|

|
|
Has the thumbs-up become a US military sign of abuse?
|
We’ve
heard it more than a few hundred times—truth is the first
casualty of war— since the invasion of Afghanistan morphed
into the invasion of Iraq.
What
is the second casualty of war? If the invasion, destruction, and
occupation of Iraq are any indication, it is likely that
historians will label morality the second casualty.
The
invasion of Iraq; the eroding of its civilian, military, and
technology infrastructure; the wholesale looting of its museums,
schools, and ministries; and the rampant unemployment (reaching
70 per cent) in the past 16 months have all been justified by
the repeated allegations that the oil-rich republic was not only
a threat to the region but to the United States and Europe as
well.
Iraq
was touted as a battleground for good and evil, with the gentle
empires of the West taking on the disillusioned megalomaniac of
the East (Saddam Hussein) who had shaken hands with the devil
(al-Qaeda) and was planning wholesale terror around the world.
The
evil dictator would use the weapons of mass destruction his
scientists had created—everything from anthrax, ricin,
smallpox, and nerve gas to nuclear and radiological weapons—to
unleash this horrible onslaught.
The
world audience held its breath as it was promised Armageddon.
Instead,
it got a horrible distortion of the truth and Iraqis were
re-introduced to the Stone Age.
And
this is where morality retreats into the shadows of a war that
should have never been over weapons that never were.
Hammer
of Justice?
Morality
has retreated into the shadows of a war that should have
never been over weapons that never were. |
|
On
July 9th, the Senate Intelligence Committee issued a blistering
report on the investigation into pre-war claims of Iraq’s
capacity to wage war against its neighbors and develop weapons
of mass destruction. At the heart of the investigation was the
persistent claim that Iraq had established, maintained and
nurtured ties with al-Qaeda and was ready to transfer its
weapons expertise to the rogue terrorist organization.
The
report bluntly stated that the intelligence used to justify the
war on Iraq was inaccurate, unsubstantiated, unwarranted,
out-of-date, negligently analyzed and warped to fit the
so-called bill of war, thereby exhibiting “a broken corporate
culture and poor management”. Several senators said that had
they known the truth they would have never voted for the
authorization US President George Bush needed to invade Iraq.
“On
Iraq, it appears to have been hallucinating,” The Economist
said of the CIA (July 17, 2004).
Across
the ocean, the Butler report, which examined the same pre-war
intelligence claims, delivered a similar blow to London’s
intelligence community.
On
July 16, the Butler report asserted that Iraq “did not have
significant, if any, stocks of chemical or biological weapons in
a state fit for deployment or developed plans for using them.”
It chastised the methods of intelligence-gathering used by the
British services and said that much of the data used to justify
the war was unreliable.
All
three countries knew fully well that the intelligence on
Iraq was flimsy at best, laughable at worst. |
|
Further
south, Australia also faced an intelligence embarrassment. An
investigative report into Australia’s pre-war claims prepared
by Philip Flood—a seasoned Australian diplomat and former head
of Office of National Assessments (Australia’s spy
agency)—found that Australian intelligence had also failed in
adequately sizing up Iraq’s illicit weapons
“It
is significant that, using similar but not all the material
available to the UK and the US, Australian assessments on
Iraq’s capabilities were on the whole more cautious, and seem
closer to the facts as we know them so far.”
So
Many, So Wrong?
Three
countries that demanded the international community invade Iraq,
three countries that aggressively pursued United Nations
legitimacy for the invasion of Iraq and three countries that
insisted time and again that Iraq was a global threat are also
the three countries that have been faulted for their
intelligence gathering.
A
coincidence? Hardly. All three countries knew fully well that
the intelligence on Iraq was flimsy at best, laughable at worst.
Take
Richard Clarke, for example, the former counter-terrorism czar,
who said that he was ordered to find a link between Iraq and the
horrible events of 9/11. When Clarke found no such link, he was
ordered to go back and return only when he found what the Bush
White House was looking for.
Clarke’s
statements seemed to echo those of Paul O’Neill, former
Treasury Secretary.
O’Neill's
book, The
Price of Loyalty,
written by Ron Suskind, claims that the first national security
meeting of the new Bush administration in January 2001 focused
on how to find a way to remove Saddam from Iraq. In a shockingly
candid interview with CBS’s 60 Minutes last Sunday,
O’Neill defended his book: “From the very beginning, there
was a conviction that Saddam Hussein is a bad person and that he
needed to go. From the very first instance, it was about Iraq.
It was about what we can do to change this regime.”
In
an issue of Time magazine, O’Neill debunked the weapons
of mass destruction claims against Iraq: “In the 23 months I
was there, I never saw anything that I would characterize as
evidence of weapons of mass destruction. ... I never saw
anything in the intelligence that I would characterize as real
evidence.”
Illegal
War, Illegal Occupation
When
Bush addressed the UN General Assembly in September 2002 and
cited intelligence information to justify a war on Iraq, the
international community refused to blink. In fact, the UN
Security Council was unable to authorize an invasion of Iraq.
The US, UK, Spain, Italy, Australia and their arm-twisted allies
(much of whom were former Soviet satellites bartering for US
economic gratitude and NATO cash) went to war alone.
And
the reasons for which they defied the will of the world have now
clearly been shown to have been false.
