TheHalabja massacre(Kurdish:کیمیابارانی ھەڵەبجەKêmyabarana Helebce) took place inIraqi Kurdistanon 16 March 1988, when thousands ofKurdswere killed by a large-scaleIraqi chemical attack.A targeted attack inHalabja,it was carried out during theAnfal campaign,which was led by Iraqi military officerAli Hassan al-Majid.Two days before the attack, the city had been captured byIranas part ofOperation Zafar 7of theIran–Iraq War.Following the incident, theUnited Nationslaunched an investigation and concluded thatmustard gasand other unidentified nerve agents had been used against Kurdish civilians.[2]TheUnited States Defense Intelligence Agencyinitially blamed Iran for the attack, though the majority of evidence later revealed thatIraqhad used the chemical weapons to bolster an ongoing military offensive against Iran, pro-Iranian Kurdish fighters, and ordinary Halabja residents.[3]

Halabja massacre
Part of theAnfal campaignof theIraqi–Kurdish conflict
Halabja is located in Iraq
Halabja
Halabja
Location within Iraq
Native nameکیمیابارانی ھەڵەبجە
LocationHalabja,Iraq
Date16 March 1988
TargetCivilianKurds,Peshmerga,andIranian Armed Forces
Attack type
Chemical attack
WeaponMustard gas
Deaths3,200–5,000[1]
Injured7,000–10,000[1]
PerpetratorIraqi Republic
MotiveAnti-Kurdish sentiment
ConvictedAli Hassan al-Majid

To date, the Halabja massacre remains the largest chemical weapons attack directed against a civilian-populated region in human history,[4]killing between 3,200 and 5,000 people and injuring 7,000 to 10,000 more.[5][1]Preliminary results from surveys of the affected areas showed increased rates ofcancerandbirth defectsin the years since the attack took place.[6]

In 2010, theSupreme Iraqi Criminal Tribunalofficially defined the Halabja chemical attack as agenocidal massacreagainst the Kurdish people during the time of Iraqi presidentSaddam Hussein.[7]That same year, it was also formally condemned by theParliament of Canada,which classified it as acrime against humanity.[8]Al-Majid, who was captured during the2003 invasion of Iraq,was put on trial and found guilty of ordering the attack; he was sentenced to death in June 2007 and executed by hanging in January 2010.[9]

Background

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Northern Iraq was an area of general unrest during the early stage of theIran–Iraq War,with theKurdistan Democratic Party(KDP) andPatriotic Union of Kurdistan(PUK) militias joining forces, with Iranian support, in 1982 and 1983, respectively. From 1985, the IraqiBa'athistgovernment underSaddam Husseindecided to eradicate pockets of Kurdish insurgents in the north and strike down thepeshmergarebels by all means possible, including large-scale punishment of civilians and the use of chemical weapons. The Halabja event was also part of Iraqi efforts to counter-attack Kurdish and Iranian forces in the final stages ofOperation Zafar 7.

Chemical attack

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The five-hour attack began in the evening of 16 March 1988, following a series of indiscriminate conventional (rocket andnapalm) attacks.[citation needed]Iraqi Mig and Mirage[10]aircraft began dropping chemical bombs on Halabja's residential areas, far from the besieged Iraqi army base on the outskirts of the town. According to regional Kurdish rebel commanders, Iraqi aircraft, coordinated by helicopters, conducted up to 14 bombings in sorties of seven to eight planes each. Eyewitnesses told of clouds of white, black and then yellow smoke billowing upward and rising as a column about 150 feet (50 m) in the air.[5]

It was a beautiful spring day. As the clock approached 11:00 in the morning, I felt a strange sensation; my heart convulsed as if it were telling me that we were on the verge of a major calamity. Within minutes, artillery rounds began to explode in Halabja and planes began dropping bombs on the town. The bombing was concentrated on the northern neighborhoods, so we ran and hid in our basement. At 2 o'clock in the afternoon, as the intensity of the bombing wound down, I carefully sneaked out of the basement to the kitchen and carried food to my family. When the bombing stopped, we began to hear noises that sounded like metal pieces falling on the ground. But I didn’t find an explanation.

I saw things that I won't forget for as long as I live. It started with a loud strange noise that sounded like bombs exploding, and a man came running into our house, shouting, 'Gas! Gas!' We hurried into our car and closed its windows. I think the car was rolling over the bodies of innocent people. I saw people lying on the ground, vomiting a green-colored liquid, while others became hysterical and began laughing loudly before falling motionless onto the ground. Later, I smelled an aroma that reminded me of apples and I lost consciousness. When I awoke, there were hundreds of bodies scattered around me. After that I took shelter again in a nearby basement and the area was engulfed by an ugly smell. It was similar to rotting garbage, but then it changed to a sweet smell similar to that of apples. Then I smelled something that was like eggs.

