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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Death toll continues to rise as US military launches new offensive
in Iraq
By James Cogan
10 January 2008
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Six American soldiers were killed in Iraq on Wednesday during
the US militarys New Year offensive against anti-occupation
insurgents in the province of Diyala, north of Baghdad. The operation,
codenamed Iron Harvest, is the fourth major assault in the area
during the past six months and underscores the entrenched nature
of the guerilla war against the US occupation and the US-backed
Iraqi government. The casualties were the heaviest daily loss
suffered by US forces since September and take the American death
toll in January to 17.
Some 4,000 American troops, backed by Iraqi government forces,
moved from different directions into an area of farming towns
and hamlets along the Diyala River, nicknamed the Breadbasket,
during the early hours of Tuesday morning. The objective was to
trap and kill an estimated 200 fighters alleged to be members
of the Sunni fundamentalist organisation Al Qaeda in Iraq.
The soldiers were killed when a massive explosion detonated
while they searched a booby-trapped house. Four others were wounded.
Embedded New York Times journalists reported that US troops
have encountered numerous improvised roadside bombs and
booby traps, barely detectable except for telltale filaments of
copper wire glinting in the morning sun through the undergrowth
and orange trees. The US military reported that at least
three armoured vehicles have been struck by roadside bombs, wounding
three soldiers.
Occupation spokesmen claim that Sunni extremists driven out
of the western province of Anbar and the suburbs of Baghdad have
relocated north to Diyala and the neighbouring province of Salahaddin,
as well as further north to areas surrounding the cities of Kirkuk
and Mosul. American and Iraqi government forces in these locations
have come under increased attack. The US military has reported
that of the 4,749 incidents in December, 2,014 took place in the
north-central provinces compared with just 808 in Anbarthe
province where the most intense fighting took place during the
first four years of the occupation.
The US commander in northern Iraq, Major General Mark Hertling,
told journalists that Raider Harvest was a massive operation
to really squeeze in the Breadbasket what we think is a major
Al Qaeda logistics site and to a lesser degree command and control
operations. The intent of this operation is to hit them hard here,
make them defend and at the same time stop them from flowing to
other places.
As the operation unfolds, however, US commanders are again
expressing frustration that the majority of the Iraqi insurgents
have either fled the area in advance or been able to blend into
the local population. Before US troops launched an assault on
Diyalas capital Baqubah last June, an estimated 500 fighters
left the city. Last September, insurgents abandoned the town of
Muqdadiya in the face of a US assault, leaving American forces
to navigate through booby-trapped streets and houses and confront
ongoing guerilla attacks.
Despite some 24,000 US troops being positioned in northern
Iraq, along with 50,000 government troops and an increasing number
of so-called citizens groupsor US-paid militiasthe
Iraqi guerillas appear to have had little difficulty eluding the
latest operation. According to Hertling, only 20 to 30
insurgents were killed in the first 24 hours of the carefully
planned trap.
In the lead-up, considerable efforts were made to prevent the
insurgents receiving advance knowledge of the attack. US forces
made it appear they were building up their forces for an offensive
on villages south of Baqubah. Most significantly, however, Iraqi
military commanders whose units were slated to take part in the
operation were deliberately given false information about the
target. A US officer, Major Eddie Sedlock, told the Washington
Post: We didnt tell them about it until the day,
knowing they were probably infiltrated by Al Qaeda.
Just as in Afghanistan, where the term Taliban
is being applied to any Afghan resisting US occupation, in Iraq
insurgents are simply branded Al Qaeda. The reality is that the
majority of Iraqis, including in the Iraqi Army, are hostile to
the US presence. While they oppose the political perspective of
Islamic extremists and the killing of civilians, millions of Iraqis
sympathise with attacks on American and other foreign troops.
After close to five years of indiscriminate US bombings and killings,
they particularly identify with the communities that are the target
of US operations.
While a US officer blamed the increase in helicopter
traffic overhead for alerting the guerillas to the US intentions,
there is little doubt that American commanders suspect that tip-offs
were passed on from the highest levels within the Iraqi government
and military. According to the New York Times, US units
noticed an unusual number of women and children fleeing
south in cars in recent days.
As in all previous colonial wars, the US military confronts
a population that will take every opportunity to hinder, sabotage
and strike back against the occupation of the country. Troops,
for example, encounter great difficulty in getting help to locate
explosive devices and booby traps. The inevitable consequence
is that terrified American soldiers begin to regard all Iraqis
as their enemies, with the inevitable result being atrocities
against civilians.
Washington Post journalist Amit Paley matter-of-factly
reported on January 9 what appears to be the callous shooting
and detention of an innocent Iraqi. The new offensive, he wrote,
is showing how difficult it is to determine whether someone
is an insurgent. One of the Iraqis wounded and then detained on
Tuesday was shot because US soldiers said he refused to listen
to their commands. He just did the wrong thing at the wrong
time, one soldier told Coffey [the unit commander] over
his radio. But I dont know if we can call him a detainee.
I dont think he has anything incriminating against him.
There is no indication in the article as to whether an investigation
resulted. The incident, which has been reproduced countless times
in one form or another, simply adds one more to the toll of death
and injury inflicted on the Iraqi people by US imperialism in
the course of its criminal occupation.
With the US presidential race well underway, no effort is being
spared to promote the Bush administrations claim that its
surge of additional troops last year is bringing the
Iraq war to an end. For 24 million Iraqis and 160,000 American
soldiers, the reality is very different. The lives of 17 Americans
and over 200 Iraqis have already been squandered this year to
feed US ambitions to control the countrys oil resources
and territory.
See Also:
Cutbacks to Iraqi food rations threaten
malnutrition and starvation
[5 January 2008]
The state of Iraq as it enters 2008
[2 January 2008]
US occupation prepares
Basra operation following British withdrawal
[29 December 2007]
What has the US "surge"
in Iraq accomplished?
[24 December 2007]
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