"His Red Right Hand"

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His Red Right Hand
By William Rivers Pitt
t r u t h o u t | Perspective

Tuesday 16 November 2004

He's a ghost, he's a god
He's a man, he's a guru
You're one microscopic cog
In his catastrophic plan
Designed and directed by
His red right hand

- Nick Cave

The top story on the New York Times website on Monday morning read, "Rebels Routed in Fallujah." It's a good thing, too, because we need to be fighting the terrorists over there in Iraq instead of over here in America. Who were these Fallujan terrorists, anyway? They really must have been the hardest of the hard-core to have gotten the kind of military reaction we have seen from U.S. forces in the last week. This is what I've been told, anyway.



An American Marine sniper searching for targets.
(Photo: New York Times)


Michael Georgy of the UK Independent, writing from the heart of the battlefield, described the aftermath of the battles: "After six days of intense combat against the Fallujah insurgents, U.S. warplanes, tanks and mortars have left a shattered landscape of gutted buildings, crushed cars and charred bodies. A drive through the city revealed a picture of utter destruction, with concrete houses flattened, mosques in ruins, telegraph poles down, power and phone lines hanging slack and rubble and human remains littering the empty streets."

At last, these scabrous terrorists have felt the awful price to be paid for defying our God-blessed right to bring 'democracy' wherever we wish by the point of the sword and the Sidewinder missile. The level of devastation wrought upon Fallujah is clear proof that the people who dwelled there were the scum of the earth, deserving of death and disaster. This must certainly be so, because George W. Bush would never order an all-out assault on a city filled with civilians in order to cover up his gross mismanagement of the situation lo these last twenty months. This is what I've been told, anyway.

An Associated Press photographer named Bilal Hussein calls Fallujah his home town. He was there to watch our justice come down. "Destruction was everywhere," said Hussein. "I saw people lying dead in the streets, wounded were bleeding and there was no one to come and help them. Even the civilians who stayed in Fallujah were too afraid to go out. There was no medicine, water, no electricity nor food for days."

After a few days, the shooting got too close for comfort, so Hussein decided to try and flee across the Euphrates River with other civilians. "I decided to swim," said Hussein, "but I changed my mind after seeing U.S. helicopters firing on and killing people who tried to cross the river." Down by the river, he was treated to the sight of a family of five being shot down as they tried to cross the water. Not long after, he "helped bury a man by the river bank, with my own hands. I kept walking along the river for two hours and I could still see some U.S. snipers ready to shoot anyone who might swim. I quit the idea of crossing the river and walked for about five hours through orchards."



Marines carry an injured colleague on a stretcher after the offensive in the Iraqi city of Fallujah.
(Photo: Reuters)


Stories like this have been coming out of Fallujah for days now. Thousands of families went without food and water, trapped in their homes, watching tanks roll over dead bodies that littered the streets. Aid organizations like the Red Cross and the Red Crescent were barred from entering the city to distribute food and medical supplies. Large numbers of wounded civilians have been evacuated to hospitals in Baghdad because the Fallujah hospitals have either run out of supplies or been blasted to rubble.

A young refugee who gave his name only as Ahmed said, "The Americans didn't care about us. Every night we said goodbye to one another because we expected to die. You could see areas where all the houses were flattened, there was just nothing left. Even those of us who do not fight, we are suffering so much because of the U.S. bombs and tanks. Can't they see this is turning so many people against them?"

The Sunni population of Iraq, watching as Sunni mosques were destroyed and Sunni religious leaders were arrested in this Sunni city, see this assault as an attack upon their religious core. In all likelihood, the Sunni population will boycott whatever cobbled-together election American forces can manage to organize in the coming months. The attack upon Fallujah has further divided Sunni from Shi'ite; Sheik Mahdi al-Sumaidaei, leader of the Supreme Association for Guidance and Daawa, a conservative Sunni organization, took a swipe at the Shi'ites for not condemning the attacks. "We didn't hear from them at all," he said. "I assume they are either satisfied or they are afraid. However, when there were attacks on Shiite cities, the Sunni clerics in Iraq immediately condemned them. What about the Shiites?"

As for American casualties, 67 soldiers have died in the last fifteen days. The total number of American soldiers killed in Iraq since the March 2003 invasion stands at 1,188. The total number of 'Coalition' troops killed to date stands at 1,334. There is no accurate count of the number of wounded from these first two weeks of November.



