| Created: 09 Dec 2004
Updated: 27 Jan 2005
The fighting in Fallujah, Iraq has led to a number of widespread
myths including false charges that the United States is using chemical
weapons such napalm and poison gas. None of these allegations are
true.
Qatar-based Internet site Islam Online was one of the first to spread
the false chemical weapons claim. On November 10, 2004, it reported
that U.S. troops were allegedly using "chemical weapons and
poisonous gas" in Fallujah. ("US Troops Reportedly Gassing
Fallujah") It sourced this claim to Al-Quds Press, which cited
only anonymous sources for its allegation.
The inaccurate Islam Online story has been posted on hundreds of
Web sites.
On November 12, 2004, the U.S. Department of Defense issued a denial
of the chemical weapons charge, stating:
"The United States categorically denies the use of chemical
weapons at anytime in Iraq, which includes the ongoing Fallujah operation.
Furthermore, the United States does not under any circumstance support
or condone the development, production, acquisition, transfer or
use of chemical weapons by any country. All chemical weapons currently
possessed by the United States have been declared to the Organization
for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) and are being destroyed
in the United States in accordance with our obligations under the
Chemical Weapons Convention."
To its credit, Islam Online ran a Nov. 25, 2004, story carrying
the U.S. denial.
In both stories, Islam Online noted that U.S. forces had used napalm-like
incendiary weapons during the march to Baghdad in the spring of 2003.
Although all napalm in the U.S. arsenal had been destroyed by 2001,
Mark-77 firebombs, which have a similar effect to napalm, were used
against enemy positions in 2003.
The repetition of this story on Islam Online’s led to further
misinformation. Some readers did not distinguish between what had
happened in the spring of 2003, during the march to Baghdad, and
in Fallujah in November 2004. They mistakenly thought napalm-like
weapons had been used in Fallujah, which is not true. No Mark-77
firebombs have been used in operations in Fallujah.
On Nov. 11, 2004, the Nov. 10 Islam Online story was reposted by
the New York Transfer News Web site, with the inaccurate headline "Resistance
Says US Using Napalm, Gas in Fallujah."
The headline was wrong in two ways. First, as explained above, Islam
Online was incorrect in claiming that U.S. forces were using poison
gas in Fallujah. Second, the New York Transfer News misread the Islam
Online story to mean that U.S. forces were currently using napalm-like
weapons in Fallujah. But Islam Online had never claimed this; it
had only talked about napalm use in 2003.
The false napalm allegation then took on a life of its own. Further
postings on the Internet repeated or recreated the error that the
New York Transfer News had made, which eventually appeared in print
media. For example, on Nov. 28, 2004, the UK’s Sunday Mirror
inaccurately claimed U.S. forces were "secretly using outlawed
napalm gas" in Fallujah.
The Sunday Mirror story was wrong in two ways.
First, napalm or napalm-like incendiary weapons are not outlawed.
International law permits their use against military forces, which
is how they were used in 2003.
Second, as noted above, no Mark-77 firebombs were used in Fallujah.
The Sunday Mirror’s phrasing "napalm gas" is also
revealing. Napalm is a gel, not a gas. Why did the Sunday Mirror
describe it as a gas?
It may be that, somewhere along the line, a sloppy reader read the
inaccurate New York Transfer News headline, "Resistance Says
US Using Napalm, Gas in Fallujah," and omitted the comma between
napalm and gas, yielding the nonsensical "napalm gas."
Next, the Sunday Mirror’s misinformation about “napalm
gas” was reported in identical articles on Nov. 28 by aljazeera.com
and islamonline.com. These two Web sites, which are owned by the
same company – Al Jazeera Publishing – are deceptive
look-alike Web sites that masquerade as the English-language sites
of the popular Qatar-based Arabic-language satellite television station
al Jazeera and the popular Islam Online Web site, which is islamonline.net.
Finally, some news accounts have claimed that U.S. forces have used "outlawed" phosphorus
shells in Fallujah. Phosphorus shells are not outlawed. U.S. forces
have used them very sparingly in Fallujah, for illumination purposes.
They were fired into the air to illuminate enemy positions at night,
not at enemy fighters.
There is a great deal of misinformation feeding on itself about
U.S. forces allegedly using "outlawed" weapons in Fallujah.
The facts are that U.S. forces are not using any illegal weapons
in Fallujah or anywhere else in Iraq.
Created: 09 Dec 2004 Updated: 27 Jan 2005 |
Created: 09 Dec 2004
Updated: 10 Nov 2005
The fighting in Fallujah,
Iraq has led to a number of widespread myths including false charges
that the United States is using chemical
weapons such napalm and poison gas. None of these allegations are
true.