An
illegal war based on unfounded speculations and erroneous
conclusions would only get worse as time wore on.
Fast-forwarding past the growing resistance in Iraq in the
summer of 2003, the failure of Saddam’s capture to discourage
resistance, and the growing US military death toll (919 as of
August 5), the single greatest blow to American moral standing
and prestige in the world is that inflicted by the stories of
atrocities, crimes, abuse, and torture committed by US troops
against the Iraqi civilian population.
In
late April, CBS aired pictures of female and male US soldiers
torturing and abusing Iraqi detainees at the notorious Abu
Ghraib prison, an area known for its history of torture and
execution during Saddam Hussein’s 35-year reign.
According
to Reuters, “The photos showed U.S. troops smiling, posing,
laughing or giving the thumbs-up sign as naked, male Iraqi
prisoners were stacked in a pyramid or positioned to simulate
sex acts with one another.” Several pictures depicted a female
US soldier, cigarette dangling from her mouth, pointing her
fingers in a gun-like fashion at the penises of several naked,
yet hooded Iraqi men. Other pictures showed US servicemen and
women giving the thumbs-up.
The
Washington Post would later show
more horrific pictures of a US soldier—Lynndie
England—giving the thumbs-up sign as she hovered over the
corpse of an Iraqi man who it was later revealed had died during
interrogation.
Don’t
forget the investigation into the picture
that depicts two Iraqi boys holding up a sign indicating that a
US soldier killed the boys’ father and “knocked up” their
sister. The soldier is standing behind the boys with a
thumbs-up. Has the thumbs-up become a US military sign of abuse
and humiliation?
In
April 2003, a Norwegian newspaper ran pictures of Iraqi
men stripped naked and forced to run through Baghdad streets.
They were accused of being looters, but no charges were brought
against them.
In
May 2003, a photography shop assistant in England developed
pictures which “allegedly showed an Iraqi, bound and gagged,
hanging from a rope on a fork-lift truck,” the BBC said.
In
July 2003, Amnesty International (AI) reported that Iraqis were
being shot while in detainment and subjected to human rights
abuses: “Detainees continue to report suffering extreme heat
while housed in tents; insufficient water; inadequate washing
facilities; open trenches for toilets; no change of clothes,
even after two months’ detention.” However, US authorities
refused to allow an AI delegation into the detention centers.
In
May, Bush suggested that Abu Ghraib be razed, ostensibly to rid
himself and his administration from the fallout of the torture
and abuse committed by US forces inside the prison. Iraqis were
outraged and refused.
In
June, The Washington Post ran a picture of an Iraqi in an
orange jumpsuit, terror apparent on his face as a US soldier
nudged a dog towards him.
The
Post claimed that a military
intelligence interrogator had told investigators that two dog
handlers at Abu Ghraib were “having a contest” to see how
many detainees could be made to urinate on themselves out of
fear of the dogs.
In
July, the former head of the Abu Ghraib prison,
Brigadier-General Janis Karpinski, made two startling
revelations. The first—that interrogation methods were
“taken out of her hands by higher-ranking officials, acting on
orders from Washington”—seems to implicate a chain of
command in abuse and torture.
The
second seems to prove suspicions that Israelis were
orchestrating the interrogation of Iraqis: “He was clearly
from the Middle East and he said: ‘Well, I do some of the
interrogation here and of course I speak Arabic, but I’m not
an Arab. I’m from Israel,’” she told the BBC.
Then
other human rights abuse charges against the US military started
filtering through. In July, noted journalist Seymour Hersh of The
New Yorker told the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
that he knew that the US government possessed tapes showing US
soldiers sodomizing Iraqi teenage boys.
“The
boys were sodomized with the cameras rolling, and the worst part
is the soundtrack, of the boys shrieking. And this is your
government at war,” he said.
To
list all the atrocities committed in Iraq would far overrun the
scope of this article; indeed, a volume of many pages would not
suffice. The US military admitted in mid-July that it is
investigating some 94 cases of torture, abuse, and criminal
misconduct in Iraq and Afghanistan. US senators have claimed
that there are some 600 CDs full of pictures and videos
allegedly of Iraqi prisoners being abused.
Whither
America’s grand plan for the Middle East? Not only was this
war fought on false, and perhaps deliberate, pretences, but it
has resulted in many amoral injunctions against the Iraqi
people.
After
years of suffering and debilitation under a brutal and inhumane
US-pedaled UN sanctions regime, one would have thought that
Iraqis deserved better.
Even
the normally soft-spoken Dalai
Lama was
ashamed of US military conduct in Iraq.
“America
generally we consider a champion of liberty, justice, these
things - so then for something such as this to happen, we regard
as shocking,” said the exiled Tibetan leader to Britain’s The
Guardian in June.
At
the end of the Democratic National Convention, US Presidential
hopeful John Kerry said that he would restore respect of America
and American values around the world. That will prove a
challenging, if not daunting task.
In
Cairo in April, demonstrators chanted “America take your
democracy and go to hell.”
In
hell, there is no morality.
Firas
Al-Atraqchi is
a Canadian journalist of Iraqi heritage. Holding an MA in
Journalism and Mass Communication, he has eleven years of
experience covering Middle East issues, oil and gas markets, and
the telecom industry. You can reach him at firascape@hotmail.com.
|