Just found this article in the Guardian. It reminds us that the claims made that White Phosphorus weapons were used against civilians in Fallujah was not the only allegation that our forces acted improperly and unlawfully when they made that assault:
But we shouldn’t forget that the use of chemical weapons was a war crime within a war crime within a war crime. Both the invasion of Iraq and the assault on Falluja were illegal acts of aggression. Before attacking the city, the marines stopped men “of fighting age” from leaving. Many women and children stayed: the Guardian’s correspondent estimated that between 30,000 and 50,000 civilians were left. The marines treated Falluja as if its only inhabitants were fighters. They levelled thousands of buildings, illegally denied access to the Iraqi Red Crescent and, according to the UN’s special rapporteur, used “hunger and deprivation of water as a weapon of war against the civilian population”.
I have been reading accounts of the assault published in the Marine Corps Gazette. The soldiers appear to have believed everything the US government told them. One article claims that “the absence of civilians meant the marines could employ blast weapons prior to entering houses that had become pillboxes, not homes”. Another said that “there were less than 500 civilians remaining in the city”. It continued: “The heroics [of the marines] will be the subject of many articles and books … The real key to this tactical victory rested in the spirit of the warriors who courageously fought the battle. They deserve all of the credit for liberating Falluja.”
But buried in this hogwash is a grave revelation. An assault weapon the marines were using had been armed with warheads containing “about 35% thermobaric novel explosive (NE) and 65% standard high explosive”. They deployed it “to cause the roof to collapse and crush the insurgents fortified inside interior rooms”. It was used repeatedly: “The expenditure of explosives clearing houses was enormous.”
The marines can scarcely deny that they know what these weapons do. An article published in the Gazette in 2000 details the effects of their use by the Russians in Grozny. Thermobaric, or “fuel-air” weapons, it says, form a cloud of volatile gases or finely powdered explosives. “This cloud is then ignited and the subsequent fireball sears the surrounding area while consuming the oxygen in this area. The lack of oxygen creates an enormous overpressure … Personnel under the cloud are literally crushed to death. Outside the cloud area, the blast wave travels at some 3,000 metres per second … As a result, a fuel-air explosive can have the effect of a tactical nuclear weapon without residual radiation … Those personnel caught directly under the aerosol cloud will die from the flame or overpressure. For those on the periphery of the strike, the injuries can be severe. Burns, broken bones, contusions from flying debris and blindness may result. Further, the crushing injuries from the overpressure can create air embolism within blood vessels, concussions, multiple internal haemorrhages in the liver and spleen, collapsed lungs, rupture of the eardrums and displacement of the eyes from their sockets.” It is hard to see how you could use these weapons in Falluja without killing civilians.
This looks to me like a convincing explanation of the damage done to Falluja, a city in which between 30,000 and 50,000 civilians might have been taking refuge. It could also explain the civilian casualties shown in the film. So the question has now widened: is there any crime the coalition forces have not committed in Iraq?
All I can say is that every day I learn something that sickens me. What is this war doing to our souls?
It’s key to point out that this is not an article but a commentary by George Monbiot, who’s quite left (which is fine — just making that clear).
I subscribe to Monbiot’s RSS feeds from his site:
http://www.monbiot.com
P.S. I’m going to send the orange police after you, Steven.
Apparently not required is the notice that the film is a virtual hit-piece designed to foster anger against American – and only American – troops. (Yes, I watched the entire film).
As if to say, in some sort of relativistic view, that the death of innocents is somehow more reprehensible when the weapon is American. There are at least two adversaries in this conflict, and death comes to all by violence.
The death of civilians IS more reprehensible when my country is doing the killing. Torture IS more reprehensible when my country is doing the torturing. Whatever happened to expecting a christian nation to demonstrate higher moral standards?
As for blaming US soldiers, the blame here lies with the decision-makers, not the soldiers. When you telegraph your intention to attack for weeks in advance, it doesn’t take a genius to figure out that most of the enemy combatants will be long gone and you will be killing primarily civilians when you completely level a major city. Our leadership is criminally inept and immoral.
