Killing
Zarqawi’s Daughter
by
Dean Lawrence R. Velvel
by Dean Lawrence R. Velvel
There is an
aspect of the killing of Zarqawi about which I have read no comment
whatever, although the bare facts have been reported, if sometimes
conflictingly. The absence of any comment, it seems to me, speaks
volumes about what the country has become.
Zarqawi, as
all know, was not the only one killed when two 500-pound bombs were
dropped on the safe house. Two other men were killed there, two
women were also, and though the military spokesman at first denied
it (read lied about it), so was a small child who is now said to
have been five or six years old. There have been some Iraqi reports
that one of the women and the child, a girl, were Zarqawi’s wife
and daughter. There have been other reports that they may have been
former tenants or something. Who knows who they were at this point?
All we can know with relative certainty now is that there were two
women and a small girl, as well as Zarqawi, and two other men, one
of whom was his spiritual adviser, whom we tracked to the house.
Whether the
third man was an Al Qaeda operative, and whether the two women were
operatives or bystanders (regardless of whether one was Zarqawi’s
wife), are unknown to the American public. One thing we can be certain
of, though, is that the five or six year old child was not
an Al Qaeda operative. She, at least, was beyond dispute an innocent.
Now, at the
somewhat superficial level, this raises the obvious question. Why
did we bomb the house, thereby insuring the death of all inside?
(We used bombs so powerful that they created huge craters, which
the military promptly had filled in by bulldozers, no doubt to hide
the power of the explosives that were used. Anyone who has ever
seen bomb craters, though, as I did in North Viet Nam, can just
imagine what the whole deal must have looked like (not to mention
the pictures that have been shown).) Why didn’t we surround it,
attack it, rush it, etc., instead of blowing it to smithereens with
two 500-pound bombs, with the certainty of killing all inside.
Now, speaking
frankly, given the limited information currently in my possession,
I want to concede up front that, had it been me making the decision,
instead of it being made by the officers who actually were on the
ground and by other officers who were back at various headquarters
monitoring the situation by video and either radio or telephone,
I probably would have made the same decision. So one claims no superior
morality here, even if one decision rather than another would
have been superior morality, which can be questioned in light of
the desirability of insuring Zarqawi’s death. But the fact that
one might have made the same, apparently time-pressured decision,
does not mean that the questions will go away.
So why did
we bomb the house instead of forcing entry? Well, a couple of reasons
apparently have been given by Caldwell, who is apparently something
of a liar – or, at minimum, is willing to make ex cathedra statements
to the press even when he has no idea what the truth is – and by
that ignorant murderous jerk, Rumsfeld. The reasons include a claimed
fear that Zarqawi might again get away – he is claimed to have had
a 360 degree possibility of retreat from the house – and an unwillingness
to risk American lives against what could turn out to be a heavily
defended target. And I’ll add yet another reason. Maybe those inside
would all, or mostly, have been killed in a heavy firefight anyway
(although this certainly is not as likely as that they would all
be killed in the explosions of two 500-pound bombs).
These claimed
or imaginable reasons raise other questions, however. Were
there American and/or Iraqi troops surrounding the house, thus making
an escape by Zarqawi unlikely at least during daylight? Bystanders
speak of what would seem to be lots of commandos rappelling down
from helicopters early-on, while sometimes other reports seem to
indicate that only a few Americans were on the scene initially though
many more arrived one or two hours later. How many Iraqi troops
were there and when did they get there? This is unclear. And what
did we know about who was in the house, and did we care who was
in it?
The military
hasn’t said whether we knew who was in it, and no doubt it will
refuse to say so, claiming this would compromise its intelligence
sources and methods – such claims, and secrecy, are, after all,
the policy about everything in this Administration. But it seems
to me that we very likely knew who was in it, or could have
known if we had wanted to know. The military knew where Zarqawi
was not just because it tracked his spiritual adviser, but also
because it, or the Jordanian intelligence service with which it
was working, had "turned" someone who was close to Zarqawi.
(Given the 25 million dollar reward, this guy was not exactly Claus
von Stauffenberg.) In fact, the informant conceivably was in the
one out of three GMC trucks which villagers saw drive up to the
safe house prior to the attack, with the one then driving away.
But whether the informant was in the truck which drove away or was
elsewhere, if he was personally close enough to Zarqawi to know
exactly where he was in all of Iraq, it seems pretty reasonable
to think it likely that he also knew who else was in the safe house
with Zarqawi. Did he tell our military who was there? Did he lie
about it to make a bombing more likely and possibly increase the
chance of obtaining 25 million bucks? Did our military ask him who
else was there? Did our military care who else was there?
