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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
US forces kill Iraqi civilians every day
By James Cogan
17 July 2007
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For more than four years of US occupation, the Iraqi people
have known that coming too close to American troops can be a death
sentence. Now, internal statistics presented to US Iraq commander
General David Petraeus, and subsequently leaked to the McClatchy
news service, shed some light on the extent of civilian killings.
In the 12 months since July 2006, according to McClatchys
sources, the US military has officially admitted to killing or
wounding 429 Iraqis in 3,200 escalation of force incidentssituations
where US troops on patrol, manning checkpoints or escorting vehicle
convoys have opened fire on men, women and children they considered
a threat.
The figures indicate that civilians are shot at by US forces
somewhere in Iraq at least every three hours. The rate at which
civilians are being fired on has sharply risen with the deployment
of 30,000 additional US troops to Iraq and the intensification
of American operations in densely populated residential areas
of Baghdad and other cities. In July 2006, 22 civilians were reported
killed or maimed. In February 2007, as the Bush administrations
surge went into motion, 46 Iraqi civilian casualties
were officially documented by the US military.
A number of factors come into play in the wanton civilian deaths
caused by US troops: sheer fear of being killed themselves; the
devaluation of Iraqi lives by military propaganda; and the general
brutalisation of military personnel who are exposed to constant
death and destruction.
Interviews with 50 Iraq combat veterans published by the Nation
magazine on July 9 and soon to be presented in a new book, Collateral
Damage, provide first-hand testimony of the conduct of US
troops against the Iraqi population. The current July 30 edition
of the Nation contains a lengthy presentation of the veterans
statements. (See The
Other War: Iraq Vets Bear Witness)
Specialist Ben Schrader, who served with an armoured unit from
February 2004 to February 2005, told the Nation: One
example I can give you, wed be driving down the road in
a convoy and all of the sudden an IED blows up. And you know,
youve got these scared kids on these guns and they start
opening fire. And there could be innocent people everywhere. And
Ive seen this. I mean, on numerous occasions where innocent
people died because were cruising down and a bomb goes off.
Sergeant Dustin Flatt, who also served in 2004, recounted how
troops protecting a convoy that passed his position near Mosul
opened fire on a civilian car behind them: Basically they
took shots at the car. Warning shots, I dont know. But they
shot the car. Well, one of the bullets happened to just pierce
the windscreen and went straight into the face of this woman in
the car. And she was, as far as I know, instantly killed... Her
son was driving the car and she had her three little girls in
the back seat... And they came up to us, because we were actually
in a defensive position right next to the hospital... she was
obviously dead and the girls were crying.
Another soldier, Geoffrey Milfred, told the Nation about
an incident he knew of that occurred at a checkpoint: This
unit sets up this traffic control point and this 18-year-old kid
is on top of an armoured Humvee with a .50-calibre machine gun.
This car speeds at him pretty quick and he makes a split-second
decision that thats a suicide bomber and he presses the
butterfly trigger and puts 200 rounds in less than a minute into
this vehicle. It killed the mother, father and two kids. The boy
was aged four and the daughter was aged three. And they briefed
this to the general... And this colonel turns around to this full
division staff and says, If these **** hajis [derogatory
term for Arabs] learned to drive, this **** wouldnt happen.
Lieutenant Jonathan Morgenstein, an officer attached in 2004-2005
to a marine civil affairs unitwhich investigated escalation
of force incidentstold the Nation: You
physically could not do an investigation every time a civilian
was wounded or killed because it just happens a lot and youd
spend all your time doing that. Attempting to sum up the
prevailing mentality, Specialist Jeff Englehart told the magazine:
I guess while I was there, the general attitude was A
dead Iraqi is just another dead Iraqi.
At a July 13 press conference in Arlington, Virginia, US Defence
Secretary Robert Gates and Joints Chief of Staff General Peter
Pace were not asked by any journalist to confirm, deny or comment
on either the McClatchy report, which had been published two days
earlier, or the publication of the Nation interviews.
The media silence is remarkable considering that the official
figures are clearly a vast underestimation of the real scale of
civilian killings in occupied Iraq. As McClatchys Nancy
Youssef noted in her July 11 article: The statistics dont
include instances of American soldiers killing civilians during
raids, arrests or in the midst of battle with armed groups, and
it remains unclear how the US military tracks such information.
Often rotating units use their own systems and there have been
several incidents of soldiers not reporting the deaths of civilians,
most notably the November 2005 shooting of 24 civilians in the
northern Iraqi town of Haditha.
In the November 19, 2005, marines went on a rampage in Haditha
after a roadside bomb killed one of their squad. Five civilians
were murdered in a taxi, one gunned down on the street and 18
men, women and children were slaughtered in their homes. Despite
the obvious evidence of a massacre, both the marines commanding
officer and US military intelligence reported the dead Iraqis
as armed insurgents.
There is no reason to believe the cover-up surrounding Haditha
was an isolated incident. In a recent US military mental health
survey, published in May, 45 percent of army personnel and 60
percent of marines in Iraq stated they would not report a fellow
serviceman for killing or injuring an innocent non-combatant.
In the trial that began on June 30 of two US soldiers charged
with murdering civilians, the defendants are accused of placing
weapons beside their victims so they would be classified as insurgents.
A third soldier of the same unit was charged with murder and cover-up
on July 2. (See US troops charged
with murders, cover-ups in Iraq)
Moreover, the official figures do not include the civilians
who have been killed or wounded at the hands of the thousands
of private security contractors employed by the US government
in Iraq. Security contractors have the same right to fire on Iraqi
civilians they believe to be a threat as the US military. They
are obliged to display a sign in English and Arabic stating Danger.
Keep back. Authorised to use lethal force. Unlike US troops
who travel in recognisable military vehicles, contractors generally
travel in unmarked civilian vehicles and sometimes disguise themselves
in local attire.
How many Iraqis have been victim to contractor killings is
unknown. Some incidents have come to light, however. In May, employees
of Blackwater Security shot and killed an Iraqi who drove too
close to their vehicle. According to an Iraqi official cited
by the Washington Post, the man had just driven out of
a petrol station onto the road and witnesses stated the shooting
was unprovoked.
In 2005, a so-called trophy video was posted on
a website, showing four incidents in which contractors fired into
Iraqi cars that appeared to come within 30 metres or so of their
vehicle. In at least one of the shootings, bullets clearly impacted
on the driver-side windscreen and the vehicle veered suddenly
off the road. The website was allegedly connected to employees
of the British security company Aegis.
At the time, Captain Adnan Tawfiq of the Iraqi Interior Ministry
told the British Sunday Telegraph: When the security
companies kill people, they just drive away and nothing is done.
Sometimes we ring the companies concerned and they deny everything.
The families dont get any money or compensation. I would
say we have had about 50-60 incidents of this kind.
As the WSWS has warned before, the carnage being inflicted
against civilians will have ramifications in the United States
as well as on generations of Iraqis. Thousands of young men and
womenboth former soldiers and contractorsare returning
from Iraq bearing the psychological scars of having participated
in, or witnessed acts of staggering brutality and indifference
to human life.
The primary responsibility for these war crimes rests with
the Bush administration, which ordered the illegal invasion of
Iraq and is waging a vicious neo-colonial war to suppress any
opposition to its continued occupation of the country.
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