Fallujah: A
Symbol of US War Crimes
By James Cogan
June 09,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "WSWS"
- No city in Iraq is more symbolic of the
criminal consequences of the US invasion of Iraq
than Fallujah. Prior to 2003, the 300,000-strong,
prosperous, predominantly Sunni Muslim community on
the Euphrates River, one of humanity’s oldest
continuous urban settlements, was known as the “city
of mosques.” After 13 years of destruction at the
hands of the US military and its client state in
Baghdad, it is today a labyrinth of ruins, a city of
the dead.
Following
weeks of air strikes by US, British and Australian
bombers, a combination of Iraqi government forces
and Shiite militias is reportedly on the verge of a
final offensive to seize back Fallujah from some 500
fighters of the Sunni-extremist Islamic State of
Iraq and Syria (ISIS), which took control of the
city in early 2014. Iraqi special forces units are
accompanied by elite troops of the US, British and
Australian militaries, who direct air strikes and
ground artillery bombardments and provide tactical
advice to Iraqi commanders.
UN High
Commissioner for Human Rights (UNHCR) Zeid Ra’ad al
Hussein has issued urgent appeals concerning the
fate of the estimated 50,000 civilians who are
trapped in Fallujah, without food or water. Civilian
deaths caused by the offensive have been justified
in advance by the US-backed Iraqi government with
allegations that the occupiers are using the
population as “human shields.” ISIS is accused of
murdering dozens of people who have attempted to
flee.
Men and
teenagers who do escape are being detained by Iraqi
government and militia units. According to the UNHCR,
they are being subjected to “physical violations and
other forms of abuse, apparently in order to elicit
forced confessions” of being ISIS members or
supporters. The UNHCR has received unconfirmed
accounts of at least 21 summary executions.
In the
media coverage, the question as to how and why ISIS
was able to gain control of the city two years ago
is largely ignored. To the extent it is raised, the
explanation given is Sunni resentment over the
sectarian and discriminatory policies of the
Shiite-dominated government— after the
withdrawal of American troops in 2011. The Iraqi
people as a whole are generally portrayed as
incurably divided along Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish
lines, incapable of living in harmony together and
inherently attracted to extremist ethno-sectarian
ideologies.
A review of
the tortured history of Fallujah since 2003 makes
clear that this narrative is a lie. The current
situation in Iraq and neighbouring Syria is the
outcome and continuation of the deliberate stoking
of sectarian conflict by the American occupation for
the purpose of dividing the Iraqi masses and
cementing the US grip over the oil-rich Middle East.
After the
illegal invasion of Iraq and overthrow of the
Baathist regime of Saddam Hussein, Fallujah was the
scene of one of the first widely reported crimes by
American troops against Iraqi civilians. Two hundred
youth demanding the reopening of their school were
fired on by troops of the US 82nd Airborne Division.
Seventeen were murdered and over 70 wounded.
Over the
following months, Fallujah emerged as a centre of
Iraqi resistance to the US occupation. By early
2004, the city was effectively controlled by armed
groups overwhelmingly made up of former members of
the Iraqi Army and local Sunni tribes.
Religious-based extremists, such as the small
grouping calling itself “Al Qaeda in Iraq,” had only
a minor presence.
The killing
of four Blackwater mercenaries in Fallujah in March
2004 triggered a massive American military response.
Across Iraq, the defiance of the people of Fallujah
became a clarion call for resistance. In the first
week of April, the stand in the city against the
occupation was joined by an uprising of tens of
thousands of Shiite working class youth in Baghdad
and cities across southern Iraq. The armed
insurgency against the US forces spread to
predominantly Sunni cities such as Ramadi, Tikrit
and Mosul.
The
dominant feature of the anti-occupation resistance
in Iraq in 2004 was that it objectively unified
Iraqis of all backgrounds who opposed the US
occupation and its local collaborators. However, it
lacked any coherent perspective or strategy. In city
after city, Iraqi fighters were overwhelmed by the
superior firepower of the US military, including in
Fallujah in November 2004. After a months-long
siege, the city was left depopulated and in rubble.
Of its 200 mosques, 60 were destroyed or damaged,
along with some 39,000 homes and other buildings.
The other
central feature of the US occupation in 2004 was the
deployment of US-trained Shiite death squads, such
as the Wolf Brigade, against the Sunni population.
Thousands of people were murdered. At the same time,
Al Qaeda in Iraq escalated sinister bombings of
Shiite civilians, which assisted the US occupation
in driving a wedge between the two communities. By
2006, US policy had provoked a full-scale sectarian
civil war that forced hundreds of thousands of
people to flee for safety into areas controlled by
the militias of their religious denomination.
The origins
of the present savage sectarianism in Iraq lie in
the manner by which US imperialism “stabilised” Iraq
under the control of its Shiite-dominated puppet
state, using the criminal methods of
divide-and-rule, mass killings and mass dislocation.
In 2011, as it withdrew its forces from Iraq,
Washington launched a regime-change war in Libya and
began sponsoring a regime-change operation in Syria
using the same methods that had triggered civil war
in Iraq. In Syria, however, the CIA and US military
worked through Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states to
arm Sunni-based groupings to overthrow the Russian-
and Iranian-backed Shiite-dominated government of
Bashar al-Assad.
One of the
main groupings that benefited from the flow of arms
was the remnants of Al Qaeda in Iraq, which sent
fighters into Syria and soon emerged as a dominant
force in the civil war. In April 2013, strengthened
by a flood of foreign Islamist fighters who were
permitted to enter Syria from Turkey, it renamed
itself the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS).
The ISIS
fighters who entered Fallujah in late 2013 and
claimed control over the city in January 2014 had
been financed, equipped and armed as part of the US
intrigues in Syria. ISIS seized other areas of
Sunni-dominated western and northern Iraq, most
dramatically the city of Mosul, in July 2014. To the
extent the Islamist movement received support, it
was because it pledged to defend the Sunni
population from the consequences of the US invasion,
including the depredations and abuses of the
US-backed government in Baghdad. Both materially and
ideologically, ISIS is the by-product of US policy.
The current
onslaught on Fallujah is only the latest chapter in
the catastrophe that US imperialism has inflicted on
the peoples of Iraq and the Middle East as a whole.
It can be ended only through the building of a mass
international anti-war movement based on the working
class and the fight for socialism.
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