US
Forces Making Great Advances in Fallujah Voter Registration Effort
by
Winston Smith, Ministry of Truth, Embedded with Coalition Forces
in Fallujah
[News
item: Fox News reported on November 10 that 500 terrorists had been
killed in the fighting in Fallujah. Commanders on the ground assured
the media that there were "no known civilian casualties."]
[News
item: "Our attack is made easier by the fact that about
75% of the civilian population has fled. There is little reason
to restrain the use of air power, heavy artillery, and tanks."
~ Former
DoD Neocon Jed Babbin]
Just
Outside Fallujah, Iraq, November 10, 2004. U.S. Commanders trumpeted
"tremendous progress" in an experimental psy-ops program
called "Operation Preemptive Democracy," implemented for
the first time this week in Fallujah.
"We
have definitely exceeded expectations," said Colonel Savvi
Corhapi, who commanded the effort. "A month ago everyone expected
all of Fallujah to boycott the January elections. Now, we are going
block by block to register prospective voters and to educate them
in the basics of democracy. It’s a really fulfilling, thrilling
experience for all of us to be a part of."
Fouglas
Deith, a Defense Department observer involved in planning the operation,
was on site to observe. Mr. Deith explained how the program works.
"Well,
we knew there were a lot of anti-democratic diehards in the city
– you know, people who just won’t vote, not matter how good the
candidates are, because, well, in their way of thinking, the whole
election process is a sham full of nothing but Yankee occupation-force
stooges. So first of all, we look at the old census tracts and identify
those anti-democratic elements – we call them "terrorists"
– and for several days we pound the hell out of their neighborhoods
with artillery fire, strafing by fighter jets, and – usually last
on the list – razing what’s left of their neighborhood with tank-bulldozers
armed with 55-mm cannon."
When
asked how the terrorists could be identified with such pinpoint
accuracy, Deith chuckled. "It was easier than we thought. At
first, back at the Pentagon, some of the guys – you know, the combat
veterans, some of the process types, the bureaucrats – said we should
go through great pains to identify and isolate the violent terrorists
from the innocent civilian population. In the end, I’m glad to say,
we liberal-arts type guys won out. We figure, hey, we studied logic
in college, let’s use it! If a guy is still in Fallujah today, after
all the hellfire we’ve been raining down on this town, you just
figure, he’s there because he wants to kill us when we come in to
do our voter survey. So we waste him – no questions asked.
"Why
just yesterday," Mr. Deith continued, "we took out a major
mosque – pretty crowded with terrorists, that’s for sure – because
most of those religious types don’t believe in the separation of
mosque and state – bigots, extremists, you know, they’re everywhere,
just everywhere. Now, these folks would never vote for a secular
government, but that’s what Mr. Rumsfeld and Mr. Chalabi want, so
that’s what they’re gonna get. We figger, if these religious extremists
were left to their own devices – I mean, that is to say, if we didn’t
kill’em now, well, they’d come back in a couple years with guns
and mortars and try to kick our ass, just prayin’ the whole time.
So we waste’em now. Pretty straightforward."
At
that point, Corhapi interrupted to tell Deith that three square
blocks in the ibn-al-Hassan precinct had just been leveled, with
a total of 43 terrorists killed.
"Lessee,"
said Deith, paging through his census tracts. "Who lives there?
Hassani, ibn Hassani, Mohamed ibn Hassani, Mohamed ibn Mohamed
how many blocks did you say?"
"Three,
sir," said Corhapi.
"Square?"
"Yes,
sir."
"Ok,
Ok, (humming to himself) – OK, here it is. How many terrorists killed,
43?"
"43,
sir."
"Ohhhhkayyy…
that means the ibn Hassani’s must’ve left town. Everybody but one
… probably the grandma. Oh yeah, here she is, "non-ambulatory."
