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Chaos
In Iraq: Gross Incompetence or Sinister Policy?
By Chris
Floyd, December 3, 2005
The recent revelations about
the virulent spread of death squads ravaging Iraq have only confirmed
for many people the lethal incompetence of the Bush Regime, whose brutal
bungling appears to have unleashed the demon of sectarian strife in the
conquered land. The general reaction, even among some war supporters,
has been bitter derision: "Jeez, these bozos couldn't boil an egg without
causing collateral damage."
But what if the truth is even more sinister? What if this murderous chaos
is not the fruit of rank incompetence but instead the desired product
of carefully crafted, efficiently managed White House policy?
Investigative journalist Max Fuller marshals a convincing case for this
conclusion in a remarkable work of synthesis based on information buried
in reams of mainstream news stories and public Pentagon documents. Piling
fact on damning fact, he shows that the vast majority of atrocities attributed
to "rogue" Shiite and Sunni militias are in fact the work of government-controlled
commandos and "special forces," trained by Americans, "advised" by Americans
and run largely by former CIA assets, Global Research reports.
We first reported here in August 2003 that the United States was already
hiring Saddam's security muscle for "special ops" against the nascent
insurgency and reopening his torture haven, Abu Ghraib. Meanwhile, powerful
Shiite militias -- including religious extremists armed and trained by
Iran -- were loosed upon the land. As direct "Coalition" rule gave way
to various "interim" and "elected" Iraqi governments, these violent gangs
were formally incorporated into the Iraqi Interior Ministry, where the
supposedly inimical Sunni and Shiite units often share officers and divvy
up territories.
Bush helpfully supplied these savage gangs -- who are killing dozens of
people each week, Knight-Ridder reports -- with U.S. advisers who made
their "counter-insurgency" bones forming right-wing death squads in Colombia
and El Salvador. Indeed, Bush insiders have openly bragged of "riding
with the bad boys" and exercising the "Salvador option," lauding the Reagan-backed
counter-insurgency program that slaughtered tens of thousands of civilians,
Newsweek reports. Bush has also provided a "state-of-the-art command,
control and communications center" to coordinate the operation of his
Iraqi "commandos," as the Pentagon's own news site, DefendAmerica, reports.
The Iraqi people can go without electricity, fuel and medicine, but by
God, Bush's "bad boys" will roll in clover as they carry out their murders
and mutilations.
For months, stories from the Shiite south and Sunni center have reported
the same phenomenon: people being summarily seized by large groups of
armed men wearing police commando uniforms, packing high-priced Glocks,
using sophisticated radios and driving Toyota Land Cruisers with police
markings. The captives are taken off and never seen again -- unless they
turn up with a load of other corpses days or weeks later, bearing marks
of the gruesome tortures they suffered before the ritual shot in the head.
Needless to say, these mass murders under police aegis are rarely investigated
by the police.
The Bushists may have been forced to ditch their idiotic fantasies of
"cakewalking" into a compliant satrapy, but they have by no means abandoned
their chief goals in the war: milking Iraq dry and planting a permanent
military "footprint" on the nation's neck. If direct control through a
plausible puppet is no longer possible, then fomenting bloody chaos and
sectarian strife is the best way to weaken the state. The Bushists are
happy to make common cause with thugs and zealots in order to prevent
the establishment of a strong national government that might balk at the
ongoing "privatizations" that have continued apace behind the smokescreen
of violence, or at the planned opening of Iraq's oil reserves to select
foreign investors -- a potential transfer of some $200 billion of Iraqi
people's wealth into the hands of a few Bush cronies, The Independent
reports.
The violence is already dividing the county into more rigid sectarian
enclaves, The New York Times reports, as Shiites flee Sunni commandos
and Sunnis flee Shiite militias in the grim tag team of their joint endeavor.
It's all grist for the Bushist mill: An atomized, terrorized, internally
riven society is much easier to manipulate. And of course, a steady stream
of bloodshed provides a justification for maintaining a U.S. military
presence, even as politic plans for partial "withdrawal" are bandied about.
There's nothing new in this; Bush is simply following a well-thumbed playbook.
