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US troops use white
phosphorous bombs against Iraqi civilians
DM Monitoring
ROME— Italian state TV, Rai, has broadcast a
documentary accusing the US military of using
white phosphorus bombs against civilians in the
Iraqi city of Falluja. Rai says this amounts to
the illegal use of chemical arms, though the
bombs are considered incendiary devices.
Eyewitnesses and ex-US soldiers say the weapon
was used in built-up areas in the insurgent-held
city. The US military denies this, but admits
using white phosphorus bombs in Iraq to
illuminate battlefields.
Washington is not a signatory of an
international treaty restricting the use of
white phosphorus devices. Transmission of the
documentary comes a day after the arrival of
Iraqi President Jalal Talabani on a five-day
official visit to Italy.
It also coincides with the first anniversary of
the US-led assault on Falluja, which displaced
most of the city’s 300,000 population and left
many of its buildings destroyed. The documentary
was shown on Rai’s rolling news channel, with a
warning that the some of the footage was
disturbing.
The future of the 3,000-strong Italian
peacekeeping contingent in Iraq is the subject
of a political tug-of-war, says the BBC’s David
Willey in Rome. The documentary begins with
formerly classified footage of the Americans
using napalm bombs during the Vietnam war.
It then shows a series of photographs from
Falluja of corpses with the flesh burnt off but
clothes still intact — which it says is
consistent with the effects of white phosphorus
on humans. Jeff Englehart, described as a former
US soldier who served in Falluja, tells of how
he heard orders for white phosphorus to be
deployed over military radio — and saw the
results.
“Burned bodies, burned women, burned children;
white phosphorus kills indiscriminately... When
it makes contact with skin, then it’s absolutely
irreversible damage, burning flesh to the bone,”
he says. Last December, the US state department
issued a denial of what it called “widespread
myths” about the use of illegal weapons in
Falluja.
“Phosphorus shells are not outlawed. US forces
have used them very sparingly in Falluja, for
illumination purposes. They were fired into the
air to illuminate enemy positions at night, not
at enemy fighters,” the US statement said.
However, the Rai film also alleges that
Washington has systematically attempted to
destroy filmed evidence of the alleged use of
white phosphorus on civilians in Falluja. |