Number: Minimum: 15654, Maximum: 17884
Dear Friends,
Two updates from Iraq; the first is from Adele Welty, a grandmother and member of September 11 Families for Peaceful Tomorrows (she lost her firefighter son Timmy in the World Trade Center). She was in a delegation that went to Amman Jordan during the Christmas holidays to deliver donations of $600,000 worth of medicines and supplies for Fallujah. Below is her report on her experiences there.[1]
The second is a report from Dahr Jamail, independent journalist in Iraq, in which he both comments and then quotes a pre-election (Jan. 27) article by Antonia Juhasz, a "Foreign Policy in Focus" scholar currently writing a book about the economic invasion of Iraq.[2]
Dahr is also asking for financial support in being able to go to the upcoming "Rome" session of the World Tribunal on "Iraq: Media Wrongs Against Truth and Humanity -- Exposing the Politics of Disinformation." He will be making an in-depth presentation there.
Please consider supporting him. He is one of the very few independent journalists in the entire country.
Best,
Judith Karpova
Iraq Humanitarian Travelers Alliance
====================================================
1.
NOTES FROM THE MIDDLE EAST
By Adele Welty
January 7, 2005
As most of you already know, I was part of a delegation, put together with extraordinary care by Medea Benjamin and Chris Michael of Global Exchange in San Francisco. We traveled to Amman, Jordan, with medical supplies, blankets, heaters and water purifiers for the refugees in the camps outside Falluja. Global Exchange received donations of medications from a large pharmaceutical company as well as small donations of supplies and cash valued at $600,000.
Once again, my vocabulary is not adequate to describe the experience of meeting Iraqis, for whom every day is September 11th. These good people, who wept as they told their stories, risked their lives to come to Amman to meet with us. We were Americans, some of whom had lost sons in Iraq, Military Families Against the War. I represented September 11th Families for Peaceful Tomorrows. Some members of the delegation were Americans who have not lost a loved one, but have concluded that the war is wrong, that Iraq had no weapons of mass destruction (except those for which Rumsfeld has the receipts) and no complicity in 9/11. We met with Arabs whose, long history of oppression has made them cynical of Americans, but who greeted us with warmth and gratitude for caring enough to come with medical supplies and humanitarian aid. I told them that Timmy had died on 9/11 trying to rescue civilians trapped in the twin towers and that now innocent civilians are being killed in his name and we were all trying to stop it.
On New Year's eve, we attempted to hold a candlelight vigil in front of the U.N. building in Amman, but the police were waiting for us and tried to grab our candles and peace signs. After a bit of a tussle, while the media were filming, we managed to get our signs back. The cameras were chased away and the police apologized and expressed sympathy for our cause, but explained that they had to do their job, so we agreed to leave.
On New Year's day, we tried to get to the Iraqi border, but were turned back by the military police, who proceeded to follow us. We stopped in the desert and held a brief ceremony for peace with al Jazeera filming us and interviewing the members of the delegation. We spoke with some shepherds who politely agreed to be interviewed, but believed that Americans are responsible for the chaos in the region. They know all about what is going on because they watch al Jazeera on TV. We then stopped at a refugee camp near the border and spoke, through an interpreter, to some of the children. One very articulate 12-year-old told us that many NGO workers came to visit them, but nothing ever changed. She alleged there was a shortage of milk and other necessities. Evidently, there was no shortage of cigarettes, we saw the men all smoking. I was introduced to the firefighters just outside the camp and was invited into their tent for tea. Afterwards they handed me a jacket and helmet and we posed for pictures in front of the fire truck.
