Shocking video you didn’t see

A must-read article by Jason Vest: On-the-ground-reality TV: Shocking footage of US military conduct in Iraq is available through major news services, yet the American public seldom sees what reporters see

Here’s an excerpt:

In a yet-to-be-released documentary, a top international investigative reporter offers a tentative explanation for both forms of derailment. On March 14 — almost six weeks before 60 Minutes II aired its Abu Ghraib story — the Australian NineNetwork’s Sunday newsmagazine program aired a scaled-down version of Iraq — On the Brink, reported by Ross Coulthart, a journalist whose award-winning investigations have spanned rough-and-tumble assignments in East Timor and Afghanistan to seminal intelligence and public-corruption investigations in the US and Australia. Indirectly, Coulthart raises serious questions about American media self-censorship — something journalists have been wrestling with since the first Gulf War. The film also raises the possibility that, then as now, such self-censorship may have helped the military cover up Iraqi wartime deaths. (A 15-minute trailer for Iraq — On the Brink can be seen at www.journeyman.tv/?lid=14772. Latest RealPlayer required. American audiences may get to see snippets of the documentary in Michael Moore’s award-winning Fahrenheit 9/11, depending on how it’s released.)
[…]
The soldiers don’t exactly approach with stealth. They kick open a gate to the house’s yard. What happens next, as Coulthart explained in an interview with the Phoenix, illustrates a perilous gap in American and Iraqi cultural understanding. “First, you have to understand that guns are ubiquitous in Iraq — most people have them, and it’s very common for them to shoot them in the air all the time for any number of reasons — from celebrations to anger to whatever,” he says. “Burglary has become very common in the past year, and oftentimes, if people hear something outside their homes at night, they’ll fire a shot or two into the air to scare burglars away. Now, you could just go up to a house, like other soldiers do, and just knock on the door. But some treat these missions like full-fledged combat operations and start kicking things in with guns drawn, and then you get what happens next.”

Coulthart’s voiceover continues: “The officer’s son — thinking the soldiers are thieves — goes to the roof of the house and fires into the air to scare them away.” The response from US soldiers: “We’ve got a shooter on the roof!” followed by a hail of bullets loosed at the house.

The next shot — of film, that is — shows Abbas, a clearly unarmed, middle-aged, balding man in pajamas, hands above his head, trembling as he stands across from at least a half-dozen US soldiers whose M-16s are trained on him. “Inside the house, the officer surrenders, but he doesn’t understand what the Americans are saying — and they don’t have a translator,” Coulthart explains. Abbas repeats the only English he appears to know — “Welcome! Welcome!” — over and over again, keeping his hands far above his head as the Fourth Infantry Division soldiers handle the situation in a way almost exactly the opposite of how the Third Cav troops acted in similar circumstances. The Fourth Infantry soldiers’ manner foreshadows the images at Abu Ghraib that the world would see months later.

“Want me to shoot him in the leg?” one soldier yells. “I might shoot you!” another growls at Abbas. As Abbas stands motionless in the doorway between his kitchen and the next room, one soldier shouts, “He’s trying to draw us in there!” Another solider half mutters, half yells, “I don’t give a shit, I’m gonna shoot, I’m gonna shoot, I’m gonna shoot!” while another hollers, “I can shoot him in the leg!”

“Get the fuck over here, get the fuck over here,” shouts another, while the previous soldier repeats his desire to shoot Abbas in the leg, adding that someone should also “shoot him in the foot.”

Abbas steps away from the doorway and moves his back to the wall. “The Iraqi officer, thinking he’s about to die,” Coulthart’s voiceover resumes, “can now be heard praying.” The American response is far from ecumenical, with one soldier yelling, “Who the fuck are you talking to? Who the fuck are you talking to? Shut the fuck up! Shut the fuck up!” The soldier then grabs the man’s pajama top and hurls him across the room into the hands of another soldier, who in turn hurls him into a chair that goes flying as the Iraqi sprawls onto the floor. One soldier begins to kick Abbas, who, though on his back, has his hands in the air again, repeating “Welcome! Welcome!” Three soldiers put their gun barrels in his face, with one solider yelling repeatedly, “Shoot him!” Another asks, “Who’s shooting?” when he hears gunfire from the roof, and then yells, “Bullshit” at the prone Abbas, who continues to repeat, “Welcome!”

