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Fallujah, the Information War, and U.S. Propaganda
by Stephen Soldz Now receded into distant memory for many, the
battle for the Iraqi city of Fallujah, accompanied by the al Sadr uprising in
the south, was a decisive turning point in the Iraq occupation.
These battles
demonstrated to much of the world that the occupation was deeply unpopular among
many Iraqis, who were willing and able to fight the occupation to a stalemate.
These battles both ended in standoffs, as the U.S. forces felt constrained from
unleashing their full military capabilities to crush the resistance. New
insights into the thinking of the U.S. military are available from a U.S. army
intelligence analysis by the Army's National Ground Intelligence
Center of the first Fallujah battle entitled Complex Environments: Battle of
Fallujah I, April 2004 that was leaked this week on the Wikileaks web site.
The first battle for Fallujah (the second, in November 2004, resulted in the
city's capture by occupation forces) began when images circulated of four
contractors being lynched from a bridge in the city. This new document confirms
that the attack on Fallujah was designed to crush a symbol of resistance to the
U.S. occupation of Iraq:
"On 31 March 2004, four American Blackwater contractors were killed
and images of their bodies being burned and mutilated were broadcast on
television around the world. Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld, CENTCOM Commander
GEN Abizaid, and Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) Ambassador Bremer decided
a military response was needed immediately. Fallujah had become a symbol of
resistance that dominated international headlines."
Media War
As befits a symbolic battle, the analysis makes clear that the information
war was primary. The failure of the Marines' attack to retake Fallujah was
caused, the authors claim, by resistance ("insurgents" in their lingo) forces'
success in getting their message out to the world.
"Insurgents demonstrated a keen understanding of the value of
information operations. IO was one of the insurgents' most effective levers to
raise political pressure for a cease-fire. They fed disinformation [sic] to
television networks, posted propaganda on the Internet to recruit volunteers and
solicit financial donations, and spread rumors through the street."
The report echo's the concern of American leaders about the
influence of Al Jazeera and other Arab media at conveying the rebel's side of
the story:
"Arab satellite news channels were crucial to building political
pressure to halt military operations. For example, CPA documented 34 stories on
Al Jazeera that misreported or distorted battlefield events between 6 and 13
April. Between 14 and 20 April, Al Jazeera used the "excessive force" theme 11
times and allowed various anti-Coalition factions to claim that U.S. forces were
using cluster bombs against urban areas and kidnapping and torturing Iraqi
children. Six negative reports by al-Arabiyah focused almost exclusively on the
excessive force theme. Overall, the qualitative content of negative reports
increasingly was shrill in tone, and both TV stations appeared willing to take
even the most baseless claims as fact. "During the first week of April,
insurgents invited a reporter from Al Jazeera, Ahmed Mansour, and his film crew
into Fallujah where they filmed scenes of dead babies from the hospital,
presumably killed by Coalition air strikes. Comparisons were made to the
Palestinian Intifada. Children were shown bespattered with blood; mothers were
shown screaming and mourning."
The report also makes clear that, in
the military's opinion, the Western press is part of the U.S.'s propaganda
operation. This process was facilitated by the embedding of Western reporters in
U.S. military units. The U.S. failure in this battle was largely attributable,
the authors claim, to the absence of embedded reporters to convey the military's
story.
"The absence of Western media in Fallujah allowed the insurgents
greater control of information coming out of Fallujah. Because Western reporters
were at risk of capture and beheading, they stayed out and were forced to pool
video shot by Arab cameramen and played on Al Jazeera. This led to further
reinforcement of anti-Coalition propaganda. For example, false allegations of up
to 600 dead and 1000 wounded civilians could not be countered by Western
reporters because they did not have access to the battlefield. "Western
reporters were also not embedded in Marine units fighting in Fallujah. In the
absence of countervailing visual evidence presented by military authorities, Al
Jazeera shaped the world's understanding of Fallujah."
This
account, however, is false. There were at least two "Western reporters," as well
as other Western civilians, inside Fallujah giving detailed information on the
effects of the fighting on civilians. While briefly detained by rebels, they
were quickly released, rather than beheaded. The report ignores these reporters
as they were independents, neither embedded with the U.S. military nor bound by
the implicit rules of the mainstream media to give special consideration to U.S.
military claims and perspectives. Further, the accounts of these reporters and
observers contradicted American military claims.
Civilian Casualties
Dahr Jamail, at that time a reporter for the now defunct New Standard, felt
obligated to go into the besieged city.
