Today the President of the United States defended, once again, the war that he, and others, engineered. He spouted the usual nonsense, that to not defeat al-Qaeda in Iraq, which is to say Salafi Jihadis, would result in “surrendering Iraq’s future to al-Qaeda”. Of course, as has been noted by a variety of scholars and regional experts, were the United States to abandon Iraq tomorrow, Salafi Jihadi forces would be the first to be dealt with, and with severe measures. What Mr. Bush doesn’t mention is where the influx of foreign fighters in Iraq stems from. He dare not mention the fact that Saudis compromise a significant number of those foreign fighters currently in Iraq, not to mention Jordanians. That would be singling out nations with which the United States has relations, despite the fact that, in the case of Saudi Arabia, it is a nation that fits the model of a state that the United States has declared “unacceptable” with regards to their desire to spread freedom throughout the world.

Instead, and not surprisingly, the President focused on others

“President Bush also singled out Iran, Syria and the Lebanese Hezbollah movement, accusing them of fomenting violence in Iraq.

Iran, he said, was supplying improvised explosive devices to militants there; Hezbollah was training militants to attack coalition forces in Iraq; and Syria was providing a route for suicide bombers heading for the country.”

If you go back in my del.icio.us archives you’ll find articles replete with contradictory information about Iranian involvement in Iraq. Everything from them allying themselves with Sunni insurgents to Salafi Jihadis to the Mahdi Army. At one point, not too long ago, US officials in Baghdad claimed that Iran was planning to support a summer offensive against occupational forces by arming a variety of different groups, claims that were later challenged, and ones that were linked with a US propaganda campaign aimed at Iran.

The reality is, George Bush has disposed of those that have attempted to warn him, or at least tell him the truth, about what is actually transpiring in Iraq. The ‘surge’ has done nothing but produce more US casualties – in fact, more over the last few months than at any point in the war – and more Iraqi civilian casualties. It has placed the Iraqi government in an even more tenuous position, as have US pressures to do with Iraqi oil legislation, and has helped empower Islamic extremists. US intelligence recently claimed that extremist groups are stronger now than they were prior to 9/11, a claim that the President also denies. Because as we all know, he has far more knowledge of such matters than his own intelligence community. Perhaps, given the ‘bogus’ information that he was fed by them prior to the invasion he simply doesn’t trust them anymore. Then again, maybe the yes men that helped fix post war intelligence around policy are all out of creative ideas.

‘A dead Iraqi is just another dead Iraqi… You know, so what?’

Meanwhile, Leonard Doyle provides some morning reading that might make eating breakfast not the wisest of decisions…

“It is an axiom of American political life that the actions of the US military are beyond criticism. Democrats and Republicans praise the men and women in uniform at every turn. Apart from the odd bad apple at Abu Ghraib, the US military in Iraq is deemed to be doing a heroic job under trying circumstances.

That perception will take a severe knock today with the publication in The Nation magazine of a series of in-depth interviews with 50 combat veterans of the Iraq war from across the US. In the interviews, veterans have described acts of violence in which US forces have abused or killed Iraqi men, women and children with impunity.

The report steers clear of widely reported atrocities, such as the massacre in Haditha in 2005, but instead unearths a pattern of human rights abuses. “It’s not individual atrocity,” Specialist Garett Reppenhagen, a sniper from the 263rd Armour Battalion, said. “It’s the fact that the entire war is an atrocity.”

A number of the troops have returned home bearing mental and physical scars from fighting a war in an environment in which the insurgents are supported by the population. Many of those interviewed have come to oppose the US military presence in Iraq, joining the groundswell of public opinion across the US that views the war as futile.

This view is echoed in Washington, where increasing numbers of Democrats and Republicans are openly calling for an early withdrawal from Iraq. And the Iraq quagmire has pushed President George Bush’s poll ratings to an all-time low.

Journalists and human rights groups have published numerous reports drawing attention to the killing of Iraqi civilians by US forces. The Nation’s investigation presents for the first time named military witnesses who back those assertions. Some participated themselves.