At dinner that evening, one of the Iraqi doctors asked me if Americans know how privileged we are. And while I answered yes, I wondered if this is true. Or maybe Americans know they are privileged and believe we deserve to be by virtue of the accident of birth that made us so. For it is obvious we consider ourselves "better" than the people in other parts of the world so much less fortunate, whose lives don't seem to matter very much. Dr. Jeff Ritterman, a member of our delegation, responded that privilege incurs responsibility, and that is key. For in the sense of privilege we all enjoy, we cannot let this sense of responsibility go unheeded -- the responsibility to keep ourselves informed and to participate in the development of government policies, if we want the government to truly represent us. We forget what constitutes a democracy. We also have a responsibility to those who are not so privileged, not only victims of natural disasters, but man-made tsunamis as well. Our Iraqi interpreter has told us that over 200,000 Iraqis have been killed in this war, 100,000 since the end of the invasion.
Stories were exchanged. Questions were asked that most often could not be answered. Why? Why is America doing this? What have we ever done to you? Nothing! There is less food now than under the food for oil program. Obesity among children that was once a problem in Iraq has given way to malnutrition. Twenty billion dollars from the oil for food program is unaccounted for. Iraq was once one of the most advanced Middle Eastern countries in terms of its educational system. It has now been bombed into the dark ages. Why?
Allegations were made that would not stand up in a court of law. They would be labeled hearsay, for although the storytellers were eyewitnesses to these events, we are not mandated reporters. These stories, they so movingly related, are difficult to accept. Yet we heard similar allegations repeated by different groups that arrived over the course of the week we were in Amman. Stories of atrocities committed by American troops that make Abu Graib seem like childish pranks instead of the horrible acts of violence they really were. They told us that since Abu Graib, the torture of prisoners has gotten worse, but there are other prisons in Iraq, outside of Baghdad, prisons that are underground and are not monitored by outside agencies. There, whole families are detained, the males beaten and the women raped in full view of the other prisoners.
They told us about routine instances of tanks rolling over and crushing cars on the road, cars filled with people. In one instance, a car contained a seven-year-old girl, whose father had just run into the market. She was screaming and banging on the window as the tank crushed the car around her. Many of the Iraqis testified to having witnessed this type of occurrence more than once. Others told of troops smashing down doors in the middle of the night and shooting the males in the household, often in front of their mothers and wives. And then there were the incidents of rape, the rape of teenage girls before the eyes of their parents and siblings. Upon learning they have made an error, the officers come back with two thousand dollars compensation and an apology for killing the heads of households by mistake.
To the surprise of most Americans, civilians in Iraq (the last figure I read before leaving Amman was 200,000) now support the insurgency. Witnessing these crimes has fueled this support, for these atrocities do not occur in the dark dungeons of the Iraqi prisons alone, but on the street in broad daylight or in homes surrounded by family members and neighbors. In hospitals, young males between the ages of 15 and 45 are dragged out of the emergency room or even the operating room and shot in the streets, regardless of how their injuries may have been incurred. In Baghdad hospital, only two of the sixteen elevators work, making emergency transfer from the ER to the operating theaters dangerously slow. After an attack, ambulances are not allowed to leave the hospital grounds to attend the wounded. This is the face of America that the average Iraqi sees, Americans who shoot pregnant women and children. This is where all the hate comes from.
We have all received e-mails from American troops in Iraq who are trying to show a different face of America. These young soldiers distribute school supplies to children and other items that are in short supply. Many of them take even greater than usual risks to help the NGO workers distribute humanitarian aid. The Iraqis with whom we met said they could not do their work without these American soldiers, who take them into areas that are forbidden, because they want to help the innocent civilians who are the victims of the bombings. These are the soldiers we would hope represent the moral character of our men and women in uniform. These are the troops we support, who can make moral judgments in the midst of chaos. In the beginning of the occupation, Iraqis saw these Americans as liberators, but as goods and services became nonexistent, attitudes began to change. With the increased level of violence, the attitude has become one of intense hatred, despite the efforts of these extraordinary soldiers.
In Falluja alone, six thousand civilians were killed in one week. We saw pictures of bodies, burned beyond recognition, whose limbs have been eaten by dogs because anyone trying to retrieve them is shot. We saw pictures of bodies discolored by chemical weapons of unknown origin. Bodies show signs of napalm and are radioactive.
