Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The site is a sister to Atlantic Free Press and Brick Ogden an American Expatriate in Amsterdam has been a key supporter of this project.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
On the day martial law was declared, US tanks began rolling into the outskirts of Fallujah, while war planes continued to pound the city with as many as 50,000 residents still inside.
Iyad Allawi, the US-installed interim prime minister, laid out the six steps for implementing his "security law". These entailed a 6pm curfew in Fallujah, the blocking of all highways except for emergencies and for government vehicles, the closure of all city and government services, a ban on all weapons in Fallujah, the closure of Iraq's borders with Syria and Jordan (except to allow passage to food trucks and vehicles carrying other necessary goods), and the closure of Baghdad International Airport for 48 hours.
Dahr Jamail set out to report the truth about the US invasion of
Iraq and its terrible impact on daily life. Determined to remain
independent of the army, he embedded himself instead with the Iraqi
people
Meanwhile, in the US, most corporate media outlets were busy
spreading the misinformation that Fallujah had fallen under the control
of the Jordanian terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. There was no available
evidence that Zarqawi had ever set foot inside the city. It was amply
evident that the resistance in the city was composed primarily of
people from Fallujah itself. However, that did not deter the
establishment media, which portrayed the assault on the city as a
hostage intervention situation.
As they had done during the April siege, the military raided and
occupied Fallujah general hospital, cutting it off from the rest of the
city. On 8 November 2004 the New York Times reported, "The assault
against Fallujah began here Sunday night as American Special Forces and
Iraqi troops burst into Fallujah General Hospital and seized it within
an hour." Of course, this information was immediately followed by the
usual parroting of US military propaganda, "At 10pm, Iraqi troops
clambered off seven-ton trucks, sprinting with American Special Forces
soldiers around the side of the main building of the hospital,
considered a refuge for insurgents and a centre of propaganda against
allied forces, entering the complex to bewildered looks from patients
and employees."
Harb al-Mukhtar, my interpreter and driver, arrived at my hotel the
next morning in a sombre mood. "How can we live like this, we are
trapped in our own country. You know Dahr, everyone is praying for God
to take revenge on the Americans. Everyone!" He said even in their
private prayers people were praying for God to take vengeance on the
Americans for what they were doing in Fallujah. "Everyone I've talked
to the last couple of nights, 80 or 90 people, have admitted that they
are doing this," he said as I collected my camera and notepad to
prepare to leave.
Out on the streets of Baghdad, the anxiety was
palpable. The threat of being kidnapped or car bombed, or simply
robbed, relentlessly played on our minds as Harb and I went about
conducting interviews that had been prearranged. We tried to minimise
our time on the streets by returning to my hotel immediately on
completing interviews. The security situation, already horrible, was
deteriorating further with each passing day.
That night, when Salam Talib arrived at my hotel to work on a radio
despatch with me, he had a wild look in his eyes and sweat beads on his
forehead. "My friend has just been killed, and he was one of my best
friends," he said staring out my window. Salam went on to tell me that
a relative of another of his friends had been missing for six days.
"This morning, his body was brought to his family by someone who found
it on the road. The body had been shot twice in the chest and twice in
the head. There were visible signs of torture, and the four bullet
shells that were used to kill him had been placed in his trouser
pockets. This news has driven me crazy, Dahr. The number of people
killed here is growing so fast every day," he said, his hands raised in
that familiar gesture of despair.
"When I was a child, it was common to
have some family member who was killed in the war with Iran. But now,
it feels as though everyone is dying every day."
Not yet one full week into the latest assault on Fallujah, the flames
of resistance had engulfed much of Baghdad and other areas in Iraq. In
Baghdad alone, neighbourhoods like Amiriyah, Abu Ghraib, Adhamiya and
al-Dora had fallen mostly under the control of the resistance. In these
areas, and much of the rest of Baghdad, US patrols were few and far
between, since they were being attacked so often.
People we interviewed
showed no surprise at fighting having rapidly spread across other
cities. It was expected, because the general belief was that the
resistance had fled Fallujah prior to the siege. Most of the fighters
had melted away to other areas to choose effective methods to strike
the enemy. Fighting had thus spread across much of Baghdad, Baquba,
Latafiya, Ramadi, Samarra, Mosul, Khaldiya and Kirkuk just days into
Operation Phantom Fury.
