IRAQ: 1.000 DAYS OF WAR & ALWAYS TORTURE
From Shock and Awe to a country torn between
insurrection and democracy
By Patrick Cockburn in Baghdad
The Independent - 13 December 2005 - It has been the
strangest war. A thousand days ago, on 20 March 2003,
the US and British armies started a campaign which ended
a few weeks later with the overthrow of Saddam Hussein.
It seemed so easy. President George Bush announced that
the war was over. The American mission had been
accomplished. Months passed before Washington and London
realised that the war had not finished. In fact it was
only just beginning. Of the 18,000 US servicemen killed
or wounded in Iraq, 94 per cent have been killed or
wounded since the fall of Baghdad.
THERE IS NO SIGN THAT THE ELECTION FOR THE 275-MEMBER
IRAQI PARLIAMENT THIS THURSDAY WILL END THE FIGHTING.
The Sunni Arabs, the core of the insurrection, will vote
for the first time, but there is no talk of a ceasefire.
A leaflet issued by one resistance group in Baghdad
yesterday encouraged its followers to vote but warned:
"The fighting will continue with the infidels and their
followers."
It was such a strange war because the US began a
conflict in 2003 to change radically the Middle East,
the most volatile and dangerous region in the world.
This was in complete contrast to the first Gulf War in
1991, when the main war aim of President George Bush Snr
was to evict Saddam Hussein from Kuwait and restore the
status quo.
There was a further sharp difference between the two
wars. Mr Bush Snr had expended enormous effort in
creating an international coalition under the UN to
fight Iraq. His son, by way of contrast, seemed to revel
in isolation. He made the Iraq war the supreme test of
American military and political strength.
The US would fight it alone, aside from Britain tagging
along behind, and win it alone. It did not need allies
outside or even inside Iraq. The insurgents received
vital if covert assistance from abroad, but the
rebellion against the US occupation was always
essentially home-grown.
DISILLUSIONMENT WITH THEIR LIBERATORS
Disillusionment with their liberators set in among
Iraqis almost as soon as the American troops captured
the capital in April 2003. The poor poured out of the
slums of Baghdad in a frenzy of destruction and theft.
Everything was looted, even the stuffed animals in the
natural history museum.
Iraqis expected much from the fall of Saddam. They had
endured 23 years of war and sanctions. The Iraqi armed
forces simply packed up and went home.
Nobody wanted to die for the old regime. Instead they
hoped to enjoy the fruits of their oil wealth for the
first time and begin to live like Kuwaitis or Saudis.
Instead the US installed a colonial regime. Iraqis were
marginalised and their opinions ignored. Iraqi
professionals with PhDs and fluent in several languages
found themselves being ordered about by young Americans
whose only qualification was links to the Republican
Party.
The army and security services were dissolved. The five
million-strong Sunni community was enraged. The first
attacks on US patrols and vehicles began. Whenever I
visited the site of an ambush I saw young Iraqi men
dancing in jubilation around the blazing vehicles.
By November 2004 a serious guerrilla war was under way.
The 140,000-strong US Army was hopelessly ill-equipped
for such a conflict. Once I saw an American artillery
unit trying to quell a fist fight among Iraqi drivers in
a queue at a petrol station. They had brought with them
an enormous howitzer designed to fire a shell 30km
because they had nowhere to store it.
THE FACE OF BAGHDAD BEGAN TO CHANGE.
The symbol of the new regime was the concrete block,
enormous obstacles to car bombs looking like gigantic
grey tombstones. Walls of them sealed off the Green Zone
in the centre of Baghdad where the US and Britain had
established their headquarters.
The suicide bombers began to make their terrifying
impact. Nobody was safe. The UN headquarters was reduced
to a heap of rubble, as was the building housing the Red
Cross. Iraqi police stations and US positions were all
hastily fortified. On some days there were a dozen
attacks. Later they fell in number, but became more
sophisticated, with one bomber trying to blast a way
through the concrete walls so the second could reach the
targeted building.
