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photo sean smith,guardian newspaper
The US Marines Used Thermobaric
Weapons in Iraq
Tudor Raiciu, World and Health News Editor Despite
the trend of producing high precision weapons which limit
the damages and the loss of human lives, the US marine
could adopt a weapon with a devastating destruction
power, which makes no discrimination, David Hambling of
Defensetech.org wrote.
In fact, is not the weapon thats new, its the
type of projectile used by it.
Developed by Talley Defense and having a code name which
doesnt say much, NE (Novel Explosive), it is based
on a thermobaric mixture which ignites the air.
Following the chemical reaction, it is produced a
shockwave whose destructive power is immense; the new
projectile is especially useful against buildings.
The US marines used this invention in the battle of
Fallujah, a report published in specialized magazine
informing that one such projectile disintegrated an
entire one level masonry building from 100 meters.
The report also says that "the gunners became expert
at determining which wall to shoot to cause the roof to
collapse and crush the insurgents fortified inside
interior rooms."
As Mr Hambling said, thermobaric weapons are not
something new, the Russian army also using them in
Afghanistan.
According to Human Rights Watch, thermobaric weapons
"kill and injure in a particularly brutal manner
over a wide area. In urban settings it is very difficult
to limit the effect of this weapon to combatants".
For these reasons, the tests and battles in which these
weapons were used have been kept quiet, the US marines
risking a scandal of large proportions.
The World Tribunal
on Iraq
27th JUNE,
2005
Planning, preparing, and waging the supreme crime of a
war of aggression in contravention of
the United Nations Charter and the
Nuremberg Principles.
Targeting the civilian population of Iraq
and civilian infrastructure.
Using disproportionate force and
indiscriminate weapon systems.
Failing to safeguard the lives of
civilians during military activities and during the
occupation period thereafter.
Using deadly violence against peaceful
protestors.
Imposing punishments without charge or
trial, including collective punishment.
Subjecting Iraqi soldiers and civilians
to torture and cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment.
Re-writing the laws of a country that has
been illegally invaded and occupied.
Willfully devastating the environment.
Actively creating conditions under which
the status of Iraqi women has seriously been degraded.
Failing to protect humanity's rich
archaeological and cultural heritage in Iraq.
Obstructing the right to information,
including the censoring of Iraqi media.
Redefining torture in violation of
international law, to allow use of torture and illegal
detentions
.
The Jury also
established charges against the Security Council of
United Nations for failing to stop war crimes and crimes
against humanity among other failures, against the
Governments of the Coalition of the Willing for
collaborating in the invasion and occupation of Iraq,
against the Governments of Other Countries for allowing
the use of military bases and air space and providing
other logistical support, against Private Corporations
for profiting from the war, against the Major Corporate
Media for disseminating deliberate falsehoods and failing
to report atrocities.
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Fallujah:The
Flame of Atrocity
New information has surfaced, including hideous
photographs and videos and interviews with American
soldiers who took part in the Fallujah attack, which
provides graphic proof that phosphorus shells were widely
deployed in the city as a weapon.
In a documentary to be broadcast by RAI, the Italian
state broadcaster, this morning, a former American
soldier who fought at Fallujah says: "I heard the
order to pay attention because they were going to use
white phosphorus on Fallujah. In military jargon it's
known as Willy Pete.
"Phosphorus burns bodies, in fact it melts the flesh
all the way down to the bone ... I saw the burned bodies
of women and children. Phosphorus explodes and forms a
cloud. Anyone within a radius of 150 metres is done
for."
Photographs on the website of
RaiTG24, the broadcaster's 24-hours news channel,
www.rainews24.it, show exactly what the former soldier
means. Provided by the Studies Centre of Human Rights in
Fallujah, dozens of high-quality, colour close-ups show
bodies of Fallujah residents, some still in their beds,
whose clothes remain largely intact but whose skin has
been dissolved or caramelised or turned the consistency
of leather by the shells.
A biologist in Fallujah, Mohamad Tareq, interviewed for
the film, says: "A rain of fire fell on the city,
the people struck by this multi-coloured substance
started to burn, we found people dead with strange
wounds, the bodies burned but the clothes intact."
VIDEO AT: www.rainews24.it
The site quotes:
an eyewitness to the bombardment in Fallujah:
"They (US military) used these weird bombs
that put up smoke like a mushroom cloud. Then small
pieces feel from the air with long tails of smoke
behind them. "He explained that pieces of these
bombs exploded into large fires that burnt peoples
skin even when water was dumped on their bodies,
which is the effect of phosphorous weapons, as well
as napalm. "People suffered so much from these,
both civilians and fighters alike."