Media repression
Media repression during the second siege of Fallujah was intense. The
"100 Orders" penned by former US administrator Bremer included Order
65, passed on 20 March 2004, which established an Iraqi communications
and media commission. This commission had powers to control the media
because it had complete control over licensing and regulating
telecommunications, broadcasting, information services, and media
establishments. On 28 June, when the US handed over power to a
"sovereign" Iraqi interim government, Bremer simply passed on his
authority to Iyad Allawi, who had long-standing ties with the British
intelligence service MI6 and the CIA. The media commission sent out an
order just after the assault on Fallujah commenced ordering news
organisations to "stick to the government line on the US-led offensive
in Fallujah or face legal action". The warning was circulated on
Allawi's letterhead. The letter also asked the media in Iraq to "set
aside space in your news coverage to make the position of the Iraqi
government, which expresses the aspirations of most Iraqis, clear".
On the ground, aside from the notorious bombing and then banning of
al-Jazeera, other instances of media repression were numerous. A
journalist for the al-Arabiya network, who attempted to get inside
Fallujah, was detained by the military, as was a French freelance
photographer named Corentin Fleury, who was staying at my hotel.
Fleury, a soft-spoken, wiry man, was detained by the US military along
with his interpreter, 28-year-old Bahktiyar Abdulla Hadad, when they
were leaving Fallujah just before the siege of the city began. They had
worked in the city for nine days leading up to the siege, and were held
for five days in a military detention facility outside the city.
"They were very nervous and they asked us what we had seen, and looked
through all my photos, asking me questions about them," he said as we
talked in my room one night. He told me he had photographed homes
destroyed by US war planes. Despite appeals by the French government to
the US military to free his translator and return Fleury's confiscated
camera equipment and his photos, there had been no luck in attaining
either. (When I had last seen Fleury in February 2005, Hadad was still
being held by the US military.)
The military was maintaining a strict cordon around most of Fallujah.
As I could not enter the city, I set out to interview doctors and
patients who had fled and were presently working in various hospitals
around Baghdad. While visiting Yarmouk Hospital looking for more
information about Fallujah, I came across several children from areas
south of Baghdad. One of these was a 12-year-old girl, Fatima Harouz,
from Latifiya. She lay dazed in a crowded hospital room, limply waving
her bruised arm at the flies. Her shins, shattered by bullets from US
soldiers when they fired through the front door of her house, were both
covered by casts. Small plastic drainage bags filled with red fluid sat
upon her abdomen, where she took shrapnel from another bullet. Her
mother told us, "They attacked our home, and there weren't even any
resistance fighters in our area."
Victims' testament
Fatima's uncle was shot and killed, his wife had been wounded, and
their home was ransacked by soldiers. "Before they left, they killed
all our chickens." A doctor who was with us looked at me and asked,
"This is the freedom. In their Disneyland are there kids just like
this?"
Another young woman, Rana Obeidy, had been walking home in Baghdad with
her brother two nights earlier. She assumed the soldiers had shot her
and her brother because he was carrying a bottle of soda. She had a
chest wound where a bullet had grazed her, but had struck her little
brother and killed him. In another room, a small boy from Fallujah lay
on his stomach. Shrapnel from a grenade thrown into his home by a US
soldier had entered his body through his back and was implanted near
his kidney. An operation had successfully removed the shrapnel, but his
father had been killed by what his mother described as "the haphazard
shooting of the Americans". The boy, Amin, lay in his bed vacillating
between crying with pain and playing with his toy car.
Later, I found myself at a small but busy supply centre in Baghdad set
up to distribute goods to refugees from Fallujah. Standing in an old,
one-storey building that used to be a vegetable market, I watched as
people walked around wearily to obtain basic foodstuffs, blankets or
information about housing. "They kicked all the journalists out of
Fallujah so they could do whatever they want," said Kassem Mohammed
Ahmed, who had escaped from Fallujah three days before. "The first
thing they did was bomb the hospitals because that is where the wounded
have to go. Now we see that wounded people are in the street and the
soldiers are rolling their tanks over them. This happened so many
times. What you see on the TV is nothing. That is just one camera. What
you cannot see is much more."
