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US Troops Ordered To Commit War Crimes
American Free Press | December 12 2004
As Americans prepared for Thanksgiving, an estimated
100,000 residents of the besieged Iraqi city of Fallujah, trapped in their
homes, struggled to survive without fresh food, water or electricity, reportedly
cut off by U.S. forces on Nov. 8.
Meanwhile, on the streets of Fallujah, a city of more than 350,000, dogs
gnaw on bloated and rotting corpses that remain unburied for weeks.
Thousands of families in Fallujah were reported to be in a critical humanitarian
situation after U.S. forces prevented the delivery of relief supplies. An
Iraq Red Crescent Society (IRCS) humanitarian aid convoy, reportedly blocked
by U.S. troops for more than two weeks, was allowed to deliver aid to residents
in the heart of the city on Nov. 25.
On Thanksgiving, U.S. forces permitted the IRCS convoy carrying thousands
of food parcels, blankets, tents and medical supplies to enter the city
and allowed one of the clinics to be converted into a temporary hospital
to treat the injured.
Rana Sidani of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Geneva,
Switzerland, however, told American Free Press on Nov. 30 that "many
civilians" were still prevented from receiving aid or medical care.
At the beginning of the U.S. operation in Fallujah on Nov. 5, a hospital
in the central Nazzal district of Fallujah was reduced to rubble as a result
of U.S. air and artillery bombardment. "Only its façade, with
a sign reading Nazzal Emergency Hospital, remained intact," Reuters
reported.
"A nearby compound used by the main Fallujah hospital to store medical
supplies was also destroyed," witnesses told Reuters. Fallujah,s main
hospital was occupied by U.S. forces when the ground offensive began. These
actions are apparent violations of international humanitarian law.
"Bodies can be seen everywhere, and people were crying when receiving
the food parcels," Muhammad al-Nuri, a spokesman for the IRCS in Baghdad,
said. "It is very sad. It is a human disaster."
Al-Nuri said that it is difficult to move in the city due to the large number
of dead bodies in the streets. The IRCS estimates there are more than 6,000
dead in Fallujah, al-Nuri said.
6,000 DEAD?
AFP asked Maj. Jay Antonelli at the Coalition Press Information Center (CPIC)
in Baghdad if the IRCS estimate of 6,000 dead in Fallujah was credible.
"We do not keep a count of dead Iraqis," Antonelli said. Asked
the same question, the ICRC,s Sidani said, "We don,t know."
Antonelli said, "U.S. forces never blocked aid convoys from reaching
the wounded. We only recommended to the aid convoys that they should not
enter the city because the MNF [Multi-National Forces] could not guarantee
their security or safety."
"The ICRC is very worried about the humanitarian situation in Fallujah,"
Sidani said. Asked what the ICRC was doing to alleviate the suffering in
Fallujah, Sidani said: "We are reminding the parties of their responsibilities
under international humanitarian law."
It shouls be noted that the United States and Britain, the occupying powers
in Iraq, are the two largest contributors to the ICRC, providing more than
42 percent of its budget for field operations.
A second convoy from Baghdad, headed by Dr. Said Ismael Haki, the IRCS president,
delivered aid to Fallujah on Nov. 26. "There are no houses left in
Fallujah, only destroyed places," Haki said. "I really don,t know
how the people will return to the city. No one will find their homes."
As U.S. troops in Fallujah engaged in what has been described as the most
intense urban combat since Vietnam, the controlled press scrupulously avoided
discussion or footage of the devastation of the rebellious Sunni city. For
example, during the second week of the attack, rather than discuss the widespread
devastation of Fallujah, U.S. television news programs focused largely on
a brawl between basketball players and fans in Detroit.
At least 136 U.S. soldiers were killed during November in Iraq, and more
than 800 were wounded, most of them in Fallujah, making it the most costly
month, and operation, in terms of U.S. lives lost since the invasion of
Iraq began in March 2003.
FOR WHAT CAUSE?
Michael Ware, Baghdad bureau chief for Time magazine, who has been in Fallujah
during the fighting, said U.S. actions in Fallujah are "creating the
nightmare that we are seeking to prevent.
"I stood there as I saw American boys die," Ware told Chris Matthews
of MSNBC on Nov. 24, "I mean, a man shot at close range, blown apart
by a rocket-propelled grenade. He dies there in front of you, and I can,t
help but think why? For what cause?
