Future Shock: A Deadly Harbinger of Post-Surge Iraq
by Chris Floyd
From AP, July 21: Aircraft fired missiles and dropped a bomb in a Shiite stronghold in northeastern Baghdad, killing six militants, the U.S. military said Saturday. Iraqi officials claimed a higher death toll, saying 18 civilians were killed.
The Husseiniyah airstrikes began after American forces came under small-arms fire from a building just before midnight, prompting helicopters to fire missiles at the structure, the military said, adding that three of the gunmen fled into another building.Aircraft dropped a bomb that destroyed that house, setting off at least seven secondary explosions believed caused by explosives and munitions stored inside, according to the military statement. Iraqi police inspected the site and reported six militants killed and five wounded, it said.
The military account contradicted reports from Iraqi police and
hospital officials, who said 18 civilians had been killed and 21
wounded in the 2 a.m. attack in Husseiniyah, where Shiite militias
operate openly near the road leading to volatile Diyala province.
AP
Television News videotape showed wounded women and children lying in
hospital beds, and white pickup trucks carrying at least 11 bodies
wrapped in blankets to the morgue. Men unloaded the bodies, including
several that were small and apparently children, as women shrouded in
black wailed in mourning.
Relatives said those killed had died in the airstrike. The conflicting accounts could not be reconciled.
You'd
better get used to hearing a lot more stories like this in the months
to come, even if – or especially if – the "consensus bipartisan
position" on Iraq that Fred Hiatt champions comes to pass: i.e., a
withdrawal of some U.S. troops, leaving a "residual force" behind to
"train the Iraqi army" and "fight terrorism." With a reduced number of
combat troops, airpower – against civilian areas – will come
increasingly to the fore. (Not that it hasn't been a heavy presence all
along.)
In this, of course, George W. Bush will making the dream
of his great hero, Winston Churchill, come true: keeping the
"recalcitrant tribes" of Mesopotamia in line by bombing the hell out of
them. We are watching a similar scenario play out in Afghanistan, where
civilians deaths from U.S. and NATO airstrikes have taken a quantum
leap in the last few months.
Any "withdrawal" plan that
includes a "residual force" in Iraq is simply a perpetuation of the
current war crime by other means. Indeed, as we have pointed out over
and over here, it would constitute "mission accomplished" for one of
Bush's primary aims in this war of aggression: a permanent military
presence in Iraq. Client regime; oil law; permanent bases: these are
the Holy Trinity of Bush's ungodly enterprise. The political exigencies
of the moment may cause some alterations in the methods used to achieve
these goals; e.g., eventually moving from a massive ground force to a
smaller presence backed up by the increased use of airpower (and
mercenaries); or exchanging one weak "sovereign government" in Baghdad
for another. But the goals remain the same; and by every indication,
most of the Democrats in Congress share those goals, since every one of
their oh-so-bold "antiwar" measures would give Bush what he ultimately
wants: a client regime hustling to meet "benchmarks" set by Washington
– including an oil law opening up the conquered nation's patrimony to
Western interests – all safeguarded by a continuing American military
presence.
So I guess the execrable Fred Hiatt is right after
all: there really is a consensus bipartisan position on Iraq in
Washington. And it's the same position that George Bush, Dick Cheney
and Donald Rumsfeld held when they set in motion the slaughter of
nearly a million innocent civilians so many years ago. And as long as
this "consensus" holds, the killing – whether by "surging" ground
troops or "residual" airstrikes – will go on and on and on and on.
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