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Terrified US soldiers are still killing civilians with impunity

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  • Terrified US soldiers are still killing civilians with impunity

    Terrified US soldiers are still killing civilians with impunity, while
    the dead go uncounted

    By Patrick Cockburn

    The Independent/UK
    24 April 2005


    An American patrol roared past us with the soldiers gesturing
    furiously with their guns for traffic to keep back on an overpass in
    central Baghdad. A black car with three young men in it did not stop
    in time and a soldier fired several shots from his machine gun into
    its engine.

    The driver and his friends were not hit, but many Iraqis do not
    survive casual encounters with US soldiers. It is very easy to be
    accidentally killed in Iraq. US soldiers treat everybody as a
    potential suicide bomber. If they are right they have saved their
    lives and if they are wrong they face no penalty.

    "We should end the immunity of US soldiers here," says Dr Mahmoud
    Othman, a veteran Kurdish politician who argues that the failure to
    prosecute American soldiers who have killed civilians is one of the
    reasons why the occupation became so unpopular so fast. He admits,
    however, that this is extremely unlikely to happen given the US
    attitude to any sanctions against its own forces.

    Every Iraqi has stories of friends or relatives killed by US troops
    for no adequate reason. Often they do not know if they were shot by
    regular soldiers or by members of western security companies whose
    burly employees, usually ex-soldiers, are everywhere in Iraq.

    A member of the Iraqi National Congress, Ahmed Chalabi's party, was
    passing through an American checkpoint last year when a single shot
    rang out from a sniper. No US soldier was hit, but the troops at the
    checkpoint hosed down the area with fire, wounding the INC member and
    killing his driver.

    The rector of Al-Nahrain University in south Baghdad was travelling to
    a degree ceremony on the other side of the city when white men in a
    four-wheel drive suddenly opened fire, hitting him in the
    stomach. Presumably they thought he was on a suicide mission.

    It was obvious to many American officers from an early stage in the
    conflict that the Pentagon's claim that it did not count civilian
    casualties was seen by many Iraqis as proof that the US did not care
    about how many of them were killed. The failure to take Iraqi civilian
    dead into account was particularly foolish in a culture where
    relatives of the slain are obligated by custom to seek revenge.

    The secrecy surrounding the numbers of civilians killed reveals
    another important facet of the war. The White House was always more
    interested in the impact of events in Iraq on the American voter than
    it was in the effect on Iraqis. From the beginning of the conflict the
    US and British armies had difficulty in working out who in Iraq really
    was a civilian.

    Marla Ruzicka, the American humanitarian worker who was buried
    yesterday in California, had established in her last weeks in Iraq
    that figures were kept based on after-action reports. Officially, she
    found, 29 civilians were killed in fire fights between US forces and
    insurgents between 28 February and 5 April. But these figures are
    likely to be gross underestimates.

    US soldiers are notorious in Iraq for departing immediately after a
    skirmish, taking their own casualties but sometimes leaving damaged
    vehicles. They would not have time to find out how many Iraqis were
    killed or injured.

    The Health Ministry in Baghdad did produce figures and then stopped
    doing so, saying they had not been properly collated. Iraqi Body
    Count, a group monitoring casualties by looking at media sources, puts
    the total at 17,384. But most Iraqis die obscurely; it is dangerous
    for reporters, Iraqi or foreign, to try to find out who is being
    killed. Much of Iraq is a bandit-ridden no-man's land.

    Even in Baghdad it is evident from the hundreds of bodies arriving at
    the mortuary that this has become one of the most violent societies on
    earth. The Iraqi Body Count figure is probably much too low, because
    US military tactics ensure high civilian losses - a bizarre aspect of
    the war is that US commanders often do not understand the damage done
    by their weapons in Iraq's close-packed cities.

    US firepower, designed to combat the Soviet army, cannot be used in
    built up areas without killing or injuring civilians. Nevertheless, a
    study published in the Lancet saying that 100,000 civilians have died
    in Iraq appears to be too high. But the lack of definitive figures
    continues to dehumanise the uncounted Iraqi dead. As Dr Richard
    Garfield, a professor of nursing at Columbia University and an author
    of the Lancet report, wrote: "We are still fighting to record the
    Armenian genocide. Until people have names and are counted they don't
    exist in a policy sense."

    The immunity of US troops means that there is nothing to inhibit them
    opening fire in what for them is a terrifying situation. For all their
    modern armament they are vulnerable to suicide bombers and roadside
    bombs. In the first case the attacker is already dead and in the
    second the man who detonates the bomb is probably several hundred
    yards away and in cover. With nobody else to shoot at it is the
    civilians who pay the price.
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