By Steve Hynd
Thanks to Kat for the heads-up, but you'll be hearing all about all this over the weekend from various pundits and media outlets. The NY Times, Guardian, Al Jazeera, Der Spiegel and Le Monde have all been given over 400,000 previously classified US documents from the Iraq war, dwarfing the previous 90,000 document leak on the Afghan war which had been the biggest Pentagon leak ever. The documents cover the period 1st January 2004 to 31st December 2009 (except for the months of May 2004 and March 2009).
Just like with the Afghan document drop, the UK's Guardian has the best coverage. Start here.
The electronic archive is believed to emanate from the same dissident US army intelligence analyst who earlier this year is alleged to have leaked a smaller tranche of 90,000 logs chronicling bloody encounters and civilian killings in the Afghan war.
The new logs detail how:
� US authorities failed to investigate hundreds of reports of abuse, torture, rape and even murder by Iraqi police and soldiers whose conduct appears to be systematic and normally unpunished.
� A US helicopter gunship involved in a notorious Baghdad incident had previously killed Iraqi insurgents after they tried to surrender.
� More than 15,000 civilians died in previously unknown incidents. US and UK officials have insisted that no official record of civilian casualties exists but the logs record 66,081 non-combatant deaths out of a total of 109,000 fatalities.
The numerous reports of detainee abuse, often supported by medical evidence, describe prisoners shackled, blindfolded and hung by wrists or ankles, and subjected to whipping, punching, kicking or electric shocks. Six reports end with a detainee's apparent death.
The NYT's coverage starts here. Der Spiegel's is here. Wikileaks here.
On a quick read-through, this new document dump is similiar to the Afghanistan one in that there doesn't seem to be a lot really new in it for those who were paying attention all these years. Iraqis abusing detainees being ignored by the US military, hardly-accidental "collateral" damage killing civilians, Iran supporting those Iraqis it was already paying with weapons and training - none of this is new news except for some detail.
Glenn Greenwald's right that new details offered by some of the documents are "news" in a real sense and i wouldn't want to say that because there's nothing big picture new we should all just ignore these documents and "move along". However, the main effect of dropping all these documents at once and the media coverage that they will engender will still be measured by renewed general political attention and pressure on Iraq, where things still aren't going as rosily as most Americans seem to believe.
Agree Guardian very good stuff but Aljazeera's visuals - hey no reading required - also pretty powerful. Just watched Hillary whatshername do the usual PR BS "oh my god national security" and some US trooper is going to be killed. Usual, funny and again Obama looks like an almost perfect recursive function. Why not simply buy a Cray or MacBook Pro, with lots of ram, to sit in the Oval Office. It would be very efficient and cheap, eh and hard to be racist or bigot towards except maybe by fools that us a Windows operating system.
ReplyDelete"You cannot surrender to an aircraft." ???
ReplyDeleteThey will probably prove that US officials were lying left, right and center...though that conclusion will almost certainly be missed by major media outlets and current, US officials. Unfortunately, the majority of Americans will probably miss it too.
ReplyDelete@ Lex:
ReplyDeleteThey will probably prove that US officials were lying left, right and center...though that conclusion will almost certainly be missed purposefully omitted by major media outlets and current US officials -- lest they disturb the sleeping, or otherwise occupied, US public.
Fixxored.
@Kat
ReplyDeleteAnd fixed well....