Marines try to take cover after a phosphorus round, set off to help provide cover for tanks, rains down on the unit.
(Photo: New York Times)


Thanks to the competent yet generous leadership of George W. Bush, the military invasion of Fallujah will certainly cure what ails us in Iraq. To be sure, the deaths of thousands of civilians will further inflame the Iraqi populace. To be sure, the number of 'insurgents' killed in Fallujah will be immediately replaced by fresh recruits. To be sure, fierce battles have erupted in Mosul, Tal Afar, Ramadi, Beiji, Baquba, Buhriz, Khabbaza, Baghdad, and indeed all across the country. To be sure, we will have to grind all these cities to powder, along with all the residents of these cities, to make sure no one thwarts our aforementioned God-given right to bomb and shoot and burn and smash whomever and whatever we please.

Fear not, however. All is well. "The objective," said John Ashcroft in his resignation letter last week, "of securing the safety of Americans from crime and terror has been achieved." This is what I've been told, anyway.

Mission accomplished.

William Rivers Pitt is a New York Times and internationally bestselling author of two books - 'War on Iraq: What Team Bush Doesn't Want You to Know' and 'The Greatest Sedition is Silence.'
 
AND:
November 16, 2004

Bush's Guernica: The Executioner's Song

A BUZZFLASH EDITORIAL

About two weeks ago, a study was released indicating that more than 100,000 Iraqis have been killed in Bush's War, according to the prestigious British medical journal "The Lancet" -- and the American media barely blinked.

If you don't know by now how many "liberated" Iraqis have been killed in the name of Bush's holy Christian Crusade against the "Infidels," that's because the mainstream media isn't going to let the bloody reality of the Iraq War interfere with their "narrative" that it is all about fighting terrorism.

Funny though, even Bush didn't claim we were invading Iraq to fight terrorists WITHIN Iraq. He ginned up the scare tactic that we were invading Iraq to protect the U.S. from Weapons of Mass Destruction (that didn't exist, of course). But terrorists themselves within Iraq, other than the evildoer Saddam, were not among the shifting reasons given Americans for the sacrifice of so many American lives. In fact, under Saddam, Iraq was a tyrannical, but secular society.

So the mainstream media follows "the battle against the Fallujah insurgents" with the same breathless pseudo reporting that marked its coverage of the first stages of the Iraq war, and the now disproven Bush lies about WMD's. No, you don't hear much about how many American GIs have been killed (now approaching 1200, but the figure is probably higher for reasons that BuzzFlash won't get into now) or wounded (estimated to be as high as 25,000), because that wouldn't serve the propaganda goals of the Bush cartel. And you certainly don't hear about the Iraqi Civilian death count, because that would demoralize Americans who are skittish to begin with about Bush's Guernica. In fact, the Pentagon won't release ANY figures about Iraqi casualties.

So we are left to find out about the horrific extent of civilian casualties in Iraq from respected medical journals and the Arabic CNN that the Bush Cartel so dreads, Al-Jazeera. But if you look closely, you can find clues even in the lapdog American media. An AP photographer related to ABC how he ran across dead civilians in Fallujah, as he fled the city, but he couldn't swim across the Euphrates River to safety because American snipers were killing ANY person -- man, woman or child -- who tried to cross the body of water. In another city U.S. forces attacked a couple of months ago, there were reputable reports that the U.S. military buried scores of Iraqi civilians in mass graves in a soccer field after fierce fighting with the ubiquitous and mysterious "insurgents."

So now the U.S. is creating mass graves, instead of uncovering those of Saddam.

And what of the "insurgents?

Well, who exactly are they? Wouldn't it be nice to have a press with some journalistic skills to explore this key question?

The New York Times, whose news section generally reflects the White House propaganda sheet (although we are always careful to point out that its editorial page is "relatively" still liberal), announced on its first page, as though it were releasing a Pentagon news release, the headline, "U.S. Armored Forces Blast Their Way Into Rebel Nest in Falluja." The Times quoted an American Colonel as saying, "We're just pushing them against an anvil." And the ubiquitously duplicitous Donald Rumsfeld proudly claimed, "Clearly there's a large number of terrorists that have been killed or captured, and that is a good thing for the people of Iraq."

Well exactly WHOM are we killing? According to the Administration, sometimes it's remnants of the Iraqi Baathists loyal to Saddam, sometimes it's followers of the illusive Zarqawi (who managed to escape yet again, if he exists at all), sometimes it's followers of Sunni Mullahs, sometimes it's "foreign fighters," sometimes its disgruntled Shiites, sometimes it's just general Islamists (whatever that means), and the list goes on.

But the reality is that there is a strong possibility that Bush is creating the enemy as he goes along. Which is to say that with more than 100,000 civilian dead in Iraq, and thousands upon thousands more wounded, there are lot of family members out there seeking revenge against the American "liberators."

