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    Wednesday, November 17, 2004
     

    Slash and Burn

    ** Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches **

    November 17, 2004


    Slash and Burn


    See the photos


    She lays dazed in the crowded hospital room, languidly waving her
    bruised arm at the flies. Her shins, shattered by bullets from US
    soldiers when they fired through the front door of her house, are both
    covered by casts. Small plastic drainage backs filled with red fluid sit
    upon her abdomen, where she took shrapnel from another bullet.

    Fatima Harouz, 12 years old, lives in Latifiya, a city just south of
    Baghdad. Just three days ago soldiers attacked her home. Her mother,
    standing with us says, ³They attacked our home and there weren¹t even
    any resistance fighters in our area.² Her brother was shot and killed,
    and his wife was wounded as their home was ransacked by soldiers.
    ³Before they left, they killed all of our chickens,² added Fatima¹s
    mother, her eyes a mixture of fear, shock and rage.

    A doctor standing with us, after listening to Fatima¹s mother tell their
    story, looks at me and sternly asks, ³This is the freedomŠin their
    Disney Land are there kids just like this?²

    Another young woman, Rana Obeidy, was walking home with her brother two
    nights ago. She assumes the soldiers shot her and her brother because he
    was carrying a bottle of soda. This happened in Baghdad. She has a chest
    wound where a bullet grazed her, unlike her little brother who is dead.

    Laying in a bed near Rana is Hanna, 14 years old. She has a gash on her
    right leg from the bullet of a US soldier. Her family was in a taxi in
    Baghdad this morning which was driving near a US patrol when a soldier
    opened fire on the car.

    Her father¹s shirt is spotted with blood from his head which was wounded
    when the taxi crashed.

    In another room a small boy from Fallujah lays on his stomach. Shrapnel
    from a grenade thrown into their home by a US soldier entered his body
    through his back, and implanted near his kidney.

    An operation successfully removed the shrapnel. His father was killed by
    what his mother called, ³the haphazard shooting of the Americans.² The
    boy, Amin, lies in his bed vacillating between crying with pain and
    playing with is toy car.

    It¹s one case after another of people from Baghdad, Fallujah, Latifiya,
    Balad, Ramadi, Samarra, BaqubaŠfrom all over Iraq, who have been injured
    by the heavy-handed tactics of American soldiers fighting a no-win
    guerilla war spawned from an illegal invasion based on lies. Their
    barbaric acts of retaliation have become the daily reality for Iraqis,
    who continue to take the brunt of the frustration and rage of the soldiers.

    Out in front of the hospital three Humvees pull up as soldiers alert the
    hospital staff that some of the wounded from outside of Fallujah will be
    brought there. One of the staff begins to yell at the soldier who is
    doing the talking, while a soldier manning a machine gun atop a Humvee
    with his face completely covered by an olive balaclava and goggles looks on.

    ³We don¹t need you here! Get the fuck out of here! Bring back Saddam!
    Even he was better than you animals! We don¹t want to die by your hands,
    so get out of here! We can take care of our own people!²

    The translator with the soldiers does not translate this. Instead he
    watches with a face of stone.

    The survivors of those killed and wounded by the US military in Iraq, as
    well as those who care for them, are left with feelings of bitter
    anguish, grief, rage and vengeance.

    This afternoon at a small, but busy supply center set up in Baghdad to
    distribute goods to refugees from Fallujah, the stories the haggard
    survivors are telling are nearly unimaginable.

    ³They kicked all the journalists out of Fallujah so they could do
    whatever they want,² says Kassem Mohammed Ahmed, who just escaped from
    Fallujah three days ago, ³The first thing they did is they bombed the
    hospitals because that is where the wounded have to go. Now we see that
    wounded people are in the street and the soldiers are rolling over them
    with tanks. This happened so many times. What you see on the TV is
    nothing-that is just one camera. What you cannot see is so much.²

    While Kassem speaks of the television footage, there are also stories of
    soldiers not discriminating between civilians and resistance fighters.

    Another man, Abdul Razaq Ismail arrived from Fallujah last week.

    While distributing supplies to other refugees he says, ³There are dead
    bodies on the ground and nobody can bury them. The Americans are
    dropping some of the bodies into the Euphrates River near Fallujah. They
    are pulling the bodies with tanks and leaving them at the soccer stadium.²

    Nearby is another man in tears as he listens, nodding his head. He can¹t
    stop crying, but after a little while says he wants to talk to us.

    ³They bombed my neighborhood and we used car jacks to raise the blocks
    of concrete to get dead children out from under them.²

    Another refugee, Abu Sabah, an older man wearing a torn shirt and dusty
    pants tells of how he escaped with his family while soldiers shot
    bullets over their heads, but killed his cousin.

    ³They used these weird bombs that put up smoke like a mushroom cloud,²
    he said, having just arrived yesterday, ³Then small pieces fell from the
    air with long tails of smoke behind them. These exploded on the ground
    with large fires that burnt for half an hour. They used these near the
    train tracks. You could hear these dropped from a large airplane and the
    bombs were the size of a tank. When anyone touched those fires, their
    body burned for hours.²

    The comparison of Iraq to Vietnam is becoming more valid by the day here.

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