| Topic: |
Politics > Politics-USA |
| User: |
"PagCal" |
| Date: |
22 Dec 2006 05:09:17 AM |
| Object: |
Losing faith in the war in Iraq |
This is, in fact, why we are loosing in Iraq. We do win every battle,
but forget, it's a counterinsurgency, and that, the real battle isn't
about battle, but about hearts and minds.
---
Losing faith in the war in Iraq
By Jonathan Beale
BBC News, Washington
Wrapped bodies of Haditha victims, 21 November 2005
Women and children died in the attack in Haditha
Haditha will add to the sense of despair and gloom coming out of Iraq
that now surrounds the White House.
Even President George W Bush has recently conceded that America is "not
winning" the war.
Haditha will make it all the harder to "win" - not just the real battles
against insurgents and preventing a civil war.
Haditha makes it harder to win the hearts and minds of ordinary Iraqis
and an increasingly sceptical American public.
The US military had been bracing itself for bad news. In the wake of the
Haditha allegations it announced that troops would undergo a "Core
Warrior Values" course - essentially ethics training.
At the time Lt Gen Peter Chiarelli - commander of US led forces in Iraq
- said: "It is important that we take time to reflect on the values that
separate us from our enemies".
Pattern of abuse
The army and marines already knew that the slaughter of innocent Iraqi
civilians would make their job more difficult. They hoped that this
would be seen as an isolated incident.
But there is a growing list of American soldiers and marines accused of
breaking the law - and what is more any moral code.
First there was Abu Ghraib. The abuse of prisoners has caused lasting
damage to America's image around the world. More recently there is
Hamdaniya and Mahmudiya.
In short there is enough for America's enemies to point to a pattern of
injustice and probably enough to turn more Iraqis against the occupiers.
President Bush hopes that by investigating and prosecuting any
perpetrators that America will still be seen as righteous. In truth the
damage has already been done.
Tipping point
But whatever happened at Haditha is unlikely to have the same impact as
the events in Abu Ghraib.
There is the confusion surrounding the "fog of war". Yes there is
damning eyewitness accounts. But unlike Abu Ghraib there are no pictures
to tell us exactly what happened.
Nor is this the first time that Americans have heard accounts of
atrocities on their own side. The shock factor is not as great as it was
in Abu Ghraib - even if marines are found guilty.
Some have suggested that Haditha might go down in history as another "My
Lai Massacre". The murder of hundreds of Vietnamese civilians in March
1968 by US soldiers turned many Americans against the Vietnam war.
But there is no sense that the American public view Haditha on the same
scale.
Nor is their any evidence that this event will turn Americans against
their military. There is still broad support for US troops - if not for
the war they are fighting.
US morale
But Haditha is likely to have an impact on the morale both of the US
public and US troops.
Allegations like this inevitably erode the President's moral certainties
about the Iraq war. It also raises serious question for US forces.
For the marines it will damage the "esprit de corps". Was there a
deliberate cover up? More widely, it may raise questions about the rules
of engagement. Will a soldier fear prosecution if he returns fire and
accidentally kills a civilian?
In short Haditha - whatever happened - will go down as another reason
why America is losing faith in this war.
.
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