‘Shooting Iraqis Like Turkeys’

The folks down in Lynndie England’s hometown are doing their best to defend her actions at the Abu Ghraib Prison. England is the woman shown in the CBS and Washington Post photos with the cigarette, giving the “thumbs-up” as she points to the genitals of a hooded prisoner. Another photo shows her dragging a naked prisoner on a leash.

Fort Ashby, West Virginia’s Colleen Kesner, said that “A lot of people here think they ought to just blow up the whole of Iraq.”

“To the country boys here, if you’re a different nationality, a different race, you’re sub-human. That’s the way girls like Lynndie are raised.

“Tormenting Iraqis, in her mind, would be no different from shooting a turkey. Every season here you’re hunting something. Over there, they’re hunting Iraqis.”

Like many, England signed up to make money and see the world. After her tour of duty, she planned to settle down and marry her first love, Charles Graner.

Graner is also seen in the photos. He is the one behind the pyramid of bodies.

He has a history.

… this is not the first time Mr Graner was involved in abuse. His former wife, Staci, obtained three separate “temporary protection of abuse” orders against him. In a document passed to the court, she told of one occasion when he went to her house after their divorce.

“[He] yanked me out of … bed by my hair, dragging me and all of the covers into the hall and tried to throw me down the steps,” she wrote. “Both of the children witnessed this and were screaming at this point. He let go of me, turned around to the children and said, ‘See what your Mommy is doing to us’.”

Graner, a former US Marine, was working at Greene Correctional Facility when the prison was at the centre of an abuse scandal. Officials there have declined to say whether Mr Graner was involved or disciplined.

On Being Right

A very good essay if you can stand to read it. Plan on being angry if you do. Excerpt:

“Stop with the hindsight”, says one writer. “Be patient,” says another.

Oh, no, let’s not stop with the hindsight. Not when so many remain so profoundly, dangerously, incomprehensibly unable to acknowledge that the hindsight shows many people of good faith and reasonable mien predicting what has come to pass in Iraq. Let’s not be patient: after all, the people counseling patience now showed a remarkable lack of it before the war.

One of my great pleasures in life, I am ashamed to say, is saying “I told you so” when I give prudential advice and it is ignored. In the greatest “I told you so” of my life, I gain no pleasure at all in saying it. It makes me dizzy with sickness to say it, incandescent with rage to say it. It sticks in my throat like vomit. It makes me want to punch some abstract somebody in the mouth. It makes me want to scrawl profane insults in this space and abandon all hope of reasonable conversation.

That’s because the people who did what they did, said what they said, on Iraq, the people who ignored or belitted counsel to the contrary, didn’t just screw themselves. They screwed me and my family and my people and my nation and the world. They screwed a very big pooch and they mostly don’t even have the courage to admit it. They pissed away assets and destroyed tools of diplomacy and persuasion that will take a generation to reacquire at precisely the moment that we need them most.

Via Meteor Blades at Daily Kos

Riverbend: “Just Go…”

Riverbend, the Iraqi girl blogger, pretty much seems to sum up the feelings of most Iraqis at the moment about the occupation in this last paragraph of her blog entry posted for May 7th.

    …I sometimes get emails asking me to propose solutions or make suggestions. Fine. Today’s lesson: don’t rape, don’t torture, don’t kill and get out while you can- while it still looks like you have a choice. Chaos? Civil war? Bloodshed? We’ll take our chances- just take your Puppets, your tanks, your smart weapons, your dumb politicians, your lies, your empty promises, your rapists, your sadistic torturers and go …read entire post

Speculating about Najaf

What happened to Sistani’s “red line?”

4/16/2004 – Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani the leading Shi’ite Muslim cleric in Iraq , has told the United States not to enter the holy city of Najaf in pursuit of Moqtada al-Sadr.

