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Fallujah during the Iraq War

The United States bombardment of Fallujah began in April 2003, one month after the beginning of the invasion of Iraq. In April 2003 United States forces fired on a group of demonstrators who were protesting against the US presence. US forces alleged they were fired at first, but Human Rights Watch, who visited the site of the protests, concluded that physical evidence did not corroborate US allegations and confirmed the residents' accusations that the US forces fired indiscriminately at the crowd with no provocation. 17 people were killed and 70 were wounded.[1] In a later incident, US soldiers fired on protesters again; Fallujah's mayor, Taha Bedaiwi al-Alwani, said that two people were killed and 14 wounded.[2] Iraqi insurgents were able to claim the city a year later, before they were ousted by a siege and two assaults by US forces. These events caused widespread destruction and a humanitarian crisis in the city and surrounding areas. As of 2004, the city was largely ruined, with 60% of buildings damaged or destroyed, and the population at 30%–50% of pre-war levels.[3]

Map showing the location of Fallujah in Iraq

2003 invasion of Iraq edit

Although the majority of the residents were Sunni and had supported Saddam Hussein's rule, Fallujah lacked military presence just after his fall. There was little looting and the new mayor of the city—Taha Bidaywi Hamed, was selected by local tribal leaders—was pro-United States.[4] When the U.S. Army's 1st Battalion / 2nd Brigade 82nd Airborne entered the town on April 23, 2003, they positioned themselves at the vacated Ba'ath Party headquarters, a local school house, and the Ba'ath party resort just outside town (Dreamland)—the US bases inside the town erased some goodwill, especially when many in the city had been hoping the US Army would stay outside of the relatively calm city.

Instability, April 2003 – March 2004 edit

On the evening of April 28, 2003, several hundred residents defied the US curfew and marched down the streets of Fallujah, past the soldiers positioned in the former Ba'ath party headquarters, to protest the military presence inside the local school. US soldiers fired upon the crowd, killing as many as 17 and wounding more than 70 of the protesters. US soldiers alleged that they were returning fire, but protesters stated they were unarmed.[5][6][7] Independent observers from a human rights group found no evidence that US forces had come under attack.[1] The US suffered no casualties from the incident.

Two days later, on April 30, the 82nd Airborne was replaced in the city by Fox Troop from 2nd squadron of the / U.S. 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment. The 3rd Cavalry was significantly smaller in number and chose not to occupy the same schoolhouse where the shooting had occurred two days earlier. On the same day soldiers shot three protesters in front of U.S. Forward Operating Base "Laurie," established in the former Ba'ath party headquarters,[8] and next to the Mayor's office. At this point in time the 3rd Cavalry controlled all of Al Anbar province, and it became evident a larger force was needed. The now battalion-sized element of the 3rd Cavalry (2nd squadron) in Fallujah was replaced by the 2nd Brigade of the 3rd Infantry Division.[citation needed]

During the summer, the US Army decided to close down its last remaining base inside the city (the Ba'ath party headquarters; FOB Laurie). At this point the 3rd ACR had all of its forces stationed outside Fallujah in the former Baathist resort, Dreamland. After the May 11 disarmament of the Mujahedin-e-Khalq and subsequent protected persons assignment under the Fourth Geneva Convention,[9] the incoming 3rd Infantry Division also began using the large MEK compound adjacent to Dreamland to accommodate its larger troop presence in Fallujah. Under its control, the 3rd Infantry Division maintained no bases inside the city of Fallujah.

On 30 June a "huge explosion" occurred in a mosque in which the imam, Sheikh Laith Khalil, and eight other people were killed. Residents of the city stated the army fired a missile at the mosque, while U.S. Colonel Joseph Disalvo stated that the explosion took place in a building adjacent to the mosque.[10] Just a couple of days earlier things had been much quieter, although US troops had been confiscating motorbikes as a preventive measure against terrorist attacks.[11]

 
Timeline showing the sequence of units in control of Fallujah in just the first year of the war

Two months after the 3rd Infantry took control of Fallujah from the 3rd Cavalry, it was redeployed home. The 3rd Cavalry again assumed control of Fallujah with only one squadron. Attached to that Squadron was the 115th MP Company from the Rhode Island Army National Guard. The 115th MPs made routine patrols and frequent house raids searching for insurgents and weapons caches. In September 2003, the 3rd Brigade of the 82nd Airborne was deployed to replace the 3rd Cavalry in Ramadi and Fallujah. The 3rd Cavalry was then left to control all of the al-Anbar province except for these two cities.

Approximately one year after the invasion, the city's Iraqi police and Iraqi Civil Defense Corps were unable to establish order. Insurgents launched many attacks, some on police stations in the city, killing at least 20 police officers. Beginning in early March 2004, the Army's 82nd Airborne Division commanded by Major-General Charles H. Swannack Jr. gave a transfer of authority of the al-Anbar province to the I Marine Expeditionary Force commanded by Lt. General Conway. The 3rd Cavalry and the 3rd Brigade of the 82nd Airborne were then sent home.

On 24 March 2004, within hours of taking over control from the 82nd Airborne, the US Marines were drawn into running gun battles with insurgents, the Marines found themselves using these firefights to test the strength of the insurgents in various neighbourhoods. On 27 March, a JSOC surveillance team in Fallujah was compromised and had to shoot its way out of trouble.[12]

Attack on contractors edit

On March 31, 2004 - Iraqi insurgents from the Brigades of Martyr Ahmed Yassin in Fallujah ambushed a convoy containing four American private military contractors employed by Blackwater USA, who were at the time guarding a convoy carrying kitchen supplies to a military base, for the catering company Eurest Support Services.[13] Intelligence reports concluded that Ahmad Hashim Abd al-Isawi was the mastermind behind the attack.[14]

The four contractors, Scott Helvenston, Jerko Zovko, Wesley Batalona and Michael Teague, were dragged from their cars, beaten, and set ablaze. Their burned corpses were then dragged through the streets before being hung over a bridge crossing the Euphrates.[15]

Siege, April 2004 edit

In response to the killing of the four US citizens, and intense political pressure, the US Marines commenced Operation Vigilant Resolve. They surrounded the city and attempted to capture the individuals responsible as well as others in the region who might have been involved in insurgencies. One out of every two mosques in Fallujah were used to hide fighters or weapons.[16] The Iraqi National Guard was supposed to work alongside the US Marines in the operation, but on the dawn of the invasion they discarded their uniforms and deserted.[17] Under pressure from the Iraqi Governing Council, the US aborted its attempt to regain control of Fallujah. The US Marines suffered 40 deaths in the siege. Estimates of the number of Iraqi deaths (both fighters and civilians) in the attack range from 271 (according to Iraqi Ministry of Health officials[18][19]) to 731 (according to Rafie al-Issawi, the head of the local hospital[20]).

