It is a fact that key Kurdish leaders aided by
the CIA and the Israeli Mossad have used a wide network of public relations
companies and media outlets in the west to manipulate and twist the truth of
what happened in Kurdish Halabja in 1988 in favour of the Kurdish political
parties.
In 1993, an organisation was established in
Israel called The Kurdish Israeli Friendship League founded by a Jewish Kurd
called Moti Zaken, who originally immigrated from Zakho, Iraq, and worked
closely with the American Zionist lobby in the US.
His efforts ended in 1996 in the establishment
of the Washington Kurdish Institute, an organisation founded with the financial
help and supervision of the Zionist Mike Amitay.
Mike Amitay is the son of Morris Amitay, a
long-time legislative assistant in Congress and lobbyist for the influential
American Israeli Public Affairs Committee.
Amitay junior is an adviser to Frank Gaffney's
Centre for Security Policy and the former vice-chairman of the Jewish Institute
for National Security Affairs (JINSA), a US-based pro-Israeli Likud advocacy
outfit that specialises in connecting US military brass to their counterparts in
the Israeli armed forces.
JINSA associates include Dick Cheney, John
Bolton, Douglas Feith, and Richard Perle. A group of Kurdish figures known for
their connection with the Israeli Mossad manage the Washington Kurdish
Institute. Those are: Najmaldin Karim, Omar Halmat, Birusk Tugan, Osman Baban,
Asad Khailany, Kendal Nezan, Asfandiar Shukri and Mohammad Khoshnaw.
Such organisations have devoted themselves to
championing the claims that the Iraqi army bombed Kurdish villages with chemical
agents throughout 1988.
According to Human Rights Watch (HRW) "at least 50,000 and possibly as many as
100,000 people, many of them women and children, were killed out of hand between
February and September 1988, the victims being Iraqi Kurds systematically put to
death in large numbers on the orders of the central government in Baghdad".
|
"It is a fact that key Kurdish
leaders aided by the CIA and the Israeli Mossad have used wide network of
public relation companies and media outlets in the west to manipulate and
twist the truth of what happened in Kurdish Halabja in 1988 in favour of the
political Kurdish parties"
|
There are other champions of the genocide
claim. One is Jeffrey Goldberg, whose 18,000-word story, The Great Terror, in
the 25 March 2002 issue of The New Yorker forms the basis of the US Department
of State's website on alleged Iraqi genocide.
Goldberg's story is long on lurid details; we
are told, for instance, that one woman, Hamida Mahmoud, died while nursing her
two-year-old daughter. Goldberg also follows the Human Rights Watch formula in
invoking the Nazis: "Saddam Hussein's attacks on his own citizens mark the only
time since the Holocaust that poison gas has been used to exterminate women and
children."
What Goldberg did not tell his readers about is
that he has dual Israeli/American citizenship and served in the Israeli defence
forces a few years back. Or that he purposefully ignored the War College report,
which, of course, reached quite different conclusions.
The Iraqi army allegedly used chemical weapons
in "40 separate attacks on Kurdish targets" during a campaign that HRW labels as
genocide.
The most prominent of these purported attacks was the March 1988 "chemical
assault" on the town of Halabja, in which the number of dead, according to Human
Rights Watch "exceeds 5000".
It is known that both Iran and Iraq used chemical weapons in their eight-year
war from September 1980 to August 1988. Most of Iraq's alleged assaults on the
Kurds took place while this war was raging, although Human Rights Watch claims
the attacks extended into September 1988.
Iraq has acknowledged using mustard gas against
Iranian troops to overwhelm the human waves tactic used by Iranians who wanted
to benefit from the fact that they outnumbered Iraqis, but has consistently
denied using chemical weapons against civilians.
The only verified Kurdish civilian deaths from
chemical weapons occurred in the Iraqi village of Halabja, near the Iran border,
are several hundred people who died from gas poisoning in mid-March 1988.
Iran overran the village and its small Iraqi
garrison on 15 March 1988. The gassing took place on 16 March and onwards; who
is then responsible for the deaths - Iran or Iraq - and how large was the death
toll knowing the Iranian army was in Halabja but never reported any deaths by
chemicals?
The best evidence to answer this is a 1990
report by the Strategic Studies Institute of the US Army War College. It
concluded that Iran, not Iraq, was the culprit in Halabja.
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"The Iraqi army
allegedly used chemical weapons in "40 separate attacks on Kurdish targets"
during a campaign that HRW labels as genocide |
While the War College report acknowledges that
Iraq used mustard gas during the Halabja hostilities, it notes that mustard gas
is an incapacitating, rather than a killing agent, with a fatality rate of only
2%, so that it could not have killed the hundreds of known dead, much less the
thousands of dead claimed by Human Rights Watch.
According to the War College reconstruction of
events, Iran struck first taking control of the village. The Iraqis
counter-attacked using mustard gas. The Iranians then attacked again, this time
using a "blood agent" - cyanogens chloride or hydrogen cyanide - and re-took the
town, which Iran then held for several months.
Having control of the village and its grisly
dead, Iran blamed the gas deaths on the Iraqis, and the allegations of Iraqi
genocide took root via a credulous international press and, a little later,
cynical promotion of the allegations for political purposes by the US state
department and Senate.
Stephen Pelletiere, who was the CIA's senior
political analyst on Iraq throughout the Iran-Iraq war, closely studied
evidences of "genocide in Halabja" has described his group's findings:
"The great majority of the victims seen by
reporters and other observers who attended the scene were blue in their
extremities. That means that they were killed by a blood agent, probably either
cyanogens chloride or hydrogen cyanide. Iraq never used and lacked any capacity
to produce these chemicals. But the Iranians did deploy them. Therefore the
Iranians killed the Kurds."
Pelletiere's report also said that
international relief organisations that examined the Kurdish refugees in Turkey
failed to discover any gassing victims.
After 15 years of support to the allegations of
HRW, the CIA finally admitted in its report published in October 2003 that only
mustard gas and a nerve agent was used by Iraq.
The CIA now seems to be fully supporting the US
Army War College report of April 1990, as a cyanide-based blood agent that Iraq
never had, and not mustard gas or a nerve agent, killed the Kurds who died at
Halabja and which concludes that the Iranians perpetrated that attack as a media
war tactic.
Despite the doubt cast by many professionals as
well as the CIA's recent report, and after years of public relations propaganda
made for the Kurdish leaderships by the assistance and support of the Israeli
Mossad, the issue of genocide has been marketed to the international community.
In a telephone interview with the Village Voice
in 2002, Stephen Pelletiere said: "There is to this day the belief - and I'm not
the only one who holds it - that things did not happen in Halabja the way
Goldberg wrote it.
"And it is an especially crucial issue right
now. We say Saddam is a monster, a maniac who gassed his own people, and the
world should not tolerate him. But why? Because that is the last argument the US
has for going to war with Iraq."
Professor Mohammed al-Obaidi is the spokesman for the People's Struggle
Movement (Al-Kifah al-Shabi) in Iraq, and works as a university professor in the
UK. He was born and educated in al-Adhamiyah district in Baghdad. He is writing
a book about Halabja.