Through a combination of gung-ho recklessness and criminal behaviour born of panic, a narrative emerges of an army that frequently commits acts of cold-blooded violence. A number of interviewees revealed that the military will attempt to frame innocent bystanders as insurgents, often after panicked American troops have fired into groups of unarmed Iraqis. The veterans said the troops involved would round up any survivors and accuse them of being in the resistance while planting Kalashnikov AK47 rifles beside corpses to make it appear that they had died in combat.

“It would always be an AK because they have so many of these lying around,” said Joe Hatcher, 26, a scout with the 4th Calvary Regiment. He revealed the army also planted 9mm handguns and shovels to make it look like the civilians were shot while digging a hole for a roadside bomb.

“Every good cop carries a throwaway,” Hatcher said of weapons planted on innocent victims in incidents that occurred while he was stationed between Tikrit and Samarra, from February 2004 to March 2005. Any survivors were sent to jail for interrogation.

There were also deaths caused by the reckless behaviour of military convoys. Sgt Kelly Dougherty of the Colorado National Guard described a hit-and-run in which a military convoy ran over a 10-year-old boy and his three donkeys, killing them all. “Judging by the skid marks, they hardly even slowed down. But, I mean… your order is that you never stop.”

The worst abuses seem to have been during raids on private homes when soldiers were hunting insurgents. Thousands of such raids have taken place, usually at dead of night. The veterans point out that most are futile and serve only to terrify the civilians, while generating sympathy for the resistance.

Sgt John Bruhns, 29, of the 3rd Brigade, 1st Armoured Division, described a typical raid. “You want to catch them off guard,” he explained. “You want to catch them in their sleep … You grab the man of the house. You rip him out of bed in front of his wife. You put him up against the wall… Then you go into a room and you tear the room to shreds. You’ll ask ‘Do you have any weapons? Do you have any anti-US propaganda?’

“Normally they’ll say no, because that’s normally the truth,” Sgt Bruhns said. “So you’ll take his sofa cushions and dump them. You’ll open up his closet and you’ll throw all the clothes on the floor and basically leave his house looking like a hurricane just hit it.” And at the end, if the soldiers don’t find anything, they depart with a “Sorry to disturb you. Have a nice evening”.

Sgt Dougherty described her squad leader shooting an Iraqi civilian in the back in 2003. “The mentality of my squad leader was like, ‘Oh, we have to kill them over here so I don’t have to kill them back in Colorado’,” she said. “He just seemed to view every Iraqi as a potential terrorist.”

‘It would always happen. We always got the wrong house…’

“People would make jokes about it, even before we’d go into a raid, like, ‘Oh fuck, we’re gonna get the wrong house’. Cause it would always happen. We always got the wrong house.”

Sergeant Jesus Bocanegra, 25, of Weslaco, Texas 4th Infantry Division. In Tikrit on year-long tour that began in March 2003

“I had to go tell this woman that her husband was actually dead. We gave her money, we gave her, like, 10 crates of water, we gave the kids, I remember, maybe it was soccer balls and toys. We just didn’t really know what else to do.”

Lieutenant Jonathan Morgenstein, 35, of Arlington, Virginia, Marine Corps civil affairs unit. In Ramadi from August 2004 to March 2005

“We were approaching this one house… and we’re approaching, and they had a family dog. And it was barking ferociously, cause it’s doing its job. And my squad leader, just out of nowhere, just shoots it… So I see this dog - I’m a huge animal lover… this dog has, like, these eyes on it and he’s running around spraying blood all over the place. And like, you know, what the hell is going on? The family is sitting right there, with three little children and a mom and a dad, horrified. And I’m at a loss for words.”

Specialist Philip Chrystal, 23, of Reno, 3rd Battalion, 116th Cavalry Brigade. In Kirkuk and Hawija on 11-month tour beginning November 2004

“I’ll tell you the point where I really turned… [there was] this little, you know, pudgy little two-year-old child with the cute little pudgy legs and she has a bullet through her leg… An IED [improvised explosive device] went off, the gun-happy soldiers just started shooting anywhere and the baby got hit. And this baby looked at me… like asking me why. You know, ‘Why do I have a bullet in my leg?’… I was just like, ‘This is, this is it. This is ridiculous’.”

