February 05, 2015 "ICH"
- "The
Intercept" -
The latest ISIS atrocity –
releasing a video of a captured
Jordanian fighter pilot being burned
alive – prompted substantial discussion
yesterday about this particular form of
savagery. It is thus worth noting that
deliberately burning people to death is
achievable – and deliberately achieved –
in all sorts of other ways:
“Living Under Drones:
Death, Injury and Trauma to Civilians
From US Drone Practices in Pakistan”,
NYU School of Law and Stanford
University Law School, 2012:
The most immediate
consequence of drone strikes is, of
course, death and injury to those
targeted or near a strike. The
missiles fired from drones
kill or injure in several ways,
including through incineration[3],
shrapnel, and the release of
powerful blast waves capable of
crushing internal organs. Those who
do survive drone strikes
often suffer disfiguring burns
and shrapnel wounds, limb
amputations, as well as vision and
hearing loss. . . .
In addition,
because the Hellfire
missiles fired from drones often
incinerate the victims’ bodies,
and leave them in pieces and
unidentifiable, traditional burial
processes are rendered impossible.
As Firoz Ali Khan, a shopkeeper
whose father-in-law’s home was
struck, graphically described,
“These missiles are very powerful.
They destroy human beings . . .There
is nobody left and small pieces left
behind. Pieces. Whatever is left is
just little pieces of bodies and
cloth.” A doctor who has
treated drone victims described how
“[s]kin is burned so that you can’t
tell cattle from human.” When
another interviewee came upon the
site of the strike that killed his
father, “[t]he entire place looked
as if it was burned completely, so
much so that even [the victims’] own
clothes had burnt. All the stones in
the vicinity had become black.”
Ahmed Jan, who lost his foot in the
March 17 jirga strike,
discussed the challenges rescuers
face in identifying bodies: “People
were trying to find the body parts.
We find the body parts of some
people, but sometimes we do not find
anything.”
One father
explained that key parts of his
son’s burial process had to be
skipped over as a result of the
severe damage to his body. “[A]fter
that attack, the villagers came and
took the bodies to the hospital.
We didn’t see the bodies. They were
in coffins, boxes. The bodies were
in pieces and burnt.” Idris
Farid, who was injured and lost
several of his relatives in the
March 17 jirga strike,
described how, after that strike,
relatives “had to collect their body
pieces and bones and then bury them
like that.” The difficulty of
identifying individual corpses also
makes it difficult to separate
individuals into different graves.
Masood Afwan, who lost several
relatives in the March 17 jirga
strike, described how the dead from
that strike were buried: “They held
a funeral for everybody, in the same
location, one by one. Their bodies
were scattered into tiny pieces.
They…couldn’t be identified” . . . .
[3] See, e.g., Yancy Y
Phillips & Joan T. Zajchuk, The
Management of Primary Blast Injury,
in Conventional Warfare:
Ballistic, Blast and Burn Injuries
297 (1991) (“The thermal pulse from
a detonation may burn exposed skin,
or secondary fires may be started by
the detonation and more serious
burns may be suffered.”);
AGM-114N Metal Augmented Charge
(MAC) Thermobaric Hellfire,
GlobalSecurity.org,
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/systems/munitions/agm-114n.htm
(last visited Aug. 17, 2012) (“The
new [AGM-114N Thermobaric Hellfire]
warhead contains a fluorinated
aluminum powder layered between the
warhead casing and the PBXN-112
explosive fill. When the PBXN-112
detonates, the aluminum mixture is
dispersed and rapidly burns.
The resultant sustained high
pressure is extremely effective
against enemy personnel and
structures.”); Explosions and
Blast Injuries: A Primer for
Clinicians, Center for Disease
Control and Prevention,
http://www.bt.cdc.gov/masscasualties/explosions.asp
(last visited on Sept. 17, 2012)
(outlining one of the types of blast
injuries as “burns (flash, partial,
and full thickness”)).
Mirza Shahzad Akbar,
The New York Times, May 22, 2013:
Instead, a few
days after [Obama’s] inaugural
address, a CIA-operated drone
dropped Hellfire missiles on Fahim
Qureishi’s home in North Waziristan,
killing seven of his family members
and severely injuring Fahim. He was
just 13 years old and left with only
one eye, and shrapnel in his
stomach. . . .
Mr. Obama is
scheduled to deliver a major speech
on drones at the National Defense
University today. He is likely to
tell his fellow Americans that
drones are precise and effective at
killing militants.
