"Just Go": Iraqis' Views of the American Occupation of their Country



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Topic: Science > Prophecies-Of-Nostradamus
User: "Perseid"
Date: 18 Jun 2007 12:23:37 AM
Object: "Just Go": Iraqis' Views of the American Occupation of their Country
http://journals.democraticunderground.com/Time%20for%20change/190
Just Go: Iraqis' Views of the American Occupation of their Country
Posted by Time for change in General Discussion
Sat Jun 16th 2007, 08:46 AM
Today's lesson: don't rape, don't torture, don't kill and get out while
you can – while it still looks like you have a choice... Chaos? Civil
war? Bloodshed? We’ll take our chances – just take your Puppets, your
tanks, your smart weapons, your dumb politicians, your lies, your
empty promises, your rapists, your sadistic torturers and go. – An
“unknown Iraqi girl”, proposing a solution to the American occupation
of Iraq
Can you imagine what the reaction of the American people would be to
viewing an interview with the above quoted Iraqi girl on a major news
network? Many millions would be rightfully shocked and enraged about
our invasion and continued occupation of Iraq.
Many other millions, militarists who fancy themselves as “patriots”,
would be enraged, not at our occupation of Iraq but at the fact that
a major news network dared to air an interview with someone with such
a scathingly negative opinion of the American occupation. They would
accuse the news network of painting a grossly unfair picture of the
American occupation (as they would accuse me for writing this). They
would argue that the coverage was unbalanced because it didn’t give
equal time to the other side. Some would even accuse the news network
of treason – for making their country “look bad”.
My own opinion of the matter is that frequent coverage of this sort,
while provoking a wide range of opinions in different directions, would
soon put an end to the war, as the bulk of American opinion would so
strongly oppose it that our politicians on both sides of the isle would
be forced to withhold further funding and demand an end to the war.
But would frequent coverage of this sort be fair and balanced, or would
it be biased, as many would claim? Let’s consider a few things:
Some basic facts
An epidemiological study showed that since the 2003 invasion of Iraq
there have been approximately 655,000 excess Iraqi deaths over a period
of a little more than three years – that is, deaths that are due to the
invasion and subsequent occupation. Over 600 thousand of those deaths
have been violent deaths, amounting to about 500 violent deaths per
day. The death rate has been increasing over time, as the occupation
has progressed.
According to the United Nations, approximately two million Iraqis have
fled their country since the start of the invasion, and the number of
external refugees is currently increasing by about 50 thousand per
month. In addition, there have been almost two million internally
displaced Iraqis since the start of the war.
Iraq’s infrastructure has been devastated. For example, despite U.S.
promises to rebuild the Iraqi infrastructure, by October 2006 Iraqis
in Baghdad were receiving an average of only 2.4 hours of electricity
per day. The Iraqi healthcare system is crumbling. And according to a
UN/World Bank report, water and sewage treatment has deteriorated by 50%.
Such are the results of George W. Bush’s efforts to “spread democracy”
to Iraq, advanced as a major reason for the war and the occupation
after it turned out that the dire warnings of Iraq’s “weapons of mass
destruction” were a pack of lies.
Why all the “collateral damage”?
A recent report by a coalition of non-governmental groups called the
Global Policy Forum shed a lot of light on some of the reasons for the
tragedies that so many Iraqis have suffered under the U.S. occupation.
The report explains that U.S. forces:
-have held a large number of Iraqi citizens in 'security detention'
without charge or trial, in direct violation of international law. No
Iraqi is safe from arbitrary arrest and the number of prisoners has
risen greatly since 2003 (when the US-led war began)…
-U.S. military commanders have established permissive rules of
engagement, allowing troops to use deadly force against virtually any
perceived threat. As a consequence, the US and its allies regularly
kill Iraqi civilians at checkpoints and during military operations, on
the basis of the merest suspicion…abusing and torturing large numbers
of Iraqi prisoners… torture increasingly takes place in Iraqi prisons,
apparently with US awareness and complicity…In addition to combat
deaths, coalition forces have killed many Iraqi civilians.
