Remember Fallujah

A shocking article, but one that addresses a number of very important facts as we mark the one year anniversary of a brutal and bloody attack against a city and its valiant but doomed band of defenders.

*“Indeed the souls of the martyrs are in the hearts of green birds, and they have lanterns hanging underneath the 'arsh (the throne of Allaah). They roam around in Paradise wherever they wish, then they return to their lanterns. So, their Lord enquires: “Do you desire anything?” They say, “What can we desire for, when we roam around in Paradise wherever we wish?” And He asks them this three times. When they realize that they will not cease to be questioned, they say, “O Lord! We wish that you return our souls to our bodies, in order that we be killed in Your Path again” When it is realized that they have no need, they will be left alone.” *[Muslim]

One year ago this week, US-led occupying forces launched a devastating assault on the Iraqi city of Falluja. The mood was set by Lt Col Gary Brandl: “The enemy has got a face. He’s called Satan. He’s in Falluja. And we’re going to destroy him.”

The assault was preceded by eight weeks of aerial bombardment. US troops cut off the city’s water, power and food supplies, condemned as a violation of the Geneva convention by a UN special rapporteur, who accused occupying forces of “using hunger and deprivation of water as a weapon of war against the civilian population”. Two-thirds of the city’s 300,000 residents fled, many to squatters’ camps without basic facilities.

As the siege tightened, the Red Cross, Red Crescent and the media were kept out, while males between the ages of 15 and 55 were kept in. US sources claimed between 600 and 6,000 insurgents were holed up inside the city - which means that the vast majority of the remaining inhabitants were non-combatants.

On November 8, 10,000 US troops, supported by 2,000 Iraqi recruits, equipped with artillery and tanks, supported from the air by bombers and helicopter gunships, blasted their way into a city the size of Leicester. It took a week to establish control of the main roads; another two before victory was claimed.

The city’s main hospital was selected as the first target, the New York Times reported, “because the US military believed it was the source of rumours about heavy casualties”. An AP photographer described US helicopters killing a family of five trying to ford a river to safety. “There were American snipers on top of the hospital shooting everyone,” said Burhan Fasa’am, a photographer with the Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation. “With no medical supplies, people died from their wounds. Everyone in the street was a target for the Americans.”

The US also deployed incendiary weapons, including white phosphorous. “Usually we keep the gloves on,” Captain Erik Krivda said, but “for this operation, we took the gloves off”. By the end of operations, the city lay in ruins. Falluja’s compensation commissioner has reported that 36,000 of the city’s 50,000 homes were destroyed, along with 60 schools and 65 mosques and shrines.

The US claims that 2,000 died, most of them fighters. Other sources disagree. When medical teams arrived in January they collected more than 700 bodies in only one third of the city. Iraqi NGOs and medical workers estimate between 4,000 and 6,000 dead, mostly civilians - a proportionately higher death rate than in Coventry and London during the blitz.

The collective punishment inflicted on Falluja - with logistical and political support from Britain - was largely masked by the US and British media, which relied on reporters embedded with US troops. The BBC, in particular, offered a sanitised version of the assault: civilian suffering was minimised and the ethics and strategic logic of the attack largely unscrutinised.

Falluja proved to be yet another of the war’s phantom turning points. Violent resistance spread to other cities. In the last two months, Tal-Afar, Haditha, Husaybah - all alleged terrorist havens heavily populated by civilians - have come under the hammer. Falluja is still so heavily patrolled that visitors have described it as “a giant prison”. Only a fraction of the promised reconstruction and compensation has materialised.

Like Jallianwallah Bagh, Guernica, My Lai, Halabja and Grozny, Falluja is a place name that has become a symbol of unconscionable brutality. As the war in Iraq claims more lives, we need to ensure that this atrocity - so recent, so easily erased from public memory - is recognised as an example of the barbarism of nations that call themselves civilised.

Re: Remember Fallujah

Oh Allah have mercy on us.

Re: Remember Fallujah

In times of despondency over victims, the victims are forgotten...The atrocities are forgotten and the deaths are forgotten...They all raise their heads later to haunt and destroy those that perpetrated it...History is a living witness...

Who could have stopped it? Who should have stopped it? Where were they? Why didn;t they act? Where was a the UN which was sending hundreds of scientists to unearth WMDs? Where was the security council which formed the biggest assembly of forces in less than week for Kuwait but remained oddly quiet about this massacre? Where were those that promise just and equitable resolutions to the world? Where was the UN? Where is the UN?

No one will help the Muslims...Never...They all serve their own purpose and act to suit their needs...No one except a Muslim can help a Muslim...No one except a Muslim can sympathize with a Muslim...

Re: Remember Fallujah

Victims?

What are you people, nuts?

Do you know how many car bombs were found there? These are the same people who shot contractors, beat them to death, dragged them through the streets, burned their bodies and hung them from a bridge.