"As I was there, an endless stream of women and children who'd been
sniped by the Americans were being raced into the dirty clinic, the cars
speeding over the curb out front as their wailing family members carried them
in. "One woman and small child had been shot through the neck -- the woman was
making breathy gurgling noises as the doctors frantically worked on her amongst
her muffled moaning. "The small child, his eyes glazed and staring into space,
continually vomited as the doctors raced to save his life. "After 30 minutes, it
appeared as though neither of them would survive."
Contrary to the
army report's claim that no cluster bombs were used in the attack, Jamail saw
wounds suspiciously like those from that weapon:
"There had been reports of this, as two of the last victims that
arrived at the clinic were reported by the locals to have been hit by cluster
bombs -- they were horribly burned and their bodies shredded."
Another of these nonexistent Western reporters was Rahul Mahajan,
who wrote for various alternative news sites, as well as his Empire Notes blog. He reported from Fallujah on
April 11, 2003. Since Mahajan was in the same group with Jamail, it is perhaps
not surprising that he also reported extensive civilian casualties:
"During the course of the roughly four hours we were at that small
clinic, we saw perhaps a dozen wounded brought in. Among them was a young woman,
18 years old, shot in the head. She was having a seizure and foaming at the
mouth when they brought here in; doctors did not expect her to survive the
night. Another likely terminal case was a young boy with massive internal
bleeding. I also saw a man with extensive burns on his upper body and wounds in
his thighs that might have been from a cluster bomb; there was no way to verify
in the madhouse scene of wailing relatives, shouts of 'Allahu Akbar' (God is
great), and anger at the Americans."
The intelligence report claims
that "Red Crescent ambulances transported fighters" yet does not discus how this
alleged situation was dealt with by the U.S. troops. Mahajan, like other
Westerners in the city, provides elucidation of this gap by reporting that the
Americans were firing on ambulances, including ones containing civilians:
"I had heard these claims at third-hand before coming into Fallujah,
but was skeptical. It's very difficult to find the real story here. But this I
saw for myself. An ambulance with two neat, precise bullet-holes in the
windshield on the driver's side, pointing down at an angle that indicated they
would have hit the driver's chest (the snipers were on rooftops, and are trained
to aim for the chest). Another ambulance again with a single, neat bullet-hole
in the windshield. There's no way this was due to panicked spraying of fire.
These were deliberate shots to kill people driving the ambulances. "The
ambulances go around with red, blue, or green lights flashing and sirens
blaring; in the pitch-dark of a blacked-out city there is no way they can be
missed or mistaken for something else). An ambulance that some of our
compatriots were going around in, trading on their whiteness to get the snipers
to let them through to pick up the wounded was also shot at while we were
there."
Jo Wilding, a British observer also among the Westerners in
Fallujah, was in one of the ambulances fired upon, on a trip to pick up a
pregnant woman and transport her to the hospital. She and the ambulance staff
hoped that the presence of Westerners would help protect from American attack.
They were wrong:
"Azzam is driving, Ahmed in the middle directing him and me by the
window, the visible foreigner, the passport. Something scatters across my hand,
simultaneous with the crashing of a bullet through the ambulance, some plastic
part dislodged, flying through the window. "We stop, turn off the siren, keep
the blue light flashing, wait, eyes on the silhouettes of men in US marine
uniforms on the corners of the buildings. Several shots come. We duck, get as
low as possible and I can see tiny red lights whipping past the window, past my
head. Some, its hard to tell, are hitting the ambulance I start singing. What
else do you do when someones shooting at you? A tyre bursts with an enormous
noise and a jerk of the vehicle. "Im outraged. Were trying to get to a woman
whos giving birth without any medical attention, without electricity, in a city
under siege, in a clearly marked ambulance, and youre shooting at us. How dare
you?"
Even back in Baghdad, Mahajan and Jamail were the only
Western reporters who attended a press conference of the Iraqi
Minister of Health, who confirmed that the Americans had fired upon
ambulances in Fallujah (and also in Sadr City in Baghdad):
"During the questions, when asked about shooting at ambulances,
Abbas confirmed that U.S. forces shot at ambulances, not only in Fallujah and
the approaches to Fallujah, but also in Sadr City. He agreed that the acts were
criminal and said he has asked the IGC ([Interim] Governing Council) and Bremer
[U.S. governor of occupied Iraq] for an explanation."
While in
Fallujah, Jo Wilding also saw civilians fired upon by U.S. troops, illustrating
the "Coalition's concern for collateral damage" that the intelligence analysis
refers to:
"Theres a man, face down, in a white dishdasha, a small round red
stain on his back. We run to him. Again the flies [h]ave got there first. Dave
is at his shoulders, Im by his knees and as we reach to roll him onto the
stretcher Daves hand goes through his chest, through the cavity left by the
bullet that entered so neatly through his back and blew his heart out. "Theres
no weapon in his hand. Only when we arrive, his sons come out, crying, shouting.
