US
Apocalypse in Mosul in the Guise of Bombing ISIS
By Felicity Arbuthnot
The
welfare of the people in particular has
always been the alibi of tyrants.
— Albert Camus, 1913-1960
April 28,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Dissident
Voice"-
On May
1st, 2003, George W. Bush stood in a dinky little
flying suit on the deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln
and in a super stage managed appearance
told the lie of the century:
Major
combat operations in Iraq have ended. In the
Battle of Iraq, the United States and our allies
have prevailed. And now our coalition is engaged
in securing and reconstructing that country.
The illegal
occupation and decimation of Iraq continued until
December 2011. In June 2014 they returned to bomb
again in the guise of combating ISIS. As the
thirteenth anniversary of Bush’s ridiculous
appearance with a vast “Mission Accomplished” banner
behind him, Iraq is largely in ruins, Iraqis have
fled the murderous “liberation” and its aftermath in
millions, and there are over three million
internally displaced.
The nation
is pinned between a tyrannical, corrupt US puppet
government, a homicidal, head chopping, raping,
organ eating, history erasing, US-spawned ISIS – and
a renewed, relentless US bombardment. So much for
the 2008 US-Iraq State of Forces agreement, which
stated that by 31st December 2011 “all United States
forces shall withdraw from all Iraqi territory.”
On the USS
Abraham Lincoln Bush stated:
In this
battle, we have fought for the cause of liberty,
and for the peace of the world … Because of you,
our nation is more secure. Because of you, the
tyrant has fallen, and Iraq is free.
In what has
transpired to be monumental irony, he continued:
The
liberation of Iraq is a crucial advance in the
campaign against terror. We have removed an ally
of al-Qaida, and cut off a source of terrorist
funding.
There was,
of course, no al-Qaida in Iraq, no funding of
fundamentalist terrorism under Saddam Hussein. It
is the invasion’s conception, birth, now reached
maturity from Baghdad to Brussels, Mosul to the
Maghreb, Latakia to London.
In Iraq, US
terrorism from the air is back in all its genocidal
force.
Incredibly
on April 23rd, the Independent
reported another staggering piece of either
disinformation or childish naivety, in a predictably
familiar script: “A spokesperson for the US military
said all possible precautions were taken to avoid
‘collateral damage'”, but in approaching 7,000
airstrikes the number of confirmed civilian deaths
had risen on Planet Pentagon to just – forty one.
In another
past its sell by date mantra:
Colonel
Patrick Ryder, a spokesperson for Central
Command, said the casualties were “deeply
regretted” but maintained that the campaign was
the “the most precise air campaign in the
history of warfare.”
And here’s
another familiar one:
In this
type of armed conflict, particularly with an
enemy who hides among the civilian population,
there are going to be, unfortunately, civilian
casualties at times.
The Geneva
Convention, amongst other Treaties, Principles and
Conventions, is specific on the protections of
populations in conflict, Colonel Ryder should
familiarize himself with the texts.
So another
onslaught in a quarter of a century of bombing Iraq
is underway – another mass murder with a silly name
“Operation Inherent Resolve.”
Here is
reality from Dr Souad Al-Azzawi, Award winning
environmental scientist who gained her Ph.D from the
Colorado School of Mines.
She states
of just the onslaught on Mosul, her home, the
ancient university city of 1.5 million, that the
stated figures from US spokespersons are: “either
misinformed about the real situation on the ground,
since they are using drones and guided missiles, or
airstrikes blindly, intentionally not saying the
truth.”
She adds:
I would
like to list SOME of what the Americans’
airstrikes have been targeting and killing in
Mosul:
Destroyed are all state services buildings,
including Municipalities in right and left sides
of Mosul. When they bomb at night, all security
personnel get killed or injured, also residents
of close by areas, and adjacent properties are
destroyed.
Bombed
and destroyed all communication centers.
Destruction of Dairy Production Factories in
both left and right sides of Mosul. Casualties
of these two are one hundred deaths and two
hundred injuries among civilians who gathered to
receive milk and dairy products from the
factories.
Dr
Al-Azzawi reminds that this is reminiscent of the
bombing of the baby milk factory outside Baghdad in
1991 with the claim it was a chemical weapons
factory. This writer visited the factory ruins just
months later. There were still charred containers
of milk powder – the machinery was provided and
maintained by a company in Birmingham, England which
specialized in infant food production.
* Bombing
of Mosul Pharmaceutical Industries.
* Mosul
University was bombed with ninety two deaths and one
hundred and thirty five injuries. Earlier estimates
were higher, but many were pulled from the rubble
alive. “They were students, faculty members, staff
members, families of faculties, and restaurants
workers.”