Specialist Michael Harmon, 24, of Brooklyn, 167th Armour Regiment, 4th Infantry Division. In Al-Rashidiya on 13-month tour beginning in April 2003

“I open a bag and I’m trying to get bandages out and the guys in the guard tower are yelling at me, ‘Get that fuck haji out of here,’… our doctor rolls up in an ambulance and from 30 to 40 meters away looks out and says, shakes his head and says, ‘You know, he looks fine, he’s gonna be all right,’ and walks back… kind of like, ‘Get your ass over here and drive me back up to the clinic’. So I’m standing there, and the whole time both this doctor and the guards are yelling at me, you know, to get rid of this guy.”

Specialist Patrick Resta, 29, from Philadelphia, 252nd Armour, 1st Infantry Division. In Jalula for nine months beginning March 2004

‘Every person opened fire on this kid, using the biggest weapons we could find…’

“Here’s some guy, some 14-year-old kid with an AK47, decides he’s going to start shooting at this convoy. It was the most obscene thing you’ve ever seen. Every person got out and opened fire on this kid. Using the biggest weapons we could find, we ripped him to shreds…”

Sergeant Patrick Campbell, 29, of Camarillo, California, 256th Infantry Brigade. In Abu Gharth for 11 months beginning November 2004

“Cover your own butt was the first rule of engagement. Someone could look at me the wrong way and I could claim my safety was in threat.”

Lieutenant Brady Van Engelen, 26, of Washington DC, 1st Armoured Division. Eight-month tour of Baghdad beginning Sept 2003

“I guess while I was there, the general attitude was, ‘A dead Iraqi is just another dead Iraqi… You know, so what?’… [Only when we got home] in… meeting other veterans, it seems like the guilt really takes place, takes root, then.”

Specialist Jeff Englehart, 26, of Grand Junction, Colorado, 3rd Brigade, 1st Infantry. In Baquba for a year beginning February 2004

“[The photo] was very graphic… They open the body bags of these prisoners that were shot in the head and [one soldier has] got a spoon. He’s reaching in to scoop out some of his brain, looking at the camera and smiling.”

Specialist Aidan Delgado, 25, of Sarasota, Florida, 320th Military Police Company. Deployed to Talil air base for one year beginning April 2003

“The car was approaching what was in my opinion a very poorly marked checkpoint… and probably didn’t even see the soldiers… The guys got spooked and decided it was a possible threat, so they shot up the car. And they [the bodies] literally sat in the car for the next three days while we drove by them.

Sergeant Dustin Flatt, 33, of Denver, 18th Infantry Brigade, 1st Infantry Division. One-year from February 2004

“The frustration that resulted from our inability to get back at those who were attacking us led to tactics that seemed designed simply to punish the local population…”

Sergeant Camilo Mejía, 31, from Miami, National Guardsman, 1-124 Infantry Battalion, 53rd Infantry Brigade. Six-month tour beginning April 2003

“I just remember thinking, ‘I just brought terror to someone under the American flag’.”

Sergeant Timothy John Westphal, 31, of Denver, 18th Infantry Brigade, 1st Infantry Division. In Tikrit on year-long tour beginning February 2004

“A lot of guys really supported that whole concept that if they don’t speak English and they have darker skin, they’re not as human as us, so we can do what we want.”

Specialist Josh Middleton, 23, of New York City, 2nd Battalion, 82nd Airborne Division. Four-month tour in Baghdad and Mosul beginning December 2004

“I felt like there was this enormous reduction in my compassion for people. The only thing that wound up mattering is myself and the guys that I was with, and everybody else be damned.”

Sergeant Ben Flanders, 28, National Guardsman from Concord, New Hampshire, 172nd Mountain Infantry. In Balad for 11 months beginning March 2004”

  1. 1

    Fucking beyond comprehension.

    07 / 12 / 13:25
  2. 2

    Only killers call killing progress.

    07 / 12 / 13:36
  3. 3

    I can’t even begin to fathom what that must be like.