Unfortunately, most pictures taken by Iraqi journalists have been confiscated by the military, who routinely imprison journalists not imbedded with the troops. Their homes are searched, their cameras and film are destroyed. Those photos we saw were smuggled out and can be seen on various websites. They are very graphic and not for the faint of heart. The food and water in Falluja is contaminated because the weapons used are not conventional. Returning residents have been warned not to eat or drink anything that was left behind. But there is nothing else and the doctors are expecting cancer rates to rise significantly.
Western journalists usually stay in their hotels and get information about what is happening from Iraqis who manage to slip in and out of the compound daily. They must constantly change cars and routes, leaving at different times of day. Gasoline now costs one dollar a liter and they must wait on line for up to 48 hours to get it. This includes gasoline for the generators. Electricity is on usually between two to eight hours a day. The mainstream media is NOT reporting this.
One of the Iraqis told us about a Human Rights meeting that was held over a year ago where his brother gave a speech. American troops broke up the meeting and randomly shot nine people. Two were pushed up against a wall and shot. The leader of the meeting was beaten before all the participants at the meeting and imprisoned. They broke his nose and his hands. This man's brother is still in prison, has not been charged with a crime and the family was told that his legs are now paralyzed.
We heard these stories until we were on atrocity overload. At dinner one evening, I asked the Iraqi doctors what they do to decompress, how they relax, what they do for fun. I asked if they went out to the movies, were there theaters or concert halls. They told me there is no such thing in Iraq, and because of the curfew, they cannot go out at night to visit friends. But on evenings when there is electricity, they watch television. And what, I asked, do they watch? Seinfeld! They love Seinfeld. I was amazed that they would understand the humor and asked, "What does it mean -- Get outta here?" After giving it some thought, one of the doctors replied, "It means -- that is so unbelievable, it cannot be true."
So there we were, Americans and Iraqis, our countries at war, sharing a common humanity and a common sense of humor. In Iraqi homes in the late night hours, they sit in front of their TV sets watching Seinfeld. While in all probability, American troops sit in their recreation tents watching Seinfeld. And when the sun rises, they start killing each other.
GET OUTTA HERE!
2.
WHAT THEY'RE NOT TELLING YOU ABOUT THE "ELECTION"
By Dahr Jamail
February 1, 2005
http://dahrjamailiraq.com/weblog/archives/dispatches/000193.php#more
The day of blood and elections has passed, and the blaring trumpets of corporate media hailing it as a successful show of “democracy” have subsided to a dull roar.
After a day which left 50 people dead in Iraq, both civilians and soldiers, the death toll was hailed as a figure that was “lower than expected.” Thus . . . acceptable, by Bush Administration/corporate media standards. After all, only of them was an American, the rest were Iraqis civilians and British soldiers.
The gamble of using the polling day in Iraq to justify the ongoing failed occupation of Iraq has apparently paid off, if you watch only mainstream media.
“Higher than expected turnout,” U.S. mainstream television media blared, some citing a figure of 72%, others 60%.
What they didn’t tell you was that this figure was provided by Farid Ayar, the spokesman for the Independent Electoral Commission for Iraq (IECI) before the polls had even closed.
When asked about the accuracy of the estimate of voter turnout during a press conference, Ayar backtracked on his earlier figure, saying that a closer estimate was lower than his initial estimate and would be more like 60% of registered voters.
The IECI spokesman said his previous figure of 72% was “only guessing” and “was just an estimate,” which was based on “very rough, word-of mouth estimates gathered informally from the field. It will take some time for the IECI to issue accurate figures on turnout.”
Referencing both figures, Ayar then added, “Percentages and numbers come only after counting and will be announced when it's over . . . It's too soon to say that those were the official numbers.”
But this isn’t the most important misrepresentation the mainstream media committed.
