No one, least of all the British, should be surprised at the state of
anarchy in Iraq. We have been here before. We know the territory, its
long and miasmic history, the all-but-impossible diplomatic balance to
be struck between the cultures and ambitions of Arabs, Kurds, Shia and
Sunni, of Assyrians, Turks, Americans, French, Russians and of our own
desire to keep an economic and strategic presence there.
Laid waste, a
chaotic post-invasion Iraq may now well be policed by old and new
imperial masters promising liberty, democracy and unwanted exiled
leaders, in return for oil, trade and submission. Only the last of these
promises is certain. The peoples of Iraq, even those who have cheered
passing troops, have every reason to mistrust foreign invaders. They
have been lied to far too often, bombed and slaughtered promiscuously.
Iraq
is the product of a lying empire. The British carved it duplicitously
from ancient history, thwarted Arab hopes, Ottoman loss, the dunes of
Mesopotamia and the mountains of Kurdistan at the end of the first world
war. Unsurprisingly, anarchy and insurrection were there from the
start.
The British responded with gas attacks by the army in the
south, bombing by the fledgling RAF in both north and south. When Iraqi
tribes stood up for themselves, we unleashed the flying dogs of war to
"police" them. Terror bombing, night bombing, heavy bombers, delayed
action bombs (particularly lethal against children) were all developed
during raids on mud, stone and reed villages during Britain's League of
Nations' mandate. The mandate ended in 1932; the semi-colonial monarchy
in 1958. But during the period of direct British rule, Iraq proved a
useful testing ground for newly forged weapons of both limited and mass
destruction, as well as new techniques for controlling imperial outposts
and vassal states.
The RAF was first ordered to Iraq to quell
Arab and Kurdish and Arab uprisings, to protect recently discovered oil
reserves, to guard Jewish settlers in Palestine and to keep Turkey at
bay. Some mission, yet it had already proved itself an effective
imperial police force in both Afghanistan and Somaliland (today's
Somalia) in 1919-20. British and US forces have been back regularly to
bomb these hubs of recalcitrance ever since.
Winston Churchill,
secretary of state for war and air, estimated that without the RAF,
somewhere between 25,000 British and 80,000 Indian troops would be
needed to control Iraq. Reliance on the airforce promised to cut these
numbers to just 4,000 and 10,000. Churchill's confidence was soon
repaid.
An uprising of more than 100,000 armed tribesmen against
the British occupation swept through Iraq in the summer of 1920. In
went the RAF. It flew missions totalling 4,008 hours, dropped 97 tons of
bombs and fired 183,861 rounds for the loss of nine men killed, seven
wounded and 11 aircraft destroyed behind rebel lines. The rebellion was
thwarted, with nearly 9,000 Iraqis killed. Even so, concern was
expressed in Westminster: the operation had cost more than the entire
British-funded Arab rising against the Ottoman Empire in 1917-18.
The
RAF was vindicated as British military expenditure in Iraq fell from
£23m in 1921 to less than £4m five years later. This was despite the
fact that the number of bombing raids increased after 1923 when Squadron
Leader Arthur Harris - the future hammer of Hamburg and Dresden, whose
statue stands in Fleet Street in London today - took command of 45
Squadron. Adding bomb-racks to Vickers Vernon troop car riers, Harris
more or less invented the heavy bomber as well as night "terror" raids.
Harris did not use gas himself - though the RAF had employed mustard gas
against Bolshevik troops in 1919, while the army had gassed Iraqi
rebels in 1920 "with excellent moral effect".
Churchill was
particularly keen on chemical weapons, suggesting they be used "against
recalcitrant Arabs as an experiment". He dismissed objections as
"unreasonable". "I am strongly in favour of using poisoned gas against
uncivilised tribes _ [to] spread a lively terror _" In today's terms,
"the Arab" needed to be shocked and awed. A good gassing might well do
the job.
Conventional raids, however, proved to be an effective
deterrent. They brought Sheikh Mahmoud, the most persistent of Kurdish
rebels, to heel, at little cost. Writing in 1921, Wing Commander J A
Chamier suggested that the best way to demoralise local people was to
concentrate bombing on the "most inaccessible village of the most
prominent tribe which it is desired to punish. All available aircraft
must be collected the attack with bombs and machine guns must be
relentless and unremitting and carried on continuously by day and night,
on houses, inhabitants, crops and cattle."
"The Arab and Kurd
now know", reported Squadron Leader Harris after several such raids,
"what real bombing means within 45 minutes a full-sized village can be
practically wiped out, and a third of its inhabitants killed or injured,
by four or five machines which offer them no real target, no
opportunity for glory as warriors, no effective means of escape."
In
his memoir of the crushing of the 1920 Iraqi uprising,
Lieutenant-General Sir Aylmer L Haldane, quotes his own orders for the
punishment of any Iraqi found in possession of weapons "with the
utmost severity": "The village where he resides will be destroyed _
pressure will be brought on the inhabitants by cutting off water power
the area being cleared of the necessaries of life". He added the
warning: "Burning a village properly takes a long time, an hour or more
according to size".
Punitive British bombing continued
throughout the 1920s. An eyewitness account by Saleh 'Umar al Jabrim
describes a raid in February 1923 on a village in southern Iraq, where
bedouin were celebrating 12 weddings. After a visit from the RAF, a
woman, two boys, a girl and four camels were left dead. There were many
wounded. Perhaps to please his British interrogators, Saleh declared:
"These casualties are from God and no one is to be blamed."
One
RAF officer, Air Commodore Lionel Charlton, resigned in 1924 when he
visited a hospital after such a raid and faced armless and legless
civilian victims. Others held less generous views of those under their
control. "Woe betide any native [working for the RAF] who was caught in
the act of thieving any article of clothing that may be hanging out to
dry", wrote Aircraftsman 2nd class, H Howe, based at RAF Hunaidi,
Baghdad. "It was the practice to take the offending native into the
squadron gymnasium. Here he would be placed in the boxing ring, used as a
punch bag by members of the boxing team, and after he had received
severe punishment, and was in a very sorry condition, he would be
expelled for good, minus his job."
At the time of the Arab
revolt in Palestine in the late 1930s, Air Commodore Harris, as he then
was, declared that "the only thing the Arab understands is the heavy
hand, and sooner or later it will have to be applied". As in 1921, so in
2003.
Source: http://tinyurl.com/kw826w4
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