Bombing Iraq: Death and Destruction as Instruments of Statecraft

Today, faced with gloomy possibilities in Iraq that include the imminent disintegration of the Iraqi state... the Obama administration is once again considering air strikes as a policy option. And as Iraqi cities once again loom in the Imperium's bomb-sights, it's instructive to cast our eyes back on this less-than-glorious relationship between the United States, bombs and Iraq.

Since World War II, bombing has been the weapon of choice in all the wars America has fought. It's a weapon that has been used on numerous occasions against Iraq - and also for Iraq - in pursuit of shifting and often surprising political and military objectives. Today, faced with gloomy possibilities in Iraq that include the imminent disintegration of the Iraqi state, the installation of a jihadist caliphate in the heart of the Middle East, and all-out sectarian civil war, the Obama administration is once again considering air strikes as a policy option. And as Iraqi cities once again loom in the Imperium's bomb-sights, it's instructive to cast our eyes back on this less-than-glorious relationship between the United States, bombs and Iraq.

  • 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War. The Iraqi air force carries out air strikes against Iranian military and civilian targets, using chemical weapons, nerve gas, sarin and mustard, whose precursors are supplied by a range of governments and corporations, including American companies.
  • 1983/84: Following Donald Rumsfeld's two visits to Baghdad, US intelligence agencies provide the Iraqi Air Force with satellite imagery to faciliate the bombing of Iranian troops with poison gas. - in breach of the 1925 Geneva Protocol prohibiting the use of such weapons. Subsequently released CIA documents published by Foreign Policy magazineobserve that the use of nerve agents 'could have a significant impact on Iran's human wave tactics, forcing Iran to give up that strategy.'
  • May 1987: Iraq accidentally sinks the US frigate Stark. In response the US allows Kuwaiti ships to fly under the US flag, in order to justify attacks on Iranian ships in the Gulf. CIA spy planes and helicopters also conduct secret bombing raids against Iranian military bases. By early 1988, according to author Barry Lando: ' officers from the Pentagon's Defense Intelligence Agency dispatched to Baghdad were actually planning day-by-day strategic bombing strikes for the Iraqi Air Force.'
  • March/April 1988: Iraq uses sarin and mustard gas in the course of four offensives against Iranian troops in the Fao Peninsula near Basra, using satellite imagery and other intelligence information supplied by the United States. Casualties estimated by the CIA in the hundreds or thousands, but gas helps thwart Iranian offensive against Basra, thus turning the war in Iraq's favour.
  • March 16, 1988: Iraq bombs the Kurdish village of Halabja with sarin, mustard and VX gas, killing between 3, 200 -5,000 people. Both the Reagan and Thatcher administrations blame the atrocity on Iran, in order to continue political and military support for Saddam Hussein. That same year the Bush administration blocks congressional attempts to impose sanctions on Iraq in response to further gas attacks on Kurdish villages.
  • January 16 1991: Following Saddam Hussein's refusal to withdraw from Kuwait, allied planes initiate Operation Desert Storm with multiple air strikes against Iraq and Kuwait. In a 42 day campaign, coalition planes drop 88,000 tons of bombs in the most relentless bombing assault in military history.
  • March 1991, a UN report on the humanitarian situation in Iraq finds that the conflict has ' wrought near-apocalyptic results upon the economic structure of what had been, until January 1991, a rather highly urbanized and mechanized society. Now, most means of modern life support have been destroyed or rendered tenuous. Iraq has, for some time to come, been relegated to a pre-industrial age.'
  • 1991-2003: US, British and French planes fly more than 200,00 sorties over Iraq in enforcement of no-fly zone, carrying out numerous air strikes in order to protect the Kurds and 'contain' Saddam Hussein.
  • December 1998: American and British jets carry out Operation Desert Fox - four-day bombing campaign of Iraqi weapons research and development installations, air defense systems, weapon and supply depots, and the barracks and command headquarters of Republican Guard, and presidential palaces. Ostensible purpose of these raids to 'degrade' Iraqi WMD in response to alleged non-compliance with UN weapons inspectors. Critics allege that their real objective is to destabilize Saddam Hussein's government and distract political attention from ongoing impeachment hearings against Bill Clinton.
  • June 2002-March 2003. 'Secret' escalation in Anglo-American bombings coincides with attempts to justify invasion on the basis of Saddam's alleged non-compliance with weapons inspectors. 600 bombs dropped on 391 Iraqi targets before the war begins.
  • 19 March 2003: The US-led coalition conducts 29, 200 air strikes in Iraq in the opening salvo of a war that according to George Bush, is intended 'to disarm Iraq, to free its people and to defend the world from grave danger.' An estimated 3, 750 Iraqi civilians are killed and injured by air-launched or ground-launched cluster munitions on Iraqi cities, in addition to some 9, 200 combatant casualties.
  • 2003-2011. US occupation forces carry out 3, 900 air strikes against Iraqi insurgents. The 2006 'Lancet report' claims that 78,133 people have been killed in these strikes, many of which are carried out in densely-populated urban neighborhoods.
  • 4 April 2004: American units headed by the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force subject the city of Fallujah to an aerial and ground assault involving seven hundred airstrikes, attacks from AC-130 Specter helicopter gunships equipped with Gatling guns capable of firing 1, 800 rounds per minute. 600 civilians are killed before the operation is called off without bringing Fallujah under American control.
  • 8 November 2004: US forces subject Fallujah to a second bombardment, followed by a ground assault by US Marines, with British and Iraqi forces in support, in which insurgent fighters are shot or blown up in houses, mosques and on the street, and burned to death with white phosphorus in 'shake and bake' bombings. In December the New York Times reporter Erik Eckholm describes Fallujah as ' a desolate world of skeletal buildings, tank-blasted homes, weeping power lines, and several palm trees.'
  • March 2013. On tenth anniversary of Iraq invasion, doctors in Fallujah and other Iraqi cities report alarming rise in cancer and birth defects, which scientists attribute to the use of depleted uranium and other chemicals used in the course of US aerial and artillery bombardments.
  • June 2014: Aircraft carrier George H.W. Bush is moved to the Persian Gulf, accompanied by a guided-missile cruiser and guided-missile destroyer in preparation for possible American air strikes on Iraq. According to a Pentagon spokeman, these deployments are intended to ' to support our longstanding commitments to the security and stability of the region.'
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