He was unarmed, they scream. He was unarmed. He just went out the gate and they
shot him. None of them have dared come out since. No one had dared come to get
his body, horrified, terrified, forced to violate the traditions of treating the
body immediately. They couldnt have known we were coming so its inconceivable
tat anyone came out and retrieved a weapon but left the body. "He was unarmed,
55 years old, shot in the back."
Also relevant to the issue of
"collateral damage" is the way in which the U.S. forces divided civilians into
potential "insurgents" all males considered to be of "military age" and all
others. The others were allowed to leave the city or areas of active combat
("Throughout the fight Coalition forces allowed nonmilitary-age men, women, and
children to exit through the cordon"), but males considered to be of fighting
age many tens of thousands in a city of perhaps 250,000 population were not
allowed to leave and were thus subject to being shot, as was the man described
above by Wilding, upon the least suspicion. Wilding describes the implementation
of this policy as a group of volunteers attempted to evacuate civilians before a
planned American attack:
"'Were going to be going through soon clearing the houses,' the
senior one says. 'What does that mean, clearing the houses?' 'Going into every
one searching for weapons.' Hes checking his watch, cant tell me what will
start when, of course, but theres going to be air strikes in support. 'If
youre going to do t[h]is [evacuate] you gotta do it soon .' "The people seem to
pour out of the houses now in the hope we can escort them safely out of the line
of fire, kids, women, men, anxiously asking us whether they can all go, or only
the women and children. We go to ask. The young marine tells us that men of
fighting age cant leave. Whats fighting age, I want to know. He contemplates.
Anything under forty five. No lower limit."
Any military forcing
tens of thousands of mostly noncombatant civilians to stay in a war zone under
siege is obviously not putting the reduction of civilian casualties (reduction
of "collateral damage") high on its list of priorities. Not surprisingly, an analysis by Iraq Body Count concluded that almost 600 ("between 572 and 616 of the approximately 800
reported deaths") civilians were among the dead in Fallujah. The intelligence
report also contains chilling phrases that, while subject to multiple
interpretations, suggest both the difficulties of fighting a guerilla resistance
in a city and the possibility of horrifying actions. Thus, in describing the
structure of homes in Falluja, the report calmly states:
"The houses also are all made of brick with a thick covering of
mortar overtop. In almost every house a fragmentation grenade can be used
without fragments coming through the walls. Each room can be fragged
individually."
Absences in Report
It is striking that, for all its emphasis on claims that U.S. troops
followed the "Laws of War" in the battle, avoiding, they claim, extensive
"collateral damage" (i.e., civilian casualties) there is no discussion of any
strategies designed to accomplish this in the "complex environment" of a city
with tens to hundreds of thousands of residents in place. Of course, the
accounts of Jamail, Mahajan, and Wilding suggest that the claim that collateral
damage was largely avoided is exaggerated at best. While providing useful
analyses of the nature of the Fallujah fighting, and of the information war,
this intelligence report demonstrates yet again the difficulties that U.S.
occupation forces, including intelligence analysts, have in coming to terms with
the nature of nationalist opposition to occupation. While it contains
interesting discussions of the organization of the Fallujah resistance,
including their decentralized command and control structures which were hard to
destroy, the authors cannot resist repeating the Marine attackers description of
the resistance fighters as " an evil Rotary club rather than a military
organization." The report also illustrates American blinders in analyzing the
political context of the Fallujah battle. The report does refer to the growing
opposition to the assault among the Iraqi Governing Council, a group of Iraqi
officials hand-picked by the United States:
"The Iraqi Governing Council began to unravel. Three members quit
and 5 others threatened to quit . The Sunni politicians considered the operation
'collective punishment.'"
The intelligence analysis, however,
doesn't mention the extreme unpopularity, at the time of the Fallujah battle, of
the occupation among many Iraqis as part of the context that hampered the U.S.
in its assault. For example, a USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup poll of
Iraqis taken in late March and early April 2004 found:
"Only a third of the Iraqi people now believe that the American-led
occupation of their country is doing more good than harm, and a solid majority
support an immediate military pullout even though they fear that could put them
in greater danger "Asked whether they view the U.S.-led coalition as
'liberators' or 'occupiers,' 71% of all respondents say 'occupiers.' "That
figure reaches 81% if the separatist, pro-U.S. Kurdish minority in northern Iraq
is not included . "53% say they would feel less secure without the coalition in
Iraq, but 57% say the foreign troops should leave anyway. Those answers were
given before the current showdowns in Fallujah and Najaf between U.S. troops and
guerrilla fighters."
