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Fallujah in US hands as uprising sweeps Sunni regions of Iraq
By James Cogan
16 November 2004
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Nine days after the US ground assault began on Fallujah, the
city, or what is left of it, is largely in US hands.
Marine Lieutenant General John Sattler claimed Sunday that
somewhere between 1,000 and 2,000 Iraqis had been killed so far
in Fallujah, and more than 1,000 captured. The number of Iraqi
casualties, however, both fighters and noncombatants, is impossible
to verify. Mortuary teams have not even begun picking up the bodies
and body parts that litter Fallujahs streets, let alone
begun searching for corpses buried beneath the rubble of homes
and apartment complexes.
The Bush administrations propaganda that Fallujah was
being held hostage by foreign terrorists has crumbled.
The only purported evidence of Islamic extremist activity has
not been found in the headquarters and fighting positions of the
citys defenders, but in what has been luridly reported as
a slaughterhouse in a windowless room on the fringes
of the northern suburbs.
The overwhelming majority of Fallujahs fightersand
the prisoners the US has takenare city residents. In the
southern districts of Fallujah, US troops have reported fighting
well-trained and uniformed Iraqis, with developed command and
control structures. An intense air and ground bombardment is being
reported against these remaining concentrations of Iraqi fighters,
with 2,000-pound bombs being unleashed on well-defended bunker
complexes.
Fallujahs crime is that its fighters, backed
by the community, have been at the forefront of Iraqi resistance
to the US-led invasion and occupation of the country. The US assault
is Nazi-style collective punishment of the entire city, aimed
at terrorising the Iraqi population as a whole into submission
before sham elections are held in January to legitimise a US-vetted
puppet government.
The US media continues to repeat the worthless claim of the
American military that it sought to minimise civilian casualties.
The claim is belied by the very methods that have been employed.
Entire districts of the city, where resistance was the strongest,
were pounded by aerial and artillery bombardment before US troops
moved in. If body heat was detected inside buildings by the thermal
sights of the advancing forces, it was assumed to come from a
fighter and the building laid waste with tank, machine-gun and
small-arms fire.
The common assessment of embedded journalists accompanying
the American troops is that Fallujah has been devastated by the
US tactics. The first estimate of structural damagesourced
from the less than reliable US-installed Iraqi interim governmentis
that 700 of the 17,000 buildings in the city have been destroyed.
Most of Fallujahs 120 mosques have suffered some degree
of damage. Thousands of homes are damaged or burnt out, with the
streets coated in glass from shattered windows. Power lines are
down across the city, and sewerage and water mains have been blown
open.
Estimates of the number of civilians in Fallujah when the assault
began on November 7 range from 30,000 to over 100,000. It is becoming
clear, however, that thousands fled for their lives as US troops
pushed into the northern suburbs. At least 4,000 families flooded
into refugee camps on the outskirts of the city by mid-last week.
The Iraqi Red Crescent Society has reported they are suffering
from a lack of food, water and medical treatment.
In a direct breach of the Geneva Convention noted by Human
Rights Watch, US troops on Thursday forced a group of unarmed
males, who were attempting to leave with their families, back
into city. Other American war crimes have already come to light.
On Saturday, an NBC cameraman captured on film a US marine apparently
executing wounded Iraqi fighters at a mosque. The incident is
said to be under investigation.
Iraqis who escaped have testified to journalists as to the
brutal and indiscriminate character of the American operation.
Associated Press (AP) photographer Bilal Hussein, who lived in
the northern district of the city attacked by US marines in the
first days of the assault, was among them. He told AP: Destruction
was everywhere. I saw people lying dead in the street, wounded
who were bleeding and there was no-one to come and help them.
Even the civilians who stayed in Fallujah were too afraid to go
out. US soldiers began to open fire on the houses, so I decided
it was too dangerous to stay.
Hussein told AP he had initially planned to swim across the
Euphrates to the citys southern suburbs, but I changed
my mind after seeing US helicopters firing on and killing people
who tried to cross the river... I kept walking along the river
for two hours and I could still see some US snipers ready to shoot
anyone who might swim.
After getting out into the rural districts, he was able to
make contact with AP correspondents in Ramadi who arranged for
a fisherman to transport him out of the area.
Fallujah doctor Ahmed Ghanim and an anesthetist also escaped
the city last Tuesday, after US artillery destroyed the clinic
they was working in. Ghanim believed that two other doctors and
most of the patients died in the attack.
