19 March 2013
Today marks the tenth
anniversary of the Anglo-American invasion of Iraq. Ten years ago, the world
watched the “shock and awe” bombing campaign light up the nighttime sky of
Baghdad with billowing clouds of flame and smoke.
This campaign and the
bloody ten years of occupation that followed had a devastating impact on what
was once among the most advanced societies in the Middle East. Hundreds of
thousands of Iraqi civilians were killed and millions were made homeless.
The American
military’s conduct of the war produced crimes of staggering dimensions. This
included the turning of Fallujah, a city of 350,000 people, into a free-fire
zone, the bombarding of its occupants with white phosphorus shells, banned by
international law, and the summary execution of wounded prisoners. Ten years
later, the rates of child cancer and birth defects in Fallujah are similar to
those in Hiroshima following the US atomic bombing.
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