People in Baghdad and the centre of Iraq lived in
perpetual terror of suicide bombers, kidnappers, Iraqi
army and US troops. The roads to the capital were all
cut by insurgents or bandits. Better-off Iraqis, fearful
of kidnappers who preyed on their children, fled to
Jordan, Syria and Egypt. In the face of Sunni Arab
attack, the US relied more and more on the two other
great Iraqi communities. The Shia make up 60 per cent of
the population and the Kurds 20 per cent.
Some Iraqi leaders had an acute perception of the
American dilemma in Iraq. "Let them try to run the
country without us and they will see what trouble they
will be in," said a Kurdish leader in the summer of
2003. "Then they will come running to us for our help."
Last year the US learnt that it could contain but could
not suppress the Sunni insurrection. This year has seen
Iraq slowly coming under the control of a Kurdish-Shia
alliance whose authority is likely to be reaffirmed by
the election on Thursday.
Iraq at the moment is an extraordinary patchwork with
conditions varying in every part of the country.
Kurdistan is more prosperous than at any time in its
history. The skylines of its cities are crowded with
cranes. In Baghdad there is hardly any sign of
construction, and richer districts are often inhabited
only by armed security guards. Their inhabitants have
fled.
A BBC poll yesterday showed that half of those
questioned say that Iraq needs a strong leader, while
only 28 per cent cited democracy as a priority. But it
would be a mistake to think that Iraqis could agree on
the same strong leader. The Sunni would like a strong
man to put the Shia in their place, and the Shia feel
likewise that the priority for a powerful leader would
be dealing with the Sunni.
Iraqis are cynical about their political leaders. The
election results are likely to show that the great
majority of Iraqis will vote along ethnic or religious
lines as Shia, Sunni or Kurds. The country is turning
from a unitary state into a confederation.
There is no sign yet of the thousand-day war ending.
Every month up to a thousand fresh corpses arrive at the
mortuary in Baghdad.
A new Iraq is emerging but it is already drenched in
blood.
[andend] - The Independent, UK - Url.:
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article332812.ece
The Guardian / UK - Noami Klein - "The US has used
torture for decades. All that's new is the openness
about it." - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/axx8r
RELATED REFERENCES & LINKS:
* 'The war in Iraq is illegal' - BBC: video &
text-interview of the United Nation's Secretary General
- Kofi Annan - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/5pl2v
* The Nuremberg principles: "Any person who commits an
act which constitutes a crime under international law is
responsible therefor and liable to punishment." - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/byurp
* 'Spreading democracy' - Countries & US Death Squads -
Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/drnca - A 55' second sound bite
concerning the US 'bringing democracy' everywhere - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/5u98v
* Who's financing? - The 'Federal Reserve' is the
absolute biggest crime ever - Url.:
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/reserve.htm
* 'Crying Wolf' - Media Disinformation and Death Squads
in Occupied Iraq - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/7ttx8
* Reference guide to the Geneva Conventions - Url.:
http://www.genevaconventions.org
* The 9/11 WTC drama was PNAC terror - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/9np7d - It was an inside job -
Google - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/7tj9d
* Al Qaeda – The Database - Url.:
http://tinyurl.com/cqx69
* The infamous US 'Lie Factory' -
http://tinyurl.com/8ncal
* He who travels far will often see things
Far removed from what he believed was the Truth.
When he talks about it in the fields at home,
He is often accused of lying,
For the obdurate people will not believe
Inexperience, I believe,
Will give little credence to my song.
'Journey to the East' - Hermann Hesse
* Help all the troops of whatever nationality to come
back from abroad! We need them badly at home in many
countries - AND WITH ALL THEIR WEAPONS, WHICH WE PAID
FOR BY TAXES - to fight with us against our so called
'governments' and their malignant managers - Url.:
http://www.bringthemhomenow.org/
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