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Deep Blade Archive
Cutting through the machinations and
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2003 Archive
Archive of 2003 War Resources
Archive of 1991 Gulf War Articles
911 Archive
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CounterPunch War Diary
Weekend Edition March 29/30,
2003
By ALEXANDER COCKBURN
US Insiders Gloomy: War
"Not Going According to Plan"
The situation of the US/UK invading force
can be assessed as difficult. The US 3rd Infantry Division, the
Marines, Division, the 101st Airborne continue to be plagued by
stretched supply lines which yesterday saw one Marine unit
entirely immobilized by lack of diesel fuel and the food down
to one “meal” a day, with the MREs being decried by
the soldiers as not fit for human consumption. Disorganization
is rife. The 3rd Infantry Division marches up one side of the
Euphrates, while their baggage and supplies proceed up the
other, which renders bridges more “strategic” than
ever. The helicopter assaults on the Iraqi Medina division
left, on one account, seven still serviceable. Two helicopters
were lost in the attack and twenty-six were damaged.
It is becoming clear that last
week’s violent sandstorm was a very serious blow to the
invaders. The Iraqis were able to reinforce their defenses
around Najaf and assault launch some damaging attacks. US high
tech equipment has been seriously degraded by the sand.
Perennial warnings about excessive reliance on hi-tech weaponry
and the hype of a supposed Revolution in Military Affairs are
now returning in force.
The US/UK forces have taken no major
town, are being harassed by guerilla forces and now menaced by
suicide units. Five US soldiers of the Third Infantry Division
were killed by one such unit on a highway north of Najaf. The
British are attempting to win hearts and minds in Basra by
aiming their artillery at the food warehouses, and attempting
to reduce the city by plague, endeavoring to cut off the water
supply. A missile killed 200 in a shelter in Basra, allegedly a
“command and control center” which may by
US/UK-speak for a civilian shelter, as with the Amariya shelter
in Baghdad in 1991.
Even the very base of the supply line in
Kuwait is a choke point, not just in the crowded and potential
dangerous Persian Gulf but in the port of Kuwait, which has
only 21 landing births.
Behind the steady stream of “All
according to plan”, and “calm and orderly
advance” press releases being pumped out of Qatar (always
excepting Wallace’s dissenting squeak that the war
wasn’t going according to war-game scenarios), and the
Pentagon there is extreme nervousness among seasoned military
observers. Serious reinforcements will take weeks to arrive.
Optimists suggest that the US Third Infantry Division will soon
engage and destroy the Iraqi Medina division and the road to
Baghdad will lie open. A less sanguine assessment is that the
two divisions will bog down in a First World War-style
confrontation, with the US disadvantage of those stretched
communications. The third scenario is that the Medina division
will outflank the Third ID, take it in the rear and overwhelm
it. Then the exultant Arab street will erupt in the humiliation
of the Great Satan.
Allah, 1, Jahweh, 0.
And so it will all get much, much
nastier. The actual fighting component of the invading
US/British force is small because (as anonymous Pentagon
officers are now bitterly complaining) Defense Secretary
Rumsfeld's preference for Special Forces prevailed over Gen.
Tommy Franks's recommendation of a far larger force; also
because huge peace demonstrations in Turkey lopped off the
northern half of the invading pincers. If urban fighting
increases, US strategy will veer toward old-fashioned
saturation bombing. The temptation to flatten significant
portions of Baghdad by B-52 raids is growing sharply as the
land force gets seriously stymied.
As regards the small US/UK force trying
to overwhelm Baghdad, imagine a force far less than one of the
recent peace demonstrations landing in Corpus Christi, Texas,
then advancing towards Phoenix through sandstorms, bypassing
all major conurbations and occasionally announcing it has
successfully seized significant portions of the deserts of the
south west and nervously threatening to declare war on Mexico
if it intervenes. (On this latter point note that the Iranian
backed Islamic council has told its adherents in southern Iraq
not to rise; also that the Kurds are conspicuously sitting on
their hands.
