The enemy within
Fallujah, Iraq - I finally got into Fallujah today. It's worth saying first what the story
there is not. U.S. forces have not wantonly destroyed a living city as did the
Serbs in Sarajevo (Bosnia in the '90s) or the Russians in Grozny (Chechnya
since 1997). The scale of destruction in Fallujah is vastly less.
And when the
U.S. authorities in Iraq realized that it would require a Grozny-style
destruction of Fallujah to subdue it, they backed off and found an alternative path.
They chose a prominent Fallujah military man -- a general under Saddam Hussein
-- to try to restore calm there.
Another thing the U.S. siege of Fallujah is not: it is not the simple
contest for morality that official U.S. rhetoric tends to portray. On April 1,
after anti-U.S. guerrillas killed four American security guards and a Fallujah
mob mutilated their bodies, the U.S. administrator for Iraq, Paul Bremer,
described Fallujah as "a dramatic example of the ongoing struggle between human
dignity and barbarism."
As seen today, Fallujah was instead a dramatic example of war and the
human excesses it requires. Hundreds of people, very many of them civilians, are
buried in a soccer field downtown, or in their front yards or under rubble of
their homes. Of 13 people who died in the first week of the siege at the clinic
of Dr. Talab Janabi, about half were automatically innocents (two babies,
four elderly).
At least some of the people fighting U.S. troops in Fallujah were
defending not barbarism, but their homes and families from what they saw as barbarism.
The most consistent defenders of human dignity were likely the medical
teams of the city's heroic hospital director, Dr. Rafa Chiad. When the Marines'
front line cut off the city's access to its main hospital, Chiad crossed into
the combat zone to set up makeshift clinics, and a surgery ward in mosques and
offices around the city. Chiad criticized both the Marines and guerrillas for
endangering civilians.
I met Chiad in a clamorous, crowded clinic office where a television was
tuned to Al-Arabiya, one of the main Arabic-language satellite TV channels.
Suddenly the room was struck silent. The TV had begun showing the now-infamous
images of U.S. soldiers abusing Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison (just east
of Fallujah). Chiad's doctors and volunteer medical workers -- survivors of a
real battle for human dignity -- stared in shock at the pictures.
In the coming days, hopefully, we'll learn details about the soldiers of
the 372nd MP Company and how these presumably ordinary folks from around
Cumberland, Maryland slipped into the kind of barbarism that our government declares
is the exclusive attribute of our opponents. And we'll learn more about how
consistently we were on the side of human dignity in our siege of Fallujah.
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