Reports today place the American troops inside Najaf and Karbala. From Juan Cole:

American forces advanced Thursday on key strategic targets in Kufa, Karbala, and the environs of Najaf, where violent clashes broke out. This in the wake of the US dispatch to the south of large numbers of reinforcements. The political offices of Muqtada al-Sadr in the heart of Karbala were razed. The outskirts of Kufa witnessed major battles, and loud explosions were heard near Najaf. The US army also announced that it had undertaken four military operations on Wednesday night in the slums of East Baghdad (Sadr City), in which it killed 10 Sadrist militiamen.

American troops gradually encroached on Najaf on Thursday, establishing control over the headquarters of the provincial governor on the outskirts of the city. In the heavy battles preceding this victory, an estimated 41 Mahdi Army militiamen were killed. US troops then searched the surrounding buildings and placed snipers atop them. Najaf residents were requested in Arabic not to leave their homes, especially in the Ghadir quarter, where the governor’s mansion is situated. Bremer requested the new governor, al-Dhurufi, to disarm the Army of the Mahdi. Loud explosions and the heavy exchange of fire were heard in Najaf, causing the deaths as so far reported of 4 Iraqis, and the wounding of 10. The US troops set up checkpoints on the road between Najaf and Kufa. The army also positions numerous tanks and armored fighting vehicles in the northwest of Najaf, in preparation for an assault on Mahdi Army positions.

This is the first time that American armor has been positioned in al-Sadrayn Square, about a mile from the shrine of Imam Ali, the cousin and son-in-law of the Prophet Muhammad.

So, does this mean the “red line” moved or that the American military is in Najaf with Sistani’s approval? Is Sistani now aligned with the occupation? It’s difficult to determine what is going on in Iraq with the dearth of actual reporting as reporters hide out in the safety of the Green Zone in Baghdad lest they be kidnapped or killed. It does seem though that Iraqis are lining up in factions that tolerate the occupation (Sistani, the IGC, the Kurds) and those opposed. How about this interesting alliance that seems to be persisting after being forged during the Fallujah massacre and siege:

Iraq Sunnis Host Sadr Followers in Show of Support
May 7, 2004 — By Joseph Logan

BAGHDAD (Reuters) – Thousands of supporters of rebel Shi’ite Muslim cleric Moqtada al-Sadr prayed in Sunni mosques in Iraq Friday, in what local leaders called a show of religious unity in the face of Iraq’s occupiers.

The gesture was the latest display of solidarity among Iraq’s Muslims since U.S. forces besieged the Sunni town of Falluja west of Baghdad and faced off with Sadr’s militia in the Shi’ite holy cities of Najaf and Kerbala to the south.

Sadr’s popularity among Shi’ites, who make up about 60 percent of Iraq’s 25 million people, seems to have soared since his uprising began a month ago, particularly among the young and the poor.

Busloads of Sadr’s followers carrying portraits of the young cleric and wearing the insignia of his Mehdi Army militia trooped to the staunchly Sunni Baghdad neighborhood of Aadhamiya to pray in the Abu Hanifa mosque, named for a pre-eminent scholar and thinker of Sunni Islam.

“Yes, yes to Moqtada!” chanted Sadr’s followers who jammed the mosque, outside of which others set up checkpoints to direct traffic and frisked worshippers as they entered from streets where posters bearing Sadr’s face dotted many buildings.

Ahmad Hassan Taha, a Sunni cleric who led prayers at the mosque, said the presence of Sadr’s followers was a message to U.S. forces who are massed around the Shi’ite holy city of Najaf in a bid to crush his insurgency.

“They have tried to sow discord among us, as Sunnis and Shi’ites, and they have failed,” he said, referring to the U.S. occupiers. His words were echoed by Sadr aide Sheikh Abdel Hadi al-Darraji, who told worshippers: “After finishing in Falluja, they have turned to Najaf.”

Several hundred Sadr supporters also prayed in Falluja, an insurgent stronghold that U.S. Marines surrounded and bombed last month after four U.S. contractors were killed and their bodies mutilated in the city.

It seems to me that the unanswered question of the day is where is Sistani?