The Agitprop War
The propaganda war is not going according
to Western plans either. There are plenty of excellent and
courageous correspondents and observers in Baghdad, not least
Paul Wood of the BBC. Robert Fisk’s account "Bitter
Truths of Basra"on this site attests to the importance of
the Al Jazeera coverage in Basra. We have the truly
extraordinary situation that the Iraqi spokesman in Baghdad is
being given more credibility than the far wilder military
flacks who have seriously damaged their credibility with
numerous baseless claims about the capture of Iraqi towns, and
preposterous British allegations that it is necessary to
destroy Basra in order to bring it vital humanitarian supplies.
It should also be said that many
reporters with major organizations are doing a useful and
professional job. We have been reading excellent reports from
UPI, Reuters and even AP, as well as Knight Ridder and other
papers.
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld
continues to perform valiantly as a vital Iraqi asset,
tremulously discovering the Geneva Convention on treatment of
prisoners or suddenly threatening war against Syria and Iran.
Another Rumsfeld propaganda coup: The retired general named as
civilian governor of occupied Iraq has visited Israel on a trip
paid for by a right-wing group that strongly backs an American
military presence in the Middle East. Lieutenant-General Jay
Garner, the co-coordinator for civilian administration in Iraq,
put his name in October 2000 to a statement blaming
Palestinians for the outbreak of Israeli-Palestinian violence
and saying that a strong Israel was an important security asset
to the United States. This piece of information circulated the
Middle East with as much rapidity as the resignation of Richard
Perle from his chairmanship of the Defense Board and the
supposed trip of Vice-President Cheney’s daughter to
become a human shield.
Chickens in a Darkening Sky
So the sky is dark with chickens coming
home to roost, and bedtime reading is Thucydides' account of
the disastrous Athenian siege of Syracuse. Start with the
amazed discovery of the White House, the Defense Department and
the permanently embedded US press corps that nations don't care
to be invaded, even if they have been misgoverned by a tyrant
for decades. How many Russians died defending the Soviet Union
from German invasion after enduring famine and Stalin's terror?
This isn't 1991, when Iraqis asked themselves, "Why die
for Kuwait?"
Basra? "Military officials,"
ran a European press report, "later admitted that they had
vastly underestimated the strength of Iraqi resistance and the
loyalty of Basra's population to Saddam." The report
quoted a British officer as saying "there are significant
elements in Basra who are hugely loyal to the regime."
Kurdish-held northern Iraq? "Even in
Kurdistan," reported the London Independent, (in the
person of my brother, Patrick Cockburn), "where the US is
popular and where President Saddam committed some of his worst
atrocities, there are flickers of Iraqi patriotism. A Kurdish
official, who has devoted years to opposing the government in
Baghdad, admitted: 'Iraqis won't like to see American soldiers
ripping down posters of Saddam Hussein though they might like
to do it themselves. They didn't enjoy watching the Stars and
Stripes being raised near Umm Qasr.'"
Rumsfeld Visits Geneva
But perhaps the most grotesque chicken
now roosting in the coop came in the form of Rumsfeld's sudden
discovery of the Geneva conventions regarding prisoners of war.
When five captured US soldiers were paraded in front of the
Iraqi television cameras, Rumsfeld immediately complained that
"it is against the Geneva convention to show photographs
of prisoners of war in a manner that is humiliating for
them." True. But the United States does not hold the high
moral ground in leveling this charge.
In January 2002 the United States
released a photograph of Guantánamo detainees kneeling,
shackled and hooded. The Red Cross said the United States may
have violated the Geneva conventions by releasing the photo,
since no "coercion may be inflicted on prisoners of war to
secure from them information of any kind whatever." Under
conditions of sleep deprivation, bright light and other
techniques, at least 25 prisoners in Camp X-Ray at
Guantánamo have tried to kill themselves, some more than
once.
The US government claims that these men
are not subject to the Geneva conventions, as they are not
"prisoners of war" but "unlawful
combatants." But as George Monbiot of the London Guardian
remarks, "The same claim could be made, with rather more
justice, by the Iraqis holding the US soldiers who illegally
invaded their country. But this redefinition is itself a breach
of article 4 of the third convention, under which people
detained as suspected members of a militia (the Taliban) or a
volunteer corps (al-Qaeda) must be regarded as prisoners of
war."
On March 6 US military officials
acknowledged that two prisoners captured in Afghanistan in
December had died during interrogation at Bagram air base north
of Kabul. A spokesman for the air base confirmed that the
official cause of death of the two men was
"homicide." The men's death certificates showed that
one died from "blunt force injuries to lower extremities
complicating coronary artery disease." Another prisoner
suffered from a blood clot in the lung that was exacerbated by
a "blunt force injury."
