Death and Dishonor: Bush's New Assassination Order
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
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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 dread
conclusion in
a remarkable work of synthesis drawn from 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 now 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 June 2003 that the U.S. was already hiring
Saddam's security muscle for "special ops" against the
nascent insurgency and re-opening his torture haven, Abu Ghraib.
Meanwhile, powerful Shiite militias including Talibanic 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 American 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.
Earlier this
year, one enterprising Knight-Ridder reporter, Yasser Salihee, actually
found several eyewitnesses willing to testify to the
involvement of the U.S.-backed commandos in 12 such murders.
The offer was shrugged off by the Interior Ministry's spokesman
an American "adviser" and veteran bones-maker from
the Colombian ops. In the end, it didn't matter; Salihee was shot
dead by a U.S. sniper at a checkpoint a few days afterwards.
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, and
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 substantial American 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. For
example, 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. (The true number of
victims is certainly much higher.) 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: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam.
Later, Saudi magnate Osama bin Laden whose family firm helped
kick-start George W. Bush's business career joined the operation,
and his men were sent to America for "anti-Soviet" terrorist
training, as Greg
Palast reports. And of course, these examples only scratch the
scorched-earth surface of America's double-dealings in this deathly
shadow world.
This bi-partisan
policy has been remarkably consistent for more than half a century:
to augment the wealth and power of the elite, American 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 inevitable blowback against ordinary
Americans means nothing to these Great Gamesters; it's merely
the price of doing business. Bush's "incompetence" is
just a mask for stone-cold calculation.
This is
an extended version of a column appearing in the Dec. 2 edition
of The Moscow Times.
January
27, 2007
Chris
Floyd [send him mail]
is the author of Empire
Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime.
Copyright
© 2007 Chris Floyd
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