Dept. of no comment (extreme wing) "'The marines that I have had wounded over the past five months have been attacked by a faceless enemy,' said Colonel Brandl. ‘But the enemy has got a face. He's called Satan. He lives in Falluja. And we're going to destroy him.'" (Lieutenant-Colonel Gareth Brandl, on his second tour of duty in Iraq and in command of one of the battalions "at the tip of the spear" of the assault on Falluja) "The most important thing is our religion, not Falluja and not the occupation. If the American solders came to me and converted to Islam, I won't fight them. We are here not because we want to liberate Iraq, we are here to fight the infidels and to make victorious the name of Islam." (Abu Ossama, a Jihadi from Tunisia in Falluja) "We must not be afraid to make an example of Fallujah… We need to demonstrate that the United States military cannot be deterred or defeated. If that means widespread destruction, we must accept the price… Even if Fallujah has to go the way of Carthage, reduced to shards, the price will be worth it." (Neocon former military officer Ralph Peters, And Now, Fallujah, the New York Post) "'You're all in the process of making history. This is another Hue city in the making,' Sergeant Major Carlton Kent, the most senior enlisted marine in Iraq, told the forces. ‘I have no doubt if we do get the word that each and every one of you is going to do what you have always done -- kick some butt.'" (Pep talk reported by Rory McCarthy of the British Guardian. The Vietnamese former imperial capital of Hue was nearly destroyed during the Tet Offensive in 1968.) "The top U.S. commander in Iraq, Gen. George Casey, told President Bush on Wednesday that his troops were ‘making very good progress' securing Iraq. ‘He said that things are going well in Fallujah,' Bush said, adding that his Iraq commanders had not asked for more troops." (Edward Harris, Associated Press) The Tipping Point And so we barge through another door marked "Open With Caution" and into yet another wing of our new age of extremity whose rooms now seem to extend in all directions forever. And this descent into barbarism is being reported to us in the anodyne language of embedded war reporters. In the meantime, back in Bush's Washington, we seem to have drifted out of the Persian Gulf and down the Mekong River into the Land That Time Forgot (but that Americans can never quite get out of their brains) -- a.k.a. Vietnam. There's our President receiving reports from his generals on our "progress" in a country suffering the sort of regression that in a human being would leave you hospitalized, if not locked away for life. Shades of General William Westmoreland and President Lyndon Baines Johnson. Then, there are our fighting commanders offering pep talks invoking the glorious tradition of Hue, the former Vietnamese imperial capital which, in the bitterest siege of that war, was all but leveled; finally, there's our Secretary of Defense Don Rumsfeld back at his old stand-up lectern talking about how we're just possibly reaching the "tipping" point in Iraq -- where public opinion will shift over to us. (For those who remember, the long slide downhill in Vietnam was greased with such "points," including the famed "crossover point" when we would kill more of the enemy than they could replace, or as General Westmoreland put it famously at the National Press Club in November 1967: "We have reached an important point when the end begins to come into view." It turned out to be the end of the beginning of the beginning of the end, if I remember rightly.) It's not, as I've argued before, that Iraq and Vietnam are simple analogs, but that our leaders can't get Vietnam off the brain. It's the collective correlative of a guilty conscience for an administration otherwise completely lacking one; and filled, Colin Powell excepted, with people who were unwilling to have anything to do with the Vietnam War in their own earlier lives. In the meantime, our re-embedded reporters return to the kind of docility and general boosterism that was the hallmark of the early Vietnam years. In our press, extremity only fits others. So our journalists can report on the barbaric extremity of enemy acts -- the beheadings, kidnappings, "hostage slaughterhouses" and the like -- in an appropriate way. But our role in the roiling extremity that is Iraq remains largely beyond them. It's cleansed from the very language they automatically employ. Nothing startling here, of course. This is, after all, but a "balanced" press version of American exceptionalism. Recently the always interesting Anatol Lieven published a new book, America Right or Wrong (which I soon plan to read). It sports the subtitle, "An Anatomy of American Nationalism." While Lieven is identified on the book