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21st
Century America. A manifestation of evil - Iraq/Afghanistan
** Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches **
** Visit
the Dahr Jamail Iraq website
http://dahrjamailiraq.com **
**
Website by http://jeffpflueger.com **
December
13, 2005
Tomgram:
Dahr Jamail on the Missing Air War in Iraq
From the
destroyed Japanese and German cities of World War II to the devastated
Korean peninsula of the early 1950s, from the ravaged South Vietnamese
countryside of the late 1960s to the "highway of death" on which much of
a fleeing Iraqi army was destroyed in the first Gulf War of 1991, air
power has been America's signature way of war
http://www.tomdispatch.com/index.mhtml?pid=2047 . Once, it was also
a major part of Hollywood's version of war-making on the "silver
screen." More recently, however, air war has largely disappeared from
consciousness. It simply hasn't been part of war, as Americans see, read
about, or imagine it, on-screen or off. This is strange.
It's true
that, with the exception of a small number of helicopters downed by
rocket-propelled grenades, the present air war in Iraq has been fought
without (American) casualties; it's also been fought largely without
publicity and almost completely without reporters. It's true as well
that there are certain obvious disadvantages to covering an air war
rather than a ground war. You can't follow in the wake of a plane
heading at supersonic speeds for a target many miles away; and it's
harder to "embed" reporters in the backseat of a jet, no less an
unmanned predator drone, than in a Humvee. This was true even during the
Vietnam War, although reporters there regularly hitched rides on
military helicopters to bases and hotspots around the country. As a
result, despite our memory of a single iconic photo of a napalmed
Vietnamese girl running screaming down a highway (and she had been
seared by a South Vietnamese plane), the fierce American air campaign in
South Vietnam was seldom given the attention it deserved. I know of only
a single exception to this: In 1967, the young Jonathan Schell managed
to talk himself into the backseats of Cessna O-1 forward air control
planes flying "visual reconnaissance" over a heavily populated coastal
strip of Vietnam's Quang Ngai province and in his New Yorker series and
subsequent book, The Military Half, he provided as vivid and devastating
an account as exists of the destruction of the Vietnamese countryside
from the air and ground.
It's
worth remembering that the U.S. began its war of choice in Iraq with a
massive (and massively promoted) "shock and awe" air and cruise missile
attack on Baghdad. The administration was then proud of our one-sided
ability to inflict massive, targeted damage on that country's capital
and happy to have it televised. But ever since, the air war and its
urban destruction have been kept in the shadows, which might be
considered, if not evidence of the military equivalent of shame, then at
least, of an "out of sight/out of mind" mentality. Whether by design or
not, the U.S. military seems to have kept reporters off air bases and
aircraft carriers (after, at least, that first burst of air assault was
over). And with the exception of a few helicopter rides over Iraq
granted to favored reporters and pundits, usually with their favored
generals, reporters simply have not been up in the sky, nor have they --
for reasons I find hard to fathom -- bothered to look up for the rest of
us (as Dahr Jamail indicates in the piece that follows). As 2004 ended,
one TV journalist wrote me:
"My own
experience of Iraq is that while we're all constantly aware of the air
power, we're rarely nearby when it's deployed offensively. Perhaps that
explains why we don't see it. One does ‘hear' the airpower all the time
though. Fighters and helicopters used to protect convoys; helis
[helicopters] shipping people back and forth to bases, or hunting in
packs across towns; AWACS high up. I've even watched drones making
patterns in the sky. So why don't we film it?"
It's a
question that still hasn't been answered -- or even asked in public.
Yet our
air power has been loosed powerfully on heavily populated cities and
towns in a country we've occupied. This has been done, in part, because
American generals have not wanted to send American troops -- any more
than absolutely necessary -- into embattled cityscapes in an ongoing
guerrilla war in which they might take heavy casualties (which, in turn,
would be likely to cause support for the war to drop at home even more
precipitously than it has). Still, it remains amazing to me that Seymour
Hersh's recent important report in the New Yorker, Up in the Air
http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/articles/051205fa_fact , is
the first significant mainstream account since the invasion of Iraq to
take up the uses of air power in that country. The piece certainly
caused a stir here, becoming part of the suddenly quickening tempo of
debate about American withdrawal; but, as readers may have noticed, the
air war itself has received no more attention since its publication two
weeks ago than previously, which is essentially none. As I wrote http://www.tomdispatch.com/index.mhtml?pid=1687
back in August 2004, "You might think that the widespread, increasingly
commonplace bombing of civilian areas in cities would be a story the
media might want to cover in something more than the odd paragraph deep
into pieces on other subjects." You might think so, but based on recent
history, don't hold your breath.
As a
result, strangely enough, it has largely been left to writers and
reporters not in Iraq to look up and give Americans a sense of what's
going on in the skies -- as Dahr Jamail, an independent journalist who
until recently covered the war from Baghdad and is now back in this
country, does below. /Tom/
* An
Increasingly Aerial Occupation* By Dahr Jamail
The
American media continues to ignore the increasingly devastating air war
being waged in Iraq against an ever more belligerent Iraqi resistance --
and, as usual, Iraqi civilians continue to bear the largely unreported
brunt of the bombing.
Read More
http://www.tomdispatch.com/index.mhtml?pid=42286
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