What they also didn’t tell you was that of those who voted, whether they be 35% or even 60% of registered voters, were not voting in support of an ongoing U.S. occupation of their country.
In fact, they were voting for precisely the opposite reason. Every Iraqi I have spoken with who voted explained that they believe the National Assembly which will be formed soon will signal an end to the occupation.
And they expect the call for a withdrawing of foreign forces in their country to come sooner rather than later.
This causes one to view the footage of cheering, jubilant Iraqis in a different light now, doesn’t it?
But then, most folks in the US watching CNN, FOX, or any of the major networks won’t see it that way. Instead, they will hear what Mr. Bush said, “The world is hearing the voice of freedom from the center of the Middle East,” and take it as fact because most of the major media outlets aren’t scratching beneath film clips of joyous Iraqi voters over here in the land of daily chaos and violence, no jobs, no electricity, little running water and no gasoline (for the Iraqis anyhow).
And Bush is portrayed by the media as the bringer of democracy to Iraq by the simple fact that this so-called election took place, botched as it may have been. Appearances suggest that the majority Shia in Iraq now finally get their proportional representation in a “government.” Looks good on paper.
But as you continue reading, the seemingly altruistic reasons for this election as portrayed by the Bush Administration and trumpeted by most mainstream media are anything but.
And Iraqis who voted are hearing other trumpets that are blaring an end to the occupation.
Now the question remains, what happens when the National Assembly is formed and over 100,000 U.S. soldiers remain on the ground in Iraq with the Bush Administration continuing in its refusal to provide a timetable for their removal?
What happens when Iraqis see that while there are already four permanent U.S. military bases in their country, rather than beginning to disassemble them, more bases are being constructed, as they are, by Cheney’s old company Halliburton, right now?
Antonia Juhasz, a Foreign Policy in Focus scholar, authored a piece just before the “election” that sheds light on a topic that has lost attention amidst the recent fanfare concerning the polls in Iraq.
Oil.
I think it’s worth including much of her story here, as it fits well with today’s topic of things most folks aren’t being told by the bringers of democracy to the heart of the Middle East.
Antonia Juhasz (the entire article can be read at http://www.sunstar.com.ph/forums/viewtopic.php?p=23941)
"On Dec. 22, 2004, Iraqi Finance Minister Abdel Mahdi told a handful of reporters and industry insiders at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. that Iraq wants to issue a new oil law that would open Iraq's national oil company to private foreign investment. As Mahdi explained: "So I think this is very promising to the American investors and to American enterprise, certainly to oil companies." In other words, Mahdi is proposing to privatize Iraq's oil and put it into American corporate hands. According to the finance minister, foreigners would gain access both to "downstream" and "maybe even upstream" oil investment. This means foreigners can sell Iraqi oil and own it under the ground -- the very thing for which many argue the U.S. went to war in the first place.
"As Vice President Dick Cheney's Defense Policy Guidance report explained back in 1992, "Our overall objective is to remain the predominant outside power in the [Middle East] region and preserve U.S. and Western access to the region's oil." While few in the American media other than Emad Mckay of Inter Press Service reported on -- or even attended -- Mahdi’s press conference, the announcement was made with U.S. Undersecretary of State Alan Larson at Mahdi's side. It was intended to send a message -- but to whom? It turns out that Abdel Mahdi is running in the Jan. 30 elections on the ticket of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution (SCIR), the leading Shiite political party.
"While announcing the selling-off of the resource which provides 95 percent of all Iraqi revenue may not garner Mahdi many Iraqi votes, but it will unquestionably win him tremendous support from the U.S. government and U.S. corporations. Mahdi's SCIR is far and away the front-runner in the upcoming elections, particularly as it becomes increasingly less possible for Sunnis to vote because the regions where they live are spiraling into deadly chaos. If Bush were to suggest to Iraq’s Interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi that elections should be called off, Mahdi and the SCIR's ultimate chances of victory will likely decline."
