Their Barbarism, and Ours
We hear that of course the U.S. tries to avoid killing civilians — as if that makes killing them okay. But the slaughter from the air and from other U.S. military actions is a certain result of the occupiers’ war. (What would we say if, in our own community, the police force killed shoppers every day by spraying blocks of stores with machine-gun fire — while explaining that the action was justifiable because no innocents were targeted and their deaths were an unfortunate necessity in the war on crime?)
Meanwhile, routinely absent from the U.S. media’s war coverage is the context: an invasion and occupation fundamentally based on deception.
“The Bush strategy for victory is about to begin,” author Beau Grosscup said Tuesday. “U.S. and Iraqi forces have surrounded the city of Ramadi. Food and water have been cut off. Next is the ‘Shock and Awe’ strategic bombing of the city, to be followed by ‘mop-up’ operations: ground troops, snipers and aerial ’support.’”
Grosscup, a professor of international relations at California State University in Chico, added: “It is the hallowed ‘Fallujah’ model, intended to bring ’stability’ by flattening the city with civilian death and destruction. It is a ‘clean’ way to victory, one supported by Rep. Jack Murtha, who would withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq but continue to engage the ‘enemy’ from far away and from 15,000 to 30,000 feet above with air power. By October 2004, this ‘clean war’ had killed close to 100,000 Iraqi civilians and thousands more since. But, as any enthusiast of strategic bombing would say, it is the price of victory and somebody has to make the ultimate sacrifice. Terror from the skies, anyone?”
Norman Solomon | huffingtonpost (read more. . .)
