Hi.  I've sent you two emails at the same time only once or
twice before.  I'd planned a powerful Barbara Ehrenreich
interview for the past week, but felt the need to temper the
news and analyses around Zarqawi with the sense of the
hood this blog exemplifies.  Ehrenreich to follow.
Ed

ps.  I've gotten a number of requests for more information on
Ehren Watada, the U.S. Army lieutenant refusing deployment to
Iraq, where to send defense money, etc.  The website for all this is
http://thanksltamp.live.radicaldesigns.org/modinput4.php?modin=50


Baghdad Burning
... I'll meet you 'round the bend my friend, where hearts can heal and souls
can mend...

Saturday, June 10, 2006

Zarqawi...

So 'Zarqawi' is finally dead. It was an interesting piece of news that
greeted us yesterday morning (or was it the day before? I've lost track of
time.). I didn't bother with the pictures and film they showed of him
because I, personally, have been saturated with images of broken, bleeding
bodies.

The reactions have been different. There's a general consensus amongst
family and friends that he won't be missed, whoever he is. There is also
doubt- who was he really? Did he even exist? Was he truly the huge terror
the Americans made him out to be? When did he actually die? People swear he
was dead back in 2003. The timing is extremely suspicious: just when people
were getting really fed up with the useless Iraqi government, Zarqawi is
killed and Maliki is hailed the victorious leader of the occupied world!
(And no- Iraqis aren't celebrating in the streets- worries over electricity,
water, death squads, tests, corpses and extremists in high places prevail
right now.)

I've been listening to reactions- mostly from pro-war politicians and the
naïveté they reveal is astounding. Maliki (the current Iraqi PM) was almost
giddy as he made the news public (he had even gone the extra mile and
shaved!). Do they really believe it will end the resistance against
occupation? As long as foreign troops are in Iraq, resistance or
'insurgency' will continue- why is that SO difficult to understand? How is
that concept a foreign one?

"A new day for Iraqis" is the current theme of the Iraqi puppet government
and the Americans. Like it was "A New Day for Iraqis" on April 9, 2003 . And
it was "A New Day for Iraqis" when they killed Oday and Qusay. Another "New
Day for Iraqis" when they caught Saddam. More "New Day" when they drafted
the constitution. I'm beginning to think it's like one of those questions
they give you on IQ tests: If 'New' is equal to 'More' and 'Day' is equal to
'Suffering', what does "New Day for Iraqis" mean?

How do I feel? To hell with Zarqawi (or Zayrkawi as Bush calls him). He was
an American creation- he came along with them- they don't need him anymore,
apparently. His influence was greatly exaggerated but he was the
justification for every single family they killed through military strikes
and troops. It was WMD at first, then it was Saddam, then it was Zarqawi.
Who will it be now? Who will be the new excuse for killing and detaining
Iraqis? Or is it that an excuse is no longer needed- they have freedom to do
what they want. The slaughter in Haditha months ago proved that. "They don't
need him anymore," our elderly neighbor waved the news away like he was
shooing flies, "They have fifty Zarqawis in government."

So now that Zarqawi is dead, and because according to Bush and our Iraqi
puppets he was behind so much of Iraq's misery- things should get better,
right? The car bombs should lessen, the ethnic cleansing will come to a
halt, military strikes and sieges will die down. That's what we were
promised, wasn't it? That sounds good to me. Now- who do they have to kill
to stop the Ministry of Interior death squads, and trigger-happy foreign
troops?

---

- posted by river @ 12:47 AM
Tuesday, June 06, 2006

Bad Day...

It's been a horrible day. We woke up to unbearable heat. Our area averages
about 4 hours electricity daily and the rest is generator electricity, which
means we can use our ceiling fans, but there's no way we can use air
conditioners.

We woke up to an ominous silence- an indicator that the generator isn't
working. E. went next door to check and got a confirmation. It might not
work all day. The neighbor responsible for it was going to bring by the
'generator doctor' as soon as he was free.

The electricity came at 6 pm for only twenty minutes- as if to taunt us. The
moment the lights flickered on, we were gathered in the kitchen and we could
hear the neighborhood children began to hoot and holler with joy.

Before that, we heard the news about the dozens abducted from the Salhiya
area in Baghdad. Salhiya is a busy area where many travel agencies have
offices. It has been particularly busy since the war because people who want
to leave to Jordan and Syria all make their reservations from one office or
another in that area.

According to people working and living in the area, around 15 police cars
pulled up to the area and uniformed men began pulling civilians off the
streets and from cars, throwing bags over their heads and herding them into
the cars. Anyone who tried to object was either beaten or pulled into a car.
The total number of people taken away is estimated to be around 50.

This has been happening all over Iraq- mysterious men from the Ministry of
Interior rounding up civilians and taking them away. It just hasn't happened
with this many people at once. The disturbing thing is that the Iraqi
Ministry of Interior has denied that it had anything to do with this latest
mass detention (which is the new trend with them- why get tangled up with
human rights organizations about mass detentions, torture and
assassinations- just deny it happened!). That isn't a good sign- it means
these people will probably be discovered dead in a matter of days. We pray
they'll be returned alive.

Another piece of particularly bad news came later during the day. Several
students riding a bus to school were assassinated in Dora area. No one knows
why- it isn't clear. Were they Sunni? Were they Shia? Most likely they were
a mix. Heading off for their end-of-year examination- having stayed up the
night before to study in the heat. When they left their houses, they were
probably only worried about whether they'd pass or fail- their parents
sending them off with words of encouragement and prayer. Now they'll never
come home.

There's an ethnic cleansing in progress and it's impossible to deny. People
are being killed according to their ID card. Extremists on both sides are
making life impossible. Some of them work for 'Zarqawi', and the others work
for the Iraqi Ministry of Interior. We hear about Shia being killed in the
'Sunni triangle' and corpses of Sunnis named 'Omar' (a Sunni name) arriving
by the dozen at the Baghdad morgue. I never thought I'd actually miss the
car bombs. At least a car bomb is indiscriminate. It doesn't seek you out
because you're Sunni or Shia.

We still don't have ministers in the key ministries- defense and interior.
Iraq is falling apart and Maliki and his team are still bickering over who
should get more power- who is more qualified to oppress Iraqis with the help
of foreign occupiers? On top of all of this, rumor has it that the Iraqi
parliament have a 'vacation' coming up during July and August. They're so
exhausted with the arguing, and struggling for power, they need to take a
couple of months off to rest. They'll leave their well-guarded homes behind
for a couple of months, and spend some time abroad with their families (who
can't live in Iraq anymore- they're too precious for that).

Where does one go to avoid the death and destruction? Are the Americans
happy with this progress? Does Bush still insist we're progressing?

Emily Dickinson wrote, "hope is a thing with feathers". If what she wrote is
true, then hope has flown far- very far- from Iraq.



- posted by river @ 2:53 AM






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