I’ll add that the list of political parties Mahdi’s SCIR belongs to, The United Iraqi Alliance (UIA), includes the Iraqi National Council, which is led by an old friend of the Bush Administration who provided the faulty information they needed to justify the illegal invasion of Iraq, none other than Ahmed Chalabi.
It should also be noted that interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi also fed the Bush Administration cooked information used to justify the invasion, but he heads a different Shia list which will most likely be getting nearly as many votes as the UIA list.
And The UIA has the blessing of Iranian born revered Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. Sistani issued a fatwa which instructed his huge number of followers to vote in the election, or they would risk going to hell.
"Thus, one might argue that the Bush administration has made a deal with the SCIR: Iraq's oil for guaranteed political power. The Americans are able to put forward such a bargain because Bush still holds the strings in Iraq.
"Regardless of what happens in the elections, for at least the next year during which the newly elected National Assembly writes a constitution and Iraqis vote for a new government, the Bush administration is going to control the largest pot of money available in Iraq (the $24 billion in U.S. taxpayer money allocated for the reconstruction), the largest military and the rules governing Iraq's economy. Both the money and the rules will, in turn, be overseen by U.S.-appointed auditors and inspector generals who sit in every Iraqi ministry with five-year terms and sweeping authority over contracts and regulations. However, the one thing which the administration has not been unable to confer upon itself is guaranteed access to Iraqi oil -- that is, until now."
And there is so much more they are not telling you. Just like the Iraqis who voted, believing they did so to bring an end to the occupation of their country.
--
Iraq_Dispatches mailing list
http://lists.dahrjamailiraq.com/mailman/listinfo/iraq_dispatches
More writing, photos and commentary at
http://dahrjamailiraq.com
Useful Links:
Photos of U.S. Military Torture in Abu Ghraib Prison
http://www.peacenowar.net/Iraq/News/April%2004-Photos/Abu%20Ghraib.htm
Los Angeles Times has a complete biographical Information on U.S. Soldiers Killed:
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/external/fmmac2.mm.ap.org/war2/adv_search.php?SITE=CALOS&SECTION=MIDEAST
For more photos and Videos from Iraq, visit:
"Report from Baghdad" July, 2003 http://www.actionla.org/Iraq/IraqReport/intro.html
=========================================================
Peace, No War
War is not the answer, for only love can conquer hate
Not in our Name! And another world is possible!
Information for antiwar movements, news across the World, please visit:
http://www.PeaceNoWar.net
Please Join PeaceNoWar Listserv, send e-mail to:
peacenowar-subscribe@lists.riseup.net
Please Donate to Peace No War Network!
Send check pay to:
ActionLA/SEE
1013 Mission St. #6
South Pasadena CA 91030
(All donations are tax deductible)
<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>
*To Translate this page to Arabic, please visit ajeeb.com:
http://tarjim.ajeeb.com/ajeeb/default.asp?lang=1
*To Translate this page to French, Spanish, German, Italian or Portuguese, please visit Systran:
http://www.systransoft.com/
<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>
**"Report From Baghdad" CD-ROM**
Pacifica Radio KPFK Los Angeles Reporter Lee Siu Hin's July 2003 trip to U.S. occupied Iraq. An interactive CD-ROM with articles, photos, audio and video interviews includes: people of Iraq, U.S. military, human rights workers, religious leaders and more!
Please Visit the Website:
http://www.actionla.org/Iraq/IraqReport/intro.html
Each CD costs: $15.00 plus $3.50 S/H (work both PC and Mac) The CD sells will be benefit the Baghdad Independent Media Center, ActionLA, and PeaceNoWar.net
*Additional donations are welcome, and it will be tax deductible.
For more information, tel: (213)413-1778 e-mail: info@ActionLA.org
URL: www.ActionLA.org
Send check/money orders to:
ActionLA/SEE
1013 Mission St. #6
South Pasadena, CA 91030