On November 21 2001, around 8,000 Taliban
soldiers and Pashtun civilians surrendered at Kunduz to
Northern Alliance commander Gen.Abdul Rashid Dostum. A major
war crime, with powerful evidence of US participation, ensued.
Jamie Doran's 2002 documentary film Massacre in Afghanistan
records how 3,000 prisoners were loaded into container trucks,
with the doors sealed and the trucks left to stand in the sun
for several days. An Afghan soldier said he was ordered by a US
commander to fire shots into the containers to provide air,
although he knew he would certainly hit some of those inside.
An Afghan taxi driver reports seeing a number of containers
with blood streaming from the floors. According to one of the
drivers, survivors of the transport ordeal were dumped in the
desert near Mazar-i-Sharif. As thirty to forty US soldiers
looked on, those prisoners still alive were shot and left in
the desert to be eaten by dogs.
Doran interviewed a Northern Alliance
soldier guarding the prison. "I was a witness when an
American soldier broke one prisoner's neck. The Americans did
whatever they wanted. We had no power to stop them." After
an investigation, the German newspaper Die Zeit concluded that
"No one doubted that the Americans had taken part."
Doran, an Irishman, says in his film that the Pentagon and
State Department have tried "by any means possible"
to block an investigation.
Inflated Price of Hot Air Dooms
Festival
The amount of hot air being put out by
official US and UK spokespersons has led to an unexpected surge
in the price of this vital commodity. It is feared that
unscrupulous entrepreneurs are taking advantage of the recently
deregulated market to corner hot air stocks and hold them off
the market, thus causing the base price of hot air to rise.
Democrats in Congress are calling on the Bush administration to
open up the national hot air reserve, now guarded by a mixed
force of Wall Street Journal editorial writers carrying their
trademark popguns, plus a rabble of fedayeen in civilian
clothes press ganged from the Standard, New Republic and CNN.
Evidence of the economic devastation
threatened such by price rises continues to pour in to the
CounterPunch news desk. Here’s a typical report (3/28) by
Emily Tsao of The Oregonian under the headline:
Withering economy deflates
Tigard Festival of Balloons
TIGARD -- The popular Tigard Festival of
Balloons won't take flight this year because of tough economic
times and a lack of sponsorship, its coordinator says.
"Given the economic situation of last year, sponsorships
have been very hard to come by, and we are not in a financial
position to produce the festival at a level we have in the
past," Bruce Ellis, the event organizer, said Thursday. He
said he hoped to resume the event next year.
Every year for the past decade, the
festival at Cook Park sent dozens of hot air balloons into the
sky. In recent years, the three-day free event drew tens of
thousands of people. Ellis said the festival cost about $80,000
a year. Title sponsor KGW chose not to renew its contract last
year, he said.
The balloon festival, although no longer
sponsored by the Rose Festival Association, was sanctioned by
it. That meant the Tigard event was listed with other Rose
Festival happenings but had an independent organizer. Community
members and organizations expressed disappointment over the
cancellation. "I am just sick," said Sydney Sherwood,
a Tigard city councilor. "It put us on the map and it gave
us an identity.”
The Jampot Files (Just Another
Middle-Aged Porker of the Right)
Dear Alexander Cockburn,
I remember old Hitchens as a cherubic
Trot at Oxford in revolutionary 1968. One day he was outside
All Souls College, haranguing the masses to burn down fascist
Oxford University. A window opened, and All Souls Warden John
Sparrow, noted reactionary and Athenian sympathizer, trilled:
'Chrissie, you aren't going to be late for tea, are you?'
Chrissie was somewhat embarrassed. By the way, in a recent
piece, you alluded to your Irish upbringing--does this mean you
are kin to the great radical journalist Claud Cockburn, who
lived at Youghal? The old boy would be proud of CounterPunch.
Yours,
Art Vander Pattaya, Thailand.
Good one, Art! And yes, CC was indeed the
Da.
Flight of the Dolphin?
Takoma, the Navy dolphin deployed in the
war theater, has gone AWOL. Those dolphins, remember, have huge
brains.
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