There were also stories of soldiers not discriminating between
civilians and resistance fighters. Another man, Abdul Razaq Ismail, had
arrived from Fallujah one week earlier and had been helping with the
distribution of supplies to other refugees, having received similar
help himself. Loading a box with blankets to send to a refugee camp, he
said, "There are dead bodies on the ground and nobody can bury them.
The Americans are dropping some of the bodies into the Euphrates River
near Fallujah. They are pulling some bodies with tanks and leaving them
at the soccer stadium." Another man sat nearby nodding his head. He
couldn't stop crying. After a while, he said he wanted to talk to us.
"They bombed my neighbourhood and we used car jacks to raise the blocks
of concrete to get dead children out from under them."
Another refugee, Abu Sabah, an older man in a torn shirt and dusty
pants, told of how he escaped with his family, just the day before,
while soldiers shot bullets over their heads, killing his cousin. "They
used these weird bombs that first put up smoke in a cloud, and then
small pieces fell from the air with long tails of smoke behind them.
These exploded on the ground with large fires that burned for half an
hour. They used these near the train tracks. When anyone touched those
fires, their body burned for hours."
This was the first time I had heard a refugee describing the use of
white phosphorous incendiary weapons by the US military, fired from
artillery into Fallujah. Though it is not technically a banned weapon,
it is a violation of the Geneva Conventions to use white phosphorous in
an area where civilians may be hit. I heard similar descriptions in the
coming days and weeks, both from refugees and doctors who had fled the
city.
Several doctors I interviewed had told me they had been instructed by
the interim government not to speak to any journalists about the
patients they were receiving from Fallujah. A few of them told me they
had even been instructed by the Shia-controlled Ministry of Health not
to accept patients from Fallujah.
That night I interviewed a spokesman for the Iraq Red Crescent, who
told me none of their relief teams had been allowed into Fallujah, and
the military said it would be at least two more weeks before any
refugees would be allowed back into their city. Collecting information
from doctors in the city, he had estimated that at least 800 civilians
had been killed so far in the siege.
The second assault on Fallujah was a monument to brutality and atrocity
made in the United States of America. Like the Spanish city of Guernica
during the 1930s, and Grozny in the 1990s, Fallujah is our monument of
excess and overkill. It was soon to become, even for many in the US
military, a textbook case of the wrong way to handle a resistance
movement. Another case of winning the battle and losing the war.
Conquerors' truth
I would like to say that I decided to go to Iraq for philosophical
reasons, because I believe that an informed citizenry is the bedrock of
any healthy democracy. But I went to Iraq for personal reasons. I was
tormented by the fact that the government of my country illegally
invaded and then occupied a country that it had bombed in 1991. Because
the government of my country had asphyxiated Iraq with more than a
decade's worth of "genocidal" sanctions (in the words of former United
Nations Humanitarian Co-ordinator for Iraq Denis Halliday). The
government of my country then told lies, which were obediently repeated
by an unquestioning media in order to justify the invasion and
occupation. I felt that I had blood on my hands because the government
had been left unchecked.
My going to Iraq was an act of desperation that has since transformed
itself into a bond to that country and so many of her people. There
were stories there that begged to be heard and told again. We are
defined by story. Our history, our memory, our perceptions of the
future, are all built and held within stories. As a US citizen
complicit in the devastation of Iraq, I was already bound up in the
story of that country. I decided to go to learn what that story really
was.
While the vast majority of the reporting of Iraq was provided by
journalists availing themselves of the Pentagon-sponsored "embed"
programme, I chose to look for stories of real life and "embed"myself
with the Iraqi people. The US military side of the occupation is overly
represented by most mainstream outlets. I consciously decided to focus
on the Iraqi side of the story. The story of the many oppressed peoples
of the world is rarely recorded by the few who oppress. We are taught
that the truth is objective fact as written down by the conquerors.
The above is extracted from "Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches From an
Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq" (Haymarket Books, £13.99),
which is available from 8 November in the U.K.