But his words will
be little consolation for 8-year-old
Nabila, who, on Oct. 24, had just
returned from school and was playing
in a field outside her house with
her siblings and cousins while her
grandmother picked flowers. At 2:30
p.m.,
a Hellfire missile came out of the
sky and struck right in front of
Nabila. Her grandmother was badly
burned and succumbed to her
injuries; Nabila survived with
severe burns and shrapnel wounds in
her shoulder.
Al Jazeera, “Yemenis seek
justice in wedding drone strike,” May
21, 2014:
Mousid al-Taysi
was travelling in a wedding convoy
celebrating a cousin’s marriage when
a missile slammed down from the sky.
All he remembers are bright
red-and-orange colours, then
the grisly
sight of a dozen burned bodies and
the cries of others wounded around
him.
Mousid survived
the December 12 attack in Yemen’s
central al-Baydah province,
apparently launched by an American
drone, but his physical and
psychological recovery process is
just beginning. If confirmed, it
would be the deadliest drone attack
in the country in more than a year.
. . .
After talking with
victims and family members in the
area, it was clear a
majority of civilians were among the
carnage of the targeted wedding
convoy. . . .
Civilians living
under drones said they live in
constant fear of being hit again.
“Many people in our village have
expressed terror at the thought of
another strike,” Sulaimani said.
“When the kids hear a plane they no
longer climb the trees searching for
where that noise came from. They
each immediately run to their
houses.”
CNN, December 23, 2011:
She has eyelashes
but no eyebrows. She has all her
fingers but is missing four nails.
Her skin is so taut now that she can
no longer frown.
But she can still
smile.
Her face tells a
story of suffering. Her name,
Shakira, tells a story of a new
journey. . .
Last week,
4-year-old Shakira arrived in the
United States for what her
caretaker, Hashmat Effendi, hopes
will be the start of the rest of her
life.
Shakira,
discovered with severe burns in
Pakistan, will undergo
reconstructive surgery in January. .
. . All anyone could say is that
there had been a U.S. drone attack,
though U.S. officials say that
drones have never struck targets in
Swat.
The Independent,
“The fog of war: white phosphorus,
Fallujah and some burning questions,”
November 15, 2005:
Ever since last
November, when US forces battled to
clear Fallujah of insurgents, there
have been repeated claims that
troops used “unusual” weapons in the
assault that all but flattened the
Iraqi city. Specifically,
controversy has focussed on white
phosphorus shells (WP) – an
incendiary weapon usually used to
obscure troop movements but which
can equally be deployed as an
offensive weapon against an enemy.
The use of such incendiary weapons
against civilian targets is banned
by international treaty. . . .
The debate was
reignited last week when an Italian
documentary claimed Iraqi
civilians – including women and
children – had been killed by
terrible burns caused by WP.
The documentary, Fallujah: the
Hidden Massacre, by the state
broadcaster RAI, cited one Fallujah
human-rights campaigner who reported
how residents told how “a rain of
fire fell on the city”. . . . The
claims contained in the RAI
documentary have met with a strident
official response from the US . . .
.
While military
experts have supported some of these
criticisms, an examination by The
Independent of the available
evidence suggests the following:
that WP shells were fired at
insurgents, that reports from the
battleground suggest troops
firing these WP shells did not
always know who they were hitting
and that there remain widespread
reports of civilians suffering
extensive burn injuries.
While US commanders insist they
always strive to avoid civilian
casualties, the story of the battle
of Fallujah highlights the intrinsic
difficulty of such an endeavour.
It is also clear
that elements within the US
government have been putting out
incorrect information about the
battle of Fallujah, making it harder
to assesses the truth. Some within
the US government have previously
issued disingenuous statements about
the use in Iraq of another
controversial incendiary weapon –
napalm. . . .
Another report,
published in the Washington Post,
gave an idea of the sorts of
injuries that WP causes. It said
insurgents “reported being
attacked with a substance that
melted their skin, a reaction
consistent with white phosphorous
burns”. A physician at a local
hospital said the corpses of
insurgents “were burned, and some
corpses were melted”. . . .
Yet there are
other, independent reports of
civilians from Fallujah suffering
burn injuries. For instance, Dahr
Jamail, an unembedded reporter who
collected the testimony of refugees
from the city spoke to a doctor who
had remained in the city to help
people, encountered numerous reports
of civilians suffering unusual
burns.
One resident told
him the US used “weird bombs that
put up smoke like a mushroom cloud”
and that he watched “pieces of these
bombs explode into large fires that
continued to burn on the skin even
after people dumped water on the
burns.” The doctor said he “treated
people who had their skin melted.”
