LOOTED HOPES by Michael Hammerschlag
VERSION w pics Alternet Scoop Home
There has been much commotion over the lack of armor on Iraq vehicles and vests, but that’s always been a trade-off: if you reinforce a HUMV enough to survive an RPG strike, you may make it too heavy to accelerate or speed enough to avoid getting hit, and full body armor suits are great except when 120° temperatures causes the soldier to collapse from heat prostration. The far more egregious outrage is why these hundreds of thousands of tons of ordnance were allowed to be looted by insurgents in the first place.
According to the Pentagon, a breathtaking
250,000 tons of heavy ordnance (out of 650,000
tons total): aircraft bombs, artillery and
tank shells, mines, rockets were allowed
to be looted by our undermanned army in the
4-30 weeks after invasion through gross negligence
at the top- equivalent to 1 million 500 lb bombs. At ten 500 lb. roadside mines or market closeouts
a day, that's enough for 274 years of attacks. Insurgent attacks have averaged 60-65 a
day.
---"During the fall of 2003, what you
would see was Iraqis going in at night, individually
and in trucks," US weapons inspector
David Kay told U.S. News . "They would
pull ordnances out and drive off." Security
was so bad after Saddam Hussein's regime
fell, Kay recalled, that his team was often
shot at by insurgents when they went to inspect
the sites: "There were just not enough
boots on the ground, and the military didn't
give it a high enough priority to stop the
looting. Tens of thousands of tons of ammunition
were being looted, and that is what is fueling
the insurgency." -US News+WR report
David BeBatto, a Military counterintelligence
officer at the massive Camp Anaconda 50 miles
north of Baghdad, in charge of hunting the
deck-of-cards Baathists, found a 5 square
mile ammo dump under 2 miles south of the camp in April 2003 “littered with
anti-aircraft missiles, land mines, rocket-propelled
grenades, plastic explosives” in dozens of bunkers.
He reported it again and again in written
reports to his battalion commander Lt. Col.
Timothy Ryan, even giving him a tour of the
dump. “Local Iraqis told us- ‘these guys’
– and they would point to looters in the
distance- ‘are fedayeen. They’re going to take this and make it
into bombs and use it against you,’” he said
in an interview. Nothing was done. “We had enough people..
if we had placed 4,5,6 guys at the main entry to that facility, that
would have been enough!.. Every time I went
back there, there was less.”
2 other intelligence agents also reported
seeing that and many unsecured ammo dumps
all over Iraq bursting with deadly material-
all of which were massive looted. “They were
wasting people for really menial things:
KP, when there were a thousand Iraqis begging
to do it for a jug of water. I would have
feasts with shieks and ministers- when I
came back me and my team of counterintelligence
special agents would be.. emptying out latrines.
Bottom line is they ignored it- (because
of) a lack of people, ignorance, and .. absolute
lack of planning for the occupation. Every day was a new day- you made it up
as you went along.” Ryan’s commander from July 2003 was Col.
Thomas Pappas, convicted of dereliction of
duty and relieved for his part in Abu Graib
abuse scandal. “Pappas was in charge of MI
(military intlligence) in central Iraq and probably the senior guy
for the entire country. Ryan went up the
chain of command and they told him he doesn’t
have the authority. Nobody else did anything,
so nothing got done.”
When questioned about the looting*, Donald
Rumsfeld, famously replied with the blithe insolence of a drunken teenager
who had crashed the family car, “Freedom's untidy. And free people are free to commit mistakes,
and to commit crimes and do bad things….
Stuff happens.” The looting was "part of the price"
for the liberation of Iraq and not uncommon
for countries that experience significant
social upheaval. Incredibly Rumsfeld seemed
to think the looting was a finger in Saddam’s eye and a healthy release of “pent-up feelings
that may result from decades of repression”,
although after the invasion America owned Iraq and obviously would have to fix any damage.
* questions were about looting of Baghdad
infrastructure and Museum; inexplicably,
deadly munitions never came up
The First Rule of Occupation since the Sumerians
is: disarm the population, but Rumsfeld knew better, wanting to test
his faster lighter cheaper invasion theories,
and blindly convinced we would be feted as
liberators. DeBatto says, “When looting started
they just didn’t know how to react. They
made a decision at the highest level- Rumsfeld-
to just let it go. They wanted not to be
seen as brutal occupiers and didn’t react
at all. You had these heavily armed Americans
who could have stopped anything, yet they let these looters take everything
they wanted. We have given every weapon Saddam
stored for 30 years.. to every terrorist
and 2-bit thug in the Middle East.”
Worst was the Manhattan-sized weapons dump
of Al Qaqa'a (an issue before the 2004 US
election), loaded with 380 tons of HMX, RDX,
PETN high explosives, so powerful they are
used in nuclear bombs, and useable in making
near undetectable IED's out of rubble (no
metal). The 101 Airborne Div., who swept
the area April 7-10, 2003, said they "did
not receive orders to search and secure the
entire facility or search for high explosive-type
munitions." By May 27, it was stripped
of all explosives by looters.
Even the Tuwaitha Nuclear Research Facility was allowed to be looted under the noses of US troops, putting a
lie to the entire WMD excuse for invasion,
and releasing dangerous radioactive compounds.
