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Does Kimmitt Get It? by
John Peters He
is the newest poster boy for America’s occupation of Iraq. Brigadier General Mark
Kimmitt can be seen on the media almost daily espousing a gritty
confidence and determination. He
is a Clutch Cargo-like figure, tall, chiseled and clean shaven.
Standing
before cameras last month for an American audience, General Kimmitt
remarked that the people of Fallujah “just don’t get it.”
He was responding to the vicious attack upon mercenaries acting
as private security for foreigners in Iraq. The
clear import of Kimmitt’s remark was that the people of Fallujah
should have prostrated themselves before the occupation army by now, as
he assumed most of There
is a certain incongruity between the image created by the term
“pacify” and the type of violent slaughter and subjugation which the
term ultimately implies. For
a minute I was reminded of Nurse Ratchet in One
Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Her
calm smile disguised an underlying malevolence which would unleash
medieval horrors upon her unsuspecting patients.
They too would be pacified – whether they wanted it or not, or
as Lt. Colonel Brennan Byrne stated the case for Iraqi democracy,
“They will bend to our will if they are afraid of us.”[2] The
stated objectives of democratic reform and freedom for the Iraqi people
apparently do not apply to the people of Fallujah. Since the invasion,
their city has been ringed with razor wire, with special passes required
for exit or entry, turning the city of 300,000 into an asylum and its
residents into prisoners of the occupation forces.
Like nurse Ratchet, Kimmitt deliberately challenges and provokes
the residents of Fallujah, then reacts violently when they respond. As
the fires of revolution spread from Fallujah throughout Iraq, Kimmitt’s promises of “pacification” seem far-fetched.
It is axiomatic that the more brutal the oppression, the stronger
the resistance will become. As U.S.
forces have cracked down harder, the resistance has spread and
intensified. Kimmitt
inadvertently embarrasses his own forces when he attempts to minimize
the resistance. The Iraqi opposition has killed or maimed dozens of U.S.
forces, engaged them in pitched battles requiring American air support
and taken physical control of several towns. Kimmitt assures the cameras
that these are a few terrorists and thugs.
If true, should this proclamation give us comfort? If a few thugs
are trying the world’s most proficient and expensive armed force, what
should we expect when the opposition intensifies in numbers or tactics? In
fact, it is Kimmit who “just don’t get it.” Whether in Fallujah or The use of force is an admission that you have failed to win hearts and minds through emulation. Iraqis would undoubtedly aspire to democracy, if only we would quit stifling it. Get it, General Kimmit? |