The occupying force on April 9 allowed more than 70,000 women, children and elderly residents to leave the besieged city. On April 10, the US military declared a unilateral truce to allow for humanitarian supplies to enter Fallujah. US troops pulled back to the outskirts of the city. An Iraqi mediation team entered the city in an attempt to set up negotiations between US forces and local leaders, but as of April 12 had not been successful. At least one US battalion had orders to shoot any male of military age on the streets after dark, armed or not.[21] In violation of the Geneva Convention, the city's main hospital was closed by Marines, negating its use, and a US sniper was placed on top of the hospital's water tower.[22]

The ceasefire followed a wave of insurgency activity across southern Iraq, which included the capture of two US soldiers, seven employees of US military contractor Kellogg, Brown and Root, and more than 50 other workers in Iraq. Several of the prisoners were released within days of their capture, while the majority were executed.[citation needed]

The US forces ostensibly sought to negotiate a settlement but promised to restart its offensive to retake the city if one was not reached. Military commanders said their goal in the siege was to capture those responsible for the numerous deaths of US and Iraqi security personnel. As the siege continued, insurgents conducted hit-and-run attacks on US Marine positions. The Marines had announced a unilateral ceasefire.[citation needed]

Truce, May 2004 edit

At the beginning of May 2004, the US Marine Corps announced a ceasefire due to intense political pressure. Most of the fighting was limited to the southern industrial district, which had the lowest population density inside the city limits and the northwest corner of the city in the Jolan district. There were also Marine battalions in the northeast and southern portion of the city. While both sides began preparations to resume offensives, General Conway took a risk and handed control of the city to a former Iraqi general with roughly 1,000 men who then formed the Fallujah Brigade, while acknowledging that many of the people under control of the general were probably insurgents themselves (no verification was provided). The general, Major General Muhammed Latif, replaced a US choice, Jasim Mohammed Saleh, who was alleged to have been involved in the earlier atrocities against Kurds during the Iran–Iraq War.[23] The ceasefire terms were to give control of Fallujah to General Latif on condition that Fallujah becomes a secure region for coalition forces and halt incoming mortar and rocket attacks on the nearby US bases. Latif's militia wore Iraqi military uniforms from the Hussein era. Another tenet of the cease-fire was the establishment of a Traffic Control Point (TCP) on the eastern side of the city just west of the "cloverleaf". This TCP was constantly manned by a platoon of Marines and a platoon from the Iraqi National Guard and saw almost daily firefights for the rest of the summer.

Inside the city, mosques proclaimed the victory of the insurgents over the United States. [citation needed] Celebratory banners appeared around the city, and the fighters paraded through the town on trucks. Iraqi governing council member Ahmed Chalabi, after a bombing that killed fellow IGC member Izzadine Saleem, blamed the US military's decisions in Fallujah for the attack, stating "The garage is open and car bombs are coming repeatedly."[24]

Owners of shops that sold US-style magazine and barbers who offered "Western-style" haircuts were beaten and publicly humiliated. Inter-faction fighting was also rampant.[citation needed] The Fallujah Brigade was soon marginalized and ceased to be more than another faction in what had effectively become a no-go area for coalition troops.

Counter-insurgency, May – November 2004 edit

Throughout the summer and fall of 2004, the U.S. military conducted sporadic airstrikes on Fallujah. U.S. forces reported that all were confirmed targeted, intelligence-based strikes against houses used by the group of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, an insurgency leader linked to al-Qaida.

In October and early November 2004, the U.S. military prepared for a major offensive against the rebel stronghold with stepped up daily aerial attacks using precision-guided munitions[25] against militant "safe houses," restaurants and meeting places in the city. U.S. Marines also engaged in firefights on a daily and nightly basis along the perimeter of the city. There were again conflicting reports of civilian casualties.[26]: 256–267 

CNN incorrectly reported on October 14, 2004, that the US offensive assault on Fallujah had begun and broadcast a report from a young Marine outside Fallujah, 1st Lt. Lyle Gilbert, who announced that "troops have crossed the line of departure." Hours later, CNN reported their Pentagon reporters had determined that the assault had not, in fact, begun. The Los Angeles Times reported on December 1, 2004, that, according to several unnamed Pentagon officials, the Marine's announcement was a feint—part of an elaborate "psychological operation" (PSYOP) to determine the Fallujah rebels' reactions if they believed attack was imminent.

On November 7, 2004, the U.S.-appointed Iraq interim government declared a 60-day state of emergency in preparation for the assault, as insurgents carried out several car bomb attacks in the Fallujah area which killed Iraqi army and police, U.S. Marines and Iraqi civilians. The next day Prime Minister Iyad Allawi publicly authorized an offensive in Fallujah and Ramadi to "liberate the people" and "clean Fallujah from the terrorists". Marines, U.S. Army soldiers and allied Iraqi soldiers stormed into Fallujah's western outskirts, secured two bridges across the Euphrates, seized a hospital on the outskirts of the city and arrested about 50 men in the hospital. About half the arrested men were later released. A hospital doctor reported that 15 Iraqis were killed and 20 wounded during the overnight incursions. The US armed forces have designated the offensive as Operation Phantom Fury.

In the first week of Operation Phantom Fury, government spokesman Thair al-Naqeeb said that many of the remaining fighters have asked to surrender and that Iraqi authorities "will extend amnesty" to those who have not committed major crimes.[27] At the same time, US forces prevented male refugees from leaving the combat zone, and the city was placed under a strict night-time shoot-to-kill curfew with anyone spotted in the Marines' night vision sights shot.[28][29]

U.S.–Iraqi offensive of November 7, 2004 edit

Journalists embedded with U.S. military units, although limited in what they may report, have reported the following:

  • On November 8, 2004, a force of around 2,000 U.S. and 600 Iraqi troops began a concentrated assault on Fallujah with air strikes, artillery, armor, and infantry. The New York Times reported that within an hour of the start of the ground attack, troops seized the Fallujah General Hospital. "Patients and hospital employees were rushed out of rooms by armed soldiers and ordered to sit or lie on the floor while troops tied their hands behind their backs".[30] Noam Chomsky in his book Failed States commented that according to the Geneva Conventions, medical establishments "may in no circumstance be attacked, but shall at all times be respected and protected by the Parties to the conflict."[31] Troops seized the rail yards North of the city, and pushed into the city simultaneously from the North and West taking control of the volatile Jolan and Askari districts. By nightfall on November 9, 2004, the U.S. troops had almost reached the heart of the city. U.S. military officials stated that 1,000 to 6,000 insurgents were believed to be in the city, they appear to be organized, and fought in small groups, of three to 25. Many insurgents were believed to have slipped away amid widespread reports that the U.S. offensive was coming. During the assault, Marines and Iraqi soldiers endured sniper fire and destroyed booby traps, much more than anticipated. Ten U.S. troops were killed in the fighting and 22 wounded in the first two days of fighting. Insurgent casualty numbers were estimated at 85 to 90 killed or wounded. Several more days of fighting were anticipated as U.S. and Iraqi troops conducted house-to-house searches for weapons, booby traps, and insurgents.
  • On 9 November, CNN Correspondent Karl Penhaul reported the use of cluster bombs in the offensive: "The sky over Fallujah seems to explode as U.S. Marines launch their much-trumpeted ground assault. War planes drop cluster bombs on insurgent positions and artillery batteries fire smoke rounds to conceal a Marine advance."[32]
  • November 10, 2004 reports by The Washington Post suggested U.S. armed forces used white phosphorus grenades and/or artillery shells, creating walls of fire in the city. Doctors working inside Fallujah report seeing melted corpses of suspected insurgents.[33] The use of WP ammunition was confirmed from various independent sources, including U.S. troops who had suffered WP burns due to friendly fire. On November 16, 2005, The Independent reported that Pentagon spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Barry Venable "disclosed that (white phosphorus) had been used to dislodge enemy fighters from entrenched positions in the city"..."We use them primarily as obscurants, for smokescreens or target marking in some cases. However, it is an incendiary weapon and may be used against enemy combatants."[34] But a day before, Robert Tuttle, the U.S. ambassador to London, denied that white phosphorus was deployed as a weapon: "US forces do not use napalm or white phosphorus as weapons."[35][36]
  • On November 13, 2004 a Red Crescent convoy containing humanitarian aid was delayed from entering Fallujah by the U.S. army.[37][38]
  • On November 13, 2004, a U.S. Marine with 3rd Battalion, 1st Marines was videotaped killing a wounded combatant in a mosque. The incident, which came under investigation, created controversy throughout the world. The man was shot at close range after he and several other wounded insurgents had previously been left behind overnight in the mosque by the U.S. Marines. The Marine shooting the man had been mildly injured by insurgents in the same mosque the day before.[39][40]

