BAGHDAD - New US military operations across Iraq appear to be worsening the
situation.
On Aug. 13 about 16,000 US and Iraqi troops began a massive new military
operation north of Baghdad. According to the US military, the goal of the
operation, named Lightning Hammer, is to "target insurgents who have fled
a crackdown in the restive city of Baquba."
The operation is part of a larger military offensive, Operation Phantom Strike,
whose goal is "to disrupt al-Qaeda in Iraq and Shi'ite extremist operations
in Iraq."
Both operations have included extensive use of air strikes. Many residents
speak with bitterness about the operations and the language used to describe
them.
"This is not the first time that we have heard nice words about military
operations that they say aim for our security and prosperity," 50-year-old
teacher Kassim Hussein told IPS in Baghdad. "Yet every time it was more
killing, sieges and poverty. It is a war that we did not have to fight, but
we are the biggest losers every time it is ignited by the Americans."
According to a press release on the official website of the Multi-National
Forces in Iraq dated Aug. 13, Operation Phantom Strike "consists of simultaneous
operations throughout Iraq focused on pursuing remaining AQI (al-Qaeda in Iraq)
terrorists and Iranian-supported extremist elements."
The MNF press release claimed that the operation had "liberated large
segments of the Iraqi population from AQI" and that the operations were
"appreciably improving the lives of the Iraqi people."
But many Iraqis recall US military offensives in Fallujah (60 km west of
Baghdad), al-Qa'im (400 km northwest of Baghdad), Haditha (240 km northwest
of Baghdad) and other cities practically destroyed under the flag of fighting
terror.
"I have no house now because of another phantom operation in my city,"
Hamid Salman, a retired government worker from Fallujah told IPS in Baghdad.
"I have to live with my brother in his small house here in Baghdad, and
tens of thousands of Fallujah people are suffering the same situation. That
was all the American ghosts and furies did for us."
According to an Aug. 19 air power summary from the US Air Force, a B-1 bomber
destroyed three buildings in Baghdad, and F-16 fighter jets dropped guided munitions
and fired cannon rounds in Baghdad and Iskandariyah (40 km south of Baghdad).
A total of 68 air support missions were flown in Iraq that day alone.
"Death walks with the military," former Iraqi army Brigadier General
Mustafa Hashim told IPS in Baghdad. "There is never a clean military operation,
and so more civilians are expected to be killed, injured or evicted from their
homes."
According to the group Just Foreign Policy, an independent organization "dedicated
to reforming US foreign policy to serve the interests and reflect the values
of the broad majority of Americans," more than one million Iraqis have
died as a direct result of the US-led invasion and occupation.
The group's number is based primarily on data extrapolated from a scientific
study published in the Lancet medical journal in Britain Oct. 11, 2006.
"The method the US army follows when attacking a city is to intensify
fire regardless of the possibility of civilians' existence in the targeted place,"
said Hashim. "In fact, they would shoot even when they are certain of civilians'
existence. Their culture is to achieve victory no matter what."
While the US military has issued many reports about the recent operations,
Iraqis continue to doubt the claims of success.
"It is all about the media, politics, elections, and conflict inside the
US Congress and such business," Waleed al-Ubaydi, a political analyst
at Baghdad University told IPS. "They know in advance that their offensives
are not going to achieve much, but they have to show their people and the world
that they are active on the ground.
"Al-Qaeda and other fighters have put their cells to sleep for the time
being, concentrating on taking the US army by surprise here and there. This
is an endless story unless a miracle takes place in a time when miracles do
not take place any more."
Many Iraqis say the US occupation leaders should consider what matters to
civilians, since most Iraqis are now living under the worst conditions possible.
They say it is the responsibility of the occupation forces to provide people
with decent living conditions, rather than fight Bush's war on Iraqi ground
and at Iraqi peoples' expense.
"Bush has nothing to lose here except his reputation which he has already
lost," Hamdan Salih, an unemployed lawyer in Baghdad told IPS. "He
is pushing Iraqis to fight each other and meanwhile attacking our cities in
search of his own enemies, who most of the time happen to be our sons and brothers.
He is sacrificing Iraqi pawns for the American oil king."
(Inter Press Service)