jacket as a Senior Associate at the Carnegie Endowment in Washington D.C., the subtitle is a pure giveaway as to his un-American-ness. (The poor sap is a Brit, I think.) If he were an American journalist he would never have linked the word "nationalism" (a state of unreasonable zeal for one's own land) to "American." Americans, it's well known, are "patriotic" or, if driven toward the dreaded moniker "nationalistic," then "super-patriotic." It's well known here, just taken for granted, that only foreigners are "nationalistic," or worse yet, "nationalists." Similarly, in Iraq, the FFs or "foreign fighters" are invariably Syrians, Saudis, Yemenis, Tunisians and other mad Muslims who slip across borders into places like Falluja to fight us. Americans, who boldly invade to liberate, cannot be FFs ever. Our good intentions evidently leave us implicitly at home wherever we go and whatever we do, though no one could deny that American troops are by definition "foreign fighters" in Iraq and, to judge by news reports, increasingly feel that way. (Here I issue a challenge: Any reader who can find a passage written by an American journalist in any mainstream news report in any of our major papers since the invasion of Iraq which refers to American troops as "foreigners" even once will get the Tomdispatch all-expenses-paid trip to sunny Abu Ghraib.) Similarly, in a recent New York Times front-page story by Edward Wong and Eric Schmitt, large numbers of the rebels and jihadists in Falluja were said, both in the headline (The Insurgents: Rebel Fighters Who Fled Attack May Now Be Active Elsewhere) and in first sentence, to have "fled." ("Insurgent leaders in Falluja probably fled before the American-led offensive and may be coordinating attacks in Iraq that have left scores dead over the past few days, according to American military officials here.") Now, maybe they did flee, but assumedly neither those military officials, nor Wong and Schmitt were actually there to watch them fleeing. The only relevant quote in the piece, from a cell-phone interview with a "midlevel commander" of the insurgency speaks of "leaving" Falluja. Since the American offensive was long announced and coordinated fighting has broken out elsewhere in the Sunni areas of Iraq, it would be as logical to speak of the Fallujan fighters "redeploying" (as American troops brought to Falluja did). But flight, of course, implies cowardice. Similarly, former American generals, now TV consultants, have flocked back onto TV to decry the rebels and jihadists for being so cowardly as to mix in with the civilian population (as guerrillas invariably do). They should, the implication is, come out and fight like men. No American journalist would ever claim, however, that American pilots in AC-130 gunships or jets attacking Falluja are cowardly, though they are obviously using another type of cover. War, of course, is like that. Each side tends to use the advantages it has. Guerillas not mixing with the population are likely to find themselves not manly or brave but dead, as many undoubtedly now are in Falluja, when facing American fire power in anything like the open or isolation. But American exceptionalism -- the deep belief that our motives are uniquely pure, our goals singularly above reproach -- means that descriptions of our actions don't fit any of the language categories in which we put those we fight. This is essential to our war coverage -- and largely unexamined. When, for instance, our planes destroy or our troops capture a clinic or hospital, as we did in our first and second acts in Falluja, the reporting on this may be grim -- patients and doctors rousted from hospital rooms, thrown on the floor and handcuffed -- and yet because Americans have done this, there will be no mention of the Geneva Conventions which such an act almost certainly contravenes. (The Fourth Geneva Convention contains this clear passage: "Civilian hospitals organized to give care to the wounded and sick, the infirm and maternity cases, may in no circumstances be the object of attack but shall at all times be respected and protected by the Parties to the conflict.") Similar acts -- the dropping of 500, 1,000 or 2,000 pound bombs in major urban areas (sometimes to kill a single sniper) or the turning back of men trying to flee Falluja (because we have no way of telling whether they are civilians or fighters) -- lead similarly down a steep but unacknowledged path to Hell. Last night on the prime-time news, a video was run of an American tank blowing the minaret off a mosque (where, again contravening the Geneva Conventions, one or more snipers were hidden). The only comment or commentary offered was a brief interview with an American soldier on the scene offering the completely understandable