*Al Hadbaa
and Al Khadraa Residential Apartment compounds.
Fifty people killed (families) and one hundred
injured.
* Hay al
Dhubat residential area in the right side of Mosul,
two days ago, five women women and four children
killed and the whole house destroyed. The father is
a respected pharmacist who has nothing to do with
ISIL.
*
Destruction of houses in front of the Medical
College, killed twenty two civilians – eleven in one
family.
* Bombing
Sunni Waqif Building, twenty deaths and seventy
injuries which included those in nearby commercial
and residential buildings.
* Car
maintenance industrial areas in both left and right
sides of Mosul destroyed with civilian’s casualties.
* Bombing
of flour factories in both sides of Mosul.
* Rafidain
and Rasheed banks and all their branches in
both sides of Mosul. Destruction of all commercial
and residential areas in the vicinity of these
places, with as yet unknown civilian casualties. (My
emphasis.)
* Central
Bank of Mosul in Ghazi Street, with nearby
residential and commercial properties.
* Pepsi
factory, currently producing ice cubes only. Three
deaths and twelve injuries among the workers.
* The
Governor’s house and close by guest house.
* Mosul’s
old industrial compound destroyed, with parking area
for fuel Tankers and cars. Three days ago, huge
explosion of fuel tankers, one hundred and fifty
deaths and injuries.
* Urban
Planning Directory in Hay al Maliyah bombed.
*
Engineering Planning Directory in Hay al Maliyah
bombed.
* Food
Storages in left side of Mosul bombed.
* Drinking
water treatment plants bombed.
* All
electrical generation and transformer stations in
the left side of Mosul bombed.
* Domez
land communications center in left side of Mosul
destroyed.
*Al
Hurairah Bridge – and many more.
There is a
sickening familiarity to some of the targets – food,
pharmaceuticals, water treatment plants, electricity
generation, communications and educational
facilities, bridges (the country, towns and cities
are divided by the Tigris and Euphrates rivers) have
been favoured targets since 1991. Every time
painstakingly and imaginatively restored they have
been re-bombed for a quarter of a century.
During the
1990s a Canadian film crew captured footage of US
‘planes dropping flares on harvested wheat and
barley, incinerating entire harvests in a country,
which due to the strangulating embargo, there were
near famine conditions in parts of society.
“When Iraqi
civilians looked into the faces of our servicemen
and women, they saw strength, and kindness, and good
will”, said George W Bush in his “Mission
Accomplished” speech.
No, they
saw invaders destroying their lives, their families,
their history, raping, pillaging. They saw Falluja’s
destruction, Abu Ghraib’s horrors and the eleven
other secret prisons and nightmares ever ongoing.
On April
25th, Dr Al-Azzawi added:
More
war crimes have been committed by American
Coalition, yesterday April 24, 2016. The
coalition airplanes bombed Rashidiya water
treatment plant left side of Mosul city and
Yermouk electricity generation station in the
right side of Mosul. Through targeting these
populations’ life sustaining necessities, the
coalition is committing genocidal action towards
Mosul residents in the pretext of fighting ISIS.
Also on
25th April, UN Deputy High Commissioner for Human
Rights, Kate Gilmore, on returning from a week in
Iraq
wrote starkly of the government:
Iraqis
are crying out for fairness, recognition,
justice, appreciation and meaningful
participation in shaping their future – a
process that goes forward and not backwards … We
all have responsibilities towards the people of
Iraq. While there is an international military
coalition in place, a comparably resourced
international coalition of practical compassion
is also needed to help with the building blocks
towards a sustained peace in Iraq.
In the US
military lexicon it seems “compassion” has been
replaced by their missiles of choice.
Ms Gilmore
also
stated that Iraq was being run by a failed
government and warned foreign powers not to be
“complicit” in its neglect of the plight of normal
Iraqis.
Further:
“The international community must not allow itself
to be made complicit with the failed leadership of
Iraq … There is political paralysis in Iraq. There
is no government in Iraq”, she stated blisteringly
of America and Britain’s illegal, abortive,
parliamentary project.
“Our
commitment to Liberty is America’s tradition … We
stand for human liberty”, concluded Bush on the USS
Abraham Lincoln.
Were
mistruths ever bleaker? And when will George W.
Bush, Charles Anthony Lynton Blair and their cohorts
answer for their crimes in a Court of Law?
Felicity
Arbuthnot is a journalist with special knowledge of
Iraq. Author, with Nikki van der Gaag, of
Baghdad in the Great City series for World
Almanac books, she has also been Senior Researcher
for two Award winning documentaries on Iraq, John
Pilger's Paying the Price: Killing the
Children of Iraq and Denis Halliday
Returns for RTE (Ireland.) |