of Political Science at the University of Calgary, Canada & President of the International Centre for Contemporary Middle East Studies at eastern Mediterranean University. His most recent works include Middle East Politics Today (2001), Turkey’s Foreign Policy in the 21st Century (2003), & Iraq: The Human Cost of History (2003).

 Raymond William Baker is Professor of International Politics, Trinity College, USA, and Adjunct Professor of Political Science at the American University in Cairo. His most recent book is Islam Without Fear: Egypt and the New Islamists.

Shereen T. Ismael is an Assistant Professor of Social Work and MSW Field Coordinator in the School of Social Work, Carleton University. In addition to her book Child Poverty and the Canadian Welfare State: from Entitlement to Charity (2006), she is the editor of Globalization: Policies, Challenges and Responses (1999).

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KBR may have poisoned 100,000 people in Iraq: lawsuit

November 10, 2009 at 1:48 pm | Posted in Turkmens | Leave a comment
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KBR may have poisoned 100,000 people in Iraq: lawsuit

By Daniel Tencer
Monday, November 9th, 2009

Defense contractor KBR may have exposed as many as 100,000 people, including US troops, to cancer-causing toxins by burning waste in open-air pits in Iraq, says a series of class-action lawsuits filed against the company.

At least 22 separate lawsuits claiming KBR poisoned American soldiers in Iraq have been combined into a single massive lawsuit that says KBR, which until not long ago was a subsidiary of Halliburton, sought to save money by disposing of toxic waste and incinerating numerous potentially harmful substances in open-air “burn pits.”

Continue Reading KBR may have poisoned 100,000 people in Iraq: lawsuit…

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