Ever occur to you that the people of Fallujah were spoiling for a fight and they got one? No pity here boys. Play that propaganda somewhere else...

Re: Remember Fallujah

^^

The men women and children...Those whom you affectionately like to call 'raving idiots' and 'morons'...

The callousness of your deeds has blinded you so much that reporsting the deaths of innocents to you now is propaganda...

By your analogy of 'raving idiots' and 'morons', the Jews of Germany, the Basques of Spain and the farmers of Kosovo were all raving idiots and morons...

You apathy and heartlessness is disturbing and despicable...Especially knowing and proven that most of those murdered and massacred were innocents...

Re: Remember Fallujah

killing the enemy is one thing.
torturing them ....abu ghraib, cutting off water, afghanistan cases of dumping bodies in tanks w/o air outlets...is beyond my understanding.

Re: Remember Fallujah

Lajawabby,

Get off you high horse. Romanticizing and Victimizing the people of Fallujah is not a winner to Western folk. There are things that are wrong. Abu Graib was wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong. But you are talking about Urban Warfare. It is ugly, it is dirty and it is nasty. We did not want to go blow up Fallujah.

You talk about the place like innocent angels ran the town. These were Saddams' henchmen, his enforcers, the seat of his power. If you want to make Fallujah into some Muslim urban myth, go right ahead, but let's not fool anybody that the town was filled with angels and choirboys. That was the most well announced offensive in the history of modern warfare. If you did not evacuate you family, even if you chose to stay and fight, then you are responsible for your family and the consequences. Using you family as human shields? That may suit your value system, but not mine. How normal is it to have charred bodies swinging from bridges in your town?

Re: Remember Fallujah

Americans will never learn it seems. History has shown over and over again, force is not the answer. By killing a few thousand in Fallujah they have created thousands of Osama Bin Ladens who will blight this world for the next hundred years. As "primitive and barbaric" as muslims are, I doubt the people of Fallujah or the Sunnis or Iraq will ever forget the wrongs that America has done over the last few years.

Re: Remember Fallujah

As Samuel Huntington said, clash of civilizations will happen!

Offcourse anglo-saxons will not care about 'towel heads' (Arabs) and their will always be a clash of views as to each their own..!

Or as our desi saying goes,
Ya' sheikh apni apni

Re: Remember Fallujah

The terrorist amerikans will only leave places like iraq and afghanistan the same way they left veitnam defeated and humiliated, and belive me don’t be watching the joke news on CNN and Fox the yanks are getting spanked in Iraq and they too ashamed too even show their own dead on their TV screens so much for freedom huh!
:bukbuk:

Re: Remember Fallujah

ameircan soldiers r trained to be beast..is not tht ohio guy??
the way u people killed 10,000 taliban and paki guys in afghanistan had been hidden.

american soldiers r actually fatherless kids...and pentagon exploit them...they r trained to be beast....look their faces,innocense is no where

Re: Remember Fallujah

well said,

Re Contractors: BWSC flew in over 1500 of its own contractors (most of them requested the posting) and they were the first to enter the city.

Re: Remember Fallujah

as my dad says in a war those who are winning are called heroes, those who are loosing are called criminal against humanity, but the ugly truth of war is that they both did exactly the same acts of torture and killings.....there are no angels in wars, no heroes either only butchers!!

Re: Remember Fallujah

well said noor!
women and philosophers MUST be rulers.

Re: Remember Fallujah

Before we jump into any conclusions whether who is victim and who is not. We should know that Fallujah was one of the most peaceful areas of the country just after the fall of Saddam. There was very little looting and the new mayor of the city selected by local tribal leaders — was staunchly pro-American.

When the U.S. Army entered the town, they positioned themselves at the vacated Ba'ath Party headquarters — an action that erased some goodwill, especially when many in the city had been hoping the U.S. Army would stay outside of the relatively calm city.

There was a incident during April 2003 when a crowd defied the Coalition curfew and gathered outside a local school to protest the presence of U.S. Coalition forces in the city. This developed into an altercation with U.S. troops in the city in which Iraqi civilians were killed by U.S. gunfire. There were no coalition casualties in the incident.

Since then Fallujah has been nothing but a trouble place for the U.S and also for the Iraqi civilans. U.S forces tried to siege the place and introduce truce but result hasn't been the same. Some reports suggest that US armed forces used white phosphorus grenades and/or artillery shells, creating walls of fire in the city. This have been used for the Insurgents but the U.S forces and the Civilians have also been affected by the WP burns ---- U.S calls it a 'friendly fire'.

Re: Remember Fallujah

That is normal practice for the American soldiers in countries they occupy. These b*stards shoot down passenger airliners killing hundreds](http://amiabstractornot.highlyillogical.org/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/july/3/newsid_4678000/4678707.stm) ,and then make their pathetic excuses later.