In May 2005, it was announced that the Marine would not face a court-martial. In a statement, Maj. Gen. Richard F. Natonski, commanding general of the I Marine Expeditionary Force, said that a review of the evidence had shown that the shooting was "consistent with the established rules of engagement and the law of armed conflict."[41]

  • On November 16, 2004, a Red Cross official told Inter Press Service that "at least 800 civilians" had been killed in Fallujah and indicated that "they had received several reports from refugees that the military had dropped cluster bombs in Fallujah, and used a phosphorus weapon that caused severe burns."[42]
  • As of November 18, 2004, the U.S. military reported 1,200 insurgents killed and 1,000 captured. U.S. casualties were 51 killed and 425 wounded, and the Iraqi forces were 8 killed and 43 wounded.[43]
  • On December 2, 2004, the U.S. death toll in Fallujah operation reached 71 killed.[44]
  • Some of the tactics said to be used by the insurgents included playing dead and attacking, surrendering and attacking, and rigging dead or wounded with bombs. In the November 13th incident mentioned above, the U.S. Marine alleged the insurgent was playing dead.[45]
  • Of the 100 mosques in the city, about 60 were used as fighting positions by the insurgents.[citation needed] The U.S. and Iraqi military swept through all mosques used as fighting positions, destroying them, leading to great resentment from local residents.
  • In 2005, the U.S. military admitted that it used white phosphorus as an anti-personnel weapon in Fallujah.[46]

On 17 May 2011, AFP reported that 21 bodies, in black body-bags marked with letters and numbers in Roman script had been recovered from a mass grave in al-Maadhidi cemetery in the centre of the city. Fallujah police chief Brigadier General Mahmud al-Essawi said that they had been blindfolded, their legs had been tied and they had suffered gunshot wounds. The Mayor, Adnan Husseini said that the manner of their killing, as well as the body bags, indicated that US forces had been responsible. Both al-Essawi and Husseini agreed that the dead had been killed in 2004. The US Military declined to comment.[47]

Aftermath edit

Residents were allowed to return to the city in mid-December after undergoing biometric identification, provided they carry their ID cards all the time. US officials report that "more than half of Fallujah's 39,000 homes were damaged, and about 10,000 of those were destroyed." Compensation amounts to 20 percent of the value of damaged houses, with an estimated 32,000 homeowners eligible, according to Marine Lt. Col. William Brown.[48] According to the NBC,[49] 9,000 homes were destroyed, thousands more were damaged and of the 32,000 compensation claims only 2,500 had been paid as of April 14, 2005. According to Mike Marqusee of Iraq Occupation Focus writing in The Guardian,[50] "Falluja's compensation commissioner has reported that 36,000 of the city's 50,000 homes were destroyed, along with 60 schools and 65 mosques and shrines". Reconstruction is only progressing slowly and mainly consists of clearing rubble from heavily damaged areas and reestablishing basic utility services. This is also due to the fact that only 10% of the pre-offensive inhabitants had returned as of mid-January, and only 30% as of the end of March 2005.[51]

Health effects edit

Research by Chris Busby, Malak Hamdan and Entesar Ariabi published in 2010 lent credibility to anecdotal news reports of increases in birth defects and cancer after the fighting in 2004.[52] Results from a survey of 711 households in Fallujah on cancer, birth defects and infant mortality suggested that large increases in cancer and infant mortality had occurred. Responses to the questionnaire also suggested an anomalous mean birth sex ratio in children born a year after the fighting, indicating that environmental contamination occurred in 2004. Although the authors said the use of depleted uranium as a possible source of relevant exposure, they emphasized that there could be other possibilities and that their results did not identify the agent(s) responsible for the increased levels of illness.

ISIS occupation edit

In early January 2014, Iraq's Fallujah had "fallen completely" out of the Iraqi government's control. The center of the city was reportedly in control of fighters from the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. While some families were fleeing Fallujah, others waited for ISIS to take over Ramadi.[7] Despite reports stating ISIS was behind the unrest, The Christian Science Monitor journalist Dan Murphy disputed this allegation and claimed that while ISIS fighters have maintained a presence in the city, various tribal militias who sympathized with the ideas of nationalism and were opposed to both the Iraqi government and ISIS controlled the largest share of area in Fallujah.[53] On January 14, tribal chieftains in the province acknowledged "revolutionary tribesmen" were behind the uprising in Fallujah and other parts of Anbar and announced they would support them unless Maliki agreed to cease the ongoing military crackdowns on tribesmen.[54] In June 2016, Fallujah was retaken by Iraqi forces after a 3 month long siege.

See also edit

U.S. operations in Fallujah edit

United States Army led operations in Fallujah
U.S. Marine led operations in Fallujah

Films edit

  • American Sniper, is a 2014 American biographical war drama film directed by Clint Eastwood and written by Jason Hall.[55]
  • Fallujah, The Hidden Massacre, a documentary detailing the alleged use of white phosphorus and Mk-77 by the U.S. Army against civilians in the city. (Google Video) 2007-11-19 at the Wayback Machine
  • No True Glory, a Frontline Account of the Battle for Fallujah based on the book by Bing West scheduled for release in 2008, starring Harrison Ford as General Mattis.[56] As of February 2010, the IMDb has no trace of this film project.
  • Occupation: Dreamland Documentary film (2005)[57]
  • Delta Farce Comedy (2007) about Army reservists deployed to Fallujah, but who are accidentally airdropped elsewhere.
  • Falluja, April 2004, a documentary film by Toshikuni Doi[58]
  • "Inside the Resistance", a documentary film by Tara Sutton[59]
  • "Fallujah Forensics", a documentary film by Tara Sutton[60]

Further reading edit

  • No True Glory: A Frontline Account of the Battle for Fallujah by Bing West (2005).
  • We Were One: Shoulder to Shoulder with the Marines Who Took Fallujah: Shoulder to Shoulder with the Marines Who Took Fallujah by Patrick O'Donnell (2006) (ISBN 9780306814693)
  • Fighting for Fallujah: A New Dawn for Iraq by John R. Ballard (2006) (ISBN 0-275-99055-9)
  • Among Warriors in Iraq: True Grit, Special Ops, and Raiding in Mosul and Fallujah by Mike Tucker (2005) (ISBN 1-59228-732-8)
  • Fallujah, with Honor; First Battalion, Eighth Marine's Role in Operation Phantom Fury by Gary Livingston (2006)
  • House to House by David Bellavia and John Bruning (2007) (ISBN 978-1416574712)