-The United States has established broad legal immunity in Iraq for its
forces, for private security personnel, for foreign military and civilian
contractors, and even for the oil companies doing business in Iraq…
-Under the control or influence of U.S. authorities, public funds in Iraq
have been drained by massive corruption and stolen oil, leaving the
country unable to provide basic services and incapable of rebuilding.
Billion of dollars have disappeared.
Not that this report should come as a big surprise. U.S. forces have long
used aerial bombing in Iraq, despite the additional civilian deaths that
it entails; they use chemical weapons against civilian populations; and,
they have repeatedly ferociously attacked population centers, with
numerous attendant civilian casualties. One might have thought that
following the revelations of torture at Abu Ghraib the Bush
administration might have taken steps to avoid more of the same. But
instead it blamed the whole scandal on “a few bad apples”, failed to
prosecute any high level officials, and demonstrated much more interest
in justifying more torture than in preventing it.
How do most Iraqis feel about our occupation of their country?
Since Americans are told over and over and over again that a primary
purpose of their country’s presence in Iraq is to bring freedom and
democracy to the Iraqi people, few Americans are aware of the
overwhelming desire by most Iraqis for the U.S. occupation of their
country to end. A World Opinion Poll of Iraqis taken in September of
2006 makes that quite clear:
71% of Iraqis want us to leave within a year, 20% want us to leave
within two years, and only 9% want U.S. troops to be reduced “as the
security situation improves”; only 21% feel that the U.S. military is
a stabilizing force in Iraq, compared to 78% who believe that the U.S.
military is “provoking more conflict than it is preventing”; and 61%
believe that if U.S. led forces were to leave in the next six months,
“day to day security for ordinary Iraqis” would increase, compared to
only 34 % who believe that it would decrease.
But the most shocking part of the poll is that 61% of Iraqis not only
disapprove of our presence in their country, but they actually approve
of the violent attacks on U.S. led forces. No wonder our forces face
such tremendous opposition and violence in Iraq. And let us be clear
about this: These are not terrorists – these are ordinary Iraqis who
deeply resent the imperialistic occupation of their country by a
foreign power.
U.S. imperialism
It should be clear to all Americans that the U.S. occupation of Iraq is
an imperialistic occupation – NOT an occupation designed to bring to the
Iraqi people the benefits of democracy and freedom, as we are so often
told. The fact that we occupy Iraq against the will of the Iraqi people
clearly demonstrates that – as that is virtually the definition of
imperialism. The flurry of no-bid contracts for Bush administration
cronies and the lack of effective administrative oversight of those
contracts speak volumes of the Bush administration’s imperialistic
intentions. Our insistence on making arrangements for the distribution
of oil in Iraq that will benefit American oil companies constitutes
additional confirmation of those intentions. And the imperial foundations
of our war against and occupation of Iraq is made all the more obvious
by our construction of 14 military bases in that country.
In recent years many American commentators have claimed that U.S.
imperialism is a blessing that should be openly embraced not only by
the American people but by the people of those nations who are the
subjects of our imperialism, since we bring to them the benefits of
our freedom, democracy, civilization, economic prosperity, or
Christianity. But imperialistic nations have always said that about
the countries that they subjugate. Yet, as Chalmers Johnson points
out in “Nemesis – The Last Days of the American Republic”:
-With rare exceptions, the countries that the various imperialisms of
the nineteenth and twentieth centuries exploited and colonized remain
poor, disease- and crime-ridden, and at the mercy of a rigged
international trading system that Anglo-American propagandists assure
us is rapidly “globalizing” to everyone’s advantage. But… the very same
representatives of the club of rich countries who go around the world
hectoring the poor to open up their markets to free trade put up
roadblocks when those countries ask the rich to dismantle their own
barriers to free trade…
In any event, it should be obvious to anyone who is aware of what is
transpiring in Iraq today that our imperialistic adventures there are
providing no benefits to the Iraqi people – nor were they meant to. Our
politicians blabber on and whine and complain about how the Iraqis are
not cooperating with what we want them to do. Well, why the hell should
they? And why the hell doesn’t our corporate news media ever ask that
question?
