Saturday, May 20, 2006

Oh, god

Just when you think you can't be hit hard by what's happening in Iraq anymore, two chilling words get added to the conversation.

"Ethnic cleansing."

The Independent (UK) is reporting:
Across central Iraq, there is an exodus of people fleeing for their lives as sectarian assassins and death squads hunt them down. At ground level, Iraq is disintegrating as ethnic cleansing takes hold on a massive scale.



The state of Iraq now resembles Bosnia at the height of the fighting in the 1990s when each community fled to places where its members were a majority and were able to defend themselves. "Be gone by evening prayers or we will kill you," warned one of four men who called at the house of Leila Mohammed, a pregnant mother of three children in the city of Baquba, in Diyala province north-east of Baghdad. He offered chocolate to one of her children to try to find out the names of the men in the family.


What have we done? Why isn't anybody from the US government going to go to jail for it?

Report via TalkLeft, where we find in the comments a link to Laura Rozen, who posts,
This came out a couple days ago, but a friend in Sarajevo has now pointed me to its significance. Basically the US government is hiring contractors to move arms from Bosnia to Iraq. And credible sources say one of the dealers in the mix that the contractors have turned to is notorious blood diamonds arms dealer Viktor Bout. Here's the Guardian on a piece based on a new Amnesty report:

According to a report by Amnesty International, which investigated the sales, the US government arranged for the delivery of at least 200,000 Kalashnikov machine guns from Bosnia to Iraq in 2004-05. But though the weaponry was said to be for arming the fledgling Iraqi military, there is no evidence of the guns reaching their recipient.

Senior western officials in the Balkans fear that some of the guns may have fallen into the wrong hands.


What have we done?

1 comment:

jeopardygirl said...

The words "ethnic cleansing" send a chill up my spine. Western governments will claim that they had nothing to do with this backlash, as the tension was already an undercurrent in that region's general societal landscape. This is disingenuous, as the answer to "what have we done?" is destabilized the region and through our meddling (I am including Canada, as we have been complicit, if not implicit), forced the people to polarize and bond in the only way they know how. Divide is what we have done, Ben. And what comes after "divide?"