Boy, you can say that again! But everybody else adds up just right,
six families, all related – terrorism is tribal, you know, it’s
amazing to us Westerners – thirteen adults, with grandma, and, umhh,
30 kids. Got it. Total of 43, you can take it to the bank. That
means we can register the Ibn Hassani’s to vote in January – if
they ever come back. Better get to work building an apartment for
them on that block you obliterated, Captain."
"Er,
it’s Colonel Corhapi, sir. Yes sir, I’ll get to work on that
right away, sir, with the planning crew."
When
asked about the immense disproportion between Iraqis with rifles
and mortars and U.S. tanks, fighter-bombers, and hi-tech weaponry,
Deith grew solemn.
"The
president fervently believes that democracy can succeed here,"
he said. "The Good Book talks about purification through fire.
Can’t you see, that’s exactly what we wanna do, democratize and
purify through fire – intense, unrelenting fire. The result will
be a strong, deep faith in democracy, rooted in hope. These people
have seen so much evil, so much suffering, that we have to purify
the population with our program." He paused, then continued:
"Of course, where that doesn’t work, we use fear."
In
a private moment, this reporter asked Deith the tough question that’s
on many readers’ minds. "You know, Mr. Deith, the 31 kids,
uh, how do you account for them being, uh, terrorists?"
"Easy,
Mr. Smith, and it’s Deith, D-E-I-T-H, Fouglas H. some people
always insist on getting it backwards. Title is Deputy Assistant
to the Assistant to the Undersecretary of the Ministry of Truth’s
Defense Cadre. Spell that right, please."
"Sure
will, sir."
"Now,
where was I? Ah yes, the children. Well, this is where Defense has
benefited so much from new blood fresh thinking, you know. Most
soldiers, even most officers, have never heard of Plato, not unless
they have kids! [Harsh laughter] Play dough, get it??!! Well, they’ve
never heard’a Plato, much less read him. But Plato, he really believed
that education was what made the man. Now, we’ve been looking at
what these kids in the ibn-al-Hassan district were learning, from
their folks, in the schools, in the mosque and we applied the
Bush doctrine – pre-emptive, you know – because we can determine
with more than 99% accuracy that those kids would grow up to be
terrorists. One out of a hundred, maybe, would have been an interpreter,
an informer, maybe a cop. But most of them, by and large, would
have been terrorists. So we kill them now. After all, the president
wants us out of Iraq someday, and who’s gonna kill’em when they
grow up if we’re gone? So we’re just using forward-projection preemptive-thinking
gaming techniques, it’s something they developed at the War College."
When
asked how the voter registration drive was going, Deith was ebullient.
"Terrific, terrific. By the time we’re finished here – another
week, another ten days – there won’t be a living Iraqi soul left
in Fallujah. We’ll find and kill every terrorist by then – pretty
much anyone who’s left in town, I reckon. And don’t forget, we’ll
have the whole place surrounded. That way, when people start straggling
back in from the desert, where they’ve been hiding, some of’em for
weeks, well, they’ll be pretty hungry, y’know, so we’ll work off
of Saddam’s old food-rationing roster, check’em off, give’em a tent
and some grub, and make sure they go to the polls in January. You
don’t vote, you don’t eat. Bingo Gringo, hundred-percent turnout!"
Deith
beamed, surveying the artillery and planes leveling the city. You
could tell he was proud, a man who likes his work. As he took a
breath to address a new subject, his assistant, a comely DoD analyst,
popped her head out of a nearby tent. "O Fuggie, Fuggie, Wolfie’s
on the satellite phone for you!"
Deith
winked, and turned to go, framed by the pounding dust and fire of
Fallujah behind him.
November
12, 2004
Christopher
Manion [send him mail] is
president of Manion Music,
LLC, which produces copyrighted, royalty-free music collections
for telecommunications media and commercial and hospitality sites
that use background music or music-on-hold. He writes from the Shenandoah
Valley.
Copyright
© Christopher Manion 2004. All Rights reserved.
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