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Massacre
of Civilians Was Inevitable
by
Eric Margolis
by Eric Margolis
Guantanamo,
Abu Ghraib, and now a new name on the roster of shame, Haditha.
Kilo Company,
3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment was patrolling the Iraqi town
of Haditha last November when a roadside bomb killed one of its
members. Kilo's men allegedly burst into the nearest house and gunned
down 24 men, women and children cowering inside.
Accused of
initially trying to cover up this killing (and other civilian killings
in Iraq), the military last month began conducting a criminal investigation.
Many Americans
are outraged and are demanding the Marines involved and superior
officers face prosecution.
The U.S. military
responded with sensitivity sessions about "core values."
What a sick joke. Anyone who needs such instruction belongs in jail,
not the armed forces.
If Kilo Company's
men did murder 24 civilians, they must face trial for murder, and
their superior officers for covering it up. But the soldiers' punishment
should be mitigated by the fact they were sent into a dirty guerilla
war fought in the middle of a largely hostile civilian population
in which such atrocities are inevitable.
Iraq and the
campaign in Afghanistan are just like typical 20th-century colonial
guerilla wars. Faced with frequent sniping, mines, ambushes and
treachery by supposed local "allies," even the best-trained
occupation armies soon became brutalized, sadistic, cynical, then
demoralized.
I have witnessed
this same pattern in every guerilla war I covered or observed: Algeria,
Vietnam, Kashmir, Angola, Namibia, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Peru,
Chechnya, Kurdistan, South Africa, Kosovo and the Palestinian territories.
Villages that
sheltered rebels were destroyed, hostages shot. Civilians quickly
became identified with the enemy and considered fair game for increasingly
trigger-happy troops.
Murderous reprisals
occur in all guerilla wars. German execution of French villagers
in reprisals for Resistance ambushes were branded war crimes. When
U.S. troops destroyed Vietnamese villages, or levelled a third of
the Iraqi city of Fallujah to intimidate the resistance, it was
termed "collateral damage."
Any army sent
into a dirty guerilla war like Iraq or Afghanistan can be expected
to become corrupted and slaughter civilians. The culture of mass
reprisals, gratuitous killing, and torture will seep back into the
higher military command structure, and then into the domestic security
forces.
It seems just,
but also unfair, to prosecute Kilo company when other U.S. forces
have killed an estimated 38,000 Iraqi civilians (some say up to
100,000), wrecked much of what once was the Arab world's most advanced
country, and hold more than 20,000 prisoners more than Saddam
Hussein.
The
simple answer is that the U.S. Army and Marines should never have
been sent to wage a neo-colonial war of pacification in Iraq
or Afghanistan. The longer U.S. forces stay there, the more they
will become brutalized, undisciplined, and hated. Canadian forces
in Afghanistan will inevitably face the same problems.
U.S.
forces are trying to avoid killing civilians. But bombing and shelling,
the primary cause of civilian deaths, are too often used to cow
villages and tribes, or punish enemy ambushes. The rule: Bomb or
shoot or shell first, check later. Dead civilians are generally
labelled "suspected Iraqi terrorists."
The real blame
for Haditha, of course, belongs to an administration that plunged
the U.S. into an unnecessary, no-win war in Iraq, and with Pentagon
brass. And with those senior Washington officials who spit on the
Geneva Conventions and laws of war and telegraphed their contempt
right down the line.
June
19, 2006
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail], contributing foreign editor for Sun National Media
Canada, is the author of War
at the Top of the World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2006 Eric Margolis
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