Qatar-based Internet site Islam Online was one of the first to spread
the false chemical weapons claim. On November 10, 2004, it reported
that U.S. troops were allegedly using "chemical weapons and
poisonous gas" in Fallujah. ("US Troops Reportedly Gassing
Fallujah") It sourced this claim to Al-Quds Press, which cited
only anonymous sources for its allegation.
The inaccurate Islam Online story has been posted on hundreds of
Web sites.
On November 12, 2004, the U.S. Department of Defense issued a denial
of the chemical weapons charge, stating:
"The United States categorically denies the use of chemical
weapons at anytime in Iraq, which includes the ongoing Fallujah operation.
Furthermore, the United States does not under any circumstance support
or condone the development, production, acquisition, transfer or
use of chemical weapons by any country. All chemical weapons currently
possessed by the United States have been declared to the Organization
for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) and are being destroyed
in the United States in accordance with our obligations under the
Chemical Weapons Convention."
To its credit, Islam Online ran a Nov. 25, 2004, story carrying
the U.S. denial.
In both stories, Islam Online noted that U.S. forces had used napalm-like
incendiary weapons during the march to Baghdad in the spring of 2003.
Although all napalm in the U.S. arsenal had been destroyed by 2001,
Mark-77 firebombs, which have a similar effect to napalm, were used
against enemy positions in 2003.
The repetition of this story on Islam Online’s led to further
misinformation. Some readers did not distinguish between what had
happened in the spring of 2003, during the march to Baghdad, and
in Fallujah in November 2004. They mistakenly thought napalm-like
weapons had been used in Fallujah, which is not true. No Mark-77
firebombs have been used in operations in Fallujah.
On Nov. 11, 2004, the Nov. 10 Islam Online story was reposted by
the New York Transfer News Web site, with the inaccurate headline "Resistance
Says US Using Napalm, Gas in Fallujah."
The headline was wrong in two ways. First, as explained above, Islam
Online was incorrect in claiming that U.S. forces were using poison
gas in Fallujah. Second, the New York Transfer News misread the Islam
Online story to mean that U.S. forces were currently using napalm-like
weapons in Fallujah. But Islam Online had never claimed this; it
had only talked about napalm use in 2003.
The false napalm allegation then took on a life of its own. Further
postings on the Internet repeated or recreated the error that the
New York Transfer News had made, which eventually appeared in print
media. For example, on Nov. 28, 2004, the UK’s Sunday Mirror
inaccurately claimed U.S. forces were "secretly using outlawed
napalm gas" in Fallujah.
The Sunday Mirror story was wrong in two ways.
First, napalm or napalm-like incendiary weapons are not outlawed.
International law permits their use against military forces, which
is how they were used in 2003.
Second, as noted above, no Mark-77 firebombs were used in Fallujah.
The Sunday Mirror’s phrasing "napalm gas" is also
revealing. Napalm is a gel, not a gas. Why did the Sunday Mirror
describe it as a gas?
It may be that, somewhere along the line, a sloppy reader read the
inaccurate New York Transfer News headline, "Resistance Says
US Using Napalm, Gas in Fallujah," and omitted the comma between
napalm and gas, yielding the nonsensical "napalm gas."
Next, the Sunday Mirror’s misinformation about “napalm
gas” was reported in identical articles on Nov. 28 by aljazeera.com
and islamonline.com. These two Web sites, which are owned by the
same company – Al Jazeera Publishing – are deceptive
look-alike Web sites that masquerade as the English-language sites
of the popular Qatar-based Arabic-language satellite television station
al Jazeera and the popular Islam Online Web site, which is islamonline.net.
Finally, some news accounts have claimed that U.S. forces have used "outlawed" phosphorous
shells in Fallujah. Phosphorous shells are not outlawed. U.S. forces
have used them very sparingly in Fallujah, for illumination purposes.
They were fired into the air to illuminate enemy positions at night,
not at enemy fighters.
| [November
10, 2005 note: We have learned that some of the
information we were provided in the above paragraph is incorrect.
White phosphorous shells, which produce smoke, were used
in Fallujah not for illumination but for screening purposes,
i.e., obscuring troop movements and, according to an article, "The
Fight for Fallujah," in the March-April 2005 issue of
Field Artillery magazine, "as a potent psychological
weapon against the insurgents in trench lines and spider
holes …." The article states that U.S. forces
used white phosphorous rounds to flush out enemy fighters
so that they could then be killed with high explosive rounds.] |
|
There is a great deal of misinformation feeding
on itself about U.S. forces allegedly using "outlawed" weapons
in Fallujah. The facts are that U.S. forces are not using any illegal
weapons
in Fallujah or anywhere else in Iraq.
Created: 09 Dec 2004 Updated: 10 Nov 2005
|