The next sequence shows the capture of Abbas’s adult son, who had shot the gun off on the roof; as he’s being restrained, a soldier’s voice barks menacingly, “Take the camera off him.” The film then resumes with a shot of two women — apparently Abbas’s wife and daughter — kneeling on the ground at gunpoint, their hands on their heads, their faces pictures of anger and humiliation.abbasarrest

The final shot shows the former general. Though fleeting, it is, perhaps, the most disturbing sequence of the film, given that in his previous appearance Abbas was terrified but physically unharmed. Now, his arms are restrained behind his back. His face is battered and bruised. His left eye is beginning to swell shut. The front of his shirt is stained with blood, and a stream of snot and blood dangles from his left nostril.

“No one here was killed,” Coulthart’s voice resumes. “But it’s raids like this that can only fuel the resentment against Coalition forces.”

Speaking with the Phoenix from Australia, Coulthart doesn’t entirely fault the soldiers for their initial reaction to gunfire from the roof: “One could reasonably, though incorrectly, conclude that one was being fired on, and it makes perfect sense to fire back if that’s what you think.” But, he says, it again raises the question of who gave the order for the squad to apprehend the general in the way it did — especially without a translator — given the obvious potential for creating an unnecessarily inflammatory situation. “People don’t seem to realize the incalculable damage something like this causes,” he says. “You can see on the face of the young woman that her heart and mind are gone forever to the Americans. When we first saw this footage, the first reaction of our Iraqi fixers was absolute anger — I can only begin to guess what the reaction is to the scenes from Abu Ghraib.”

Too much freedom is bad

Brian Doherty posts on the Reason Hit & Run blog that the US troops in Iraq are barred from Russ Kick’s Memory Hole site.

Check out the first response by Kevin Carson:

Only makes sense. After all, they’re over there “fighting for our freedoms.” Stands to reason they can’t be allowed to read just anything they want–they might get the wrong ideas.

This is a war for freedom, that could last forever. Freedom is a luxury we can’t afford until it’s over.

Which reminds me of an insightful Medium Lobster post on Fafblog!:

Recently a few distressed voices in the wilderness have been raised in alarm at the newest, darkest, and most dangerous threat to America’s success in the war on terror: the media. Morton Kondracke recently pointed out that the media “is in danger of talking the United States into defeat in Iraq. And the results would be catastrophic.” He goes on to pin the West’s Iraq problems squarely where they belong: on the media’s fixation with the Abu Ghraib scandal. How astute, Mr Kondracke! For it was in fact the press’s obsession with military torture that allowed the the Shiite and Sunni insurgencies to claim whole cities from the American occupation.

But what to do about this pernicious enemy within? Analytical wunderkind and concerned lover of law Glenn Reynolds muses, “Freedom of the press, as it exists today (and didn’t exist, really, until the 1960s) is unlikely to survive if a majority — or even a large and angry minority — of Americans comes to conclude that the press is untrustworthy and unpatriotic.” Quite true, Professor Reynolds. And America will likely need that angry minority if we’re to inforce patriotism on our press, and end the nightmarish salvo of information and journalism that threatens to cripple the war effort. For this is not merely a war for freedom. Indeed, it is also a war against freedom – specifically, that freedom which seeks to destroy freedom…..(read the rest…)

So, everybody needs to stop worrying about freedom! We can always worry about freedom later after we’re done fighting for freedom, because too many freedoms are bad for the war for freedom.

Meet the New Puppets

Same as the Old Puppets…….