ground-level view that this was "no holds barred" warfare and his troops had to be protected. But, folks, we're talking about the so- called City of a Thousand Mosques. Imagine an al Qaeda sniper in the steeple of an American church or cathedral and how Americans might react. Or let's imagine this: If American claims are accurate and (like the Russians before they went in and leveled the Chechnyan capital of Grozny), we did our best to get civilians out of Falluja, possibly a couple of hundred thousand of them, where did they go? Tens of thousands of refugees, homeless and desperate? Where are the articles about them? Who is thinking about what will happen when they finally return to a city in ruins, to homes that may no longer exist in neighborhoods that have been pounded into rubble in areas possibly lacking the most basic services or functioning hospitals? These are, as Naomi Klein points out on the Alternet website, the future "voters" of Sunni Iraq. The decision by American strategists to "take" Falluja the second time around leads us directly into the charnel house of history. Unfortunately, even to think reasonably about what's unfolding in Iraq you need to leave the American press behind. Only elsewhere in the world are the obvious analogies to Falluja (or Iraq) today coming to mind. Take the Russian destruction of the city of Grozny from whose ruins so many years later guerillas still ambush Russian troops, as described by former Australian diplomat Tony Kevin in the Sydney Morning Herald; or the eerie and depressing parallels -- right down to the beheadings -- to the Algerian independence struggle against the French ("the first campaign in which poorly equipped Muslim mujaheddin licked one of the top Western armies") as described by Alistair Horne in The Spectator, the conservative British publication; or the Syrian destruction of the city of Hama as considered by Charles Glass in the British Independent. Only elsewhere (or on the Internet) are you likely to find mention of the Geneva Conventions when hospitals are taken or mosques blown apart. Only elsewhere is the language of American war-making and war reporting questioned or the efficacy (no less morality) of bombing civilian populations in major urban centers considered. The other day CNN had a report on the recent actions of the French military in the Ivory Coast. In the headline and the subsequent report, the French were lambasted for their "hypocrisy" in opposing our actions in Iraq and yet acting like the former colonial masters they are in the Ivory Coast. I assure you, however, that you can search the American press or television in vain for a single report that might link the word "hypocrisy" to the Bush administration for any of its actions. It's just not in our journalistic dictionary, and that dictionary ensures that, even as our leaders push ever further into the age of extremism -- remember, Alberto Gonzales, just nominated as our next Attorney General, oversaw the White House effort to create a legalistic framework for an offshore torture regime -- it's nearly impossible for American readers to grasp the extremity of the situation. Depending on what news report you read, American troops have by now taken 50% or 70% or 90% of Falluja. The real question, though, is 50-70-90% of what? In the meantime, after initially upbeat reports, it looks like there will be significant American casualties in Falluja, which means growing anger and frustration, which means ever more extreme acts on the ground. So here's an old Vietnam-era word that might have been worth bringing back as our Fallujan offensive began: "escalation." The widespread destruction in Falluja represents an escalation of our Iraq war. It represents an extremity of behavior (on both sides), horrific in itself, for which there will be a cost as yet unknown. As small-scale running battles, assassinations, and car bombings now shake Mosul, Samarra, and other cities in Sunni Iraq, we see yet more doors marked "Open With Caution," or even "Do Not Enter," before us, and yet more tanks and jets and angry soldiers, and more frustrated American commanders and strategists ready to barge through them. What we need now is not our usual set of embedded reporters, but the artist Hieronymous Bosch back from the grave to paint us the necessary pictures. After all, we've already seen what the liberation of Najaf and Falluja look like. But what will Iraq look like after we've liberated Samarra and Mosul and who knows where else -- and the insurgency only grows? Below, Mark Levine considers four possible scenarios from our now Fallujanized world and what they tell us about Iraq and ourselves. Tom
Copyright C2004 Mark LeVine |
Friday
Four Times Falluja Equals?
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