
One of the truly courageous voices of the Iraqi war, Riverbend, the "girl blogger" from Baghdad, is back after weeks of silence with this
report on the rape charges against the "security" forces of the American-trained, Bush-backed Iraqi government. The case of Sabrine al-Janabi could have horrific consequences in accelerating the destruction of Iraqi society (not to mention the
Iraqi government) -- which is no doubt one reason why Bush's man in Baghdad, Nouri al-Maliki, leader of a violent sectarian faction with a history of terrorism, is now trying so hard to denigrate the victim and exonerate the death squads under his command.
This is your war, you followers of Bush. This is your war,
you timorous Democrats who won't even consider a measure to cut off
funding for Bush's crime. This is your war, you Beltway pundits, you
"serious reporters" serving as unfiltered pipelines for the lies and
manipulations of the brutal thugs in power.
This is your war
-- but the bloodsoaked consequences will belong to us all, and to our
children, and to their children, a dark acrid smoke trailing down
through the generations.
I
look at this woman and I can’t feel anything but rage. What did we
gain? I know that looking at her, foreigners will never be able to
relate. They’ll feel pity and maybe some anger, but she’s one of us.
She’s not a girl in jeans and a t-shirt so there will only be a vague
sort of sympathy. Poor third-world countries- that is what their
womenfolk tolerate. Just know that we never had to tolerate this
before. There was a time when Iraqis were safe in the streets. That
time is long gone. We consoled ourselves after the war with the fact
that we at least had a modicum of safety in our homes. Homes are
sacred, aren’t they? That is gone too.
She’s just one of tens,
possibly hundreds, of Iraqi women who are violated in their own homes
and in Iraqi prisons. She looks like cousins I have. She looks like
friends. She looks like a neighbor I sometimes used to pause to gossip
with in the street. Every Iraqi who looks at her will see a cousin, a
friend, a sister, a mother, an aunt…
Humanitarian organizations
are warning that three Iraqi women are to be executed next month. The
women are Wassan Talib, Zainab Fadhil and Liqa Omar Muhammad. They are
being accused of 'terrorism', i.e. having ties to the Iraqi resistance.
It could mean they are relatives of people suspected of being in the
resistance. Or it could mean they were simply in the wrong place at the
wrong time. One of them gave birth in the prison. I wonder what kind of
torture they've endured. Let no one say Iraqi women didn't get at least
SOME equality under the American occupation- we are now equally as
likely to get executed.
And yet, as the situation continues to
deteriorate both for Iraqis inside and outside of Iraq, and for
Americans inside Iraq, Americans in America are still debating on the
state of the war and occupation- are they winning or losing? Is it
better or worse?
Let me clear it up for any moron with lingering
doubts: It’s worse.
It’s over. You lost.
You lost the day your tanks
rolled into Baghdad to the cheers of your imported, American-trained
monkeys.
You lost every single family whose home your soldiers
violated. You lost every sane, red-blooded Iraqi when the Abu Ghraib
pictures came out and verified your atrocities behind prison walls as
well as the ones we see in our streets.
You lost when you brought
murderers, looters, gangsters and militia heads to power and hailed
them as Iraq’s first democratic government.
You lost when a gruesome
execution was dubbed your biggest accomplishment. You lost the respect
and reputation you once had.
You lost more than 3000 troops. That is
what you lost America.
I hope the oil, at least, made it worthwhile.
UPDATE:
Riverbend follows up on
Maliki's brazen denial that Sabrine was raped at all, and his rewarding of the soldiers accused of the crime.
Excerpts:
I hate the media and I hate the Iraqi government for turning this
atrocity into another Sunni-Shia debacle- like it matters whether
Sabrine is Sunni or Shia or Arab or Kurd (the Al Janabi tribe is
composed of both Sunnis and Shia). Maliki did not only turn the woman
into a liar, he is rewarding the officers she accused. It's outrageous
and maddening.
No Iraqi woman under the circumstances- under any
circumstances- would publicly, falsely claim she was raped. There are
just too many risks. There is the risk of being shunned socially. There
is the risk of beginning an endless chain of retaliations and revenge
killings between tribes. There is the shame of coming out publicly and
talking about a subject so taboo, she and her husband are not only
risking their reputations by telling this story, they are risking their
lives.
No one would lie about something like this simply to
undermine the Baghdad security operation. That can be done simply by
calculating the dozens of dead this last week. Or by writing about the
mass detentions of innocents, or how people are once again burying
their valuables so that Iraqi and American troops don't steal them.
It
was less than 14 hours between Sabrine's claims and Maliki's rewarding
the people she accused. In 14 hours, Maliki not only established their
innocence, but turned them into his own personal heroes. I wonder if
Maliki would entrust the safety his own wife and daughter to these men.
This
is meant to discourage other prisoners, especially women, from coming
forward and making claims against Iraqi and American forces. Maliki is
the stupidest man alive (well, after Bush of course…) if he believes
his arrogance and callous handling of the situation will work to
dismiss it from the minds of Iraqis. By doing what he is doing, he's
making it more clear than ever that under his rule, under his
government, vigilante justice is the only way to go. Why leave it to
the security forces and police? Simply hire a militia or gang to get
revenge. If he doesn't get some justice for her, her tribe will be
forced to... And the Janabat (the Al Janabis) are a force to be
reckoned with.
Maliki could at least pretend the rape of a young Iraqi woman is still an outrage in today's Iraq.