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Chickens in a darkening sky
WorkingForChange ^ | 03.27.03 | Alexander Cockburn - Creators Syndicate

Posted on 03/27/2003 1:43:16 PM PST by Willie Green

For education and discussion only. Not for commercial use.

House-to-house fighting looms;
meanwhile, will world follow U.S. lead in treatment of POWs?

Suddenly the sky is dark with chickens coming home to roost. Start with the amazed discovery of the White House, the Defense Department and the U.S. press corps that nations don't care to be invaded, even if they have been misgoverned by a tyrant for decades. How many Russians died defending the Soviet Union from German invasion after enduring famine and Stalin's terror? This isn't 1991, when Iraqis asked themselves, "Why die for Kuwait?"

Basra? "Military officials," ran a Tuesday European press report, "later admitted that they had vastly underestimated the strength of Iraqi resistance and the loyalty of Basra's population to Saddam." The report quoted a British officer as saying, "There are significant elements in Basra who are hugely loyal to the regime."

Kurdish-held northern Iraq? "Even in Kurdistan," reported the London Independent, also on Tuesday (in the person of my brother, Patrick Cockburn), "where the U.S. is popular and where President Saddam committed some of his worst atrocities, there are flickers of Iraqi patriotism. A Kurdish official, who has devoted years to opposing the government in Baghdad, admitted: "Iraqis won't like to see American soldiers ripping down posters of Saddam Hussein, though they might like to do it themselves. They didn't enjoy watching the Stars and Stripes being raised near Umm Qasr."

And so it will all get much, much nastier. Saddam Hussein, a devoted admirer of Joseph Stalin, must have the Stalingrad parallel in mind. A confident invading German army, extended lines of communication vulnerable to weather and guerrilla attack, and then Stalin's order to the Red Army, "Not another inch of retreat," followed by the savagery of house to house urban fighting.

One doesn't have to parallel the German defeat with one for the U.S. and Britain, or substitute sandstorms and approaching summer heat for snow and the Russian winter, but merely remember what happened to the city of Stalingrad, in which scarcely one brick was left on top of another. The actual fighting component of the invading U.S./U.K. force is not particularly large, because (as anonymous Pentagon officers are now bitterly complaining) Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's preference for Special Forces prevailed over General Tommy Franks' recommendation of a massive army, also because huge peace demonstrations in Turkey lopped off the northern half of the invading pincers.

The temptation to flatten significant portions of Baghdad by B-52 raids will grow sharply if the land force gets seriously stymied.

But perhaps the most grotesque chicken now roosting in the coop came in the form of Rumsfeld's sudden discovery of the Geneva Conventions regarding prisoners of war. When five captured U.S. soldiers were paraded in front of the Iraqi television cameras on Sunday, Rumsfeld immediately complained that "it is against the Geneva Convention to show photographs of prisoners of war in a manner that is humiliating for them."

True. But alas, the United States does not hold the high moral ground in leveling this charge. In the Bush years, it's trodden the Geneva Conventions into the dirt, as Michael Ratner of the Center for Constitutional Rights points out.

In January 2001, the United States released the famous picture of Guantanamo detainees kneeling, shackled and hooded. There was an international uproar, and the Red Cross said the United States may have violated the Conventions by releasing the photo.

No "coercion may be inflicted on prisoners of war to secure from them information of any kind whatsoever." Under conditions of sleep deprivation and bright light, and other techniques used by Israel against Palestinians, several of the prisoners in Camp X-Ray at Guantanamo have tried to kill themselves.

The U.S. government claims that these men are not subject to the Geneva Conventions, as they are not "prisoners of war," but "unlawful combatants." But as George Monbiot of the London Guardian remarks, "The same claim could be made, with rather more justice, by the Iraqis holding the U.S. soldiers who illegally invaded their country. But this redefinition is itself a breach of Article 4 of the third convention, under which people detained as suspected members of a militia (the Taliban) or a volunteer corps (al-Qaida) must be regarded as prisoners of war.