The press has never held the Bush cast of liars accountable for promising that the Iraqis would greet us with flowers. The fact is that an increasing number of them are greeting us with bullets and rocket-propelled grenade launchers. On top of that, the Bush Cartel was so lax in its oversight of Iraqi weapon storage depots, the resistance movement in Iraq has been able to easily arm themselves with high-tech weaponry and explosives.

Now, after the men, women and children of Fallujah have been decimated (a euphemistic word for being killed and wounded), the world is informed that "rebels" escaped Fallujah and have now taken up residence in Mosul, the next city in an endless series that the Bush Cartel will keep attacking in order to keep "the war on terror" alive.

But this isn't a war on terror that makes us safer. It's a Bush Cartel Guernica style Sherman's March that only creates more men and women who want to take up arms against an occupying army that kills young men, women, children and grandparents alike.
Before the Iraq War started, BuzzFlash published an editorial in which we argued that the invasion of Baghdad was not about stopping terror, it was about oil, Bush's revenge, and the raw exercise of power for no other reason than to show the world that we had no compunction about killing thousands upon thousands of people.

The enemy in Iraq now includes just about everybody except the CIA-operative and puppet, "Prime Minister" Allawi.

The New York Times article had one concession to the truth or the horror that is being conducted in our name:

Hospitals in Baghdad began receiving civilian casualties from the fighting in Falluja. In Numaan General Hospital, a taxi driver, Farhan Khalaf, 45, stared at two bedridden sons who had been wounded by shrapnel. Alaa, 11, was hit in the chest, and Nafe, 7, lost one of his legs.

"Everything was so quiet," Mr. Khalaf said. "Offices and shops were open, police were in the city. I didn't see anyone carrying guns. Now the Americans are shooting randomly at anything that moves."

"Our houses are completely deserted now," he said. "Look at that child. Does that child look like Zarqawi?"

The Iraq war long ago entered into the war crime zone. That is why Bush is so insistent about his opposition to the U.S. being subject to an International War Crimes Court. He knows that his entire administration would end up in the docket.

You don't liberate a country by sealing off cities and shooting at everything in sight. You don't liberate a country by killing a 100,000 citizens -- and climbing -- including men, women, children, the elderly and whole families at a time. You don't liberate a nation by looting it. You don't reduce the number of people battling you by killing more of the population as a whole, unless you plan on killing the entire country. (The question of what they are resisting is another one the media conveniently ignores. Let's try this on for size: many of them are resisting an occupying army.)

As John Kerry pointed out in the debates, Bush is increasing the number of terrorists in the world, not reducing them. The Bush cartel is enlarging the number of Muslims who hate America and want to take up arms against us. The Bush Cartel is committing crimes against humanity, while at the same time making America more vulnerable to terrorism.
Fallujah isn't Bush's first Guernica in Iraq, but it's his biggest yet.

Now, he is preparing to install Condi Rice as our Secretary of State, the person -- who along with Bush -- was warned in August of 2001 that Al-Qaeda was planning hijackings in the United States and did nothing to prevent them. (Bush heard the warning and reacted to it by taking a month's vacation, just prior to September 11th.)

Call it incompetence, call it hubris, call it war crimes -- or call it all of the above, which it is.

All BuzzFlash knows is that our families are less safe and America more vulnerable under the horrifyingly inept Bush Administration.

No doubt, Osama was filled with glee to see Bush "elected." No one is a better recruiter for Osama than George W. Bush.

Meanwhile, Iraqi civilians die by the thousands -- and the ranks of potential terrorists and enemies of America increase -- in our name.

A BUZZFLASH EDITORIAL
 
You can post all the sob stories you want. The people in Fallujah were given ample opportunity to leave the city. Time is something the terrorists didn't give to the people in New York.

In addition, Iran is paying a bounty of $500 a head for every US soldier killed in Iraq.

Sorry to say it, but get ready. Iran is next and it is going to be way, way more bloody, for both sides.
 
Iran is next cool another war. Just what we need. How many trillons of dollars will we spend there!

I want Bush to have the us army, airfore, and marines to bomb my house so I can get a new one. Please give me ample time to get out of the way. There are a few bad people who have spent time in jail that live in my town this is ample reason to invade.

It will cost oh with the your open pocket book Mr. Bush, I'll settle for $500,000 to build. Maybe I'll relocate to a nice 200 acre piece of land with with a nice trout stream running through it and plenty of hunting land. This will make me feel better after you destroy my neighborhood looking for the bad guys. Oh please don't kill the good people. You'll know them as they look like the bad people.
 

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