Jeff Englehart, a
former marine who spent two days in
Fallujah during the battle, said he
heard the order go out over military
communication that WP was to be
dropped. In the RAI film, Mr
Englehart, now an outspoken critic
of the war, says: “I heard the order
to pay attention because they were
going to use white phosphorus on
Fallujah. In military jargon it’s
known as Willy Pete …
Phosphorus
burns bodies, in fact it melts the
flesh all the way down to the bone …
I saw the burned bodies of women and
children” . . . .
Napalm was
used in several instances during the
initial invasion.
Colonel Randolph Alles, commander of
Marine Air Group 11, remarked during
the initial invasion of Iraq in
2003: “The generals love napalm – it
has a big psychological effect.”
Lindsay Murdoch, The
Age (Australia), March 19, 2013:
I was not aware
the Pentagon had called me a liar. .
. .
An editor in
Sydney took the call from the
Pentagon’s Lieutenant-Commander Jeff
Davies a day after the beginning of
the ground war in Iraq 10 years ago
today. My report for Fairfax Media
of the opening of hostilities,
which
referred to the use of Vietnam-era
napalm, was ”patently false”, he
said. . . .
It was not
until US Marine Corps fighter pilots
and commanders started returning
from the war zone later in 2003 that
the Pentagon’s deceit was exposed in
interviews conducted by the San
Diego Union Tribune.
The pilots
described how they had dropped
massive fireballs they called napalm
on Iraqi forces as marines battled
towards Baghdad.
On August 4, 2003,
a Pentagon spokesman admitted that
”Mark 77” incendiary devices were
used by the US forces, which he
acknowledged were ”remarkably
similar” to napalm weapons.
The Mark 77s used
a fuel-gel mixture that was similar
to napalm, he conceded.
Asked about Safwan
Hill, US Marine colonel Mike Daily
said: ”I can confirm that Mark 77
firebombs were used in that general
area.”
Incendiary bombs
were also dropped in April 2003 near
bridges over the Saddam Canal and
Tigris River, returning officers
revealed.
”We napalmed both
those [bridge] approaches,” said
Colonel Randolph Alles who commanded
Marine Air Group 11 during the war.
”There were Iraqi
soldiers there.
It’s not a great way
to die.”
Colonel
Alles added that napalm had a ”big
psychological effect” on an enemy.
”The generals love napalm,” he said.
Haaretz,
October 22, 2006 (“Israel admits using
phosphorus bombs during war in Lebanon”):
Israel has
acknowledged for the first time that
it attacked Hezbollah targets during
the second Lebanon war with
phosphorus shells. White phosphorus
causes
very painful and often lethal
chemical burns to those hit by it,
and until recently Israel maintained
that it only uses such bombs to mark
targets or territory. . . .
During the war
several foreign media outlets
reported that Lebanese civilians
carried injuries characteristic of
attacks with phosphorus, a substance
that burns when it comes to contact
with air. In one CNN report, a
casualty with serious burns was seen
lying in a South Lebanon hospital.
In another case,
Dr. Hussein Hamud al-Shel, who works
at Dar al-Amal hospital in Ba’albek,
said that he had
received three
corpses “entirely shriveled with
black-green skin,” a phenomenon
characteristic of phosphorus
injuries.
Lebanon’s
President Emile Lahoud also claimed
that the IDF made use of phosphorus
munitions against civilians in
Lebanon.
Human Rights Watch, March
25, 2009 (“Israel: White Phosphorus Use
Evidence of War Crimes”):
Israel’s
repeated firing of white phosphorus
shells over densely populated areas
of Gaza
during its recent military campaign
was indiscriminate and is evidence
of war crimes, Human Rights Watch
said in a report released today.
The 71-page
report, “Rain
of Fire: Israel’s Unlawful Use of
White Phosphorus in Gaza,”
provides witness accounts of the
devastating effects that white
phosphorus munitions had on
civilians and civilian property in
Gaza. . . .
“In Gaza, the
Israeli military didn’t just use
white phosphorus in open areas as a
screen for its troops,” said Fred
Abrahams, senior emergencies
researcher at Human Rights Watch and
co-author of the report. “It fired
white phosphorus repeatedly over
densely populated areas, even when
its troops weren’t in the area and
safer smoke shells were available.
As a result, civilians
needlessly suffered and died”
. . . .
Israel at first
denied it was using white phosphorus
in Gaza but, facing mounting
evidence to the contrary, said that
it was using all weapons in
compliance with international law.
Later it announced an internal
investigation into possible improper
white phosphorus use. . . .
The IDF knew that
white phosphorus poses
life-threatening dangers to
civilians, Human Rights Watch said.