On March 6, American military officials acknowledged that two prisoners captured in Afghanistan in December had died during interrogation at Bagram air base north of Kabul. A spokesman for the air base confirmed that the official cause of death of the two men was "homicide." The men's death certificates showed that one captive died from "blunt force injuries to lower extremities complicating coronary artery disease," while another captive, Mullah Habibullah, 30, suffered from a blood clot in the lung that was exacerbated by a "blunt force injury."

On Nov. 21, 2001, around 8,000 Taliban soldiers and Pashtun civilians surrendered at Konduz to the Northern Alliance commander, General Abdul Rashid Dostum. Jamie Doran's film, "Afghan Massacre: Convoy of Death," records some hundreds, possibly thousands, of the prisoners being loaded into trucks, the doors sealed and the trucks left to stand in the sun for several days. Dostum's men finally machine-gunned the containers. When they arrived at Sheberghan, most of the captives were dead. The U.S. Special Forces running the prison watched the bodies being unloaded. According to Doran, they instructed Dostum's men to "get rid of them before satellite pictures can be taken."

Doran interviewed a Northern Alliance soldier guarding the prison. "I was a witness when an American soldier broke one prisoner's neck. The Americans did whatever they wanted. We had no power to stop them." Another soldier alleged: "They took the prisoners outside and beat them up, and then returned them to the prison. But sometimes they were never returned, and they disappeared." After an investigation, the German newspaper Die Zeit concluded that: "No one doubted that the Americans had taken part."

The third Geneva Convention prohibits "violence to life and person, in particular, murder of all kinds, mutilation, cruel treatment and torture," as well as extra-judicial execution." It is impossible to know whether U.S. violations of the Conventions led to Iraqi non-compliance," Ratner says, "but U.S. compliance would have certainly made its current complaints more credible and less hypocritical. Selective compliance with the law by the U.S. leads to selective compliance by others."


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: alexandercockburn
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1 posted on 03/27/2003 1:43:17 PM PST by Willie Green
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To: Willie Green
Willie, did you call this person's village to find out if their idiot has gone missing?
2 posted on 03/27/2003 1:44:33 PM PST by Poohbah (Crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and hear the lamentations of their women!)
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To: Willie Green; general_re; BlueLancer; Poohbah; Chancellor Palpatine
Not long from now, I expect to see Cockburn in The Greek Conservative.
3 posted on 03/27/2003 1:47:28 PM PST by dighton (Amen-Corner Hatchet Team, Nasty Little Clique)
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To: Willie Green
Cockburn's many oil portraits of Stalin must be covered with drool from the way he obsessively slobbers over his hero.
4 posted on 03/27/2003 1:47:56 PM PST by Argus
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To: Poohbah
No. They'd only deny having ever heard of him.

(But I kinda liked the catchy title, so I posted the article anyway.)

5 posted on 03/27/2003 1:48:29 PM PST by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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To: Willie Green
Cockburn is an America hater.
6 posted on 03/27/2003 1:53:12 PM PST by tomahawk
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To: Poohbah
Feel the love; goose-stepping "populists" from the Right and flag-stomping cretins from the Left get together for a big cuddly jew-bashing, conspiracy theory group hug.

Awwwww. Get a room, you two.

7 posted on 03/27/2003 1:54:38 PM PST by IowaHawk
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To: Willie Green
Sky is dark with chickens. WKRP strikes again.
8 posted on 03/27/2003 1:58:30 PM PST by RightWhale (Theorems link concepts: Proofs establish links)
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To: Willie Green
Stalingrad? This guy doesn't have a clue. Baghdad will not be anything like Stalingrad.
9 posted on 03/27/2003 1:59:15 PM PST by Burkeman1 (i)
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To: RightWhale
Alexander Cockburn: "As God (whom I do not believe in, anyway) is my witness, I thought chickens could fly!"
10 posted on 03/27/2003 1:59:30 PM PST by Poohbah (Crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and hear the lamentations of their women!)
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To: Willie Green
"It is impossible to know whether U.S. violations of the Conventions led to Iraqi non-compliance," Ratner says"

Umm.. so now Iraq executed our soldiers because we provoked them to do it?
It's our fault Iraq is a murderous rogue nation?