My first impression was that Jamail's eyewitness
might have been describing one of the
"non-lethal" chemical weapons of the type
the Russians reluctantly admitted they had deployed
during the Chechen hostage rescue attempt that
subsequently killed 117 hostages along with the
Chechen terrorists. The Israeli 2001 chemical attack
in Khan Younis also came to mind.
REPORT NO.2
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This week, the broadcast of a shattering new documentary
provided fresh confirmation of a gruesome war crime
covered by this column nine months ago: the use of
chemical weapons by American forces during the frenzied,
Bush-ordered destruction of Fallujah in November 2004.
Using filmed and photographic evidence, eyewitness
accounts, and thedirect testimony of American soldiers
who took part in the attacks, the documentary - "Fallujah:
The Hidden Massacre" - catalogues the American
use of white phosphorous shells and a new,
"improved" form of napalm that turned human
beings into "caramelized" fossils, with their
skin dissolved and turned to leather on their bones. The
film was produced by RAI, the Italian state network run
by a government that backed the war.
Vivid images show civilians, including women and
children, who had been burned alive in their homes, even
in their beds. This use of chemical weapons - at the
order of the Bushist brass - and the killing of civilians
are confirmed by former American soldiers interviewed on
camera. "I heard the order to pay attention because
they were going to use white phosphorous on
Fallujah," said one soldier, quoted in the
Independent. "In military jargon, it's known as
Willy Pete. Phosphorous burns bodies; in fact it melts
the flesh all the way down to the bone. I saw the burned
bodies of women and children. Phosphorus explodes and
forms a cloud. Anyone within a radius of 150 meters is
done for."
The broadcast is an important event: shameful, damning,
convincing. But it shouldn't be news. Earlier this year,
as reported here on March 18, a medical team sent to
Fallujah by the Bush-backed Iraqi interim government
issued its findings at a press conference in Baghdad. The
briefing, by Health Ministry investigator Dr. Khalid
ash-Shaykhli, was attended by more than 20 major American
and international news outlets. Not a single one of these
bastions of a free and vigorous press reported on the
event. Only a few small venues - such as the
International Labor Communications Association - brought
word of the extraordinary revelations to English-speaking
audiences.
Yet this highly credible, pro-American official of a
pro-occupation government confirmed, through medical
examinations and the eyewitness testimony of survivors -
including many civilians who had opposed the heavy-handed
insurgent presence in the town - that "burning
chemicals" had been used by U.S. forces in the
attack, in direct violation of international and American
law. "All forms of nature were wiped out" by
the substances unleashed in the assault, including
animals that had been killed by gas or chemical fire,
said Dr ash-Shaykhli. But apparently this kind of thing
is not considered news anymore by the corporate
gatekeepers of media "truth."
As we noted here in March, Dr ash-Shaykhli's findings
were buttressed by direct testimony from U.S. Marines
filing "after-action reports" on websites for
military enthusiasts back home. There, fresh from the
battle, American soldiers talked openly of the routine
use of Willy Pete, propane bombs and "jellied
gasoline" (napalm) in tactical assaults in Fallujah.
As it says in the scriptures: by their war porn ye shall
know them.
This week, as in March, the Pentagon said it only used
white phosphorous shells in Fallujah for
"illumination purposes." But the documentary's
evidence belies them. Although there are indeed many
white bombs bursting in air to bathe the city in
unnatural light, the film clearly shows other phosphorous
shells raining all the way to the ground, where they
explode in fury throughout residential areas and spread
their caramelizing clouds. As Fallujah biologist Mohamed
Tareq says in the film: "A rain of fire fell on the
city, the people struck by this multi-colored substance
started to
burn, we found people dead with strange wounds, the
bodies burned but the clothes intact."
As word of the documentary spread across the Internet and
into a very few mainstream media sources, intrepid
investigators dug out even more confirmation of how
Bush's battalions whipped out the Willy Pete and flayed
Fallujah's heathen devils with flesh-eating fire. A Daily
Kos diarist, Stephen D., dug up one of the U.S.
military's own publications, Field Artillery Magazine,
which eagerly related the use of white phosphorous, which
"proved to be an effective and versatile
munition," the article said. "We used it for
screening missions at two breeches and, later in the
fight,
as a potent psychological weapon against the insurgents
in trench lines and spider holes when we could not get
effects on them with HE. We fired 'shake and bake'
missions at the insurgents, using WP to flush them out
and HE to take them out."