Our leadership is criminally inept and immoral.
We agree. My comment had to do with the film’s depiction of only American troops.
Amen, and thanks for bringing attention to this horrific issue.
Lisa has written about this too. And beautifully. here’s the link to her diary at the orange place.
Keep on it, Steven D. you’ve been writing about this story passionately and knowledgeably since it first broke, and you’re doing a fantastic job!
I’ve been holding this in all day, trying to protect my dainty rep around here, but somehow Nov. 22 seems like an appropriate day to let it loose.
Un-fucking-believable!
The article contains two errors of no intrinsic importance regarding fuel-air explosives:
I mention this only because errors, even those of no intrinsic importance, can interfere with a message.
If you want a gut feeling for the destructive power of a fuel-air explosion, watch this short clip of a fuel-air explosive blast applied to a house.
That information was a quotation from the Marine Corps Gazette article. Any errors were from the authors of the Gazette article.
The Marine Corps Gazette advertises itself as: “Since 1916 the Professional Journal of U.S. Marines”, and is not an official publication of the USMC. Recommend using GlobalSecurity or other resource for military information.
Why is it only wrong to use white phosphorus against civilians and okay to use it against enemy soldiers. From the description of its effects it seems clear that no one should have to suffer such agony. The New York Times sees the revelation of WP use only in terms of a PR bungle by the White House:
“But those statements were incorrect. First hand accounts by American officers in two military journals note that white phosphorus munitions had been aimed directly at insurgents in Falluja to flush them out. War critics and journalists soon discovered those articles.
In the face of such evidence, the Bush administration made an embarrassing public reversal last week. Pentagon spokesmen admitted that white phosphorus had been used directly against Iraqi insurgents. “It’s perfectly legitimate to use this stuff against enemy combatants,” Colonel Venable said Friday.”
From here
Legitimate? Melting soldiers’ flesh off is legitimate? How is this different than napalm?
I added two more new and rare videos on Fallujah in Macromedia Flash 8 format.
I am sure some of it has not been published – the first part of the first video in particular where a British nurse/doctor enters a hospital in Fallujah. The second video below is of a surreal shooting up of an Iraqi bus where soldiers are killing one minute and saving lives the next. It really reflects the confusion of Iraq – and the mix of emotion that rumbles through the soldiers as they morph from killers to healers in an instant.
Click here to see
The Gates of Hell
by Chris Floyd
President George W. Bush often complains about the "media filter" that distorts the true picture of his Administration’s accomplishments in Iraq. And he’s right. For regardless of where you stand on Mr. Bush’s policies in the region, it’s undeniable that the political and commercial biases of the American press have consistently misrepresented the reality of the situation.
Here’s an excellent example. Earlier this month (March 2005), the American media completely ignored an important announcement from an official of the Iraqi government concerning the oft-maligned U.S. operation to clear insurgents from the city of Fallujah last November. Although the press conference of Health Ministry investigator Dr. Khalid ash-Shaykhli was attended by representatives from the Washington Post, Knight-Ridder and more than 20 other international news outlets, nary a word of his team’s thorough investigation into the truth about the battle made it through the filter’s dense mesh.
Once again, the American public was denied the full story of one of President Bush’s remarkable triumphs.
Dr. ash-Shaykhli’s findings provided confirmation of earlier reports by many other Iraqis – reports that were also ignored by the arrogant filterers, who seem more interested in hearing from terrorists or anti-occupation extremists than ordinary Iraqis and those like Dr. ash-Shaykhli, who serve in the American-backed interim government vetted and approved by Mr. Bush. But while the media elite turn up their nose at such riff-raff, the testimony of these common folk and diligent public servants give ample evidence of Mr. Bush’s innovative method of liberating innocent Iraqis from tyranny:
He burns them to death with chemical weapons.
