by Craig Murray,
As the catastrophe in Iraq continues to unfold, an unresolved
question remains on the role of Bush, Blair, and the US/UK military. To
what extent were they passively incompetent in facilitating the decline
into civil war, and to what extent were they actively pursuing policies
that promoted that outcome?
The adoption of the 'Salvador Option' by the US in Iraq was reported
and discussed from the beginning of 2005 onwards. As described by Newsweek, the Salvador Option looked something like this:
Following that model, one Pentagon proposal would send
Special Forces teams to advise, support and possibly train Iraqi
squads, most likely hand-picked Kurdish Peshmerga fighters and Shiite
militiamen, to target Sunni insurgents and their sympathizers, even
across the border into Syria, according to military insiders familiar
with the discussions. It remains unclear, however, whether this would
be a policy of assassination or so-called "snatch" operations, in which
the targets are sent to secret facilities for interrogation. The
current thinking is that while U.S. Special Forces would lead
operations in, say, Syria, activities inside Iraq itself would be
carried out by Iraqi paramilitaries, officials tell NEWSWEEK.
US Congressman Denis Kucinich took up the issue in April of this year in a letter to Donald Rumsfeld:
Dear Secretary Rumsfeld:
I am writing to request a copy of all records pertaining to Pentagon
plans to use U.S. Special Forces to advise, support and train Iraqi
assassination and kidnapping teams.
On January 8, 2005, Newsweek magazine first published a report that
the Pentagon had a proposal to train elite Iraqi squads to quell the
growing Sunni insurgency. The proposal has been called the "Salvador
Option," which references the U.S. military assistance program,
initiated under the Carter Administration and subsequently pursued by
the Reagan Administration, that funded and supported "nationalist"
paramilitary forces who hunted down and assassinated rebel leaders and
their supporters in El Salvador. This program in El Salvador was highly
controversial and received much public backlash in the U.S., as tens of
thousands of innocent civilians were assassinated and "disappeared,"
including notable members of the Catholic Church, Archbishop Oscar
Romero and the four American churchwomen. According to the Newsweek
report, Pentagon conservatives wanted to resurrect the Salvadoran
program in Iraq because they believed that despite the incredible cost
in human lives and human rights, it was successful in eradicating
guerrillas.....
...About one year before the Newsweek report on the "Salvador
Option," it was reported in the American Prospect magazine on January
1, 2004 that part of $3 billion of the $87 billion Emergency
Supplemental Appropriations bill to fund operations in Iraq, signed
into law on November 6, 2003, was designated for the creation of a
paramilitary unit manned by militiamen associated with former Iraqi
exile groups. According to the Prospect article, experts predicted that
creation of this paramilitary unit would "lead to a wave of
extrajudicial killings, not only of armed rebels but of nationalists,
other opponents of the U.S. occupation and thousands of civilian
Baathists." The article further described how the bulk of the $3
billion program, disguised as an Air Force classified program, would be
used to "support U.S. efforts to create a lethal, and revenge-minded
Iraqi security force." According to one of the article's sources, John
Pike, an expert of classified military budgets at
www.globalsecurity.org. "the big money would be for standing up an
Iraqi secret police to liquidate the resistance."...
...News reports over the past 10 months strongly suggest that the
U.S. has trained and supported highly organized Iraqi commando
brigades, and that some of those brigades have operated as death
squads, abducting and assassinating thousands of Iraqis.
The evidence that the US directly contributed to the creation of the
current civil war in Iraq by its own secretive security strategy is
compelling. Historically of course this is nothing new - divide and
rule is a strategy for colonial powers that has stood the test of time.
Indeed, it was used in the previous British occupation
of Iraq around 85 years ago. However, maybe in the current scenario the
US just over did it a bit, creating an unstoppable momentum that, while
stalling the insurgency, has actually led to new problems of control
and sustainability for Washington and London. So, what did Blair know of and approve in the implementation of the
Salvador Option? How does he feel about it now? Maybe someone should
ask him.
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