References edit

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  2. ^ . Associated Press. 2003-04-30. Archived from the original on 2010-12-04. Retrieved 2010-06-16.
  3. ^ - by Pepe Escobar, Asia Times (2 December 2004)
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  7. ^ a b Nightline (29 April 2003). "ABC News Transcripts". ABC News.
  8. ^ "FOB Laurie". Retrieved 27 October 2015.
  9. ^ Goulka, Jeremiah; Hansell, Lydia; Wilke, Elizabeth; Larson, Judith (2009). The Mujahedin-e Khalq in Iraq: A Policy Conundrum (PDF) (Report). RAND corporation. Archived (PDF) from the original on 22 February 2016.
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  14. ^ Deignan, Tom (December 22, 2013). "Navy SEALS tragedy in Afghanistan chronicled in new film, "Lone Survivors"". IrishCentral. Retrieved November 28, 2016.
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  27. ^ "HeadlineAlley".
  28. ^ Hider, James (2004-11-12). "US soldiers set to move in on martyrs land". The Times. London. Retrieved 2010-03-30.
  29. ^ Jeffery, Simon (2005-11-18). "A week of the war". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
  30. ^ Early Target of Offensive Is a Hospital The New York Times, 8 November 2004.
  31. ^ Chomsky, Noam (2006). Failed States: The Abuse of Power and The Assault on Democracy (First Holt Paperbacks Edition 2007 ed.). New York, New York: Henry Holt and Company, LLC. p. 48. ISBN 978-0-8050-8284-5.
  32. ^ "CNN.com – Transcripts". Transcripts.cnn.com. 2004-11-09. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
  33. ^ "U.S. Forces Battle Into Heart of Fallujah". The Washington Post. 2004-11-10. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
  34. ^ . The Independent. London. 2005-11-16. Archived from the original on 2008-01-01. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
  35. ^ . Commondreams.org. 2005-11-16. Archived from the original on 2009-02-20. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
  36. ^ Reynolds, Paul (2005-11-16). "White phosphorus: weapon on the edge". BBC News. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
  37. ^ "Aid enters embattled Iraqi city". BBC News. 2004-11-13. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
  38. ^ Rory McCarthy in Baghdad (2004-11-15). "US denies need for Falluja aid convoy | World news". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
  39. ^ "Military investigates shooting of wounded insurgent – Nov 16, 2004". CNN.com. 2004-11-16. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
  40. ^ . Kevinsites.net. Archived from the original on June 24, 2007. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
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  42. ^ Jamail, Dahr (2004-11-16). . Dahrjamailiraq.com. Archived from the original on 2008-09-25. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
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  45. ^ Sites, Kevin (2004-11-21). "Open Letter to Devil Dogs of the 3.1 by Kevin Sites". The Digital Journalist. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
  46. ^ "U.S.Used White Phosphorus in Iraq". BBC News. 2005-11-16. Retrieved 2009-01-22.
  47. ^ '21 bodies found in Iraq mass grave, AFP, 2011-05-17, archived from the original on 2013-01-24, retrieved 19 June 2011
  48. ^ "Increased Security In Fallujah Slows Efforts to Rebuild". washingtonpost.com. 2005-04-19. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
  49. ^ "Still locked down, Fallujah slow to rebuild – Nightly News – NBC News". NBC News. 2005-04-14. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
  50. ^ Mike Marqusee (2005-11-09). "Mike Marqusee: The destruction of Falluja was an act of barbarism that ranks alongside My Lai, Guernica and Halabja | World news". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
  51. ^ . Voanews.com. 2005-03-31. Archived from the original on 2005-04-18. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
  52. ^ Busby, Chris; Hamdan, Malak; Ariabi, Entesar (6 July 2010). "Cancer, Infant Mortality and Birth Sex-Ratio in Fallujah, Iraq 2005–2009". International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 7 (7): 2828–2837. doi:10.3390/ijerph7072828. PMC 2922729. PMID 20717542.
  53. ^ Dan Murphy (January 9, 2013). "What's really going on in Iraq's Anbar Province?". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved January 11, 2013.
  54. ^ Anbar tribesmen voice opposition to Iraqi PM Maliki World Bulletin.com, January 14, 2014
  55. ^ "American Sniper". 16 January 2015 – via www.imdb.com.
  56. ^ No True Glory April 16, 2006, at the Wayback Machine [user-generated source]
  57. ^ "Occupation: Dreamland". 19 May 2006 – via www.imdb.com.
  58. ^ Falluja, April 2004
  59. ^ Inside the Resistance BBC
  60. ^ Fallujah Forensics

External links edit

  • Fallujah - The Day After: Video of devastation of Fallujah from Diario (27 May 2005)
  • This is our Guernica – by Jonathan Steele and Dahr Jamail, The Guardian (27 April 2005)
  • by Omar Khan, DahrJamailIraq.com (15 February 2005)
  • Fallujah: The Real Fall special report on Fallujah since November 2004 - Channel 4 (11 January 2005)
  • Falluja: City with history of rebellion - BBC News 23 December 2004
  • Raw Video Footage of U.S. Offensive in Fallujah large archive of news network footage and unofficial footage collected by Geoffrey Huntley – fallujah.us
  • Zarqawi's city of death – The Washington Times (29 November 2004)
  • - by Hannah Allam, Knight Ridder (22 November 2004)
  • Telling the Fallujah Story to the World - Military.com (20 November 2004)
  • Fallujah yields up weapons, videos – The Christian Science Monitor (19 November 2004)
  • signed by Al-Fallujah Shura Council, a council of insurgent organizations; and by others
  • The 2004 Siege of Fallujah - An interactive guide - The Guardian
  • (by Dahr Jamail, an unembedded and independent 2005-04-14 at the Wayback Machine journalist) - DahrJamailIraq.com
  • Fallujah, November-December 2004 United States Marine Corps 2014

