Have things really gotten that bad? → U.S. government is cruel, despotic, a threat to people → civilian casualties, urban bombardment, etc. → targeted bombings of Iraq brass

the news is full of speculation about whether Saddam Hussein was killed in a bombing or not. Four 2,000-pound “bunker buster” bombs were used to turn a hunk of the neighborhood near a popular restaurant into a crater. As of now, there’s still no consensus as to whether the hoped target was one of the victims.

The English-language media, with uncharacteristic forthrightness, is describing the other victims of this bombing — in one case, describing how the head and torso of a twenty-year-old woman was pulled from the rubble, and was recognized by her mother, who collapsed sobbing and was carried away by other relatives.

Which got me thinking about how such things get justified. It was no surprise to anyone in-the-loop that dropping a bunch of “bunker busters” on a residential neighborhood was going to cause civilian casualties. There was of course no attempt to warn people that bombs were on the way, and no way to minimize damage (indeed, the intent was to cause enough damage to collapse even an underground, fortified room).

So it must have been a utilitarian calculation along the lines of: “yes, of course innocent civilians will die, but if we succeed in killing Saddam Hussein and some of his henchmen, the rest of his military will give up and this will end the war much more quickly, causing fewer civilian deaths over all.”

That’s not quite the same as the Hiroshima calculus — in which the intent was to cause massive civilian casualties as a way of demonstrating to Japan as a whole the costs of continuing to fight.

But it should still put an end to the whole “we’re doing everything we can to minimize civilian casualties” line. If the best you can do for an excuse for killing civilians in one place is so that you won’t have to keep killing civilians elsewhere, that’s a bit like saying to the judge “I had to beat my daughter — she was making me so angry that I kept beating my son!”

It’s interesting to play with some thought experiments. Imagine Saddam Hussein in a desk chair suspended by a rope above a volcano. He’s up there, directing his regime via fax and email, safe in the knowledge that this is the last place the invaders will look for him. But you’ve found him. And you’ve got a pair of scissors. And you see where the rope is tied off.

You go to drop the bastard, but you notice he’s got somebody else tied up and dangling from the bottom of the desk chair. You don’t recognize this other person. Maybe s/he’s a complete innocent — or maybe a P.O.W. Maybe there are five people dangling there — or fifty. Maybe you do recognize this person and it’s someone you know. Maybe it’s 1,000 uniformed draftees in Saddam’s army. Maybe it’s your mom. Maybe she’s holding a kitten.

Every minute he’s still dangling up there free to do his thing the war drags on, the victims of his regime continue to suffer, U.S. troops continue to launch missiles at neighborhoods and fire rounds at journalists, and his evil goes unpunished.

Drop him, and you’re deliberately causing the suffering of the innocent. What’s dangling from the rope when your decision changes from “cut” to “don’t cut?” Would it matter if you knew them or not? Would it matter if they’re from the same country that you’re from? That they speak the same language? That you might meet their relatives some day? Under what circumstances would you make the decision to cut the rope if that would throw you in as well?

Russell Brown, of Hard News, writes :

“We share sacrifices. We share grief. We pray for those families who mourn the loss of life; American families, British families…” George W. Bush let the sentence hang in the air. I genuinely thought he was about to say “Iraqi families”. It would have been a decent and thoughtful thing to do. But he didn’t.

Instead, Bush and Blair got through the whole of their press conference in Belfast yesterday, each paying tribute to coalition dead, without acknowledging that any Iraqi citizen has suffered so much as a paper cut in the past two weeks. As an exercise in denial, it was right up there with the daily briefings from the Iraqi information minister.

Both men are often described by their supporters as “courageous”. But real courage would dictate that they tackled the consequences of their actions head-on. Contend that the deaths of civilians — or, let’s face it, the poor Iraqi conscripts — have been a regrettable consequence of the pursuit of a greater goal of liberation. They might even be right. But they didn’t try. It was like nobody had really died.


Back , I wrote about how the U.S. had dropped a “bunker buster” on a Baghdad neighborhood in the hopes that Saddam was underneath. He wasn’t and only neighborhood civilians were killed.

Today, Human Rights Watch reports that

50 strikes on top Iraqi leaders failed to kill any of the intended targets, but instead killed dozens of civilians, the Human Rights Watch report revealed. The U.S. “decapitation” strategy relied on intercepts of senior Iraqi leaders’ satellite phone calls along with corroborating intelligence that proved inadequate. As a result, the U.S. military could only locate targets within a 100-meter radius — clearly inadequate precision in civilian neighborhoods…

On a “decapitation” attack, apparently targeting Saddam Hussein on the basis of a satellite phone intercept, killed 18 civilians and destroyed three homes in the Mansur neighborhood of Baghdad. Residents said there was no evidence that Saddam Hussein or any members of the Iraqi government had been there.

“The decapitation strategy was an utter failure on military grounds, since it didn’t kill a single Iraqi leader in 50 attempts,” said [HRW Executive director Kenneth] Roth. “But it also failed on human rights grounds. It’s no good using a precise weapon if the target hasn’t been located precisely.”

The report was also highly critical of the use of cluster munitions — a problem also raised by a USA Today article (“Cluster bombs kill in Iraq, even after shooting ends”).


And the papers are finally catching on to a story that I covered : the Human Rights Watch report that U.S. air strikes designed to assassinate top Iraqi leaders were utter failures — zero for fifty — and because they involved techniques like dropping “bunker busters” on residential neighborhoods they caused many civilian casualties.

Why did it take for outfits like the Times to consider this news “fit to print?” I guess it’s because they finally got “senior military and intelligence officials” to verify the report. I’d like the Times better if they had the good sense to work the other way around, and wait until Human Rights Watch verifies the latest official spin before they rush it to print.


The U.S. military, unfazed by the loss of innocent life and the astounding record of failure in its attempts to kill targets by bombing civilian homes, is at it again, with predictable results:

The United States military said it dropped a 500-pound bomb on the wrong house outside the northern city of Mosul on Saturday, killing five people. The man who owned the house said the bomb killed 14 people, and an Associated Press photographer said seven of them were children.…

“The house was not the intended target for the airstrike. The intended target was another location nearby,” the military said in a statement.…

“Multi-National Force Iraq deeply regrets the loss of possibly innocent lives,” the statement said, adding that an investigation was underway.

You read that right: The military dropped a bomb on the wrong house, killing 14 people, half of them children (you may, of course, substitute the military’s own kill estimate if you don’t have any reason to question their motives or stunning reputation for accuracy and care in such matters), and then released a statement in which the victims are described as “possibly innocent lives.”