In failing to come to terms with the
unpopularity of the occupation, the report continues the American blindness to
the difficulties of sustaining an occupation as opposition mounts. The report
thus pays insufficient attention to the extent to which the Fallujah population
supported the resistance fighters. Perhaps, however, the absence of any
discussion of "winning hearts and minds" is an implicit recognition that this
was an impossible goal, and one irrelevant to the U.S. desire to crush Fallujah
as a symbol of organized opposition to occupation. In the end, the most
surprising aspect of this leaked report is the absence of any information or
analysis in the classified document that was not readily available in the public
domain. Its failure to deal with the real situation the U.S. faced in Iraq
during the Fallujah assault raises the question as to why, even in a classified
intelligence analysis, the military, and perhaps the entire U.S. government, did
not analyze reality, rather than relay propaganda. Many possible explanations
can be contemplated: a fear of the document being leaked, military leaders and
even intelligence analysts being infected with the same propaganda being fed to
the press and the public, or systems for relaying information that reward those
who support the prevailing ideology. Most likely is some combination of these
factors. But the result, this report illustrates, is that, as with prewar
intelligence, the intelligence during the Iraq occupation has in many cases
reinforced existing beliefs rather than provide new insights designed to allow
the U.S. forces to adapt to the real conditions they faced.
Preparing for November Attack
The report does provides several glimpses into the tactics used to prepare
for the later November 2004 attack in which Fallujah was captured by the
Americans at the cost of thousands of damaged buildings, many tens of thousands
of refugees, and an unknown number of both rebel and civilian casualties. In
preparing for the November attack, U.S. forces had more time for pre-attack
"shaping operations":
"Shaping operations that clear civilians from the battlefield offers
[sic] many positive second-order effects. In Fallujah in April 2004, IMEF [I Marine Expeditionary Force]
only had a few days to shape the environment before engaging in decisive combat
operations. The remaining noncombatants provided cover for insurgents,
restrained CJTF-7's[Coalition Joint Task Force 7]
employment of combat power, and provided emotional fodder for Arab media to
exploit."
In preparing for the November attack, the U.S. engaged in
months of massive bombing and artillery strikes, perhaps in order to terrorize
into leaving many of the population who were not of military age and hence
allowed to leave. As the Guardian reported October 31,
2004:
"US warplanes and artillery pounded targets in the city amid
prolonged clashes with insurgents. A marine at a nearby US base described the
strikes as the heaviest artillery bombardment he had heard in two months. At
least a dozen airstrikes hit a southeastern district of the Sunni Muslim city
during the afternoon, witnesses said."
These "shaping operations"
largely worked, as Reuters reported on October
26, 2004:
"'Three-quarters of the people have fled to other towns to avoid the
American air strikes, especially the women and children,' said Abdel Aziz
Ibrahim, a teacher. "Bank employee Mohammed al-Alwani said: 'Whoever looks
around Falluja now can only feel saddness. The damage is so heavy the suburbs
look like they were hit by an earthquake.'"
Having failed to destroy
Fallujah as a symbol of resistance to occupation in April, the U.S. designed the
November attack to accomplish this goal once and for all, as the Christian Science Monitor
explained on the eve of the attack:
"'One thought going around now is: "Why doesn't Iraq look like
[post-World War II] Germany or Japan, which knew they had been defeated?' says
John Pike, a military analyst who heads Globalsecurity.org in Alexandria, Va.
'One of the challenges we are facing now is these people don't know they have
been defeated,' he says. 'Fallujah will be an opportunity for them to be crushed
decisively and for them to taste defeat.'"
Or, as explained by
another Western analyst in the same article:
"'The logic is: You flatten Fallujah, hold up the head of Fallujah,
and say "Do our bidding, or you're next,"' says Toby Dodge, an Iraq analyst at
the International Institute of Strategic Studies in London."
The
U.S. also learned from its perceived failure in the information war during the
April attack, which led, in the view of the intelligence report, to calling off
the attack before victory. In November they got many reporters, including even Iraqi reporters, to
embed with U.S. troops, so that they could act, in the words of the intelligence
report, as the propaganda arm of U.S. forces. The greater success in
manipulating the information war in November was offset, however, by the U.S.'s
inability to hide from reporters and thus, from the world the country's descent
into full-scale civil war. It remains to be seen if the relative lull in civil
war currently occurring as the various factions reevaluate the situation will
allow the U.S. greater success in the information war, if not in the real war of
occupation.