    07 / 12 / 13:36
  4. 4

    I’ve been purposly avoiding reading about Bushes take on the so called “progress” in Iraq. I find it so hard to comprehend that any inteligent human being would buy any of it.

    07 / 12 / 13:53
  5. 5

    I really wish the U.S. media would show pictures of these atrocities. Not to be vulgar (I do not wish any disrespect to anyone alive or dead), but to show people what is really going on. Isn’t that what started to change things during the Vietnam era? We see NOTHING on the news here. I wish some rich activist would buy up a channel and just run images 24/7 to show Americans what their tax dollars are paying for and the message that is being delivered in their name to countless innocent civilians.

    07 / 12 / 14:20
  6. 6

    Quoting KBryce:

    I really wish the U.S. media would show pictures of these atrocities. Not to be vulgar (I do not wish any disrespect to anyone alive or dead), but to show people what is really going on. Isn’t that what started to change things during the Vietnam era? We see NOTHING on the news here. I wish some rich activist would buy up a channel and just run images 24/7 to show Americans what their tax dollars are paying for and the message that is being delivered in their name to countless innocent civilians.

    I agree.

    07 / 12 / 14:54
  7. 7

    I can’t imagine what the children see on a daily basis growing up there, that is if they are not injured or killed. Without hearing stories like these, to some it is out of sight, out of mind. What a selfish human thought.

    07 / 12 / 15:00
  8. 8

    What’s sad, is that as soon as these guys start talking, they are going to be astrasized. People like Bill O’Reilly will look at them, call them disgraces to their uniform, to their nation, perhaps even pull out the traitor card, and label them as idiots. He, meanwhile, is making a killing off of everything since 9/11.

    The truth of this war is going to, i believe, only slowly makes its way into popular American awareness and media. In the meantime, it will spread a great deal of hate throughout the ME.

    As Stephen Colbert would say, the right are good at Truthiness - meaning things that sound like truth, but are in fact false.

    07 / 12 / 15:03
  9. 9

    Quoting walktherapy:

    Quoting KBryce:

    I really wish the U.S. media would show pictures of these atrocities. Not to be vulgar (I do not wish any disrespect to anyone alive or dead), but to show people what is really going on. Isn’t that what started to change things during the Vietnam era? We see NOTHING on the news here. I wish some rich activist would buy up a channel and just run images 24/7 to show Americans what their tax dollars are paying for and the message that is being delivered in their name to countless innocent civilians.

    I agree.

    None of this ever makes the news. It god damn should. The only things regarding the US military I see on TV these days, are the advertisements to join the military. They make it seem so honourable and cool, like you’re in a fucking video game or something. The reality is much different.

    07 / 12 / 15:35
  10. 10

    this is it, this is the end of compassion and the birth of genocide

    07 / 12 / 15:45
  11. 11

    I don’t disagree with any of the commentary above. There is yet another dimension to this that the future may bring. There is a large number of returning soldiers who have been “emotionally injured” by the conflict who will be taking their place in American society. For some, the war won’t end. This is not to suggest the actions against Iraqis are any less horrendous. All I’m saying is that there are other consequences that “stay the course’ flag-waving refuses to acknowledge.

    07 / 12 / 16:03
  12. 12

    Of course the linked headline on the linked article is ABC’s and not mine. I offer it solely to identify another issue that is being ignored.

    http://tinyurl.com/yrvyxu

    07 / 12 / 16:30
  13. 13

    The House approved US troop removal by spring. I’m sure once we go everyone else will follow

    07 / 12 / 17:34
  14. 14

    damn it all

    and billibadass, i’m sure bush will just veto it. such is the wonder of democracy.

    07 / 12 / 18:05
  15. 15

    Quoting billybadass:

    The House approved US troop removal by spring. I’m sure once we go everyone else will follow

    how likely will big brother give us the reality that is absoulate truth?

    07 / 12 / 21:31
  16. 16

    Quoting proxy:

    i’m sure bush will just veto it. such is the wonder of democracy.

    He’s already said that’s his intention should it come across his desk.