fallujah, during, iraq, united, states, bombardment, fallujah, began, april, 2003, month, after, beginning, invasion, iraq, april, 2003, united, states, forces, fired, group, demonstrators, were, protesting, against, presence, forces, alleged, they, were, fire. The United States bombardment of Fallujah began in April 2003 one month after the beginning of the invasion of Iraq In April 2003 United States forces fired on a group of demonstrators who were protesting against the US presence US forces alleged they were fired at first but Human Rights Watch who visited the site of the protests concluded that physical evidence did not corroborate US allegations and confirmed the residents accusations that the US forces fired indiscriminately at the crowd with no provocation 17 people were killed and 70 were wounded 1 In a later incident US soldiers fired on protesters again Fallujah s mayor Taha Bedaiwi al Alwani said that two people were killed and 14 wounded 2 Iraqi insurgents were able to claim the city a year later before they were ousted by a siege and two assaults by US forces These events caused widespread destruction and a humanitarian crisis in the city and surrounding areas As of 2004 the city was largely ruined with 60 of buildings damaged or destroyed and the population at 30 50 of pre war levels 3 Map showing the location of Fallujah in Iraq Contents 1 2003 invasion of Iraq 1 1 Instability April 2003 March 2004 1 1 1 Attack on contractors 1 2 Siege April 2004 1 3 Truce May 2004 1 4 Counter insurgency May November 2004 2 U S Iraqi offensive of November 7 2004 3 Aftermath 3 1 Health effects 4 ISIS occupation 5 See also 5 1 U S operations in Fallujah 5 2 Films 6 Further reading 7 References 8 External links2003 invasion of Iraq editAlthough the majority of the residents were Sunni and had supported Saddam Hussein s rule Fallujah lacked military presence just after his fall There was little looting and the new mayor of the city Taha Bidaywi Hamed was selected by local tribal leaders was pro United States 4 When the U S Army s 1st Battalion 2nd Brigade 82nd Airborne entered the town on April 23 2003 they positioned themselves at the vacated Ba ath Party headquarters a local school house and the Ba ath party resort just outside town Dreamland the US bases inside the town erased some goodwill especially when many in the city had been hoping the US Army would stay outside of the relatively calm city Instability April 2003 March 2004 edit Main article Fallujah killings of April 2003 On the evening of April 28 2003 several hundred residents defied the US curfew and marched down the streets of Fallujah past the soldiers positioned in the former Ba ath party headquarters to protest the military presence inside the local school US soldiers fired upon the crowd killing as many as 17 and wounding more than 70 of the protesters US soldiers alleged that they were returning fire but protesters stated they were unarmed 5 6 7 Independent observers from a human rights group found no evidence that US forces had come under attack 1 The US suffered no casualties from the incident Two days later on April 30 the 82nd Airborne was replaced in the city by Fox Troop from 2nd squadron of the U S 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment The 3rd Cavalry was significantly smaller in number and chose not to occupy the same schoolhouse where the shooting had occurred two days earlier On the same day soldiers shot three protesters in front of U S Forward Operating Base Laurie established in the former Ba ath party headquarters 8 and next to the Mayor s office At this point in time the 3rd Cavalry controlled all of Al Anbar province and it became evident a larger force was needed The now battalion sized element of the 3rd Cavalry 2nd squadron in Fallujah was replaced by the 2nd Brigade of the 3rd Infantry Division citation needed During the summer the US Army decided to close down its last remaining base inside the city the Ba ath party headquarters FOB Laurie At this point the 3rd ACR had all of its forces stationed outside Fallujah in the former Baathist resort Dreamland After the May 11 disarmament of the Mujahedin e Khalq and subsequent protected persons assignment under the Fourth Geneva Convention 9 the incoming 3rd Infantry Division also began using the large MEK compound adjacent to Dreamland to accommodate its larger troop presence in Fallujah Under its control the 3rd Infantry Division maintained no bases inside the city of Fallujah On 30 June a huge explosion occurred in a mosque in which the imam Sheikh Laith Khalil and eight other people were killed Residents of the city stated the army fired a missile at the mosque while U S Colonel Joseph Disalvo stated that the explosion took place in a building adjacent to the mosque 10 Just a couple of days earlier things had been much quieter although US troops had been confiscating motorbikes as a preventive measure against terrorist attacks 11 nbsp Timeline showing the sequence of units in control of Fallujah in just the first year of the warTwo months after the 3rd Infantry took control of Fallujah from the 3rd Cavalry it was redeployed home The 3rd Cavalry again assumed control of Fallujah with only one squadron Attached to that Squadron was the 115th MP Company from the Rhode Island Army National Guard The 115th MPs made routine patrols and frequent house raids searching for insurgents and weapons caches In September 2003 the 3rd Brigade of the 82nd Airborne was deployed to replace the 3rd Cavalry in Ramadi and Fallujah The 3rd Cavalry was then left to control all of the al Anbar province except for these two cities Approximately one year after the invasion the city s Iraqi police and Iraqi Civil Defense Corps were unable to establish order Insurgents launched many attacks some on police stations in the city killing at least 20 police officers Beginning in early March 2004 the Army s 82nd Airborne Division commanded by Major General Charles H Swannack Jr gave a transfer of authority of the al Anbar province to the I Marine Expeditionary Force commanded by Lt General Conway The 3rd Cavalry and the 3rd Brigade of the 82nd Airborne were then sent home On 24 March 2004 within hours of taking over control from the 82nd Airborne the US Marines were drawn into running gun battles with insurgents the Marines found themselves using these firefights to test the strength of the insurgents in various neighbourhoods On 27 March a JSOC surveillance team in Fallujah was compromised and had to shoot its way out of trouble 12 Attack on contractors edit Main article 2004 Fallujah ambush On March 31 2004 Iraqi insurgents from the Brigades of Martyr Ahmed Yassin in Fallujah ambushed a convoy containing four American private military contractors employed by Blackwater USA who were at the time guarding a convoy carrying kitchen supplies to a military base for the catering company Eurest Support Services 13 Intelligence reports concluded that Ahmad Hashim Abd al Isawi was the mastermind behind the attack 14 The four contractors Scott Helvenston Jerko Zovko Wesley Batalona and Michael Teague were dragged from their cars beaten and set ablaze Their burned corpses were then dragged through the streets before being hung over a bridge crossing the Euphrates 15 Siege April 2004 edit Main article First Battle of Fallujah In response to the killing of the four US citizens and intense political pressure the US Marines commenced Operation Vigilant Resolve They surrounded the city and attempted to capture the individuals responsible as well as others in the region who might have been involved in insurgencies One out of every two mosques in Fallujah were used to hide fighters or weapons 16 The Iraqi National Guard was supposed to work alongside the US Marines in the operation but on the dawn of the invasion they discarded their uniforms and deserted 17 Under pressure from the Iraqi Governing Council the US aborted its attempt to regain control of Fallujah The US Marines suffered 40 deaths in the siege Estimates of the number of Iraqi deaths both fighters and civilians in the attack range from 271 according to Iraqi Ministry of Health officials 18 19 to 731 according to Rafie al Issawi the head of the local hospital 20 The occupying force on April 9 allowed more than 70 000 women children and elderly residents to leave the besieged city On April 10 the US military declared a unilateral truce to allow for humanitarian supplies to enter Fallujah US