Although only the IAEA knew what existed
there, the administration blocked them from
inspecting it for 2 months. Debatto found
empty shells meant to be filled with chemicals
and bills of lading from the late 80’s. “The
only WMD I found in Iraq was supplied by
the USA… when we were still buddies.”
The cost has been borne by soldiers blasted
by massive IED’s and car bombs, which were
easily available only because of the looting:
1054 coalition deaths2 (Iraq Coalition Casualty Count) and 4000-7500 wounded as of June 1, 2006.
Insurgents have destroyed everything short
of Abrams tanks with these artillery shell
or air bomb IED’s, sometimes daisy chained
together or shaped to penetrate armor. Although
US forces are stopping half of them, IED’s
now cause the vast majority of coalition
hostile deaths in Iraq, 71% (181) from IED or car bomb in the last 5
months alone (Jan-May 2006). The Marines have really
suffered: in June 2005, 24 of 28 Marine fatalities,
85%, were from IED’s and car bombs†. In addition,
helicopter crash deaths from anti-aircraft
missiles, RPG and missile attacks on vehicles,
even mortar fatalities could be largely blamed
on the unlimited looting.
America initially had enormous authority
as the new overlord who had easily vanquished
a brutal dictator. The looting of all institutions
first caused amazement among Iraqis, then
outrage, then disgust, finally contempt;
which allowed the insurgency to flower. America
wasn’t all powerful; but seemed incompetent, careless, impotent,
reckless; and the protective aura of invincibility
evaporated. The one thing Iraq required was
order, but the USA refused to keep it, although
an explosion of looting was to be expected
once the pressure cooker lid was finally
released on totalitarian Iraq (where no weapons were in the hands of the populace). Even
hundreds of high power transmission towers
and lines were destroyed. Iraqis have paid
in blood: In the year after turnover of sovereignity,
there were 480 car bombings with 2174 killed
and 5520 wounded. When enraged Iraqis blame
America for these bombings, they aren’t completely
wrong.
We were ignorant towards their culture too.
“Iraq is a tribal country- everything revolves
around the sheiks,” explains DeBatto. “They
came hundreds of miles and said, ‘We will
contain our tribe, we guarantee there will
be no problem in this sector as long as you
deal with (pay) me and don’t go in on your
own.’ The Army refused to deal with that. They said, ‘Nope… we
are the law and you don’t tell us what to do.’” As in Afghanistan,
we could have bought Sunni sheiks’ cooperation
and secured these stolen armaments at a penny
on the dollar.
There were, of course, US disposal teams
destroying or securing some munitions: 100
tons a day destroyed, according to one report.
But way too few in a landscape saturated
with arms. Now 150 ordnance experts of an
IED task force attempt to stop the bombers
with $460 million of Warlock jammers to block
the detonation signals, lasers to fry suspected
IED’s, bomb robots to examine them, and military
detectives to track evidence back to the
bombers. Half of all IED’s are supposedly
discovered and disarmed successfully. But
they’ve evolved enormously in sophistication,
aided by officers from Saddam’s Iraq Army Special Operations Branch: the bomb that flipped the Marine amphibious
vehicle and killed US 14 soldiers was made
up of 3 anti-tank shells stacked on top of each other. Delayed secondary
bombs sometimes target rescue people. And
like insurgents have unlimited ordnance,
they may have unlimited bombers. “There is
an ample supply of replacements who will
perform as mercenaries – for the money. If
one is detained, another one can be recruited,”
said Lt. Gen. John Vines, commander of the
multinational forces. The foreign jihadis
are mostly Saudi,and come in through Syria,
which doesn’t require a visa for Arab men.
“It all comes back to Rumsfeld: he tried
to do the war on the cheap at the expense
of the miltary,” fumes DeBatto. “If we had
contained the looting, I firmly believe,
Iraqis would have still liked us, we could
have sent the vast majority of our people
home, and left a small number to train their
people, instead of 150,000. Things would
be very different today.”
Rumsfeld said in the 2004 Congressional hearings
on Abu Graib that, “I would resign in a minute if I thought that
I couldn't be effective.” He wasn’t- he cavalierly ignored the most
basic rules of invasion and perhaps 900 Americans
have paid the ultimate price for his arrogance
and hubris. He should resign or be fired,
or suffer the endless chants of Cindy Sheehans
camped at his door, or the doorstep of his
mind.
They say an ounce of prevention is worth
a pound of cure; or in this case, a quarter
million tons and 140,000 troops of it.
Copyright ©2005 Michael Hammerschlag
† 490 Iraq Marine deaths as of June 3,’05; total 565 Aug 31, inc. attached Navy; 30% of all US fatalities (1882)
2 (as of 11-11) Includes categories “explosion”, “bomb”,
"car bomb", “suicide car bomb”
which are also IEDs. Grenade, RPG, mine, etc listed separately
Michael Hammerschlag's commentary and articles
(HAMMERNEWS.com) have appeared in Seattle Times, Providence. Journal, Columbia
Journalism Review, Hawaii Advertiser, Capital
Times, MediaChannel; and Moscow News, Tribune, Times, and
Guardian. He's been a TV reporter, foreign correspondent,
and produced documentaries. He spent 2 years
in Russia from 1991-94, while multiple wars
raged in the Islamic southern republics.
hammerschlag@bigfoot.com