New York Times Rewrites
Fallujah History
Fair.org
November 16, 2004
In three recent reports about the military invasion of the
Iraqi city of Fallujah, the New York Times has misreported the
facts about the April 2004 invasion of the city and the toll it
took on Iraqi civilians.
On November 8, the Times reported: "In April, American troops
were closing in on the city center when popular uprisings broke
out in cities across Iraq. The outrage, fed by mostly unconfirmed
reports of large civilian casualties, forced the Americans to
withdraw. American commanders regarded the reports as inflated,
but it was impossible to determine independently how many
civilians had been killed."
The next day, the Times made the same point, reporting that
the U.S. "had to withdraw during a previous fight for the city in
April after unconfirmed reports of heavy civilian casualties
sparked outrage among both Sunni and Shiite Iraqis." And on
November 15, the Times noted that the current operation
"redressed a disastrous assault on Fallujah last April that was
called off when unconfirmed reports of large civilian casualties
drove the political cost too high."
It's unclear why the Times considers those civilian deaths
"unconfirmed." While there is some debate over precise figures,
this wording leaves the impression that nothing can be reasonably
known about deaths in Fallujah.
The head of Fallujah's hospital, Dr. Rafie al-Issawi, has
consistently maintained that more than 600 people were killed in
the initial U.S. siege of Fallujah in April 2004, a figure that
rose to more than 800 as the siege was lifted and people pinned
down by the fighting were able to register their families' deaths
(Knight-Ridder, 5/9/04). More than 300 of the dead, according to
al-Issawi, were women and children. The Iraqi Health Ministry in
Baghdad, part of the U.S.-installed government, gave a lower
figure of about 271 killed, with 52 of the dead being women and
children. On October 26, the independent British-based group Iraq
Body Count reported that the civilian death toll in Fallujah in
April was about 600, based on their extensive evaluation of the
numbers reported by local hospital officials and the Health
Ministry, as well as mainstream media accounts.
Other journalistic investigations depict the reality of
widespread civilian death in Fallujah: An Associated Press tally
of the dead in Iraq (4/30/04) discovered that in Fallujah "two
football fields were turned into cemeteries, with hundreds of
freshly dug graves, marked with wooden planks scrawled with names
-- some with names of women, some marked specifically as
children. At one of the fields, an AP reporter was told by
volunteer gravediggers on April 11 that more than 300 people had
been buried there." A Reuters report (4/13/04) quoted researchers
from Human Rights Watch calling for an investigation based on
reports they received from residents fleeing the violence in
Fallujah.
Even the lower estimates provided by the Health Ministry
debunk the Times' repeated assertion that reports of "large
civilian casualties" are "unconfirmed"-- unless the paper wants
to maintain that 52 women and children killed in an attempt to
"liberate" their city are inconsequential. But the Times should
know from its own reporting that the higher casualty figures are
much more realistic.
On October 19, the Times reported: "There are no agreed
figures for civilian deaths in Iraq over all since the war began
in early 2003, but the best estimates, by private groups and
independent news organizations, place the figure in the 10,000 to
15,000 range." It would seem obvious, then, that the bombing of a
large civilian population in Iraq in what the Times called "the
most intense aerial bombardment in Iraq since major combat ended"
(4/30/04) would produce significant civilian casualties.
Since substantial numbers of civilians did in fact die in
Fallujah in April, even if the exact number cannot be pinned
down, readers might wonder if the Times' policy is that things
that cannot be confirmed with numerical precision are essentially
"unconfirmed." But this would be a double standard on the part of
the Times; in its November 8 report, the paper noted: "The number
of insurgents in the city is estimated at 3,000, although some
guerrillas, terrorist fighters and their leaders escaped the city
before the attack. American military officials estimated that of
a usual population of 300,000, 70 percent to 90 percent of
civilians had fled."
Surely there is no way to determine exactly how many
insurgents are in Fallujah, or how many civilians have fled. To
be consistent, shouldn't the Times be reporting that accounts of
civilians leaving the city are "unconfirmed"?
In its November 8 report, the Times matter-of-factly noted
that U.S forces targeted a Fallujah hospital early in the
campaign "because the American military believed that it was the
source of rumors about heavy casualties." The Times added: "This
time around, the American military intends to fight its own
information war, countering or squelching what has been one of
the insurgents' most potent weapons."
If part of that "information war" means convincing Americans
that civilians are not victims of the Fallujah invasion, the
Times has signed up on the side of the Pentagon.
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