troops pulled back to the outskirts of the city An Iraqi mediation team entered the city in an attempt to set up negotiations between US forces and local leaders but as of April 12 had not been successful At least one US battalion had orders to shoot any male of military age on the streets after dark armed or not 21 In violation of the Geneva Convention the city s main hospital was closed by Marines negating its use and a US sniper was placed on top of the hospital s water tower 22 The ceasefire followed a wave of insurgency activity across southern Iraq which included the capture of two US soldiers seven employees of US military contractor Kellogg Brown and Root and more than 50 other workers in Iraq Several of the prisoners were released within days of their capture while the majority were executed citation needed The US forces ostensibly sought to negotiate a settlement but promised to restart its offensive to retake the city if one was not reached Military commanders said their goal in the siege was to capture those responsible for the numerous deaths of US and Iraqi security personnel As the siege continued insurgents conducted hit and run attacks on US Marine positions The Marines had announced a unilateral ceasefire citation needed Truce May 2004 edit At the beginning of May 2004 the US Marine Corps announced a ceasefire due to intense political pressure Most of the fighting was limited to the southern industrial district which had the lowest population density inside the city limits and the northwest corner of the city in the Jolan district There were also Marine battalions in the northeast and southern portion of the city While both sides began preparations to resume offensives General Conway took a risk and handed control of the city to a former Iraqi general with roughly 1 000 men who then formed the Fallujah Brigade while acknowledging that many of the people under control of the general were probably insurgents themselves no verification was provided The general Major General Muhammed Latif replaced a US choice Jasim Mohammed Saleh who was alleged to have been involved in the earlier atrocities against Kurds during the Iran Iraq War 23 The ceasefire terms were to give control of Fallujah to General Latif on condition that Fallujah becomes a secure region for coalition forces and halt incoming mortar and rocket attacks on the nearby US bases Latif s militia wore Iraqi military uniforms from the Hussein era Another tenet of the cease fire was the establishment of a Traffic Control Point TCP on the eastern side of the city just west of the cloverleaf This TCP was constantly manned by a platoon of Marines and a platoon from the Iraqi National Guard and saw almost daily firefights for the rest of the summer Inside the city mosques proclaimed the victory of the insurgents over the United States citation needed Celebratory banners appeared around the city and the fighters paraded through the town on trucks Iraqi governing council member Ahmed Chalabi after a bombing that killed fellow IGC member Izzadine Saleem blamed the US military s decisions in Fallujah for the attack stating The garage is open and car bombs are coming repeatedly 24 Owners of shops that sold US style magazine and barbers who offered Western style haircuts were beaten and publicly humiliated Inter faction fighting was also rampant citation needed The Fallujah Brigade was soon marginalized and ceased to be more than another faction in what had effectively become a no go area for coalition troops Counter insurgency May November 2004 edit Throughout the summer and fall of 2004 the U S military conducted sporadic airstrikes on Fallujah U S forces reported that all were confirmed targeted intelligence based strikes against houses used by the group of Abu Musab al Zarqawi an insurgency leader linked to al Qaida In October and early November 2004 the U S military prepared for a major offensive against the rebel stronghold with stepped up daily aerial attacks using precision guided munitions 25 against militant safe houses restaurants and meeting places in the city U S Marines also engaged in firefights on a daily and nightly basis along the perimeter of the city There were again conflicting reports of civilian casualties 26 256 267 CNN incorrectly reported on October 14 2004 that the US offensive assault on Fallujah had begun and broadcast a report from a young Marine outside Fallujah 1st Lt Lyle Gilbert who announced that troops have crossed the line of departure Hours later CNN reported their Pentagon reporters had determined that the assault had not in fact begun The Los Angeles Times reported on December 1 2004 that according to several unnamed Pentagon officials the Marine s announcement was a feint part of an elaborate psychological operation PSYOP to determine the Fallujah rebels reactions if they believed attack was imminent On November 7 2004 the U S appointed Iraq interim government declared a 60 day state of emergency in preparation for the assault as insurgents carried out several car bomb attacks in the Fallujah area which killed Iraqi army and police U S Marines and Iraqi civilians The next day Prime Minister Iyad Allawi publicly authorized an offensive in Fallujah and Ramadi to liberate the people and clean Fallujah from the terrorists Marines U S Army soldiers and allied Iraqi soldiers stormed into Fallujah s western outskirts secured two bridges across the Euphrates seized a hospital on the outskirts of the city and arrested about 50 men in the hospital About half the arrested men were later released A hospital doctor reported that 15 Iraqis were killed and 20 wounded during the overnight incursions The US armed forces have designated the offensive as Operation Phantom Fury In the first week of Operation Phantom Fury government spokesman Thair al Naqeeb said that many of the remaining fighters have asked to surrender and that Iraqi authorities will extend amnesty to those who have not committed major crimes 27 At the same time US forces prevented male refugees from leaving the combat zone and the city was placed under a strict night time shoot to kill curfew with anyone spotted in the Marines night vision sights shot 28 29 U S Iraqi offensive of November 7 2004 editMain article Second Battle of Fallujah Journalists embedded with U S military units although limited in what they may report have reported the following On November 8 2004 a force of around 2 000 U S and 600 Iraqi troops began a concentrated assault on Fallujah with air strikes artillery armor and infantry The New York Times reported that within an hour of the start of the ground attack troops seized the Fallujah General Hospital Patients and hospital employees were rushed out of rooms by armed soldiers and ordered to sit or lie on the floor while troops tied their hands behind their backs 30 Noam Chomsky in his book Failed States commented that according to the Geneva Conventions medical establishments may in no circumstance be attacked but shall at all times be respected and protected by the Parties to the conflict 31 Troops seized the rail yards North of the city and pushed into the city simultaneously from the North and West taking control of the volatile Jolan and Askari districts By nightfall on November 9 2004 the U S troops had almost reached the heart of the city U S military officials stated that 1 000 to 6 000 insurgents were believed to be in the city they appear to be organized and fought in small groups of three to 25 Many insurgents were believed to have slipped away amid widespread reports that the U S offensive was coming During the assault Marines and Iraqi soldiers endured sniper fire and destroyed booby traps much more than anticipated Ten U S troops were killed in the fighting and 22 wounded in the first two days of fighting Insurgent casualty numbers were estimated at 85 to 90 killed or wounded Several more days of fighting were anticipated as U S and Iraqi troops conducted house to house searches for weapons booby traps and insurgents On 9 November CNN Correspondent Karl Penhaul reported the use of cluster bombs in the offensive The sky over Fallujah seems to explode as U S Marines launch their much trumpeted ground assault War planes drop cluster bombs on insurgent positions and artillery batteries fire smoke rounds to conceal a Marine advance 32 November 10 2004 reports by The Washington Post suggested U S armed forces used white phosphorus grenades and or artillery shells creating