Any hopes that new faces would appear as the “interim government” died yesterday as the Puppet Council basically reshuffled itself and was reincarnated as the “interim government.” Apparently, the first order of business for the New Iraqi Prime Minister® involves assuring the people of Iraq that he’s still an American tool who intends to grant the American military’s fondest wish, a SOFA agreement and basing rights in Iraq.

The only comment so far from Iraqis outside the “Green Zone” hothouse:

Al-Yawer, a Sunni Muslim who has sharply criticised U.S. policy in Iraq, will hold the largely symbolic post of president, while the more powerful position of prime minister goes to Allawi, a U.S.-backed Shiite Muslim with military and CIA connections.

Allawi, whose appointment was announced Friday, was chosen because he was considered the best candidate to cope with the deteriorating security situation.

As word of the appointment was announced, a car bomb blew up outside the offices of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, which is located just outside the green zone U.S. coalition headquarters in central Baghdad.

The Arab language television stations Al-Jazeera and Al-Arabiya quoted police as saying about 10 people were killed, but the information could not immediately be confirmed. Another blast, followed by gunfire, sent a mushroom cloud billowing into the air. Coalition aircraft could be heard flying over Baghdad.


UPDATE: High farce


UPDATE: Rock-solid proof that I’m right.

A Thought Experiment for All You Right-Wingers

From the generally rotten weblog No Treason, an exceptional entry by John Lopez:

    A Brief Note On The Terror War

    If you think the greatest danger to your life is from Islamic radicals, then try this thought experiment:

    Go burn a Koran on your front lawn. Then, go sit on your front lawn holding your shiny, new, unregistered machinegun.

    Question: Who will come after you first, the jihadists, or your local police?

I want answers from Wayne LaPierre, Dave Kopel, and co.

Ominous developments in Iraq

CNN is reporting:

About 100 Iraqi police who arrived in Najaf over the past week to begin joint patrols with U.S.-led coalition forces on Sunday apparently deserted their posts, U.S. military officials said.

In the past few days, U.S. forces coordinated and trained with the Iraqi police to begin the patrols in the Shiite holy city that has been besieged by fighting between U.S. forces and the militia loyal to radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.

It is not clear why the police left the city, but their disappearance added to the skepticism at the U.S. military base in Najaf that a unilateral peace agreement announced three days ago by Shiite representatives would quell the ongoing violence.

100 “police” disappeared? And in Baghdad, not to be outdone by the Saudi hostage takers, a convoy of “westerners” was shot up and the “survivors” dragged away:

Gunmen attacked three civilian vehicles carrying foreigners in northwest Baghdad Sunday, killing two Westerners and seizing three others, witnesses and police at the scene said.

Two of the four-wheel-drive vehicles, of the type used by foreign contractors, employees of the U.S.-led administration and some media in Iraq, appeared to have collided after coming under fire on a main highway, and two bodies could be seen.

Locals and police said the attackers had dragged away three survivors of the attack. Their fate was unknown.

In one of the cars, a dark-colored sports utility vehicle, both front airbags had inflated and were stained red with blood. Bloodstains were also soaked into the back seat.

Nearby, a white four-wheel-drive vehicle had its front staved in by the force of the collision.

After the attack, locals set the two vehicles ablaze, and later shooting erupted between gunmen and police at the scene.

Meanwhile, Duhbya is playing with Saddam’s pistol:

A handgun that Saddam Hussein was clutching when U.S. forces captured him in a hole in Iraq last December is now kept by President Bush at the White House, Time magazine reported Sunday.
[…]
Bush shows Saddam’s gun to select visitors, telling them it is unloaded, both now and when Saddam was captured, Time reported.

“He really liked showing it off,” Time quoted a visitor who had seen the gun as saying. “He was really proud of it.”

Well, as long as Duhbya gets to show off his war trophies to his buddies in Washington, I guess all the death, violence and chaos is worth it.