by Norman Solomon
A Distant Mirror of Holy War
The conflict in Iraq has become a holy war. In both directions. On the surface,
the most prominent headline on the New York Times front page Nov. 10 was simply
matter-of-fact: "In Taking Fallujah Mosque, Victory by the Inch." Yet it's not
mere happenstance that American forces have bombed many of Fallujah's mosques.
For public consumption, US military officers--like their civilian bosses and
American journalists--usually discuss this war in secular, even antiseptic terms.
When the Times quoted Marine battalion commander Gary Brandl in another
front-page story, on Nov. 6, the lieutenant colonel sounded straightforward: "We
are going to rid the city of insurgents. If they do fight, we will kill them."
However, on the same day, the Associated Press reported that the same Lt. Col.
Brandl said: "The enemy has got a face. He's called Satan. He's in Fallujah, and
we're going to destroy him."
That statement by Brandl--an officer with 800 soldiers under his command--caused a
bit of stir in some Internet circles. But mainstream US media outlets scarcely
noted his holy-warrior declaration. Most news outlets ignored it entirely.
Providing a fuller, more revealing quote from Lt. Col. Brandl, the Sunday Times
of London included a lead-in sentence: "The Marines that I have had wounded over
the past five months have been attacked by a faceless enemy. But the enemy has
got a face. He's called Satan...." In other words, Satan started this conflict.
And we--the anti-Satan forces--fully intend to finish it by destroying him.
Sounds very fundamentalist.
Sounds a lot like Osama bin Laden.
In public-relations terms, the colonel was a tad off-message.
Except for occasional lapses, the rhetoric from Washington stops short of
proclaiming a crusade against Islamic devils. And the US news coverage rarely
fails to detour around the American side of the jihad equation.
During a real holy war, of course, the fire and brimstone is not just
figurative. Dominating the top half of the New York Times front page on Nov. 10
was a full-color picture with stunning hues and brilliant composition, over this
caption: "Marines tried to take cover after a phosphorous round, set off to help
provide cover for tanks, rained down on the unit. No one was seriously hurt." An
article inside mentioned that the phosphorous broke "into a hundred flaming
pieces ... burning backpacks and gear but seriously hurting no one." Reassuring.
Meanwhile, a Washington Post article provided more graphic-- though
sketchy--information about phosphorous. "Some artillery guns fired white
phosphorous rounds that create a screen of fire that cannot be extinguished with
water," the Post explained more than 20 paragraphs into the story. "Insurgents
reported being attacked with a substance that melted their skin, a reaction
consistent with white phosphorous burns."
The Post quoted hospital physician Kamal Hadeethi: "The corpses of the
mujaheddin which we received were burned, and some corpses were melted."
But such melting of human flesh is an abstraction in US media, as it is apt to
be for holy warriors. On NBC's Today show Nov. 9, a network correspondent in
Baghdad mentioned phosphorous shells just long enough to say that they are
"meant to burn through metal bunkers." Presumably a description of effects on
human beings would not have gone well with viewers' breakfasts.
A live report from a CNN correspondent in Fallujah, on Nov. 8, was similarly
circumspect: "Tanks have been blasting away inside the city, and shells filled
with phosphorous--shells to hide the movement of the Marines inside the city--have
been exploding overhead."
The CNN reporter added that, along with gunfire from the city, "We have also
heard, even from our distance about two kilometers away, chants of 'Allah Akbar'
going up from the insurgents, the chants of 'God is great' going up from the
insurgents."
Lt. Col. Brandl, like his commander in chief, would doubtless scorn such
prayerful chants as satanic. The holy warriors from America are blessed with
superior military strength, which includes the capacity to melt human flesh ...
and to drop large quantities of cluster bombs--one of the most inhuman weapons on
the planet--from sleek A-10 jets flying over Fallujah. Children often pick up
not-yet-exploded cluster bombs because they look like toys.
At the outset of the new assault, US forces captured Fallujah's general
hospital. "In terms of the information war, the hospital was indeed the most
strategic of targets," international correspondent Pepe Escobar writes. "During
the first siege of Fallujah in April, doctors told independent media the real
story about the suffering of civilian victims. So this time the Pentagon took no
chances: no gory, disturbing photos of the elderly, women and children ... the
civilian victims of the relentless bombing."
From Fallujah, on Nov. 9, journalist Fadhil Badrani--a resident of the city who
reports for the BBC World Service--said that "a medical dispensary in the city
center was bombed." He added: "I don't know what has happened to the doctors and
patients who were there. It was last place you could get medical attention
because the big hospital on the outskirts of Fallujah was captured by the
Americans on Monday. A lot of the mosques have also been bombed. For the first
time in Fallujah, a city of 1,200 mosques, I did not hear a single call to
prayer this morning."
While the US media are downplaying the available information about Iraqi people
suffering in Fallujah, many Arabic-language outlets have a different news
agenda. Escobar reports in the Nov. 11 edition of Asia Times Online: "The main
story playing in the Arab world in the past 24 hours is that of Mohammed
Abboud--who saw his nine-year-old son bleed to death of shrapnel wounds when his
house in Fallujah was hit because he could not venture out to go to a hospital.
Abboud had to bury his son in his own garden."
As the United States government terrorizes and murders in the name of fighting
terrorism and murder, the message from Washington is that its holy war of might
is unquestionably right. On the Nov. 10 front page of the New York Times, a
dispatch from Fallujah reported: "Nothing here makes sense, but the Americans'
superior training and firepower eventually seem to prevail." Americans are
encouraged to assume that Allah may be great but the red-white-and-blue God is
surely greater.
Norman Solomon is co-author, with Reese Erlich, of Target Iraq: What the News
Media Didn't Tell You. His columns and other writings can be found at
www.normansolomon.com .
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