Liberators as Murderers
The Way Americans Like Their War
By ROBERT FISK
http://counterpunch.org/, Weekend Edition, June 3 / 4, 2006
Could Haditha be just the tip of the mass grave?
The corpses we have glimpsed, the grainy footage of the cadavers and
the dead children; could these be just a few of many? Does the
handiwork of the United States' army of the slums go further?
I remember clearly the first suspicions I had that murder most foul
might be taking place in our name in Iraq. I was in the Baghdad
mortuary, counting corpses, when one of the city's senior medical
officials, an old friend, told me of his fears. "Everyone brings bodies
here," he said. "But when the Americans bring bodies in, we are
instructed that under no circumstances are we ever to do post-mortems.
We were given to understand that this had already been done. Sometimes
we'd get a piece of paper like this one with a body." And here the man
handed me a U.S. military document showing with the hand-drawn outline
of a man's body and the words "trauma wounds."
What kind of trauma is now being experienced in Iraq? Just who is doing
the mass killing? Who is dumping so many bodies on garbage heaps? After
Haditha, we are going to reshape our suspicions.
It's no good saying "a few bad apples." All occupation armies are
corrupted. But do they all commit war crimes? The Algerians are still
uncovering the mass graves left by the French paras who liquidated
whole villages. We know of the rapist-killers of the Russian army in
Chechnya.
We have all heard of Bloody Sunday. The Israelis sat and watched while
their proxy Lebanese militia butchered and eviscerated its way through
1,700 Palestinians. And of course the words My Lai are now uttered
again. Yes, the Nazis were much worse. And the Japanese. And the
Croatian Ustashi. But this is us. This is our army. These young
soldiers are our representatives in Iraq. And they have innocent blood
on their hands.
I suspect part of the problem is that we never really cared about
Iraqis, which is why we refused to count their dead. Once the Iraqis
turned upon the army of occupation with their roadside bombs and
suicide cars, they became Arab "gooks," the evil sub-humans whom the
Americans once identified in Vietnam. Get a president to tell us that
we are fighting evil and one day we will wake to find that a child has
horns, a baby has cloven feet.
Remind yourself these people are Muslims and they can all become little
Mohamed Attas. Killing a roomful of civilians is only a step further
from all those promiscuous air strikes that we are told kill
'terrorists" but which all too often turn out to be a wedding party or
-- as in Afghanistan -- a mixture of "terrorists" and children or, as
we are soon to hear, no doubt, "terrorist children."
In a way, we reporters are also to blame. Unable to venture outside
Baghdad -- or around Baghdad itself -- Iraq's vastness has fallen under
a thick, all-consuming shadow. We might occasionally notice sparks in
the night -- a Haditha or two in the desert -- but we remain meekly
cataloguing the numbers of "terrorists" supposedly scored in remote
corners of Mesopotamia. For fear of the insurgent's knife, we can no
longer investigate. And the Americans like it that way.
I think it becomes a habit, this sort of thing. Already the horrors of
Abu Ghraib are shrugged away. It was abuse, not torture. And then up
pops a junior officer in the United States charged for killing an Iraqi
army general by stuffing him upside down in a sleeping bag and sitting
on his chest. And again, it gets few headlines. Who cares if another
Iraqi bites the dust? Aren't they trying to kill our boys who are out
there fighting terror.
For who can be held to account when we regard ourselves as the
brightest, the most honorable of creatures, doing endless battle with
the killers of Sept. 11 or July 7 because we love our country and our
people -- but not other people -- so much. And so we dress ourselves up
as Galahads, yes as Crusaders, and we tell those whose countries we
invade that we are going to bring them democracy. I can't help
wondering today how many of the innocents slaughtered in Haditha took
the opportunity to vote in the Iraqi elections -- before their
"liberators" murdered them.
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Robert Fisk is a reporter for The Independent and author of Pity the
Nation. He is also a contributor to CounterPunch's collection, The
Politics of Anti-Semitism. Fisk's newest book is The Conquest of the
Middle East.