Marxism
mailing list archive
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]
Date:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Thread:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Index:
[ Author
| Date
| Thread
]
[Marxism] "They pretty much set us up"
- To: Activists and scholars in Marxist tradition <marxism@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: [Marxism] "They pretty much set us up"
- From: Louis Proyect <lnp3@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 12 Nov 2004 09:14:32 -0500
- User-agent: Mozilla Thunderbird 0.8 (Windows/20040913)
LA Times, November 12, 2004
Fallouja Insurgency Chaotic, Persistent
By Patrick J. McDonnell, Times Staff Writer
FALLOUJA, Iraq — The mosque had been taken, but the fire kept coming.
"We've got chunks of territory, but these guys [insurgents] are all over
the place," Marine Lt. Brandon Turner said Thursday as he stood amid
shattered glass and concrete under the green dome of the Khulafah Rashid
mosque, his fellow Marines resting on a plush red carpet.
"They just keep coming at us."
There is no real pattern to the fighting in Fallouja — a fierce, chaotic
battle that continued to rage Thursday, house to house, street to
street. But if there is any accepted truth so far, it is this: The
insurgents are not going away easily.
And that truth has a corollary: The Marines are doing all they can to
draw the guerrillas out and kill them.
"The enemy is right where we want him. He's coming to us," said Lt. Col.
Gareth Brandl, commander of the 1st Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment,
which has experienced perhaps the toughest fight of all the units
penetrating the city. "And we're killing him."
Many of the 3,000 to 5,000 insurgents estimated to have been in Fallouja
before the invasion are believed to have fled this Sunni Muslim city
west of Baghdad. But those who have remained are tenacious, even though
Marines say they have killed hundreds of them.
Guerrilla snipers crouch in buildings and amid the rubble. Small squads
of insurgents rush Marine positions. Dozens of rocket-propelled
grenades, or RPGs, have struck tanks and other military vehicles. A
pickup with six men carrying rocket-propelled grenade launchers was
spotted near one mosque.
Several snipers on rooftops halted the advance of a platoon of Marines
heading out on foot Wednesday to attack insurgents in a mosque where
they had been firing on U.S. troops.
"They seem to be communicating with each other," said 1st Sgt. Jose
Andrade of Charlie Company, 1st Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment, as he
crouched on a main street, taking cover. "It makes it harder to get at
them."
Marines on the streets are constant targets. Troops accustomed to
getting around on foot are being transported in tracked amphibious
vehicles whenever possible. But street patrols inevitably must be done
on foot, with no lapse of concentration.
"The enemy just pops out of anywhere and fires off rounds and RPGs,"
said Cpl. Adam Golden, 21. "We're just looking to get him when he pops out."
Marines have advanced through more than half of Fallouja. But no one
here believed Thursday that the city was close to being under control.
"We've still got to impose security," said Lt. Col. Michael Ramos,
commander of the 1st Battalion of the 3rd Marine Regiment.
U.S. forces are doing all they can to force the guerrillas into the open.
Army psychological operations teams have been broadcasting
Arabic-language tapes excoriating fighters in the most explicit terms.
"Liars and cowards, you are nothing but dogs!" goes the text of one
tape, the dog reference especially insulting in the Arab world. "You
have no honor! You hide behind women and children!"
The idea is not to offend most Iraqis, said Army Spc. Jose Rincon, 24,
who is heading one of the psychological operations teams. "We just want
to get the terrorists angry enough to fight."
On occasion, guerrillas put up fights for buildings, as was the case
when Marines attacked a former Iraqi national guard headquarters. The
troops called in tanks and flattened the place.
More frequently, though, key buildings — such as Fallouja's City Hall
and various mosques associated with the resistance — have been taken
without major battles.
Then, once the Marines are ensconced, the insurgents arrive in waves.
"Getting in here wasn't so hard," Gunnery Sgt. James Cully said of the
municipal compound seized largely without a fight Wednesday. "But since
we got here the firing hasn't stopped."
Gun battles resounded Thursday around the City Hall complex, which was
filled with abandoned and wrecked office equipment. The deep thud of the
Marines' heavy weapons matched the distinctive crackle of Kalashnikov
assault rifle fire. Mortar rounds and exploding rockets shook the buildings.
From rooftops, plumes of smoke rose into the air — the result of U.S.
artillery and airstrikes, or possibly mortar shells and rockets from
insurgents. Flares and illumination rounds lighted up the night sky.
Marines demolished buildings as guerrillas scrambled amid the ruins and
through alleyways. Roof-to-roof gun battles raged.
"The enemy is like camel spiders," said Lance Cpl. Rajai Hakki, an Alpha
Company interpreter. "You try to squash 'em and they crawl to the next
spot."
Sometimes, insurgent tactics can be more complex. On the morning of the
invasion, a squad of 30 guerrillas drew Marines into an intersection,
then opened fire with AK-47s and grenades. Three Marines were hurt.
"They pretty much set us up," said Marine Lance Cpl. Craig Winthrow, who
escaped uninjured when a grenade exploded a few feet from him.
