Iraq’s U.N. Envoy ‘and His U.S.-Murdered Relative’

Published in Azzaman
(Iraq) on 4 July 2005
by Saad al-Awsi (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by . Edited by .
U.S. troops in Iraq kill innocent Iraqis almost on a daily basis, but our U.N. envoy deigns to speak up only when it is one of his relatives that are murdered.

In his capacity as a public official and a representative of the nation, Samir Sumaidaie should have presented the case of the fathers, mothers, women, children and entire families that regularly perish on Iraqi roads and highways, allegedly for approaching a passing U.S. military convoy.

The only words U.S. troops and their commanders ever utter are “we are sorry,” or “we express our heartfelt condolences.”

These words of regret Sumaidaie obtained immediately, and some might even say that any expression of regret for the cold-blooded murder of unarmed Iraqi civilians is enough, particularly when it comes from the most powerful nation on earth.

It is remains unclear whether such vocal regrets have persuaded our U.N. envoy to forget the murder of his 21-year-old unarmed cousin Mohammed. Most probably they have, as Mr. Sumaidaie and other senior Iraqi officials owe their positions to the U.S. occupiers.

For this reason, Mr. Sumaidaie never said a word about the cold-blooded murder of so many Iraqis by U.S. troops. He only reacted when U.S. troops killed his innocent cousin.

The incident shows that our envoys and government are in disarray. It illustrates that they have little to do with conditions in the country and that they only move when their own personal interests and relatives are affected.

But the incident is also a lesson to the big cheeses in our government, that even they lack the power to protect their closest relatives or even themselves from the wrath of U.S. troops.

The murder of innocent people like Mohammed has been going on for over two years and is bound to continue, but the victims may not always be hapless Iraqis who can’t even find someone to ask the occupation forces for an apology.



This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link .

Hot this week

France: Europe: Toward a Painful But Necessary Break with the US

Mexico: The Halftime Show That Enraged President Trump

Egypt: Iran and Washington: A Deal Completed or a More Painful Strike?

Mexico: The United States: Arms Supplier to Drug Traffickers

Japan: Diplomacy between Major Nations and Japan: Create a Unified Core of Mid-Level Nations

Topics

India: How Trump’s Escalation Math Doesn’t Yet Add Up to War with Iran

Egypt: Iran and Washington: A Deal Completed or a More Painful Strike?

Germany: Rubio’s Charm Offensive Changes Nothing*

Iraq: From Noriega to Maduro: The Logic of Force in US Policy

Mexico: The United States: Arms Supplier to Drug Traffickers

India: What’s behind the Layoffs at The Washington Post?

   

Israel: Donald Trump’s Intervention in the Netanyahu Trial Is Unacceptable

Saudi Arabia: Recalling the Night the US Ambassador to Libya Was Killed

Related Articles

Saudi Arabia: Transitional Dualism and the Role Required of America

India: How America’s Iraq Oil Saga Might Be Replayed in Syria

Venezuela: What Is ExxonMobil Up to in Iraq and the Essequibo?

Turkey: Will the US Withdraw from Iraq?