Maybe Ratner needs to go there in person.
11 posted on 03/27/2003 1:59:52 PM PST by Darksheare (Nox aeternus en pax.)
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To: tomahawk
Cockburn is an America hater.

Yeah, but with "Chickens in a darkening sky", he does a great takeoff on Grantland Rice:

"Outlined against a blue, gray October sky the Four Horsemen rode again.

"In dramatic lore they are known as famine, pestilence, destruction and death. These are only aliases. Their real names are: Stuhldreher, Miller, Crowley and Layden. They formed the crest of the South Bend cyclone before which another fighting Army team was swept over the precipice at the Polo Grounds this afternoon as 55,000 spectators peered down upon the bewildering panorama spread out upon the green plain below."


12 posted on 03/27/2003 2:00:28 PM PST by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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To: Willie Green
This article is shot through with lies and distortion. The most obvious one is the conflagaration over POWs. Al-Quaeda, as a terrorist organization, is NOT, let me repeat NOT, a governmental entity. How could it then be responsible for adhering to the Geneva conventions? The Geneva conventions, it must be remembered, bind the states who signed them. I don't recall Al-Quaeda or the Taliban signing them, do you? Judging by inference, apparently Iraq DID sign the Geneva conventions, thus they CAN be held accountable to them. Stop the lies already.
13 posted on 03/27/2003 2:06:30 PM PST by =Intervention= (so freaking sick of the lies...)
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To: Willie Green
Saddam Hussein, a devoted admirer of Joseph Stalin,...

Well, isn't that nice? Alex and Saddam have something in common.

14 posted on 03/27/2003 2:08:31 PM PST by Celtjew Libertarian (No more will we pretend that our desire/For liberty is number-cold and has no fire.)
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To: Willie Green
Saddam Hussein, a devoted admirer of Joseph Stalin,...

Well, isn't that nice? Alex and Saddam have something in common.

15 posted on 03/27/2003 2:08:32 PM PST by Celtjew Libertarian (No more will we pretend that our desire/For liberty is number-cold and has no fire.)
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To: =Intervention=
Another few things...This writer lambasts only the United States, but says nothing about the brutal nature of the regimes we seek to clean from the face of the earth. He argues that we should fight with one hand behind our back in order to facilitate our losses. What a coward. Also, I'd like to see his sources. Ten to one he's invented them.
16 posted on 03/27/2003 2:14:15 PM PST by =Intervention= (so freaking sick of the lies...)
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To: Willie Green
This guy doesn't know his history. The Ukrainians welcomed the Nazis as liberators until they started abusing the population. There were Ukrainian units in the SS and a large Ukrainian army fought alongside the Nazis in the WWII.

Lousy analogy.
17 posted on 03/27/2003 2:21:50 PM PST by Keith
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To: Burkeman1
Differences with Stalingrad: 1) weather is "better"; 2) no outside source of supply such as the US; 3) German line back to source supply products was 2000 miles long - ours is 300 miles; 4) the generals are (mostly) in charge rather than a raving lunatic in Berlin; 5) Hitler intended to use Russians as slaves.
18 posted on 03/27/2003 2:26:39 PM PST by laconic
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To: Willie Green
For a brief, fleeting moment I thought Alexander Cocklover was going to make sense.

Then I read the first paragraph.

19 posted on 03/27/2003 2:39:47 PM PST by Cable225
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To: Burkeman1
The pro-Saddam, anti-West fifth columnists like Cockburn are smoking heavy dope. For one thing the Russians were reinforced daily and had over a million more soldiers than the Germans at their command. The Germans were not able to be resupplied or reinforced in the numbers they needed and did not have the vast technical and military superiority that the coalition forces have. By ourselves we could do it without great problems. With the Brits and other wonderful allies with us, Hussein doesn't stand the chance of a snowball in Hell where he will be going very shortly. It's just a matter of time.
20 posted on 03/27/2003 3:36:11 PM PST by driftless ( For life-long happiness, learn how to play the accordion.)
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