In that instance, several guerrillas were killed in the initial
engagement. Others were wiped out by C-130 gunships that prowled the
skies looking for fleeing fighters.
Mosques being used as military positions by insurgents have come under
attack from Marines. The troops usually enter the facilities on the
heels of U.S.-allied Iraqi forces after the guerrillas are flushed out.
Laser-guided bombs have felled at least two minarets in which snipers
were holed up. Marines have found extensive weapons caches and
anti-American propaganda in several mosques.
"We have a lot of mosques in our AO [area of operations], and to the
best of my knowledge in only one instance did we not receive fire from a
mosque," said Capt. Matt Nodine, judge advocate for the 1st Battalion,
8th Marine Regiment. "These mosques have lost the protections of the
Geneva Convention. We are not here to destroy mosques. But the
terrorists are using them and we will go after them."
At the majestic Khulafah Rashid mosque, on the highway that divides the
northern and southern portions of Fallouja, Marines attacked after
taking sniper fire from one of the facility's two minarets. That minaret
now lies crumbled after being struck by a 500-pound laser-guided bomb
from a U.S. aircraft.
The U.S.-led attacks on mosques have also served to halt the
announcements from mosque loudspeakers urging people to resist the
Americans. The taped recordings castigating the "infidels" could be
heard throughout the first days of the invasion, infuriating Marines.
In one mosque, Iraqi troops fighting with the Marines discovered what
might be the body of Abdullah Janabi, a cleric who was considered a
guerrilla leader in Fallouja, said Lt. Col. Michael Ramos, commander of
the 1st Battalion, 3rd Marine Regiment.
Ramos said the identity had yet to be confirmed, but the body appeared
to be Janabi, who was a member of the town's de facto governing council
during the insurgency. Iraqi military officials declined to comment on
Janabi's possible death.
There was no confirmed sign of two other high-value targets: Abu Musab
Zarqawi, the Jordanian-born militant leader said to be operating from
Fallouja; and Omar Hadid, an Iraqi extremist said to be allied with
Zarqawi. U.S. commanders speculate that both may have fled the city in
the face of the U.S.-Iraqi onslaught.
Few civilians appeared to have remained in Fallouja, which will probably
stay a war zone for some days more.
Once noncombatant residents begin trickling back in, the tableau of
destroyed buildings, burned-out cars, battered mosques and piles of
rubble will probably make their city all but unrecognizable.
U.S. officials say tens of millions of dollars have been set aside for
the rebuilding of Fallouja. Thousands of newly trained Iraqi police and
armed forces are said to be ready to be brought into town once a
semblance of order has been restored.
Whether the people of Fallouja will accept the U.S.-designed plan
remains to be seen. American officials cite as a model Najaf, where an
August offensive against Shiite Muslim guerrillas destroyed much of the
Old City. A massive rebuilding plan is underway, and Iraqi police have
maintained order.
In Najaf, however, the guerrillas were known to be unpopular with a
conservative, business-oriented population. The Shiites of Najaf, long
suppressed under President Saddam Hussein, welcomed the U.S.-led
invasion of Iraq in spring 2003.
The Sunnis of Fallouja have never embraced the U.S. military presence.
Clashes between U.S. forces and the citizens of Fallouja began almost
immediately after Hussein was toppled. U.S. troops shot more than a
dozen people dead here in spring 2003 clashes after Army positions came
under fire, U.S. officials said. Many in Fallouja called it a massacre.
For months after the fall of Hussein, not a shot was fired at U.S.
forces in Najaf.
For now, it's difficult to gauge the sentiment of Fallouja residents
because there are so few around. The dearth of civilians has been a plus
for the Marines.
"We have got to take advantage of this period when the civilians are not
present to kill as many enemy as we can," said Ramos, the lieutenant
colonel. "We have to keep pressing this against the enemy before the
civilians return."
--
The Marxism list: www.marxmail.org
_______________________________________________
Marxism mailing list
Marxism@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism
- Thread context:
- [Marxism] Re:split in worker-communist party,
Metin Sarp Fri 12 Nov 2004, 15:40 GMT
- [Marxism] Re: post-election malaise [sorry],
M. Junaid Alam Fri 12 Nov 2004, 15:13 GMT
- [Marxism] Re: post-election malaise,
M. Junaid Alam Fri 12 Nov 2004, 15:10 GMT
- [Marxism] On your bike!,
Jurriaan Bendien Fri 12 Nov 2004, 14:50 GMT
- [Marxism] "They pretty much set us up",
Louis Proyect Fri 12 Nov 2004, 14:14 GMT
- [Marxism] Cuba Declares National Mourning for Yasser Arafat´s Death,
Walter Lippmann Fri 12 Nov 2004, 12:55 GMT
- [Marxism] Re: The Workers Communist Party of Iraq split,
Ben C Fri 12 Nov 2004, 10:41 GMT
- [Marxism] Re: The Worker Communist Party of Iraq...,
Fred Feldman Fri 12 Nov 2004, 08:56 GMT
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]