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Counting iraqis dead { March 25 2003 }

March 25, 2003
Counting Iraq's dead civilians
By Jackson Thoreau

Deep in the pit of Hell, Fatima Abdullah screams. Few hear her. Especially
not the pilots in the U.S. and British jets that have been raining 2,000-lb.
bombs, which obliterate everything within a football field upon impact, on
Baghdad since Thursday. Especially not the U.S. generals who refuse to
acknowledge the lives of kids like Fatehah Abdullah, Fatima Abdullah's
eight-year-old son.

Fatehah is dead, another victim in Bush's and Cheney's Blood for Oil, Inc.
war. And Bush, Cheney and the generals that push this massacre could care
less. Welcome to the "New" World Order.

U.S. Commander Tommy Franks says they will not tabulate body counts,
especially of Iraqis, in this war that is as illegitimate as Bush's claim to
the White House. The bulk of the U.S. media will not report on civilian
casualties, unless they are so large that even our
corporate-and-Republican-controlled media cannot ignore them.

But some of us will. I will. Fatehah Abdullah may just be eight years old.
He may be Arab. But he counts for something in my book.

He's number 303. And that number of Iraqi civilians killed by our bombs
continues to rise.

Since the outbreak of the latest phase of the war for Iraqi oil and
continued U.S. domination of the planet Wednesday, I have not slept much. I
have paid little attention to the talking heads on CNN, who like to call
themselves the "most trusted name in news." CNN commentators lied once again
about progressive film maker Michael Moore being booed off the Oscar stage
Sunday. As the British news agency Reuters reported, many in the Hollywood
crowd gave Moore a standing ovation as he issued his anti-Bush, anti-war
remarks. Moore himself had this to say to reporters: "Don't report that
there was a split decision in the hall because five loud people booed."
Maybe CNN is the "most trusted" name in the U.S. media to paint pictures the
way the Bush administration wants them painted.

I have concentrated on reading international media reports such as from
London's Guardian. I have read the reports from activists like Voices in the
Wilderness' Iraq Peace Team who put their lives on the line to try to
protect Iraqis. I have scanned the reports from alternative media like the
United Kingdom's Independent Media Centre.

And I'm here to tell you what Gen. Franks and CNN and Donahue-less MSNBC and
others will not: More than 300 Iraqi civilians - many of them children, as
almost half of Baghdad's population is under age 14 - have been killed by
the U.S.-led massive aerial bombing campaign, as of early Tuesday. Many more
will probably soon die in hospitals.

At Al Kindi Hospital in Baghdad, Fatima Abdullah screamed, "Why do you do
this to us?" to April Hurley, a physician and member of the Iraq Peace Team.
Not only is one of her sons dead, but her four-year-old boy and two
daughters were wounded by a missile that hit her uncle's home outside
Baghdad, near a bridge targeted by U.S. bombers.

Nada Adnan, a 13-year-old student at a high school for girls, is among those
with deep wounds who must suffer in anguish without basic medicines that
could at least give her some temporary relief from the pain. Cheney's oil
company, Dallas-based Halliburton, could make millions supplying Iraq with
oil equipment after the 1991 Gulf War. But relief workers could not ship
basic medicines to Iraq because that violated the economic sanctions imposed
by the UN on Hussein's regime. To repeat: Cheney's company can make millions
in oil deals, but Iraqi kids like Nada cannot get basic medicines.

Want to talk precision bombing? Talk to Nahla Harbi, a passenger driving
away from Baghdad with her two-year-old when a military school for boys was
struck, causing her car to roll. She escaped with fractures in both legs.
Her toddler suffered head injuries.

Talk to the families of the five Syrians who died when a U.S. missile struck
a Syrian passenger bus near the Iraqi border. Ten other passengers, most of
whom were laborers working in Iraqi oil fields, were injured.
One of the more ludicrous aspects of this war is how U.S. officials are
crying foul when Iraq pulls a few tricks like pretend surrenders and putting
POWs on television. "Iraq is violating the Geneva Convention," U.S.
officials say. These are the same officials who ignore international laws
such as the UN charter that states one country cannot invade another without
provocation or the blessing of the UN Security Council. These are the same
officials who ignore international treaties like those governing nuclear
weapons and global warming.

So it's unfair for Iraq to put prisoners on television or use civilians as
soldiers or women and kids as shields? Tell me, what's fair about one side
spending $400 billion annually on nuclear weapons, high-tech weapons, etc.
and the other spending some $1.4 billion on scud missiles and other low-tech
weapons after years of economic sanctions that has wracked its strength?
That's like the NFL Super Bowl champion playing a junior high team that's
been decimated with the flu and crying foul when the weaker team pulls a few
trick plays.

I'm not condoning Iraq's regime or its tactics. I'm just trying to explain
and understand them. I'm just trying to explain that there are reasons why
many people throughout the world can't stand narrow-minded Americans who can
't, or won't, recognize when their leaders are leading them down a path to
Hell. I hate seeing anyone killed. That's why I walked more than 5,000 miles
in my youth across the U.S. and Europe to Russia during the depths of the
Cold War.