A medical report prepared during the
recent hostilities by the Israeli
ministry of health said that white
phosphorus “can cause serious injury
and death when it comes into contact
with the skin, is inhaled or is
swallowed.” Burns on less
than 10 percent of the body can be
fatal because of damage to the
liver, kidneys, and heart, the
ministry report says. Infection is
common and the body’s absorption of
the chemical can cause serious
damage to internal organs, as well
as death. . . .
All of the white
phosphorus shells that Human Rights
Watch found were manufactured in the
United States in 1989 by Thiokol
Aerospace, which was running the
Louisiana Army Ammunition Plant at
the time. . . . The United
States government, which supplied
Israel with its white phosphorus
munitions, should also
conduct an investigation to
determine whether Israel used it in
violation of the laws of war, Human
Rights Watch said.
Boston Globe,
February 14, 2013 (“Girl in famous
Vietnam photo talks about forgiveness”):
The girl in the
photo — naked, crying, burned,
running, with other children, away
from the smoke — became emblematic
of human suffering during the
Vietnam War. Kim Phuc was 9 then,
a child who would spend the
next 14 months in the hospital and
the rest of her life in skin
blistered from the napalm that hit
her body and burned off her clothes.
She ran until she no longer could,
and then she fainted. . . .
Phuc went outside
and saw the plane getting closer,
and then heard the sound of four
bombs hitting the ground. She
couldn’t run.
She didn’t know until
later, but the bombs carried napalm,
a gel-like incendiary that clings to
its victims as it burns.
“Suddenly I saw
the fire everywhere around me,” she
remembers. “At that moment, I didn’t
see anyone, just the fire. Suddenly,
I saw my left arm burning. I used my
right hand to try to take it off.”
Her left hand was
damaged, too. Her clothes burned
off. Later, she would be thankful
that her feet weren’t damaged
because she could run away, run
until she was outside the fire. She
saw her brothers, her cousins, and
some soldiers running, too. She ran
until she couldn’t run any more. . .
. Two of her cousins, ages 9 months
and 3 years, died in the bombing.
Phuc had burns over two-thirds of
her body and was not expected to
live.
Unlike ISIS, the U.S.
usually (though
not always)
tries to suppress (rather than
gleefully publish)
evidence showing the victims of its
violence. Indeed, concealing stories
about the victims of American militarism
is a critical part of the U.S.
government’s strategy for maintaining
support for its sustained aggression.
That is why, in general, the U.S. media
has
a policy of systematically excluding and
ignoring such victims (although
disappearing them this way does not
actually render them nonexistent).
One could plausibly
maintain that there is a different moral
calculus involved in (a) burning a
helpless captive to death as opposed to
(b) recklessly or even deliberately
burning civilians to death in areas that
one is bombing with weapons
purposely designed to incinerate
human beings, often with the maximum
possible pain. That’s the moral
principle that makes torture specially
heinous:
sadistically inflicting pain and
suffering on a helpless detainee is
a unique form of barbarity.
But there is
nonetheless something quite obfuscating
about this beloved ritual of denouncing
the unique barbarism of ISIS. It is true
that ISIS seems to have embraced a goal
– a strategy – of being incomparably
savage, inhumane and morally repugnant.
That the group is indescribably
nihilistic and morally grotesque is
beyond debate.
That’s exactly what
makes the intensity of these repeated
denunciation rituals somewhat
confounding. Everyone decent, by
definition, fully understands that ISIS
is repellent and savage. While it’s
understandable that being forced to
watch the savagery on video prompts
strong emotions (although, again, hiding
savagery does not in fact make it less
savage), it’s hard to avoid the
conclusion that the ritualistic
expressed revulsion has a definitive
utility.
The constant orgy of
condemnation aimed at this group seems
to have little purpose other than tribal
self-affirmation: no matter how many
awful acts our government engages in, at
least we don’t do something like that,
at least we’re not as bad as them.
In some instances, that may be true, but
even when it is, the differences are
usually much more a matter of degree
than category (much the way that angry
denunciations over the Taliban for
suicide-bombing a funeral of one of
its victims hides the fact that the
U.S. engages in its own “double tap”
practice of bombing rescuers and funeral
mourners for its drone victims). To
the extent that these denunciation
rituals make us forget or further
obscure our own governments’ brutality –
and that seems to be the overriding
effect if not the purpose of these
rituals – they are worse than worthless;
they are actively harmful.
Photo: Horst
Faas/AP
UPDATE:
One tweeter, responding to this article,
made a point harshly though succinctly: