Home > Trophy Hunting in Iraq

Trophy Hunting in Iraq

by Open-Publishing - Sunday 5 December 2004
3 comments

Wars and conflicts International

December 04, 2004
Trophy Hunting?

Dahr Jamail

Yesterday, before the usual morning gunfire in
the streets that has become my morning alarm clock, Abu Talat phoned me. There
is very heavy fighting over in al-Adhamiya. Two giant explosions occurred around
6:15 a.m., followed by mortar blasts, then constant, heavy gun battles that
went on into late morning.

The Hamid al-Alwan mosque, a small Shia mosque in the predominantly Sunni area
of Adhamiya had been hit with a car bomb.

Witnesses reported that the car had been left there at 6 a.m., and detonated
remotely.

After the first blast, people in nearby homes, hearing the screaming of the
wounded, ran outside to help. As a group formed around the wreckage, a secondary,
much larger explosion went off. In the end, 14 were killed, 19 wounded.

Smoldering vehicles, including a destroyed
minibus
, lay about the street in front of the damaged
mosque
. Pools
of blood
and body parts lay strewn about the scene. Nearby
homes were damaged
from the blast as well.

Residents
took it upon themselves to evacuate most of the bodies and wounded to nearby
al-Numan hospital, because ambulances failed to arrive until 45 minutes after
the blast.

The interesting detail is that while U.S. military are usually some of the
first to arrive on the scene at bombings, they never showed up for this one.
The Iraqi National Guard, who have a base in the ex-presidential palace less
than one kilometer from the bombing, never showed up, either.

The Iraqi Police, however, did show up at the scene. Most of them were wearing
facemasks to protect their identity (this is Adhamiya) ... but one man, a muscular,
arrogant, loud-spoken policeman, unmasked, was yelling, "Of course this
happened, because this is a Shia mosque! The Sunni hate the Shia!"

Members of the crowd perceived his actions as deliberately provocative and
inflammatory.

Aisha Dulaimy, a resident of al-Adhamiya, said, "The reason for this car
bomb is the Americans want to cause a split between the Shia and Sunni. But
there has never been fighting between the Shia and Sunni in the history of Iraq.
They want to make a struggle between us, but it will never work. They tried
this before and people responded by making demonstrations together against the
occupiers. So they will never make it. We are living as brothers - Shia and
Sunni. There is no difference because we all live in the same home, which is
Iraq."

She references an attack last winter in the large Shia mosque across the river
in the Khadamiya district, which was followed nearly immediately by an attack
on a Sunni mosque in Adhamiya. The attacks were perceived by both residents
and religious leaders as attempts to divide the religious sects, so they held
mass demonstrations together, Shia and Sunni, in a show of solidarity. They
also prayed in one another’s mosques.

The nearly immediate reaction from the bombing yesterday was an intense mortar
barrage on the nearby U.S. military base followed by fierce clashes in Adhamiya.

Military helicopters and fighter jets roared overhead, scaring many people
who feared they would be bombed.

A 16-year-old resident of al-Adhamiya, Ahmed al-Dulaimey, said, "The U.S.
jets are so loud, only flying 50 meters above our homes. They dropped three
groups of many flares. When I saw them, I ran to my house because I was afraid
they would bomb us."

In other news, Thursday the director of Fallujah General Hospital was shot
and wounded by soldiers while he and two other doctors attempted to enter Fallujah
in an ambulance in order to provide aid to families trapped there. They had
gone into the city after having been granted permission by the military and
Ministry of Health.

A friend of mine here who is a doctor told me that recently the Ministry of
Health issued a directive instructing doctors not to talk to any media, particularly
about patients who are wounded by the military.

Salam stayed the night last night since we worked late ... hence we slept late
today. Until 9:30 anyhow, when a huge blast nearby shook the hotel and rattled
windows. I sat up quickly in bed, looked at him over on the couch, and he said,
"Good morning, Dahr."

I said, "Morning, man, who needs coffee," as I dressed and grabbed
my camera and ran to the roof of a nearby hotel to locate the blast. A building
blocked the exact locale, but the plume
of black smoke
rose above it, just over near the "green zone."
Interesting to have the photo, then 10 minutes later in my hotel see it replicated
on the TV
.

It was a police station that was bombed. Six police dead, at least 60 cops
and civilians wounded.

Photos dated from May 2003 have been shown all over al-Jazeera today showing
Navy Seals torturing Iraqis. Up close shots of men with bloodied mouths with
guns held to their heads, etc. You know the drill by now.

They were put on the net by the wife of a soldier who’d returned from Iraq.

John Hutson, a retired rear admiral who served as Navy judge advocate general
from 1997 to 2000, said the photos suggested possible Geneva Convention violations,
as international law prohibits souvenir photos of prisoners of war.

Hutson said, "It’s pretty obvious that these pictures were taken largely
as war trophies."

Not too surprising, however, because there are also eyewitness reports now
from refugees that some soldiers in Fallujah were tying the dead bodies of resistance
fighters to tanks and driving around with their "trophies."

http://dahrjamailiraq.com/weblog/archives/dispatches/000148.php

Forum posts

  • "Aisha Dulaimy, a resident of al-Adhamiya, said, "The reason for this car bomb is the Americans want to cause a split between the Shia and Sunni. But there has never been fighting between the Shia and Sunni in the history of Iraq. They want to make a struggle between us, but it will never work. They tried this before and people responded by making demonstrations together against the occupiers. So they will never make it. We are living as brothers - Shia and Sunni. There is no difference because we all live in the same home, which is Iraq."

    She references an attack last winter in the large Shia mosque across the river in the Khadamiya district, which was followed nearly immediately by an attack on a Sunni mosque in Adhamiya. The attacks were perceived by both residents and religious leaders as attempts to divide the religious sects, so they held mass demonstrations together, Shia and Sunni, in a show of solidarity. They also prayed in one another’s mosques."

    as Iraq falls apart and there is no hope of salvaging it, Israel would like to split it into three smaller states that will pose no threat. the ’civil war’ that we’ve been told is sure to happen if we ’cut and run’ is another lie- another fabrication for the benefit of Israel.

    • If there was a God, he would make one of Israel’s nuclear bombs go off and create a mini armageddon there. It would solve the mid east problems once and for all...let us pray it happens.

    • Israel needs to be careful with its racist genocidal policies. Ok it may get $5bn from the USA every year for its state of art killing machinery, but it’s outnumbered and surrounded by brave arabs, who, at the moment have traitorous governments in the pockets of US zionists. This will not always be the case, and for Israel as a state to survive,they need to moderate their gratuitous killings. The Israeli powers that be owe this to their children , otherwise there will be a definite ’final solution’ in years to come.