In 1953, the CIA bankrolled Islamic fundamentalists and secular goon squads
to destabilize the democratic government of Iran -- which selfishly wanted
to control its own oil -- and pave the way for the puppet Shah, as the
agency's own histories recount. In 1971, CIA officials admitted carrying
out more than 21,000 "extra-judicial killings" in its Phoenix counter-insurgency
operation in Vietnam. In 1979, the CIA began sponsoring the most violent
Islamic extremist groups in Afghanistan -- supplying money, arms, even
jihad primers for schoolchildren -- to destabilize the secular, Soviet-allied
government and provoke the Kremlin into a costly intervention, as Robert
Dreyfus details in his new book, "Devil's Game." Later, Saudi magnate
Osama bin Laden joined the operation, and sent his men to the United States
for "anti-Soviet" terrorist training, as the BBC's Greg Palast reports.
The policy has been remarkably consistent for more than half a century.
To augment the wealth and power of the elite, U.S. leaders have supported
-- or created -- vicious gangs of killers and cranks to foment unrest,
eliminate opponents and terrorize whole nations into submission. The resulting
carnage in the target countries and the inevitable blowback against ordinary
Americans mean nothing to these Great Gamesters; that's simply the price
of doing business. Bush's "incompetence" is just a mask for stone-cold
calculation.
Annotations
Crying Wolf: Media Disinformation and Death Squads in Occupied
Iraq
Global Research, Nov. 10, 2005
Frontline Police of Iraq are Waging Secret War of Vengeance
The Observer, Nov. 20, 2005
Devil's Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist
Islam
Metropolitan Books, 2005
Killings Linked to Shiite Squads in Iraqi Police Force
Los Angeles Times, Nov. 29, 2005
The Salvador Option
Newsweek, Jan. 14, 2005
Die Laughing: The Bush Way of Rehabilitation
Empire Burlesque, Aug. 29, 2003
Iraqi Guards Seen as Death Squads
Newsday, Nov. 15, 2005
Sunnis Accuse Iraqi Military of Kidnappings and Slayings
New York Times, Nov. 28, 2005
Sunni men in Baghdad targeted by attackers in police uniforms
Knight-Ridder, June 27. 2005
Abuse of Prisoners in Iraq Widespread, Officials Say
Knight-Ridder, Nov. 29, 2005
Robert
Dreyfus on Bush's Deadly Dance With Islamic Theocrats
TomDispatch, Nov. 30, 2005
A History of Violence: Robert Dreyfuss Interview
Salon.com, Nov. 28, 2005
Documents From the
Phoenix Program
The Memory Hole, May 2003
Secrets of History: The CIA in Iran
New York Times, April 16, 2000
The Hidden History of CIA Torture
TomDispatch.com, Sept. 9, 2004
The World's
Most Dangerous Man
Antiwar.com, Nov. 30, 2005
Abuse Worse Than Under Saddam, Says Iraqi Leader
The Observer, Nov. 27, 2005
Revealed: The Grim New World of Iraqi Torture Camps
The Observer, July 3, 2005
Lost Amid the Rising Tide of Detainees in Iraq
New York Times, Nov. 21, 2005
Did
the President spike the investigation of bin Laden?
Greg Palast, Nth Position, March 2003
If the CIA Had Butted
Out [In Iran]
Los Angeles Times, Oct. 21, 2001
Up in
the Air: Where Is the Iraq War Headed Next?
The New Yorker, Nov. 5, 2005
Private Security Crews Add to Fear in Baghdad
The Washington Post, Nov. 28, 2005
UK Funds Aid Iraqi Torture Units
The Observer, July 3, 2005
The
CIA and Operation Phoenix in Vietnam
Ralph McGehee, Feb. 19, 1996
U.S. Senate Review of Operation Phoenix
United States Senate, Feb. 17 to March 19, 1970
Counter-Revolutionary Violence: Bloodbaths in Fact & Propaganda
Noam Chomsky and Edward S. Herman
Project X, Drugs and Death Squads
Consortium News, 1997
Phoenix
Project: It's How We Fought the War
Los Angeles Times, May 3, 2001
The
Phoenix Program Revisited
CounterPunch, May 15, 2004
The Gentlemanly Planners of Assassinations
Slate.com, Nov. 1, 2002
See more from Chris Floyd here
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