Just Go
Thus, it should be obvious that the “unknown Iraqi girl” whom I quoted
in the introduction to this post is not unrepresentative of the Iraqi
people in general with respect to her intense hostility to and hatred
of the American occupation of her country. Nor are her reasons difficult
to understand. It would be a great service to the people of our country
if our corporate news media would discuss what she and others like her
have to say about George Bush’s efforts to “spread democracy” to her
country:
-People are seething with anger… Every newspaper you pick up in Baghdad
has pictures of some American or British atrocity or another. It's like
a nightmare that has come to life. Everyone knew this was happening in
Abu Ghraib and other places… American and British politicians have the
audacity to come on television with words like, "True the people in Abu
Ghraib are criminals, but…" Everyone here in Iraq knows that there are
thousands of innocent people detained… In the New Iraq, it's "guilty
until proven innocent”…
-There was a time when people here felt sorry for the troops… That time
has passed… We burn with shame and anger and frustration at not being
able to do something. Now that the world knows that the torture has
been going on since the very beginning, do people finally understand
what happened in Fallujah?
-And through all this, Bush gives his repulsive speeches. He makes an
appearance on Arabic TV channels looking sheepish and attempting to look
sincere, babbling on about how this 'incident' wasn't representative of
the American people or even the army, regardless of the fact that it's
been going on for so long… But when the bodies were dragged through the
streets of Fallujah, the American troops took it upon themselves to punish
the whole city… Bush… Your credibility was gone the moment you stepped
into Iraq and couldn't find the WMD....
-So are the atrocities being committed in Abu Ghraib really not
characteristic of the American army? What about the atrocities committed
by Americans in Guantanamo? And Afghanistan? … It seems that torture and
humiliation are common techniques used in countries blessed with the
American presence…
-We heard stories since the very beginning of the occupation about
prisoners being made to sit for several hours on their knees… being
deprived of sleep for days at a time by being splashed with cold water or
kicked or slapped… about the rape, the degradations, the emotional and
physical torture… and there were moments when I actually wanted to believe
that what we heard was exaggerated. I realize now that it was only a small
fragment of the truth.
-Why is no one condemning this? … I don't understand the 'shock' Americans
claim to feel at the lurid pictures. You've seen the troops break down
doors and terrify women and children… curse, scream, push, pull and throw
people to the ground with a boot over their head. You've seen troops shoot
civilians in cold blood. You've seen them bomb cities and towns. You've
seen them burn cars and humans using tanks and helicopters. Is this latest
debacle so very shocking or appalling?
-The Americans and British are saying that they are 'insurgents'… but
people from Najaf are claiming that innocent civilians are being killed
on a daily basis.
-I sometimes get emails asking me to propose solutions or make
suggestions. Fine. Today's lesson: don't rape, don't torture, don't
kill and get out while you can – while it still looks like you have a
choice... Chaos? Civil war? Bloodshed? We’ll take our chances – just
take your Puppets, your tanks, your smart weapons, your dumb
politicians, your lies, your empty promises, your rapists, your
sadistic torturers and go.
A solution offered by the Global Policy Forum
The Global Policy Forum that I referenced above ends its report with a
few recommendations that our politicians would be wise to heed:
-End the coalition mandate at the earliest opportunity and plan for a
stable transition in Iraq.
-Respect international law.
-Complete and speedy withdrawal of the coalition with no residual
forces or bases and with no conditions.
-Speedily release all security detainees who have not been charged
with a crime.
-A UN peacekeeping force clearly distinct from the coalition {should}
assist with the transition by monitoring the ceasefire, strengthening
local police forces and the judicial system and organizing
fully-credible elections.
.

 

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