“Baby Killers” by Mike Whitney
As if the carnage and bloodshed we hear about daily in Iraq wasn’t bad enough, this one will make you lose your lunch.
I had heard about this incident in bits-and-pieces last week, but I was still trying to piece together the facts. This is truly disturbing. It hasn’t really made it into the mainstream media, but as you know, I keep my ears close to the blogosphere. Mike Whitney articulates the story very well, in this article I found on the Smirking Chimp.
Executive Summary
From what I can gather, apparently, in an attempt to crack down on those terrorist evil-doers in Iraq, American (yes, AMERICAN) soldiers, whom we support so much, managed to decimate a house and its 11 occupants. The kicker? Five children… four women… two men… shot execution style in the head. No al Qaeda or terrorists, just innocent civilians.
I invite you to read the article below… if you have the stomach.
Mike Whitney: 'Baby killers'
Monday, March 20 @ 10:19:56 EST
What goes through George Bush's mind when he sees the dead bodies of Iraqi women and children loaded on the back of a pickup truck like garbage?
Is there ever a flicker of remorse; a split-second when he fully grasps the magnitude of the horror he has created?
March 15 was another defining moment in America's downward moral-spiral in Iraq. Eleven members of an Iraqi family were killed in a wanton act of slaughter executed by the American occupiers. Photos taken at the scene show the lifeless bodies of young children, barely old enough to walk, lying motionless in the back of a flatbed truck while their fathers moan inconsolably at their side.
What parent can look at these photographs and not be consumed with rage?
The US military openly admits it attacked the house in Ishaqi where the incident took place. Reuters reports that, "Major Ali Ahmed of the Ishaqi police said US forces landed on the roof of the house in the early hours and shot the 11 occupants, including five children."
"After they left the house they blew it up", he said. "The bodies, their hands bound, had been dumped in one room before the house was destroyed," (policeman) Hussein said. Police had found spent American issue cartridges in the rubble." (Reuters)
The autopsy report at the Tikrit hospital said, "All the victims had gunshot wounds to the head".
Iraqi policeman Farouq Hussein noted, "It is a clear and perfect crime without any doubt".
The evidence provided by Reuters suggests that we have entered the "My Lai phase" of the Iraq war, where the pretensions about democracy and liberation are stripped-away and replaced with the gratuitous butchery of women and children. The carnage in Ishaqi illustrates the growing recklessness and desperation of Washington's failed crusade.
Military spokesman Major Tim O' Keefe justified the attack saying they were searching for "a foreign fighter facilitator" for Al Qaida in Iraq. He added, "Troops were engaged by enemy fire as they approached the building. Coalition Forces returned fire utilizing both air and ground assets....Two women and one child were killed. The building was destroyed."
In fact, 11 women and children were killed and there's no evidence to verify that the house was being used as an Al Qaida safe-house.
The US military made similar claims after bombing raids in January and December when a total of 17 family members were killed.
The grim fact is that is that the lives of Iraqi women and children are of no real consequence to US officials. As General Tommy Franks boasted, "We don't do body counts". The victims of American aggression are simply dismissed as collateral damage undeserving of any further acknowledgement.
The story has received scant attention in the establishment media, which prefers to highlight the stumbling oratory of our Dear Leader as he reaffirms our commitment to western "pro-life" values.
In truth, George Bush is as responsible for the deaths of those children as if he had put a gun to their heads himself and shot them one by one.
At present, we have no way of knowing how frequently these attacks on civilians are taking place. The Pentagon strategy of removing independent journalists from the battlefield has created a news-vacuum that makes it impossible to know with confidence the extent of the casualties or the level of the devastation. The few incidents like this that find their way into the mainstream create a troubling picture of military adventurism and brutality that is no longer anchored to any identifiable moral principle or vision of resolution. It is simply violence randomly dispersed on a massive scale; traumatizing the Iraqi people and bringing the United States into greater disrepute.
There were no Al Qaida fighters in the home in Ishaqi. The attack was just another lethal blunder by a blinkered military fighting an invisible enemy.
"The killed family was not part of the resistance; they were women and children," said Ahmed Khalaf. "The Americans promised us a better life, but we only get death."
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