    I fear there will be no movement towards a true exit strategy until the Cowboy is out of office. Reading between the quotes after commuting Libby’s sentence, Bush pretty much acknowledged that he is aware his approval ratings have dropped through the floor. In responce he said it didn’t matter at this point and he would do what he wants for the remainder of his presidency. So basiclly, the big “F-You” to us all for the next 18 months.

    07 / 13 / 01:54
  17. 17

    I had a lot of trouble keeping my breakfast down after reading this. I suppose I should have taken your advice and either not eaten first or waited till it settled. But ultimately it doesn’t matter. No one in the US sees these things, and they dont want to. Unless the media runs these stories on the front page of every major newspaper, anyone who chooses to can ignore the realities of the American presence in Iraq. I think one of the most powerful statements in there (and all of them are enough to induce violent illness) was

    Quoting xarcadia:

    “I just remember thinking, ‘I just brought terror to someone under the American flag’.”

    We are the terrorists over there. And yet somehow it’s ok. Because god damnit, we are bringing freedom to these people whether they want it or not.

    How appaling. I dont think the thesaurus has enough words to describe how truly disgusting this situation is.

    07 / 13 / 08:03
  18. 18

    Is it bad enough in Iraq for the Americans/Brits to run away? Should perhaps they just barricade their bunkers and set up a base like Guantanamo?

    07 / 13 / 20:10
  19. 19

    I direct any and all of you that believe the war was “manufactured” to the very eye opening book Plan of Attack by Bob Woodward. He chronicles in great detail what was going on at the White House leading up to the invasion. If I remember correctly, Bush and his administration were acting on the best intelligence that they had; and that intel showed that Saddam had WMD’s or there was a good chance of him having them as well as there was an established Al Qaeda - Iraq link. Looking back, obviously bad intel, but to go on and on spouting it as fact that Bush “deceived” or “misled” or as Matt so eloquently put it; “engineered” is quite absurd. No country or man or administration would be able to pull that off. I think its funny how on one hand; most of you have a very low opinion of George Bush and his intelligence; yet on the other hand, he has the ability to lie and deceive and manufacture a war. I just find that odd……

    07 / 13 / 21:59
  20. 20

    After reading up on that article….I have to say that sounds rather awful.. though you have to realize and understand the conditions over there. It sounds like urban fighting, and while innocents do get harmed it is due to the fact that the people attacking them are not wearing colours..they are using guerrilla and terrorist tactics so if your in the armed forces you want to stay alive. Not trying to make an excuse for whats going on because some of that is truly horrible, but look at it from the full perspective. If someone starts shooting at your convoy with an AK 47, it doesnt matter how old he is…you and others lives are at risk, you need to return fire. I mean, some of that can be explained I’m sure but some of that is horrific….

    07 / 13 / 22:23
  21. 21

    Quoting xarcadia:

    …ultimately it doesn’t matter. No one in the US sees these things, and they dont want to. Unless the media runs these stories on the front page of every major newspaper, anyone who chooses to can ignore the realities of the American presence in Iraq.

    No offense intended, but at best, these sentiments (though understandable) are naive generalizations:

    Though it’s true that anyone who chooses can hide their head in the sand… proof of the horrific results of war are readily apparent every day. The evidence is overwhelming that Iraq is a cluster-f@$k and the majority of the US public wants to see us out of there (56-60% depending what poll you read on any given day). Bush’s approval rating is one of the lowest in history (32-34%… hell, he’s barely ever had over 50% during his elections!) second only to the only president to be impeached (Nixon held 29% at his lowest point). Both the House and Senate have made efforts towards some legislation to get the US out of Iraq. Even when sucessful however, they are sure to be vetoed on the President’s desk.

    On the other side of the coin, those who choose to seek out these horrors have the simplest task of all. If the news networks, papers or weekly publications aren’t enough, just turn off your Google filter and search “iraq war” images. Just be sure and skip lunch beforehand.

    The old idea that one person can make a difference seems to unfortunately given way to apathy and cynisim (under these circumstances, how could it not?). Whether this war was “enginered” or not may be debatable… but now that the machine is in motion, there seemes to be only one person at the wheel… and it appears he’s dead set on “staying the course”.

    07 / 14 / 03:17

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