It's a sad situation all around that Bush's stupidity and selfishness have
led us into, isn't it? Bush's stupidity with this
go-it-alone-except-for-countries'-leaders-who-we-can-bribe Iraqi invasion
will CAUSE more days like Sept. 11, 2001, not prevent them. More Arabs will
join bin Laden and other terrorist groups and attack Americans. Wealthy
Americans like Bush and Cheney will fly off to their private islands or stay
in their bunkers until the smoke clears, while the rest of us deal with
their lunacy for the rest of our lives.

Meanwhile, courageous, concerned protesters have to deal with U.S. radio
disc jockeys who urge listeners to run over peaceful protesters with their
vehicles. Americans who question this mad war are called traitors and told
to leave the country and threatened with bodily harm. Is this the kind of
America our forefathers fought and died for, where closet Nazis tell
thinking Americans to goose-step along with them or leave the place where
they were born?

I don't think so. If there was a real threat to our country, as Nazi Germany
was back in the 1930s, I'd join the fight myself. But Iraq is not Nazi
Germany - it's not even Nazi Austria. There is no good reason for invading
Iraq, not oil, not personal revenge, not justifying a $400 billion military
budget, not chemical and biological weapons that can be bought by most
anyone on the black market, not world domination. Americans fought the
British empire in the 18th century, and now the U.S. is the imperialistic
British empire. And unless wiser U.S. leaders take control and really work
with the rest of the world on our serious problems, the U.S. will go the way
of the British empire.

Hussein can be dealt with by a UN-appointed tribunal that indicts and tries
him on crimes. That way, the whole world through the UN gets involved in
stopping whatever threat Hussein poses. And the UN needs to exert its
influence over Bush-Cheney and not bow down to them. Russia has the right
idea in wanting to get the Security Council back together to confront the
U.S. invasion of Iraq. I still believe a UN that is not beholden to any
so-called superpower - which the current UN admittedly is - can work if
enough people support it. It's our world's main chance for survival.

Enough dreaming. I'm back to reality - finding another report of a civilian'
s death in Baghdad. Number 304.

It's not a job I like. But someone has to do it. My wife and I have two
young children ourselves to raise, so I can't stand in harm's way like
members of the Iraq Peace Team. But I can help make sure kids like Fatehah
Abdullah do not die in vain. I can help make them count, even when the U.S.
government and media won't.

Jackson Thoreau is co-author of We Will Not Get Over It: Restoring a
Legitimate White House. The updated, 120,000-word electronic book can be
downloaded on his Internet site at
http://www.geocities.com/jacksonthor/ebook.html. Citizens for Legitimate
Government has the earlier version at
http://www.legitgov.org/we_will_not_get_over_it.html. Thoreau can be emailed
at jacksonthor@justice.com.


1700 iraqi civilian deaths { May 18 2003 }
36 dead civilians bahgdad bombing { March 27 2003 }
4000 dead civilians one week { March 27 2003 }
50 die market blast
Accuses us targeting civilians
Baghdad blasts kill 17 civilians { March 27 2003 }
Baghdad hospital bombed { April 2 2003 }
Baghdad market world cries { March 29 2003 }
Baghdad marketplace hit
Bathed in blood { April 6 2003 }
Bloody checkpoint marines weeping { April 6 2003 }
Bombed maternity hospital
Boy without arms [jpg]
Boy without arms2 [jpg]
Chick got in the way { March 29 2003 }
Children die checkpoint { April 1 2003 }
Cluster bombs liberate children
Concern grows for iraqi civilians { April 6 2003 }
Counting iraqis dead { March 25 2003 }
Cruise missile residential area { March 26 2003 }
Denies targeting baghdad marketplace
Errant missile hits iran { March 22 2003 }
Excessive force cluster bombs { April 1 2003 }
Explosions dismemberd iraqis { April 3 2003 }
Face of war [jpg]
Forces kill 7 woman children
High civilian death toll { May 22 2003 }
Hilla hospital cluster bombs { April 3 2003 }
Hit marketplace 3 26 03 [jpg]
Hospitals overwhelmed
Humanitarian effort disaster { April 7 2003 }
Hundreds reported dead
Iran says building hit { March 22 2003 }
Iraq shows casualties hospital { April 3 2003 }
Iraqi civilian deaths 10 000
Iraqi wounded too high to count
Marketplace death us missile { April 2 2003 }
Mirror appeal boy without arms
Missile strikes baghdad market friday
Missile strikes house family { March 25 2003 }
Nasiriya bridge slaughter { March 31 2003 }
Outrage over damage homes cluster bombs
Proof marketplace us missile
Rutba hospital bombed { March 31 2003 }
Saddam bombs hit homes
Slaughter bridge death
Target baghdad marketplace
Tours hospitals wounded
Vegetable market bombed
Women children killed highway9 { April 1 2003 }

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