VOA reports:

Representatives of Iraq’s most influential Shiite leaders are demanding that extremist Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr withdraw his militia units from the holy cities of Najaf and Karbala. The Shiite leaders also want Sadr’s gunmen to stop using the mosques in those cities as arsenals and to return power to Iraqi police and civil defense units. The Shiite leaders are calling for a quick return to U.S.-led negotiations on Iraq’s future.

A representative of the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, or SCIRI, which has close ties to Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, told the New York Times newspaper that Iraqi Shiites have overwhelmingly rejected Sadr and his militia’s violence. “He’s one-hundred percent isolated across most of the southern provinces; he’s even isolated in Najaf,” the SCIRI representative said. “The people there regard him as having taken them hostage.”

Notice they carefully refrain from saying they represent Sistani. Also, the SCIRI statement about Sadr’s isolation is so much BS. As Read Jarrar wrote:

The situation of Falluja and Najaf isn’t getting any better, but I still believe that the real crisis is the Najaf one; Falluja is a smaller conflict for sure.

The deep disagreement between AsSadr and the SCIRI is kind of historical, the older generation of both Sadr and Hakim were not the best friends ever, Mohammad Mohammad Sadiq AsSadr (the one assassinated in the late 90s, the father of Muqtada) used to criticize the general policy of SCIRI at his time, and some underground rumors accuses the Ayato Allah AlHakim (the one assassinated last year, the brother of the Current GC member AlHakim) of helping in a way or another in killing the old Sadr. When the American administration approved the return of Badr Militias (The SCIRI militias) from Iran after the end of this war, small conflicts started in the Shia areas that maybe was one of the reasons for the establishment of the Mahdi Armi (AsSadr militias). At that time the only militias in Iraq were Badr and the FIF (Chalabi’s militias), and both were approved and backed up by the American Army…

AsSadr and SCIRI are the two main Shia parties controlling the southern region of Iraq now, but the party and militias of AsSadr are much more popular, I can say that the real center of AsSadr is Amara (northern to Basra) where no one can notice a single evidence that SCIRI has any activities there, they have a real isolated small office and a mosque that they prey in, but when we speak about the main center of SCIRI we are speaking about Najaf, Najaf is the Holy-City of Shia, The Imam Ali is buried there, (Karbala is the second holy-city where AlHusien and AlAbbas are buried), AsSadr took AlKufa (which is a small town attached to AnNajaf) as his center, the main mosque of AlKufa was the one his father used to give his last Friday Prayer speech before his murder, it is an important Islamic symbol too. The thing I’m trying to say is that AsSadr is active and powerful even in the central city of the SCIRI.

The last Friday prayed speech (which is the most important political indication) witnessed the first in-public criticism of the policy of AsSadr, the SCIRI spokesman indirectly announced the beginning of the new Shia-Shia conflict. From the SCIRI position, I think they find themselves committed to criticizing any anti-occupation movement, because they are the main player in the GC.

There is something that I used to say one year ago, and I’m still repeating it… The “real” war in Iraq didn’t happen yet. I still think the American administration is underestimating what can a person like AsSadr do, and starting a Shia-Shia conflict will only increase the size of explosion.

I think if we were separating the players into pro and anti occupation bins, Sadr and the Sunnis line up as anti and SCIRI and Sistani are making pro-occupation moves, which means the Shia split Raed wrote about is in danger of becoming a reality. How and if the Iraqi people in general divide up into these camps remains to be seen,but it seems reasonable to say that they are divided more by the degree of their opposition to the occupation than by any religious differences.

Bush: “Full Investigation”

Stuart Hughes asks a good question:

President Bush has told al-Arabiya that the US will “fully investigate” the alleged abuse of Iraqi prisoners by military personnel and “justice will be served.”

What, like the “full investigations” and subsequent handing down of justice following the deaths of Tariq Ayyub, Taras Protsyuk, José Couso, Mazen Dana, Ali Al-Khatib and Ali Abdel Aziz?

Don’t hold your breath.

Maybe we need some graphic, S&M type pictures to attract American attention to these deaths?