walls of fire in the city Doctors working inside Fallujah report seeing melted corpses of suspected insurgents 33 The use of WP ammunition was confirmed from various independent sources including U S troops who had suffered WP burns due to friendly fire On November 16 2005 The Independent reported that Pentagon spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Barry Venable disclosed that white phosphorus had been used to dislodge enemy fighters from entrenched positions in the city We use them primarily as obscurants for smokescreens or target marking in some cases However it is an incendiary weapon and may be used against enemy combatants 34 But a day before Robert Tuttle the U S ambassador to London denied that white phosphorus was deployed as a weapon US forces do not use napalm or white phosphorus as weapons 35 36 On November 13 2004 a Red Crescent convoy containing humanitarian aid was delayed from entering Fallujah by the U S army 37 38 On November 13 2004 a U S Marine with 3rd Battalion 1st Marines was videotaped killing a wounded combatant in a mosque The incident which came under investigation created controversy throughout the world The man was shot at close range after he and several other wounded insurgents had previously been left behind overnight in the mosque by the U S Marines The Marine shooting the man had been mildly injured by insurgents in the same mosque the day before 39 40 In May 2005 it was announced that the Marine would not face a court martial In a statement Maj Gen Richard F Natonski commanding general of the I Marine Expeditionary Force said that a review of the evidence had shown that the shooting was consistent with the established rules of engagement and the law of armed conflict 41 On November 16 2004 a Red Cross official told Inter Press Service that at least 800 civilians had been killed in Fallujah and indicated that they had received several reports from refugees that the military had dropped cluster bombs in Fallujah and used a phosphorus weapon that caused severe burns 42 As of November 18 2004 the U S military reported 1 200 insurgents killed and 1 000 captured U S casualties were 51 killed and 425 wounded and the Iraqi forces were 8 killed and 43 wounded 43 On December 2 2004 the U S death toll in Fallujah operation reached 71 killed 44 Some of the tactics said to be used by the insurgents included playing dead and attacking surrendering and attacking and rigging dead or wounded with bombs In the November 13th incident mentioned above the U S Marine alleged the insurgent was playing dead 45 Of the 100 mosques in the city about 60 were used as fighting positions by the insurgents citation needed The U S and Iraqi military swept through all mosques used as fighting positions destroying them leading to great resentment from local residents In 2005 the U S military admitted that it used white phosphorus as an anti personnel weapon in Fallujah 46 On 17 May 2011 AFP reported that 21 bodies in black body bags marked with letters and numbers in Roman script had been recovered from a mass grave in al Maadhidi cemetery in the centre of the city Fallujah police chief Brigadier General Mahmud al Essawi said that they had been blindfolded their legs had been tied and they had suffered gunshot wounds The Mayor Adnan Husseini said that the manner of their killing as well as the body bags indicated that US forces had been responsible Both al Essawi and Husseini agreed that the dead had been killed in 2004 The US Military declined to comment 47 Aftermath editResidents were allowed to return to the city in mid December after undergoing biometric identification provided they carry their ID cards all the time US officials report that more than half of Fallujah s 39 000 homes were damaged and about 10 000 of those were destroyed Compensation amounts to 20 percent of the value of damaged houses with an estimated 32 000 homeowners eligible according to Marine Lt Col William Brown 48 According to the NBC 49 9 000 homes were destroyed thousands more were damaged and of the 32 000 compensation claims only 2 500 had been paid as of April 14 2005 According to Mike Marqusee of Iraq Occupation Focus writing in The Guardian 50 Falluja s compensation commissioner has reported that 36 000 of the city s 50 000 homes were destroyed along with 60 schools and 65 mosques and shrines Reconstruction is only progressing slowly and mainly consists of clearing rubble from heavily damaged areas and reestablishing basic utility services This is also due to the fact that only 10 of the pre offensive inhabitants had returned as of mid January and only 30 as of the end of March 2005 51 Health effects edit Research by Chris Busby Malak Hamdan and Entesar Ariabi published in 2010 lent credibility to anecdotal news reports of increases in birth defects and cancer after the fighting in 2004 52 Results from a survey of 711 households in Fallujah on cancer birth defects and infant mortality suggested that large increases in cancer and infant mortality had occurred Responses to the questionnaire also suggested an anomalous mean birth sex ratio in children born a year after the fighting indicating that environmental contamination occurred in 2004 Although the authors said the use of depleted uranium as a possible source of relevant exposure they emphasized that there could be other possibilities and that their results did not identify the agent s responsible for the increased levels of illness ISIS occupation editIn early January 2014 Iraq s Fallujah had fallen completely out of the Iraqi government s control The center of the city was reportedly in control of fighters from the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria While some families were fleeing Fallujah others waited for ISIS to take over Ramadi 7 Despite reports stating ISIS was behind the unrest The Christian Science Monitor journalist Dan Murphy disputed this allegation and claimed that while ISIS fighters have maintained a presence in the city various tribal militias who sympathized with the ideas of nationalism and were opposed to both the Iraqi government and ISIS controlled the largest share of area in Fallujah 53 On January 14 tribal chieftains in the province acknowledged revolutionary tribesmen were behind the uprising in Fallujah and other parts of Anbar and announced they would support them unless Maliki agreed to cease the ongoing military crackdowns on tribesmen 54 In June 2016 Fallujah was retaken by Iraqi forces after a 3 month long siege See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fallujah in the Iraq War Human rights in post Saddam Hussein Iraq Mark 77 bomb also controversial in its usage in Fallujah by US forces White phosphorus use in Iraq Iraqi insurgency Battle of Fallujah 2016 Ramadi under U S military occupationU S operations in Fallujah edit United States Army led operations in FallujahOperation Spartan Scorpion June 15 16 2003 Operation Market Sweep January 13 2004 dd U S Marine led operations in FallujahOperation Vigilant Resolve April 04 April 09 2004 Operation Phantom Fury November 07 December 23 2004 dd Films edit American Sniper is a 2014 American biographical war drama film directed by Clint Eastwood and written by Jason Hall 55 Fallujah The Hidden Massacre a documentary detailing the alleged use of white phosphorus and Mk 77 by the U S Army against civilians in the city Google Video Archived 2007 11 19 at the Wayback Machine No True Glory a Frontline Account of the Battle for Fallujah based on the book by Bing West scheduled for release in 2008 starring Harrison Ford as General Mattis 56 As of February 2010 the IMDb has no trace of this film project Occupation Dreamland Documentary film 2005 57 Delta Farce Comedy 2007 about Army reservists deployed to Fallujah but who are accidentally airdropped elsewhere Falluja April 2004 a documentary film by Toshikuni Doi 58 Inside the Resistance a documentary film by Tara Sutton 59 Fallujah Forensics a documentary film by Tara Sutton 60 Further reading editNo True Glory A Frontline Account of the Battle for Fallujah by Bing West 2005 We Were One Shoulder to Shoulder with the Marines Who Took Fallujah Shoulder to Shoulder with the Marines Who Took Fallujah by Patrick O Donnell 2006 ISBN 9780306814693 Fighting for Fallujah A New Dawn for Iraq by John R Ballard 2006 ISBN 0 275 99055 9 Among Warriors in Iraq True Grit Special Ops and Raiding in Mosul and Fallujah by Mike Tucker 2005 ISBN 1 59228 732 8 Fallujah with