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Analysis : Middle
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US military admits to a dozen civilian deaths in Iraq
By Naomi Spencer
6 February 2008
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The US military confirmed Tuesday that soldiers shot dead at
least three Iraqi civilians in their beds Monday night north of
Baghdad. The admission comes just a day after military officials
acknowledged that nine civilians were killed in an Army air raid
south of the capital on February 2.
The incidents, which were only acknowledged by the military
after inquiries from the media, highlight the ongoing brutality
of the US occupation and its reliance on indiscriminate firepower.
On Saturday, witnesses in Iskandariya said the air raid came
after a mortar attack on a US convoy at a checkpoint manned by
US-backed Sunni fighters, members of the so-called Awakening Councils.
Calling the air raid the deadliest case of mistaken identity
since November, the Associated Press reported that the Army
retaliated to the hostile fire by calling in strikes on a nearby
home where Awakening Council fighters had sought cover. Helicopters
bombarded the house, killing eight adults and a child, and wounding
three others, including two children.
The area has been subjected to massive US air strikes since
the beginning of the year, with the initiation of operation Phantom
Phoenix. Tens of thousands of pounds of bombs have been dropped
on Baghdad suburbs and other areas inhabited mainly by Sunnis
who have refused to join the Awakening Councils.
The militias were formed primarily out of the desire of former
Baathist military and tribal leaders to challenge Shiite dominance
in the government by securing US backing.
In November, US troops killed dozens of Awakening Council members
north of Baghdad, but officials insisted simply that the dead
were suspected militants who were engaged because they were within
the target area of operations. More militia members
have been killed in similar circumstances in the months since.
As with so many US assaults, the attacks on the Awakening Councils
reveal that the difference between civilians and suspected
militantsor the catch-all suspected Al Qaedais
frequently a matter of taxonomic convenience to US command.
The latest instance has stoked anxiety among Sunni leaders
that US atrocities will cause former insurgents who enlisted the
Awakening Councils over the past year to defect. Reflecting the
unsound and shallow character of the Sunni-US alliance and the
Iraqi government itself, Sunni government official Salman al-Jumaili
commented to the Associated Press, Al Qaeda could exploit
such mistrust in order to win back some Awakening Council members
... any attempt to hurt them, even if it is by mistake, could
endanger the political process in the country.
The military issued a potted statement following the attack
that steered clear of any acceptance of blame. We offer
our condolences to the families of those who were killed in this
incident and we mourn the loss of innocent civilian life,
US navy lieutenant Patrick Evans, acting as a military spokesman,
told the press Monday.
Council fighter Abu Abeer, who witnessed the attack, told the
AP that helicopters were targeting anyone near the house. It
was a crime and it shows the Americans disrespect for Iraqi
blood, he said. The US apology will not bring the
dead people back to life.
On Monday night in Adwar, a predominantly Sunni village 10
miles south of Tikrit, US soldiers stormed a one-room house and
killed several members of a family. Iraqi police said that while
the US military reported three dead, two young children were also
shot and one died of her wounds on Tuesday.
Witnesses say the raid was unprovoked. According to a cousin
of the victims, soldiers burst in and opened fire on the unarmed
residents immediately. The dead included a 40-year-old woman,
her 55-year-old husband, and their teenage son, who was a member
of the local Awakening Council.
One surviving family member, a 16-year-old girl, told reporters
that when US troops forced their way into the home, their interpreter
tried to stop them from killing her parents, and put himself between
the soldiers and a five-year-old and six-year-old.
In contrast, US military officials, in typical fashion, insisted
that soldiers came under fire and killed two suspected terrorists
in self-defense. Absurdly, officials claimed in an email sent
to the AP that the military did not know who shot the woman or
the children. Contradictorily, officials also implied that militants
used the civilians as human shields and the troops had no choice
but to use force.
Elsewhere in Iraq Monday, the US touted the killing of 15 suspected
militants in raids northeast of Baghdad. According to the
official press statements, the dead were targeted by US forces
at a possible bed-down location for Al Qaeda. Over
the weekend at least 11 others were killed in similar raids and
64 were detained.
While US officials insist that the addition of 30,000 troops
in 2007 resulted in a drop in civilian and troop casualties, reliance
on indiscriminate force suggests that the deaths of innocents
are not being reported consistently, and that the military may
be classifying civilians as militants in their public statements.
Receiving even less media attention is the ongoing occupation
of Afghanistan. According to Human Rights Watch, the number of
civilians killed by US and NATO forces in Afghanistan doubled
over 2007, largely due to air strikes. Last year, US-led forces
dropped about a million pounds of bombs in the country.
In a report published February 5, Marc Garlasco of Human Rights
Watch told the Washington Times that from 2006 through
2007, You see a jump from some 20,000 pounds of bombs dropped
per month to some 80,000 to 100,000 pounds dropped.
The paper said a similar increase was seen in Iraq. In 2006,
US forces dropped 62,000 pounds of bombs during air strikes. In
early 2007, the US was dropping 10,000 to 15,000 pounds per month.
In the latter half of the year, the US was bombarding Iraq with
71,000 pounds of explosives per month.
The result for both countries is a humanitarian disaster, vastly
downplayed by the media and denied by US military and political
leaders. A number of studies have put the civilian death toll
in Iraq in the hundreds of thousands or more than a million, and
polls by both the British firm ORB and the BBC found roughly one
in five households had lost family members to war violence. While
the Iraq Health Ministry has recently estimated civilian war dead
at 155,000, the Iraq Ministry of Human Rights reported February
4 that there were at least 1.5 million widows registered with
the government, many of whom lost their husbands to war-related
violence.
See Also:
US carries out massive bombing
on outskirts of Baghdad
[12 January 2008]
The state of Iraq as it enters
2008
[2 January 2008]
US raid on Baghdads
Sadr City leaves many dead and wounded
[22 October 2007]
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