"I see us creating the very thing that the president said we went there
to prevent," Ware said, ". . . . subsequent to this invasion and
the occupation and the guerrilla war that is currently under way, we are
the midwives of the next generation Al Qaeda and Islamic terrorist."
Ware, who has interviewed senior insurgent leaders, said they study the
writings of the Vietnamese Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap, Che Guevara and Mao Zedong.
"They,re bringing it straight from Vietnam and the broader insurgency
playbook," Ware said.
"The name of the game is deny the population to the insurgents,"
Ware said. "That,s what we,re trying to do, win hearts and minds. But
we,re not winning them."
The New York Times has reported actions taken by U.S. forces in Fallujah,
which appear to be prima facie evidence of war crimes, without mentioning
that the actions constitute clear violations of the Laws of Land War found
in The U.S. Army Field Manual 27-10.
For example, a Nov. 20 Times article by Edward Wong, with two correspondents
in Fallujah, reports that U.S. Marines had transformed a mosque into a fortress
with snipers and machine gunners perched on the roof.
Then, using the passive form, Wong goes on to say that "no neutral
group has been able to enter the city," without mentioning that U.S.
forces blocked humanitarian aid convoys. Likewise, Wong wrote, "Electricity
and water had been cut off."
The Times, whose motto is "All the news that,s fit to print,"
apparently didn,t think that its readers needed to know the U.S. forces
had cut off the water and power to a city of 340,000 people.
Asked if U.S. forces had cut power and water to Fallujah, Maj. Antonelli
wrote: "MNF did, with approval of the Interim Iraqi Government, cut
off electricity to the city of Fallujah as Operation Al-Fajr began. Water
was not cut off intentionally. However, the water system did sustain some
kinetic damage during strikes."
American Free Press asked the Pentagon,s Lt. Col. Joe Yoswa if it is true
that U.S. forces were using mosques as fortresses.
"It,s not possible," Yoswa said. "Under no circumstances.
We would not set up snipers in a mosque in an offensive position."
CPIC,s Antonelli said: "MNF would not use a mosque as a fortress.,
MNF and Iraqi security forces would only fire from a mosque if they were
being fired upon and were firing back in self-defense."
Abu Sabah, a refugee from Fallujah, reported seeing phosphorus bombs: "They
used these weird bombs that put up smoke like a mushroom cloud. Then small
pieces fell from the air with long tails of smoke trailing behind them.
These exploded on the ground with large fires that burnt for half and hour,"
Sabah said. "When anyone touched these fires their bodies burnt for
hours."
Eyewitnesses from Fallujah also reported seeing "melted" bodies.
OBLITERATION OF FALLUJAH
The "obliteration of Fallujah" is a serious war crime, according
to Francis A. Boyle, a professor of international law at the University
of Illinois. "The obliteration of Fallujah continues apace," Boyle
wrote in his Nov. 15 article, "A War Crime in Real Time: Obliterating
Fallujah."
"Article 6(b) of the 1945 Nuremberg Charter defines a Nuremberg War
Crime in relevant part as the wanton destruction of cities, towns or villages,,
" wrote Boyle. "According to this definitive definition, the Bush
administration,s destruction of Fallujah constitutes a war crime for which
Nazis were tried and executed."
Throw Away Soldiers? [insert]
HAVING SEEN WHAT APPEARED to be a depleted uranium (DU) missile fired at
a building in Fallujah on CNN during the first week of the fighting, AFP
asked the Pentagon if DU weapons are being used in Fallujah. "Yes,"
Lt. Col. Joe Yoswa said, "DU is a standard round on the M-1 Abrams
tank."
Because U.S. Marines in Fallujah are very close to the poison gas produced
by exploded DU shells, AFP asked Yoswa if anything was being done to protect
the troops from DU poisoning. Yoswa seemed unaware of the dangers posed
by the use of DU.
Marion Fulk, a retired nuclear scientist from Livermore National Lab, told
AFP that U.S. troops in DU contaminated battlefields are considered "throwaway
soldiers." The Marines exposed to DU in Fallujah, and elsewhere, face
greatly increased risks of cancer, deformed children, and other health problems
in the future.