See video (downloadable), images and more here…
Dr. ash-Shaykhli was sent by the pro-American Baghdad government to assess health conditions in Fallujah, a city of 300,000 people that was razed to the ground by an American assault on a few hundred insurgents, most of whom slipped away long before the attack. The ruin of the city was total: every single house was either destroyed (75-80 percent of the total) or heavily damaged. The entire infrastructure – water, electricity, food, transport, medicine– was obliterated. Indeed, the city’s hospitals were among the first targets, in order to prevent medical workers from spreading "propaganda" about civilian casualties, U.S. officials said at the time.
Eyewitness accounts from the few survivors of the onslaught – which killed an estimated 1,200 non-combatants – have consistently reported the use of "burning chemicals" by American forces: horrible concoctions that roasted people alive with an unquenchable jellied fire, InterPress reports. They tell too of whole quadrants of the city in which nothing was left alive, not even the dogs and the goats: quadrants that were sealed off by the victorious Americans for mysterious scouring operations after the battle. Others told of widespread use of cluster bombs in civilian areas: a flagrant violation of the Geneva Conventions, but a standard practice throughout the war.
The few fragments of this information that made it through the ever-vigilant filter were instantly dismissed as anti-American propaganda, although they often came from civilians who had opposed the heavy-handed insurgent presence in the town. Rejected too were the innumerable horror stories of those who had seen their whole families – women, children, the old and sick – slaughtered in the "liberal rules of engagement" established by Bush’s top brass. Most of the city was declared "weapons free": military jargon meaning that soldiers could shoot "whatever they see – it’s all considered hostile," the New York Times reported, in a story buried deep inside the paper.
Yet the ash-Shaykhli team – again, appointed by the Bush-backed government – confirmed the use of "mustard gas, nerve gas and other burning chemicals" by U.S. forces during the battle. Dr. ash-Shaykhli said that survivors – still living in refugee camps, along with some 200,000 former Fallujah residents who fled before the assault – are now showing the medical effects of attack by chemical agents and the use of depleted uranium shells.(American officials have admitted raining more than 250,000 pounds of toxin-tipped DU ammunition on Iraqis since the war began.)
The Pentagon has acknowledged using white phosphorous in Fallujah, but only for "illumination purposes." It denied using napalm in the attack – but in the course of that denial admitted that its earlier denials of using napalm elsewhere in Iraq were in fact false. However, individual Marines filing "After Action Reports" on the Internet for military enthusiasts back home have detailed the routine use of white phosphorous shells, propane bombs and "jellied gasoline" (also known as napalm) during direct tactical assaults in Fallujah.
Dr. ash-Shaykhli’s findings – coming from a pro-American government, buttressed by reams of eyewitness testimony from ordinary Iraqi civilians – appear to be substantial and credible, worthy of further investigation by the American press. Certainly, the findings are more credible than the pre-war lies and fantasies about Saddam’s phantom WMD, which the "media filter" lapped up from the Bush Regime and amplified across the nation, rousing support for an unnecessary, illegal and immoral war. Yet these serious new atrocity charges have not even been mentioned, much less examined.
Behind the filter – with its basic story template of "always moral U.S. policies occasionally marred by a few bad apples" – a relentless degeneration of American society is taking place. Brutality and atrocity are becoming normalized, systemized, rewarded. The noble American ideal of transcendence – overcoming the beast within, seeking to embrace an ever-broader, ever-deeper, ever-richer vision of universal communion and individual worth – is dying at the hands of the resurgent barbarity championed and cultivated by the Regime. Old-fashioned citizens are being replaced by "Bush-Americans": wilfully ignorant, bellicose zealots, cringingly servile toward the powerful, violently hostile to all "outsiders." Despite Bush’s artful complaints, the media filter has served his degenerate purposes very well.
Ring of Fire: The Fallujah Inferno (Chris Floyd – March 1, 2005)
Filter Tips: Muzzling and Massaging the Message of War (March 18, 2005)
See Italian video Documentary (downloadable), images and more here… (Chris Floyd – November 2005)
BTW, I am not Chris Floyd… but I do run his site and do legwork for him – which brought me to some rare footage.
…this on on November 22, and several of us commented about it in various places.
Marines Quiet About Brutal New Weapon
Minus the obviously brain-damaged, a decent discussion.