| Home |
| Firebombing Falluja By Mike Whitney Al-Jazeerah, December 1, 2004 The United States is using napalm in Falluja. So far, the military has denied the allegations, but the proof is mounting. On Nov. 28 The Daily Mirror’s political editor, Paul Gilfeather filed a report stating: “US troops are secretly using outlawed napalm gas to wipe out remaining insurgents in and around Fallujah. News that President George W. Bush has sanctioned the use of napalm, a deadly cocktail of polystyrene and jet fuel banned by the United Nations in 1980, will stun governments around the world.” For over a week rumors have
circulated in the Arab press that both napalm and other chemical weapons
were used mainly in the Jolan district of Falluja, a major area of the
fighting. Now, despite a US media blackout, more evidence is leaking out
and causing a furor in the British Parliament. The US has already admitted
that it used napalm during the siege of Baghdad. The truth was reluctantly
confirmed by the Pentagon after news reports corroborated the evidence.
The military has tried to conceal the truth by saying that there is a
distinction between its new weapon and “traditional napalm”.
The “improved” product carries the Pentagon moniker “Mark
77 firebombs” and uses jet fuel to “decrease environmental
damage”. The fact that military planner’s even considered
“environmental damage” while developing the tools for incinerating
human beings, gives us some Independent journalists have
been reporting for some time now that the US has been using banned weapons
in Falluja. Iraqi doctors have noted that many of the bodies they have
examined have been “swollen, yellowish and have no smell.”
Asia Times online has reported that “Americans used chemical weapons
in the bombing of Jolan, ash-Shuhada and al-Jubayl neighborhoods. They
also say the neighborhoods were showered with cluster bombs”; an
The charges of “war crimes” and use of banned weapons comes on the heels of a confidential report just released by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). The report confirms that the US military has intentionally used psychological and sometimes physical coercion "tantamount to torture" on prisoners at Guantánamo Bay. The report concludes that the
military has developed a system to break the will of prisoners through
"humiliating acts, solitary confinement, temperature extremes, use
of forced positions….The construction of such a system, whose stated
purpose is the production of intelligence, cannot be The Bush Administration is
trying to anticipate the public reaction to this new wave of allegations
and act accordingly.) The rationale for eschewing the Geneva Conventions
that was developed at the highest levels of the Bush Administration (and
which was identified by the exposing of secret memorandum) can now be
more easily understood by the ICRC report. The activities at Guantanamo
Bay prove beyond a doubt that the administration will not comply with
even minimal standards of decency or humanitarian law. The firebombing
in Falluja shows that they won’t be constrained by international
rules prohibiting the use of banned weapons. With each desperate act,
a portrait of the administration as a reckless, criminal enterprise is
taking shape. Their inclination to use “whatever |