----- Original Message ----- 
From: Michael Schwartz 
To: xxx 
Sent: Monday, November 08, 2004 9:02 AM
Subject: The attack on Falluja is already horrific


The battle of Falluja is starting.  I hope that the guerrillas decide to melt 
and come back to fight another day, as they did in Samarra, because all the 
signs are that the U.S. intends to annihilate the city on the least 
provocation.  And even though most people have left, there are still at least 
50,000 people and all those buildings to destroy-and a multitude of lives along 
with them.  

A few things that are worth noting have already occurred.  Most sickening is 
the fact that the U.S. is trying to prevent the insurgents and civilian 
casualties from having any medical care.  In the past couple of days, they 
shelled a new medical facility (and then issued a tepid denial-that "no medical 
facility was targeted"), blocked access to the main hospital, and now have 
taken over that hospital.  This is designed to deny medical care to Iraqis 
wounded in the battle (U.S. troops have their own field hospitals), but also to 
deny doctors access to Iraqi casualties.   In the past (especially the first 
battle of Falluja) it has been the doctors who have documented and publicized 
the multitude of civilian casualties from American offensives.  This time, the 
U.S. is attempting to forestall such information by denying all medical care to 
those it wounds and kills. NY Times reporter Richard Oppel, in generous 
understatement, framed this aspect of the situation thusly: American 
officials.have made little secret of their irritation with what they contend 
are inflated civilian casualty figures that regularly flow from the hospital - 
propaganda, they believe, for the Falluja insurgents"

So we arrive at the ghoulish result that the Americans are preventing Iraqis 
from obtaining medical care because they feel the doctors have exaggerated 
civilian casualties.  We will see if they are successful in denying the Iraqis 
medical care, but even if they are frustrated, this has the eerie echo of 
Nazism.  

 

The mass media has once again fallen into "total support" mode, just as they 
did during the original invasion.  The usual "embedded" journalists write 
everything from the view of American soldiers (as the quote above from the NY 
Times demonstrates), recording nothing of the impact of the hi-technology, 
highly destructive assault, and expressing not even a smidgen of critical 
analysis or skepticism about official America versions of events.  On CNN this 
morning, their military reporter actually said that the way guerrillas hide and 
run was "unfair, referring to them of course, as "the bad guys."  In addition 
to the disingenuous comments quoted above about inflated civilian casualties as 
a reason for taking over a hospital, Times reporter Oppel described the assault 
on the hospital as straight news-as a typical action in time of war-and even 
described rousting patients out of beds and handcuffing them as normal 
activity. 

 

Finally, pay attention to the gratuitous brutality that will be a feature of 
this onslaught.  The U.S., desperate as usual, has got a lot riding on the 
conquest of Falluja-it is supposed to do far more than "secure" the town.  If 
must completely demoralize and intimidate the resistance, there and in other 
parts of the country.  Their strategy for accomplishing this is to annihilate 
everyone and everything that impedes their progress.  In this context, the 
denial of medical care is a symptom of the larger strategy, called "scorched 
earth" in other contexts, that tries to end an insurgency by wreaking so much 
havoc and destruction and death that it intimidates all current and future 
rebels from further resistance. 



MS
Dir., Undergraduate College of Global Studies
Professor of Sociology
University at Stony Brook
Stony Brook NY 11794
Cell Phone: 516 356-4078

 

***

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To learn more folks can consult ZNet at http://www.zmag.org 

Today's commentary:
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2004-11/08herman.cfm

==================================

ZNet Commentary
We Had To Destroy Fallujah in Order to Save It November 08, 2004
By Edward Herman 

""The similarities between the Vietnam and Iraq wars become more marked with 
each passing week.We are now told that the U.S. forces have surrounded Fallujah 
and are about to unleash a full-scale attack to recover it from the insurgents. 
They are already bombarding the town with howitzers and missiles, so we can be 
fairly certain that the town will be destroyed and that civilian casualties 
will be very heavy. Fallujah must be destroyed in order to save it from control 
by a resistance to the U.S.-invasion/occupation and U.S. control, as was the 
case with Ben Tre in Vietnam, about whose destruction the famous phrase "We had 
to destroy the town in order to save it" was coined by a U.S. officer 
implementing the destruction. Then as now the U.S. right to invade and destroy 
in order to shape the politics of a distant country was taken as a given by the 
media and ready-access intellectuals.

In both cases there was this ready willingness to use advanced weaponry on 
relatively defenseless peoples, with heavy civilian casualties entirely 
acceptable, and of course kept under the rug as much as possible, with media 
assistance. There were no body counts of civilians in Vietnam, and U.S. leaders 
like Colin Powell and General Tommy Franks have been explicit that such counts 
as regards Iraqi civilians are not an interesting subject and in fact "We don't 
do body counts" (Franks). In Vietnam, U.S. legal personnel even coined the 
phrase "the mere gook rule," to describe the attitude toward the locals we were 
allegedly saving. In Iraq the natives are referred to as hajis by the invaders, 
a term of derogation that is matched by actions in raiding homes, dealing with 
prisoners, and once again the lavish use of high tech weapons in civilian-heavy 
locales with heavy civilian costs (heavy bombs, cluster bombs, DU ammunition).

