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[A-List] Iraq: US effectively lost
A year on from 'Mission Accomplished', an army in disgrace, a policy in
tatters and the real prospect of defeat
Against the odds, America has earned the hatred of ordinary Iraqis. In
Baghdad Patrick Cockburn sees the battle for hearts and minds
comprehensively lost
The Independent on Sunday, 02 May 2004
Wisps of grey smoke were still rising from the wreckage of four Humvees
caught by the blast of a bomb which had just killed two US soldiers and
wounded another five. It seemed they had been caught in a trap.
When the soldiers smashed their way into an old brick house in the Waziriya
district of Baghdad last week, they were raiding what they had been told was
an insurgent bomb factory, only for it to erupt as they came through the
door. The reaction of local people, as soon as the surviving American
soldiers had departed, was to start a spontaneous street party.
A small boy climbed on top of a blackened and smouldering Humvee and
triumphantly waved a white flag with an Islamic slogan hastily written on
it. Some other young men were showing with fascinated pride a blood-soaked
US uniform. Another group had found an abandoned military helmet, and had
derisively placed it on the head of an elderly carthorse.
A year after President George Bush famously declared "major combat" in Iraq
over, how is it that so many Iraqis now have such a visceral hatred of
Americans? One reason is that the photographs of brutality and humiliation
of Iraqi detainees by British and American troops, which have so shocked the
rest of the world and angered Arab countries, have come as little surprise
to Iraqis. For months it has been clear to them that the occupation is very
brutal; for weeks they have been watching pictures of the dead and injured
in Fallujah on al-Jazeera satellite television which CNN did not broadcast.
Iraqis, who are cynical about their rulers, may also suspect that real as
well as simulated torture is going on in Abu Ghraib prison, where US
intelligence calls the shots. They may suspect that, as under Saddam
Hussein, the humiliation and ill-treatment were quite deliberately inflicted
to soften up prisoners before they were interrogated. More graphic pictures
of real torture are said to have been taken as well those shown on US
television last week.
Saddam should not have been a hard act to follow. Iraqis knew that he had
ruined their lives through his disastrous wars against Iran and Kuwait, and
were glad to be rid of him. Even the supposed beneficiaries of his rule, the
Sunni Arabs of cities such as Tikrit and Fallujah, could not see why they
were so much poorer than the people of other oil states such as Kuwait and
Abu Dhabi.
Watching the dancing, jeering crowd in Waziriya was Nada Abdullah Aboud, a
middle-aged woman, dressed in black. She had a reason for hating Americans,
though she claimed she did not do so. "I do feel sorry for the young
soldiers, though they killed my son," she said quietly. "They came such a
long distance to die here." It turned out that her son, Saad Mohammed, had
been the translator for a senior Italian diplomat working for the ruling
Coalition Provisional Authority. She said: "My son was driving with the
Italian ambassador last September near Tikrit when an American soldier fired
at the car and shot him through the heart."
Saad Mohammed was one of a large but unknown number of Iraqis shot down by
US troops over the past year. There seems to have been no rational reason
why he had been killed. But the high toll of Iraqi civilians shot down after
ambushes or at checkpoints has given Iraqis the sense that, at bottom,
American soldiers regard them as an inferior people whose lives are not
worth very much.
Iraqis make very plain what they think about the occupation in private
conversation, but Paul Bremer, the US viceroy in Iraq, and the US military
command, shut away in their headquarters in Saddam's old Republican Palace,
had no idea of the growing hostility towards them until April. Then, when
they started the sieges of Fallujah and Najaf, they discovered that aside
from the Kurdish minority, Iraqis had turned decisively against the
occupation.
Another simple reason for disillusionment with the US is simply the
Americans' failure to restore normal life. Iraqis in Baghdad continually say
that Iraq recovered more quickly from the damage inflicted by the first Gulf
War under Saddam in 1991 than it did after the second war in 2003.
Baghdad is a city on edge. Shopkeepers keep their stock at home in case
there is another outbreak of looting. The police are back on the streets and
there is less casual crime than last year, but it is still more dangerous
than it was under the old regime.
Abu Amir, a shopkeeper in the middle-class Jadriyah district of the capital,
said: "Under Saddam I sometimes did not make money in my store, but I could
go home in the evening without worrying if my son had got back safely. Now
there is looting everywhere. If you walk in the streets maybe you will be
shot by the Americans or by criminal gangs fighting each other."
A curious achievement of the US over the past year has been to revive Iraqi
nationalism in Iraq. This had been largely discredited by Saddam. But
Fallujah and the pursuit of Muqtada al-Sadr, the radical Shia cleric, has
meant that nationalism is once more respectable.
The extraordinary political weakness of the US in Iraq became evident as
never before last week. Despite having an overwhelming military force
available to take Fallujah and Najaf, the US did not dare do so. It had
become evident even in Washington that to crush the resistance in either
city - not a difficult task against a few thousand lightly armed gunmen -
would spread rather than end the rebellion.
Even so, it was extraordinary to see Jassim Mohammed Saleh, a general in
Saddam's Republican Guard - disbanded like so much else in Iraq last May -
being driven into Fallujah on Friday in full uniform past cheering crowds.
The old Iraqi flag, now dropped by the US-appointed Iraqi Governing Council,
was being waved from his car window.
It is a measure of how far the Governing Council is out of touch with
ordinary Iraqi opinion that they should have voted to change the flag in the
first place. Mohammed, an engineer trying to patch up a broken sewage pipe
in Baghdad, still had time to express his fury at the change. "Of course the
occupation is a disaster," he said. "We understand the Governing Council are
American agents. But a man has to be the worst of collaborators to change
his country's flag."
On 30 June the US will be handing over very little to Iraqis. Security
remains firmly in US hands; so does control of money. One of the biggest US
mistakes was not to hold elections earlier, something British and US
officials admit in private could have been done. This would have produced a
legitimate Iraqi authority to which Iraqi security forces could have given
real loyalty. Dr Mahmoud Othman, a member of the Governing Council, says:
"Iraqis are never going to fight other Iraqis under the orders of an
American." This was amply borne out when half of the US-trained security
forces deserted or mutinied in early April.
The tide is going out for the US in Iraq. They were not able to use their
military strength against Fallujah and Najaf. They have very little
political support outside Kurdistan. They can no longer win. It may be one
of the most extraordinary defeats in history.
- Thread context:
- [A-List] Fw: Hudson Institute Economic News Update,
Gary Santos Mon 03 May 2004, 17:49 GMT
- [A-List] Wrist slap for abusers,
Stan Goff Mon 03 May 2004, 13:11 GMT
- [A-List] US state: Plame-Novak scandal,
Michael Keaney Mon 03 May 2004, 12:23 GMT
- [A-List] Iraq: US effectively lost,
Michael Keaney Mon 03 May 2004, 12:19 GMT
- [A-List] US imperialism: Russia, Central Asia,
Michael Keaney Mon 03 May 2004, 12:17 GMT
- [A-List] US imperialism: Macedonia,
Michael Keaney Mon 03 May 2004, 12:16 GMT
- [A-List] US economy: Buffett's inflation worries,
Michael Keaney Mon 03 May 2004, 12:14 GMT
- [A-List] EU integration struggles: the new Commission,
Michael Keaney Mon 03 May 2004, 12:13 GMT
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