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Iraq: Civilian casualties spike in February
By Naomi Spencer
6 March 2008
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In a sign of continuing instability in occupied Iraq, violent
deaths rose again sharply in February and early March. New figures
from the Iraqi government indicate that civilian casualties were
33 percent higher last month than in January.
The death toll, reported discreetly by American news outlets,
contradicts claims of US leaders that the addition of 30,000 troops
last year has quelled bloodshed. Indeed, the escalating violence
underscores that the relatively lower official casualty rates
of recent months have more complicated origins than the more
boots on the ground explanation offered by the wars
planners.
Combined figures of the Iraq interior, health, and defense
ministries indicate that 721 Iraqis636 civilians, 65 men
working as police, and 20 Iraqi soldierswere killed or found
dead throughout the country over the month. A media report tally
by ICasualties.org put security forces casualties at 110 for February,
the highest since October. The Iraqi government also reported
that least 847 people were wounded in February.
The Iraqi casualty count does not include those dead characterized
by the US military as suspected terrorists or insurgent
fighters, and is likely a substantial undercount of deaths. Nasser
Omar Hassan, a Baghdad security analyst, commented to United Nations
IRIN news service March 3, The statistics on casualties
are considered low, and are based only on police reports... the
actual number is most likely higher, as many killings go unreported.
Over the same period, 29 US troops were killed, and 270 were
wounded, according to Defense Department statistics. The number
of wounded has climbed every month since November.
Many of the February civilian deaths were caused by suicide
bomb attacks on crowded markets and shrines in and around Baghdad,
including a February 2 incident in which 99 market-goers were
killed. A February 24 suicide attack on Shiite worshippers on
a pilgrimage to Karbala killed 63.
In the first five days of March, at least 62 Iraqi civilians
and security workers have been killed, according to the ICasualties.org
tally. On Monday, car bombings in Baghdad killed 26 Iraqis and
injured at least 42 more, according to various press reports relying
on police and hospital witnesses. The US military, without explanation
for the discrepancy, reported only 11 deaths in the incident.
Witness accounts of the March 3 bombing reveal the ruinous
state of Iraqi society as a result of the US occupation. Ahmed
Naim, a shopkeeper in the area, told the Los Angeles Times
that he was injured by shards from his storefront window and taken
to a downtown hospital. Hospital staff were treating patients
on the floor, he said. I dont know the reason why
the government doesnt build new emergency hospitals after
five years now.
According to the Times, survivors and those arriving
on the scene helped to ferry the dead and wounded to hospital,
but they said the concrete barriers set up to deter such attacks
made it difficult to reach the victims.
Pentagon and Bush administration officials, pointing to the
lower reported civilian and troop casualties, have insisted that
the surge is working. In addition to the build up
of active duty troops in Iraq, the US has taken a number of drastic
policy measures to hold down the violence.
Since the beginning of the year, US forces have resorted to
heavy air bombardments to destroy resistance, especially in Baghdad,
where regions have been partitioned off along ethnic lines and
blockaded with walls and checkpoints. Meanwhile, sections of the
Iraqi bourgeoisie have cut deals with the occupation to decrease
sectarian attacks in exchange for funding and influence in the
Iraqi puppet government.
These deals have considerably built up both Shiite and Sunni
militias, composed of Iraqis formerly active in the anti-occupation
insurgency as well as in the religious strife. However, as the
two factions of the Iraqi elite vie for control of the countrys
parliament and oil wealth, the rank and file of the Shiite and
Sunni militias have threatened to break away and call off their
nominal ceasefire arrangements.
Such sentiments pose an enormous threat to the occupations
planners. First and foremost, the failure to suppress the Iraqi
population and control the countrys resources would have
fatal consequences for the ambitions of the US ruling elite. Plans
to draw down troop levels over the coming year have
been significantly scaled back by the Defense Department out of
concern that the insurgency could reignite.
Last month, the Pentagon Joint Chiefs of Staff announced that
the military would begin drawing down troop levels, but planned
to pause the drawdown in July at a level nearly 10,000
troops higher than before the surge was initiated last year. Calling
plans for further reductions premature, the Defense
Department insisted that a force of 15 brigades140,000 troopswould
remain indefinitely.
On Tuesday, the highest ranking US military commander in the
Middle East, Admiral William Fallon, reiterated this position
in testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee. Well
take actions based on the conditions that we find... I think nothing
is written in stone.
Major General Mark Hertling, commander of US forces in northern
Iraq, told Reuters Wednesday that the drawdown may have to be
abandoned altogether if Iraqi officials didnt move
faster to create jobs and improve basic services, in the
news agencys words. Im going to see more soldiers
hurt and killed and we are not going to be able to reduce the
number of forces, Hertling said, because theres
going to be more people out there planting bombs and shooting
people.
The power struggle between Shia, Sunni, and Kurdish sections
of the national bourgeoisie has deadlocked the central government.
A bill was passed by the parliament early in the year that would
have laid out the political autonomy of provincial authoritiesconsidered
by some military commanders as essential in lowering resistance
in some areasbut it was rejected by Nouri al-Malikis
presidency council last month.
The rejection was undoubtedly based in part upon provisions
that would have lifted many restrictions on political participation
of mostly Sunni former Baathists in October 1 provincial elections,
threatening the dominance of Shia parties.
US policies have created an explosive situation. While the
Shia-dominated government is determined to maintain control, authorities
in the Kurdish north refuse to recognize Baghdads control
over the regions extensive oil fields. The Turkish government,
which sees an autonomous Kurdish region as a threat to its own
territorial holdings, has invaded the north with US support. Sunni
militias have begun mutinying over unmet conditions for power
and protection from death squads operating out of government ministries.
Scores of bound and tortured corpses continue to be discovered
each week.
Within the US, the appearance of success in Iraq is seen as
crucial by the Bush administration. The surge in particular has
been presented as a model for the innumerable future conquests
in the so-called war on terror, and the political
ambitions of the Republican Party for continuing its hold on the
executive branch depend to a large extent on holding down violence
in Iraq.
Republican presidential nominee John McCain has placed the
surge at the center of his election campaign and called his Democratic
rivals soft on terror for criticizing the tactic.
For their part, while Democratic candidates Hillary Clinton
and Barack Obama both posture as critics of the war, neither candidate
advocates a swift or complete withdrawal, and both have affirmed
their willingness to take the advice of military brass from
day one, regardless of the anti-war sentiment of the vast
majority of the American people. At every turn over the past five
years, the Democrats no less than the Republicans have facilitated
and funded the Iraq occupation.
See Also:
Turkey rejects timetable to
end invasion of northern Iraq
[29 February 2008]
US military announces 10,000
more post-surge troops in Iraq
[27 February 2008]
Iraq: US occupation faces
crisis of its own making
[21 February 2008]
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