If you ask
for my guess, it’s dollars to doughnuts that our military didn’t
care who else was in the house. Special Forces had been trying to
track down Zarqawi for months, he had narrowly escaped them a few
times, they were frustrated about all this, he was responsible for
killing hundreds, maybe thousands, of people, they didn’t want him
to have any chance of escape, they didn’t want Americans to die
in the process of trying to capture or kill him. Put it all together
and it seems likely that they didn’t give a damn who else was in
the house and would have bombed it, and rationalized the bombing
of it, even if someone had told them there were five kids in there.
Would they have drawn the line at ten kids? At twenty? At fifty?
Who knows? Is it mere fortuity rather than mindset that caused five
villagers, including some small kids, to be killed by an American
grenade in a raid on a nearby village shortly afterwards? That has
caused the killings of thousands of civilians, including kids, in
bombing raids and by American shelling? That created Haditha – just
as we had My Lai and Tiger Force in Nam, mass murder in Korea, and
wholesale slaughter in the Philippines?
Now, as said,
the question of why we bombed the house is, in terms of the immediate
event, pretty superficial, not hard to answer. And, as I conceded,
I would probably have given the same order had it been me giving
orders instead of the guys who actually did so. But the deeper question
raised by all this is: what kind of country have we now become?
– or perhaps, in light of our history, going back to slaughters
of Indians, what kind of country have we long been? We did slaughter
Indian women and children on many occasions, for which I know of
no excuse. We did slaughter Filipinos – ditto. We engaged in mass
terror bombings of Germany and Japan, but at least one can say,
and I personally believe, that in WWII we faced an evil so terrible,
one which the civilian populations had put into power and/or in
which they were complicit, that the bombing was desirable as an
object lesion to those countries never again to attempt war and
conquest – a lesson we administered but did not learn. There was
no excuse for our slaughter of civilians in Korea nor for our wholesale
killings of them in Nam. And one is truly hard pressed to understand
any good reason for the massive killing of civilians – old people,
women, children – that we have perpetrated in Iraq. To us, wholly
immorally, and even more so to the moral degenerates at the top
of our government, all these people are simply collateral damage,
like the little girl in the safe house, who may or may not have
been Zarqawi’s daughter.
The fact that
the death of that little girl has evoked no comment whatever in
the American mass media (at least not so far as I know) speaks to
what this country has become. It also brings home another point.
In this era of modern war, where more civilians are killed than
military personnel (as occurred in World War II), it is morally
crucial to have unassailable reasons to go to war, as in World War
II. Otherwise, we are inevitably condemning thousands of innocents
to death. Such inevitable condemnation is the morally degenerate
decision that was made by Bush, Cheney, Wolfowitz and their ilk.
Any argument that they thought it would be a short war is no excuse.
Such argument is merely stupid because it is both common and commonly
wrong.
One last point
inherent in killing the little girl who may or may not have been
Zarqawi’s daughter. It is about the question of courage. I suppose
one has to expect that a country whose moral reasoning is as screwed
up as ours would get the question of courage all wrong too. Bill
Maher lost his TV show for saying that the suicides who flew planes
into the Twin Towers on 9/11 had courage. They had, after all, gone
to their certain deaths. By any reasonable standard, Maher
was right (notwithstanding 100 virgins and all that stuff). But
it didn’t fit what Americans wanted to think, so Americans insisted
that they be called cowards. But our troops in Iraq are called courageous.
I generally agree with calling our troops courageous, since they
run horrid risks. But is it in fact courage when we avoid risk by
calling down bombs – from planes piloted by men who themselves run
no risk – to destroy a house and its occupants, rather than run
the risk to men on the ground of attacking the house on foot? It
is smart to call down bombs, from the standpoint of protecting our
troops. I would have done it myself. But is it courage? Especially
is it courage if we know there are, or suspect there could be, innocent
adults or even children inside? Maybe this is thought to be courage
by cowardly moral degenerates like Bush and Cheney, who ran from
war during Nam yet now blithely send other people’s families off
to war, though not their own. But it is hard to believe it would
be considered courage on any objective basis, or by men who in other
wars have won medals by such heroism as charging machine gun nests
or jumping on hand grenades to protect their buddies.
June
16,
2006
Dean Lawrence R. Velvel [send
him mail] is an honors graduate of the University of Michigan
Law School, has practiced law in the public and private sectors,
and been a law professor. He is the author of the quartet Thine
Alabaster Cities Gleam. The books in the quartet are entitled:
Misfits
In America, Trail
of Tears, The
Hopes and Fears of Future Years: Loss and Creation, and The
Hopes and Fears of Future Years: Defeat and Victory. Visit his
blog.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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