In both cases there was a large-scale abuse of prisoners and ugly prison 
conditions. In Vietnam, electronic methods of torture were widely used, partly 
by proxy troops advised by the United States and trained in these up-to-date 
methods, and prisoners were regularly killed after interrogation, sometimes by 
being dropped out of airplanes; and Vietnam was famous for its "tiger cages" 
that were the predecessors of the cages used at Guantanamo.

In both cases puppet governments were installed by the occupying power with 
leaders who would take orders and give the United States a free hand to bomb 
and kill. There were "elections" in Vietnam in 1966 and 1967, held under 
comical conditions of non-freedom, in which a military junta that openly 
admitted it couldn't compete with the insurgents on a purely political basis, 
won handily. The U.S. media were greatly encouraged by these elections. Iraq is 
possibly going to have an election in January that will not be very free (see 
my "Cheney, the New York Times, and the Afghan, El Salvador, and Iraq 
Elections," forthcoming in the December issue of Z Magazine). But meanwhile its 
is nominally ruled by Ayad Allawi, openly selected by U.S. officials, but taken 
by the media (and Kofi Annan and the UN) as a genuine leader of Iraq. In the 
runup to "saving" Fallujah U.S. military officials say that they are awaiting a 
go-ahead from the head-of-sovereign-Iraq, Mr. Allawi, for permission! Like the 
United States needed a go-ahead from Generals Ky and Thieu to ravage their 
country with Agent Orange and napalm!

In both cases the UN did nothing to impede straightforward aggression in 
violation of the UN Charter, although there has been a slight regression in 
that now Kofi Annan and company have been manipulated into servicing U.S. 
aggression: first, letting the United States play with them in making Iraq's 
threat of weapons of mass destruction a very serious business, even if the 
United States had to walk over the UN in the end when the inspections seemed to 
be yielding inadequate justification for conquest. But second, after the 
invasion-occupation, the UN was induced to give the occupation its imprimatur, 
therefore accelerating the UN decline to irrelevance as a peace-making body and 
making it an open tool of aggression and imperialism.

In both cases, the huge turmoil that resulted from the invasion-occupation was 
used by the aggressor to justify further intervention and killing-having 
produced a great deal of instability, and stoked a powerful resistance by its 
horrifying tactics, the party responsible for the instability claimed the need 
to stay on and kill on a larger scale in the interest of "stability." Of 
course, the only stability sought by the aggressor was one in which at least 
some of the attack objectives were achieved: hopefully transformation of the 
target into a client state (still a goal in Iraq); in Vietnam, a partial 
victory without control, but so devastating the country and killing so many of 
its most energetic and productive citizens that Vietnam was unable to project 
any threatening development model to compete with the U.S. clients that had 
actually profited from the Vietnam holocaust.

In both cases, when problems arose as pacification of the attacked country 
became more costly than anticipated, extrication was difficult. Losing in 
Vietnam to "Communists"-- and little "yellow dwarves" to boot (Lyndon 
Johnson)--or in Iraq to a rag-tag, diversified but increasingly mass-based set 
of insurgents who had not a single helicopter, was intolerable, and would have 
domestic political costs. Withdrawal is therefore delayed, for many years in 
the case of Vietnam. Americans don't lose well, and today the powerful 
rightwing would shriek at the abandonment of our noble, God-ordered killing 
goals. In both cases, with the huge commitment to the aggression/occupation, 
there was the problem of the loss of credibility and the fear that the U.S. 
threat that keeps lesser breeds in line would seem less fearsome.

There was also the problem that an actual loss, or seeming loss, would make the 
home public less willing to support future aggressions.This problem has been 
solved in part by choosing only weak targets, by effective demonization of 
their leadership, and by conquering them and exiting quickly. The failure to 
achieve a quick accomplishment of the "mission" in Iraq has been painful for 
the Bush administration, but now that Bush has won his election, and with no 
moral values obstructing his willingness to kill (those influential to his 
constituency certainly do not include "Thou shalt not kill"), we may expect 
escalated violence, starting with Fallujah.

In each case, both Republicans and Democrats played an important role in mass 
killing: Eisenhower and Nixon, and Kennedy and Johnson in Vietnam; Bush-1 with 
the 1990 Persian Gulf War, and his son carrying the White Man's Burden in 
1993-1994; Clinton managing the "sanctions of mass destruction" that killed 
over a million Iraqi civilians, and with Blair, steadily and illegally bombing 
Iraq throughout his term of office; and John Kerry voting for the Bush-2 war, 
and promising to stay the course with more troops and a planned four-year 
presence.

In short, destroying towns, cities and countries to save them from falling out 
of the orbit of Godfather control is bipartisan and is built-in to the highly 
militarized imperial United States. This isn't going to change without a change 
in the U.S. political economy, now geared to domination, expansion, and war 
without end.






[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]






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