Excerpt of The Departure by Michael Parker

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Wednesday, September 22, 2004

The information in Juan Cole's article should be read from the housetops of America.  One cannot be more descriptive than this.  Bravo Juan Cole!  Here are a few excerpts. You should read the whole thing, though, really you should....

President Bush said Tuesday that the Iraqis are refuting the pessimists and implied that things are improving in that country.

What would America look like if it were in Iraq's current situation? The population of the US is over 11 times that of Iraq, so a lot of statistics would have to be multiplied by that number.

Thus, violence killed 300 Iraqis last week, the equivalent proportionately of 3,300 Americans. What if 3,300 Americans had died in car bombings, grenade and rocket attacks, machine gun spray, and aerial bombardment in the last week? That is a number greater than the deaths on September 11, and if America were Iraq, it would be an ongoing, weekly or monthly toll.

And what if those deaths occurred all over the country, including in the capital of Washington, DC, but mainly above the Mason Dixon line, in Boston, Minneapolis, Salt Lake City, and San Francisco?

What if the grounds of the White House and the government buildings near the Mall were constantly taking mortar fire? What if almost nobody in the State Department at Foggy Bottom, the White House, or the Pentagon dared venture out of their buildings, and considered it dangerous to go over to Crystal City or Alexandria?

What if all the reporters for all the major television and print media were trapped in five-star hotels in Washington, DC and New York, unable to move more than a few blocks safely, and dependent on stringers to know what was happening in Oklahoma City and St. Louis? What if the only time they ventured into the Midwest was if they could be embedded in Army or National Guard units?

There are estimated to be some 25,000 guerrillas in Iraq engaged in concerted acts of violence. What if there were private armies totalling 275,000 men, armed with machine guns, assault rifles (legal again!), rocket-propelled grenades, and mortar launchers, hiding out in dangerous urban areas of cities all over the country? What if they completely controlled Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Salt Lake City, Las Vegas, Denver and Omaha, such that local police and Federal troops could not go into those cities?

What if, during the past year, the Secretary of State (Aqilah Hashemi), the President (Izzedine Salim), and the Attorney General (Muhammad Baqir al-Hakim) had all been assassinated?

.....What if no one had electricity for much more than 10 hours a day, and often less? What if it went off at unpredictable times, causing factories to grind to a halt and air conditioning to fail in the middle of the summer in Houston and Miami? What if the Alaska pipeline were bombed and disabled at least monthly? What if unemployment hovered around 40%?

.....What if municipal elections were cancelled and cliques close to the new "president" quietly installed in the statehouses as "governors?" What if several of these governors (especially of Montana and Wyoming) were assassinated soon after taking office or resigned when their children were taken hostage by guerrillas?

What if the leader of the European Union maintained that the citizens of the United States are, under these conditions, refuting pessimism and that freedom and democracy are just around the corner?


8:25:35 PM   | COMMENT [] | TRACKBACK []

Jason Burke, the Chief Reporter, at The Observer reports:

The British Army is to start pulling troops out of Iraq next month despite the deteriorating security situation in much of the country, The Observer has learnt.

The main British combat force in Iraq, about 5,000-strong, will be reduced by around a third by the end of October during a routine rotation of units.

The news came amid another day of mayhem in Iraq, which saw a suicide bomber kill at least 23 people and injure 53 in the northern city of Kirkuk. The victims were queueing to join Iraq's National Guard.

More than 200 people were killed last week in one of the bloodiest weeks since last year's invasion, strengthening impressions that the country is spinning out of control.....

News of the troop withdrawal comes at a difficult time for Blair, with the publication yesterday of leaked documents suggesting that he was warned a year before the invasion that it could prompt a meltdown.....

In another embarrassment for the Prime Minister, a draft report from the Iraqi Survey Group, set up to investigate Saddam Hussein's weapons programme, has concluded that the former dictator's only chemical or biological armament was a small amount of poison for use in political killings.

I wonder if this pull-back of about one-third of their infantry is due to the pressure put on Blair the past couple of days?  I don't know much about military manuevers or strategy. Right now, it seems that Iraq needs more troops to stabilize the increasing numbers of insurgent attacks, not less.  But maybe the problem is the lack of strategy and control.  So it doesn't matter how many troops you have stationed there.   


8:13:19 PM   | COMMENT [] | TRACKBACK []

As reports were surfacing late yesterday afternoon about Hensley's decapitation, my friend asked me if I had heard the fact that the morning these men were kidnapped, that their body guards didn't show up. I had not heard that. I found this fact reported by the AFP back on September 19. This is the excerpt:

Americans Jack Hensley and Eugene "Jack" Armstrong and British engineer Kenneth Bigley were snatched from their house in Baghdad's upscale Mansour district by gunmen on Thursday.

Patty Hensley said she and her husband had had "our usual daily conversation of how are things going for you, how are things going for me" about 45 minutes before the abduction.

Accustomed to tension and threats that came and went, the three sensed something wrong in the days before they were taken.

"They were provided with round-the-clock guards at their home, Iraqi guards who were armed, and the guards had stopped showing up for work or showed up for work and had some excuse as to why they couldn't stay.

"The morning they were abducted there was no guard as there should have been," she said.

"Everybody was working on it, trying to figure out what's wrong and what do we need to do, and before they had an opportunity, this happened."

I have a few questions.

Who hired the Iraqi security guards? Were these guards employed by the same private Gulf-based equipment firm that Hensley, Armstrong, and Bigley worked for? Or did their employer hire contract security guards from a security-for-hire service? What were the names of the hired guards? What is being done to find them? Did one or all of them have ties to the terrorist group who kidnapped them?

The company they worked for failed in some regard to check the background and credentials of these guards. And the company should be held completely liable for the tragic deaths of their employees.


7:53:37 PM   | COMMENT [] | TRACKBACK []

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