U.S. Mistreats Innocents on the Battlefield

Published in Azzaman
(Iraq) on 9 November 2005
by Fatih Abdulsalam (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by . Edited by .
It is wrong to blame ordinary Iraqis, wherever they live, for the surge in violence by groups opposed to the government and the United States. As U.S. troops pursue their new border offensive [Operation Steel Curtain] for a seventh consecutive day, reports from the battlefield say that innocent Iraqis are again bearing the brunt.

If the U.S., the mightiest military power the world has ever known, cannot stop the infiltration of Iraq by foreign fighters, it is certainly beyond the power of hapless Iraqis living in border villages to do so. If these fighters and their supporters can so fiercely resist the massive and disproportionate firepower of the United States, no one on earth should expect Iraqi women and children to take up arms and flush them out.

In the absence of independent reporting, it is hard to assess the damage and casualties in areas covered by this major offensive. American military officials only speak of the damage they inflict on insurgents and broadly deny Iraqi reports of civilian casualties. But Iraqi medics and Red Crescent officials, available on the ground, dispute U.S. claims and speak of scores of civilians killed and thousands of families fleeing these areas.

Killing and displacing civilians for the purposes of exposing rebels who are able to resist U.S. military power is tantamount to a crime against humanity. Iraqi civilians should not be punished because of the failure of U.S. troops to crush the resistance. ðThere is no justification for the atrocities suffered by Iraqi civilians at the hands of U.S. and Iraqi troops during these operations.

Not every man in these areas is a rebel or an insurgent, and even if he is found to be connected to the insurgency, his wife, children and parents should not suffer as a result. But unfortunately, that is exactly what is happening, fuelling more anger and fury against the occupiers and their supporters.


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

Hot this week

Saudi Arabia: US-Iran Talks: Calibrated Sanctions Relief Could Boost Regional Stability

Germany: Clear Winners and Losers

India: The Gulf’s Borrowed Shelter: What the Iran War Is Really Exposing

Canada: Is It Normal for the US President To Spar with the Pope?

Canada: Carney Preparing To Fail in Trump Negotiations

Topics

Indonesia: America’s War, Everyone’s Problem

Saudi Arabia: Trump, Iran and the Battle of Wits

Israel: Is Israel Approaching an Era without American Backing?

Canada: Carney Preparing To Fail in Trump Negotiations

Ireland: The Audacity of Newbie Catholic JD Vance Lecturing Pope Leo Is Breathtaking

Liberia: The Price of Dependence: What a Middle East Conflict Is Telling Liberia About Itself

Saudi Arabia: A World without NATO… What Would It Look Like?

India: The Gulf’s Borrowed Shelter: What the Iran War Is Really Exposing

Related Articles

Egypt: Iran’s Fate Is Not in Trump’s Hands

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?