He told the Los Angeles Times: I was doing amputations
for many patients... But I am an orthopedic surgeon. If a patient
came with an abdominal injury, I could do nothing... We would
bring the patient in and we would have to let him die. We were
treating everyone. There were women, children, mujaheds [fighters].
I dont ask someone if they are a fighter before I treat
them. I just take care of them.
After the destruction of the clinic, he sheltered in an abandoned
house. American tanks, he said, hit anything that moved.
Fighters who recognised him as a doctor showed him an escape route,
north along the Euphrates.
Nicole Choueiry, a London spokeswoman for Amnesty International,
told AP: According to what were hearing and some testimony
from residents who have fled Fallujah, it looks like the toll
of civilian casualties is high. It remains the responsibility
of the US military officials and the Iraqi government to establish
that. So far they havent given any figure.
Uprising in Sunni regions
The self-deluded conception in US political and military circles
that the Iraqi opposition can be subdued by bloody repression
is being exposed by the rebellion now taking place among Iraqs
Sunni Muslim population.
The main Sunni Association of Muslim Scholars, as it warned
it would before the assault on Fallujah, is calling for a boycott
of the January elections. Anger among the Sunni population has
been further inflamed by the US arrest over the last week of four
leading clerics, on charges of promoting armed resistance.
American and pro-US interim government forces are coming under
stepped-up attack in cities and towns across the central and northern
regions of the country.
Insurgents have attacked US convoys between Fallujah and Ramadi.
US air strikes were called in to dislodge Iraqi fighters from
a police station they had attacked in Baquaba. The Green Zone
headquarters of the occupation in Baghdad was mortared Monday
night, with reports of widespread guerilla activity in parts of
the city.
In Mosul, heavy fighting has taken place between hundreds of
Sunni fighters and American troops, backed now by several thousand
Kurdish militiamen who were rushed in from the Kurdish-controlled
northern provinces. A Mosul resident told the Washington Post:
Mosul will become another Fallujah. And later on, all the
cities of Iraq will be Fallujahs.
To try and slow the arrival of US reinforcements, guerillas
blew up a bridge in the city of Baiji, which lies between Mosul
and Baghdad.
The Kurdish militiamen or peshmerga have been the only
forces who will fight alongside the occupation troops in the Mosul
area. As many as 5,000 Sunni police are believed to have deserted
or joined the guerillas when they occupied the streets. The US
reliance on the peshmerga prompted the interim government
deputy prime minister, Barham Saleh, to warn of the dangers of
an Arab-Kurdish civil war in the countrys north.
Ethnic Turkomen fighters in the city of Tal Afar also launched
attacks on occupation targets over the weekend, taking over a
prison and freeing captured guerillas from cells. US armoured
vehicles are reported to have established a cordon around the
city. In September, the US military conducted a series of bloody
raids in the area, only calling them off after the Turkish government
threatened to stop cooperation with the American presence in Iraq
unless US attacks on ethnic Turks were halted.
The passions that have been provoked by the events in Fallujah
could see direct resistance to the occupation break out again
in the Shiite regions of southern Iraq. Shia political and religious
leaders who had hoped to exploit the US-staged elections are conducting
an increasingly tenuous balancing act between their ambitions
and the opposition of ordinary Iraqi Shiites to the mass killing
being conducted by US forces.
Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr came out on Friday stating his
organisation was suspending support for the elections
as no clean and honest ballot could be held under
conditions of US attacks on Iraqi cities. A senior Sadr aide demanded
that members of the interim government security forces stop
fighting against your brothers in Fallujah.
Another leading Shiite cleric in Baghdad, Hadi al-Khalissi,
declared Friday: The current savage military attack on Fallujah
by US occupation forces and the US-appointed Iraqi government
is an act of mass murder and a crime of war.
The first two weeks of November have already proven costly
for the US military. American soldiers are dying at the rate of
five per daya figure higher than any other period than the
first 10 days of the invasion itself. So far this month, 72 US
troops have been killed. At least 39 have been killed in Fallujah,
and more than 300 wounded.
See Also:
Iraq aflame over mass killings in Fallujah
[13 November 2004]
US assault leaves Fallujah in ruins and
unknown numbers dead
[11 November 2004]
US massacres civilians in Fallujah
[10 November 2004]
US media and liberal establishment: accomplices
in the assault on Fallujah
[9 November 2004]
US troops begin slaughter in Fallujah
[9 November 2004]
Massacre looms in Fallujah following
the US election
[5 November 2004]
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