Honor First Battalion Eighth Marine s Role in Operation Phantom Fury by Gary Livingston 2006 House to House by David Bellavia and John Bruning 2007 ISBN 978 1416574712 References edit a b Iraq U S Should Investigate al Falluja Report Human Rights Watch June 17 2003 Retrieved September 1 2013 The 18 page report challenges the U S military s assertion that its troops came under direct fire from individuals in the crowd of protesters on April 28 Human Rights Watch found no conclusive evidence of bullet damage on the school where the soldiers were based In contrast buildings facing the school had extensive multi caliber bullet impacts that were inconsistent with U S assertions that soldiers had responded with precision fire U S Soldiers again attacked by Iraq Demonstrators Associated Press 2003 04 30 Archived from the original on 2010 12 04 Retrieved 2010 06 16 From Guernica to Fallujah by Pepe Escobar Asia Times 2 December 2004 Firstbrook Clinton Newfound Respect A Combat Correspondent s Tale of the Battle for Fallujah PDF US Marines Magazine Archived from the original PDF on March 1 2006 Retrieved 2006 05 15 Blair Edmund 29 April 2003 Anger Mounts After U S Troops Kill 13 Iraqi Protesters Reuters Archived from the original on 16 June 2013 Retrieved 22 June 2013 Falluja City with history of rebellion BBC 23 December 2004 Retrieved 22 June 2013 a b Nightline 29 April 2003 ABC News Transcripts ABC News FOB Laurie Retrieved 27 October 2015 Goulka Jeremiah Hansell Lydia Wilke Elizabeth Larson Judith 2009 The Mujahedin e Khalq in Iraq A Policy Conundrum PDF Report RAND corporation Archived PDF from the original on 22 February 2016 Bush firm despite Iraq attacks BBC News July 1 2003 Retrieved 2006 05 15 US strikes at Iraqi resistance BBC News June 29 2003 Retrieved 2006 05 15 Urban Mark Task Force Black The Explosive True Story of the Secret Special Forces War in Iraq St Martin s Griffin 2012 ISBN 1 250 00696 1 ISBN 978 1 250 00696 7 p 58 frontline private warriors contractors the high risk contracting business PBS Retrieved 2010 03 16 Deignan Tom December 22 2013 Navy SEALS tragedy in Afghanistan chronicled in new film Lone Survivors IrishCentral Retrieved November 28 2016 Akvariefisk Roberts fisk Archived from the original on 29 December 2006 Retrieved 4 March 2023 Squitieri Tom 2004 11 28 Fallujah s mosques hid arms militants USA Today Retrieved 2010 06 16 Manyon Julian Worse than Vietnam The Spectator Bernard Anne April 22 2004 Death toll near 500 in Fallujah Baghdad Boston Com News Retrieved 2006 05 15 Barnard Anne 2004 04 22 Death toll near 500 in Fallujah Baghdad The Boston Globe Boston com Retrieved 2010 03 16 Charlotte news events Panthers Bobcats jobs cars homes Archived from the original on 2005 11 19 Retrieved 2005 11 14 Gettleman Jeffrey 2004 04 14 THE STRUGGLE FOR IRAQ COMBAT THE STRUGGLE FOR IRAQ COMBAT Marines in Falluja Still Face and Return Relentless Fire NYTimes com Select nytimes com Archived from the original on 2012 07 17 Retrieved 2010 03 16 Rory McCarthy 2004 04 24 Uneasy truce in the city of ghosts World news The Guardian London Retrieved 2010 03 16 Iraqi militiamen clash with U S troops Chinadaily com cn Retrieved 2010 03 16 Head of Iraqi Governing Council Killed in Blast U S amp World FOXNews com 2004 05 17 Archived from the original on 2011 02 08 Retrieved 2010 03 16 Spread bombette West Bing 2005 No True Glory A Frontline Account of the Battle for Fallujah Bantam Dell ISBN 978 0 553 80402 7 HeadlineAlley Hider James 2004 11 12 US soldiers set to move in on martyrs land The Times London Retrieved 2010 03 30 Jeffery Simon 2005 11 18 A week of the war The Guardian London Retrieved 2010 03 16 Early Target of Offensive Is a Hospital The New York Times 8 November 2004 Chomsky Noam 2006 Failed States The Abuse of Power and The Assault on Democracy First Holt Paperbacks Edition 2007 ed New York New York Henry Holt and Company LLC p 48 ISBN 978 0 8050 8284 5 CNN com Transcripts Transcripts cnn com 2004 11 09 Retrieved 2010 03 16 U S Forces Battle Into Heart of Fallujah The Washington Post 2004 11 10 Retrieved 2010 03 16 US forces used chemical weapon in Iraq The Independent London 2005 11 16 Archived from the original on 2008 01 01 Retrieved 2010 03 16 US Forces Used Chemical Weapon in Iraq Commondreams org 2005 11 16 Archived from the original on 2009 02 20 Retrieved 2010 03 16 Reynolds Paul 2005 11 16 White phosphorus weapon on the edge BBC News Retrieved 2010 03 16 Aid enters embattled Iraqi city BBC News 2004 11 13 Retrieved 2010 03 16 Rory McCarthy in Baghdad 2004 11 15 US denies need for Falluja aid convoy World news The Guardian London Retrieved 2010 03 16 Military investigates shooting of wounded insurgent Nov 16 2004 CNN com 2004 11 16 Retrieved 2010 03 16 Open Letter to Devil Dogs of the 3 1 Blog entry by Kevin Sites the reporter who filmed the November 13 killing in the Mosque Kevinsites net Archived from the original on June 24 2007 Retrieved 2010 03 16 No Charges In Fallujah Shooting CBS News Jamail Dahr 2004 11 16 800 Civilians Feared Dead in Fallujah Dahr Jamail Independent Reporting from Iraq and the Middle East Dahrjamailiraq com Archived from the original on 2008 09 25 Retrieved 2010 03 16 U S Department of Defense www defenselink mil Archived from the original on December 6 2005 US death toll in Fallujah reaches 71 02 12 2004 ABC News Online Abc net au 2004 12 02 Archived from the original on 2009 02 21 Retrieved 2010 03 16 Sites Kevin 2004 11 21 Open Letter to Devil Dogs of the 3 1 by Kevin Sites The Digital Journalist Retrieved 2010 03 16 U S Used White Phosphorus in Iraq BBC News 2005 11 16 Retrieved 2009 01 22 21 bodies found in Iraq mass grave AFP 2011 05 17 archived from the original on 2013 01 24 retrieved 19 June 2011 Increased Security In Fallujah Slows Efforts to Rebuild washingtonpost com 2005 04 19 Retrieved 2010 03 16 Still locked down Fallujah slow to rebuild Nightly News NBC News NBC News 2005 04 14 Retrieved 2010 03 16 Mike Marqusee 2005 11 09 Mike Marqusee The destruction of Falluja was an act of barbarism that ranks alongside My Lai Guernica and Halabja World news The Guardian London Retrieved 2010 03 16 Fallujah Four Months Later News English Voanews com 2005 03 31 Archived from the original on 2005 04 18 Retrieved 2010 03 16 Busby Chris Hamdan Malak Ariabi Entesar 6 July 2010 Cancer Infant Mortality and Birth Sex Ratio in Fallujah Iraq 2005 2009 International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 7 7 2828 2837 doi 10 3390 ijerph7072828 PMC 2922729 PMID 20717542 Dan Murphy January 9 2013 What s really going on in Iraq s Anbar Province The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved January 11 2013 Anbar tribesmen voice opposition to Iraqi PM Maliki World Bulletin com January 14 2014 American Sniper 16 January 2015 via www imdb com No True Glory Archived April 16 2006 at the Wayback Machine user generated source Occupation Dreamland 19 May 2006 via www imdb com Falluja April 2004 Inside the Resistance BBC Fallujah ForensicsExternal links editFallujah The Day After Video of devastation of Fallujah from Diario 27 May 2005 This is our Guernica by Jonathan Steele and Dahr Jamail The Guardian 27 April 2005 Remembering the First Siege of Fallujah by Omar Khan DahrJamailIraq com 15 February 2005 Fallujah The Real Fall special report on Fallujah since November 2004 Channel 4 11 January 2005 Falluja City with history of rebellion BBC News 23 December 2004 Raw Video Footage of U S Offensive in Fallujah large archive of news network footage and unofficial footage collected by Geoffrey Huntley fallujah us Zarqawi s city of death The Washington Times 29 November 2004 Fallujah s real boss Omar the electrician by Hannah Allam Knight Ridder 22 November 2004 Telling the Fallujah Story to the World Military com 20 November 2004 Fallujah yields up weapons videos The Christian Science Monitor 19 November 2004 Letter from Fallujah to Kofi Annan signed by Al Fallujah Shura Council a council of insurgent organizations and by others The 2004 Siege of Fallujah An interactive guide The Guardian Archive of the Iraq Dispatches by Dahr Jamail an unembedded and independent Archived 2005 04 14 at the Wayback Machine journalist DahrJamailIraq com Fallujah November December 2004 United States Marine Corps 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fallujah during the Iraq War amp oldid 1216484838, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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