Mr. D also points to a comment on Altercation.com, that
provides further ammunition - for "illumination
purposes" - on the effect of white phosphorous on
human beings. There, Mark Kraft writes: "There is no
way you can use white phosphorus like that without
forming a deadly chemical cloud that kills everything
within a tenth of a mile in all directions from where it
hits. Obviously, the effect of such deadly clouds weren't
just psychological in nature."
Meanwhile, in the Guardian, Mike Marquesse pounded home
the reality of the overarching atrocity of the attack:
"One year ago this week, US-led occupying forces
launched a devastating assault on the Iraqi city of
Falluja. The mood was set by Lt Col Gary Brandl: 'The
enemy has got a face. He's called Satan. He's in Falluja.
And we're going to destroy him.'
"The assault was preceded by eight weeks of aerial
bombardment. US troops cut off the city's water, power
and food supplies, condemned as a violation of the Geneva
convention by a UN special rapporteur, who accused
occupying forces of "using hunger and deprivation of
water as a weapon of war against the civilian
population". Two-thirds of the city's 300,000
residents fled, many to squatters' camps without basic
facilities.
"By the end of operations, the city lay in ruins.
Falluja's compensation commissioner has reported that
36,000 of the city's 50,000 homes were destroyed, along
with 60 schools and 65 mosques and shrines. The US claims
that 2,000 died, most of them fighters. Other sources
disagree. When medical teams arrived in January they
collected more than 700 bodies in only one third of the
city. Iraqi NGOs and medical workers estimate between
4,000 and 6,000 dead, mostly civilians -- a
proportionately higher death rate than in Coventry and
London during the blitz."
The atrocity-breeding mindset behind the attack was
evident from the very first, as I noted in a Moscow Times
column of November 18, 2004: "One of the first moves
in this magnificent feat of arms was the destruction and
capture of medical centers. Twenty doctors - and their
patients, including women and children - were killed in
an airstrike on one major clinic, the UN Information
Service reports, while the city's main hospital was
seized in the early hours of the ground assault. Why?
Because these places of healing could be used as
"propaganda centers," the Pentagon's
"information warfare" specialists told the NY
Times. Unlike the first attack on Fallujah last spring,
there was to be no unseemly footage of gutted children
bleeding to death on hospital beds. This time - except
for NBC's brief, heavily-edited, quickly-buried clip of
the usual lone "bad apple" shooting a wounded
Iraqi prisoner - the visuals were rigorously
scrubbed."
When you begin by bombing hospitals, devouring innocent
people with hot jellied death is not exactly a stretch.
It is simply part and parcel of the inhumanity of the
Bushist mindset.
Indeed, the slaughter in Fallujah was a microcosm of the
entire misbegotten enterprise launched by those two
eminent Christian statesmen, Bush and Blair: a brutal act
of collective punishment for defying the imperial will; a
high-tech turkey shoot that mowed down the just and
unjust alike; an idiotic strategic blunder that has
exacerbated the violence and hatred it was meant to
quell. The vicious overkill of the Fallujah attack
alienated large swathes of previously neutral Iraqis and
spurred many to join the resistance. It further entangled
the United States and Britain in a putrid swamp of war
crime, state terrorism and atrocity, dragging them ever
deeper into a moral equivalency with the murderous
extremists that the Christian leaders so loudly and
self-righteously condemn.
Let's give the last word to Jeff Engelhardt, one of the
ex-servicemen featured in the documentary, who recently
issued this plea to his fellow U.S. soldiers on Fight to
Survive, a new dissident web site run by Iraqi War vets:
"I hope someday you find solace for
the orders you have had to execute, for the carnage you
helped take part in, and for the pride you wear
supporting this bloodbath. Until then, you can only hope
for an epiphany, something that stands out as completely
immoral, that convinces you of the inhumanity of this
war. I don't know how much more proof you need. The
criminal outrage of Abu Ghraib, the absolute massacre of
Fallujah, the stray .50 caliber bullets or 40mm grenades
or tank rounds fired in highly packed urban areas,
500-pound bombs dropped on innocent homes, the use of
depleted uranium rounds, the inhumane use of white
phosphorus, the hate and the blood and the
misunderstandings.this is the war and the system that you
are asked "to support".
cannonfire.blogspot and
REPORT No 2.sent in by maisoon rice.
FALLUJAH
occupation forces are still provoking trouble
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