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Fallujah background

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Contents

general context

The city grew from a small town in 1947 to a pre-war population of about 435,774 inhabitants 
in 2003 According to UN Data but According to the Former regime there about 600 thousand inhabitants.
The current population is unknown but estimated at over 25,131, with approximately 300 sunni immigrants 
arriving monthly from Baghdad. Within Iraq, it is known as the "city of mosques" for the more than 
200 mosques found in the city and surrounding villages. The Iraq American War has reportedly damaged 
80% of the city's buildings, with 50% totally destroyed including 60 of the city's mosques.
As part of the occupation of Iraq, the First Battle of Fallujah, codenamed Operation Vigilant Resolve 
was an unsuccessful attempt by the United States Military to capture the city of Fallujah in April 2004.
The chief catalyst for the operation was the highly-publicized killing and mutilation of four Blackwater 
private military contractors, and the killing of 5 U.S. soldiers in Habbaniya a few days earlier.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Battle_of_Fallujah

The Second Battle of Fallujah (code-named Operation Al-Fajr - "The Dawn" in Arabic, and Operation Phantom Fury) 
was a joint U.S.-Iraqi offensive led by the U.S. Marine Corps against the Iraqi insurgency stronghold in the 
city of Fallujah, authorized by the U.S.-appointed Iraqi Interim Government. The U.S. military called it 
"the heaviest urban combat since the Battle of Hue City in Vietnam."


Fallujah reportedly friendly after regime fell (pro-american mayor)

The occupying force on April 9 allowed about 70,000 women, children and elderly residents to leave the 
besieged city, but forced all males of military age to remain.
One of the American terms of the ceasefire was that an Al-Jazeera journalist, who had filmed tens of 
civilian corpses reported to have been killed in US bombing raids, leave the city. An Iraqi mediation 
team entered the city in an attempt to set up negotiations between the US and local leaders.


Sniper placed on roof of Fallujah Hospital watchtower after USA shuts down the hospital

Cluster bombs on fallujah being denied (find AP etc stories claiming different)

Calls for nuking of Fallujah

Use of white phosphor in fight over city

The jail re warehouse for human beings

location

Next to the Joint Communications Center in downtown Fallujah is a squalid and war-shattered warehouse for human beings.

construction

“Can you believe this building is only three years old?” Sergeant Dehaan said to me.
http://www.michaeltotten.com/archives/2008/02/the-dungeon-of.php
  • who built this in 2005?
  • any documents on construction contracts?
  • what was initial purpose?
  • what dates do the pictures have? (google maps / aftergood picture)

conditions

“Have you seen that place yet?” one Marine said. “It is absolutely disgraceful.”
“The smell,” said another and nearly gagged on remembering. “God, you will never forget it.”
“Leave the camera,” he said. “The Iraqis won't let you take pictures.”
"No, I didn’t believe it. The building looked at least sixty years old, and it looked as though no maintenance
work had ever been done. Floor tiles were broken, the foundation was cracked, the stairs were uneven, and the 
walls were utterly filthy as though they hadn’t been painted once since I’ve been alive."
"I didn't feel like we were in a jail. The doors to the cells looked like doors leading to offices or sleeping 
quarters. There were no bars. I could not see the prisoners from the hallway."
“How many prisoners are here right now?” I said. - “320,” Major Ibrahim said.

Locations around the Jail

"At the Iraqi Government Center in the heart of the city of Fallujah, the Police Transition Team (PTT) of the 
3rd Battalion, 14th Marines is working to organize the local police and teach them to operate independently. 
The Fallujah PTT is commanded by Major Brian Lippo, a Marine Reservist and former Philadelphia policeman who 
works for the FBI. One of the primary missions of the PTT is to facilitate communications between the Fallujah 
Police, the Iraqi Army and the Marines in the Joint Command Center.
The Government Center occupies several city blocks, and contains the Fallujah Police headquarters, the Major 
Crimes police division, the mayor's office, a company of Iraqi Army accompanied by a Marine Military Transition Team, 
and Charlie Company of the 1st Battalion, 24th Marines. The Government Center is largely secured by the Iraqi police, 
who man the gates and outer security watchtowers."

JCC (Joint Communications Center)

OP Burgess

OP Burgess, riddled with holes from gunfire from years of attacks, is located in the heart of Fallujah. The building 
Marines occupy is surrounded by large cement barriers, and its windows are barricaded by sandbags.
[...]
Daily tasks for these support Marines include, but are not limited to, fortifying structures and providing routine 
maintenance in the area surrounding both the compound containing the Fallujah district Iraqi Police headquarters, 
or the Joint Command Center, and OP Burgess.
[...]
“This area of Fallujah is a very valuable piece of real estate,” said Capt. Siu K. Cheng, Echo Co. commander. “It is 
because the OP is close to the JCC.”
Other than Coalition Forces, the JCC, across a courtyard from OP Burgess, houses many prominent individuals such as 
the mayor of Fallujah and Iraqi Police chief Col. Faisal. Living and working from the JCC, Marines attached to RCT-6 
also train hundreds of Iraqi Police officers to patrol and work within the streets of the city.
“You should have seen this place before we got here,” said 19-year-old Lance Cpl. Joseph A. Lourenco, a mortarman 
with Echo Co. “There was nothing here. Since we arrived, we have installed air conditioners as well as hooked up a chow hall.”
Although air conditioners and warm chow are now regular features at OP Burgess, they are still vulnerable to power outages.
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