When you hear people shouting the words 'gas' or 'chemicals'—and you hear those shouts spreading among the people—that is when terror begins to take hold, especially among the children and the women. Your loved ones, your friends, you see them walking and then falling like leaves to the ground. It is a situation that cannot be described—birds began falling from their nests; then other animals, then humans. It was total annihilation. Whoever was able to walk out of the town, left on foot. Whoever had a car, left by car. But whoever had too many children to carry on their shoulders, they stayed in the town and succumbed to the gas.[11]

The infamous image of Omer Khawar and his infant.

Survivors said the gas at first smelled of sweet apples[12]and reported that people "died in a number of ways, suggesting a combination of toxic chemicals."[13]Citing an interview with a university student who survived the attack, the internationalNGO,Human Rights Watch,reported that "some [victims] 'just dropped dead'. Others 'died of laughing.' Others took a few minutes to die, first 'burning andblistering' or 'coughing up green vomit' ".[14]"Those who were in the thick of the 'death cloud' died in suspended animation" according toDlawer Ala'Aldeenof Nottingham University, who collected detailed data between 1987 and 1988, including numbers, places and types of chemical weapon attacks acrossIraqi Kurdistan.[15]Many were injured or perished in the panic that followed the attack, especially those who were blinded by the chemicals.[16]

"Iranian physicians reported that victims of the chemical attacks on Halabja showed characteristic symptoms ofcyanide poisoning,"while other reports indicated substantial quantities ofmustard gasand other chemical weapons were used.[17]Most of the wounded taken to hospitals in the Iranian capitalTehranwere suffering from mustard gas exposure.[5]AUnited Nations(UN) medical investigation concluded that mustard gas was used in the attack, along with unidentifiednerve agents;the UN's investigator was "unable to obtain any definitive information about the [reported] use of hydrocyanic gas as an aggressive chemical."[2]It is generally accepted that "a lethal cocktail of mustard gas and the nerve agentsTabun,SarinandVX"was used, as reported by theBBC.[9]Prior to the Halabja incident there were at least 21 documented smaller-scale chemical attacks against Iraqi Kurds, none of which prompted any serious response from the international community.[18]

Aftermath

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Discovery and response

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The first images after the attack were taken by Iranian journalists who later spread the pictures in Iranian newspapers. Footage taken by aBritishITNcamera crew, airlifted by the Iranians,[19]was also shown worldwide via news programmes. Some of those first pictures were taken by Iranian photographerKaveh Golestan,who described the scene to Guy Dinmore of theFinancial Times.He was about 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) outside Halabja with a military helicopter when the IraqiMiG-23fighter-bombers flew in. He said "it was not as big as a nuclearmushroom cloud,but several smaller ones: thick smoke. "Golestan was shocked by the scenes on his arrival in the town, though he had seen gas attacks before at the front lines:

Victims of the attack

It was life frozen. Life had stopped, like watching a film and suddenly it hangs on one frame. It was a new kind of death to me. (…) The aftermath was worse. Victims were still being brought in. Some villagers came to our chopper. They had 15 or 16 beautiful children, begging us to take them to hospital. So all the press sat there and we were each handed a child to carry. As we took off, fluid came out of my little girl's mouth and she died in my arms.[20]

The Iraqi government did not publicly comment on the use of chemical weapons at Halabja until 23 March, and early statements by Iraqi officials on the matter were inconsistent. Although Iraq ultimately denied responsibility for the attack and blamed it on Iran, its initial silence, as well as the fact that Halabja was never a major part of Iraq's wartime propaganda campaign against Iran, raises questions about the sincerity of this deflection.[21]

Bodies of a woman and children

International response at the time was muted. TheUnited States(U.S.) government and its intelligence agencies suggested that Kurdish civilians had not been deliberately targeted, and attempted to place responsibility for the attack on Iran.[19][22]The U.S.Defense Intelligence AgencyandCentral Intelligence Agencyanalyst Stephen C. Pelletiere claimed at the time that Iran was responsible for the gassing, an allegation which Pelletiere repeated in a 2003 op-ed inThe New York Times.[23]However, these claims were subsequently discredited.[24][25]A briefing paper produced by the BritishForeign and Commonwealth Officeabout how the British government should respond to the massacre, and whether or not economic sanctions should be imposed, came to the following conclusion: "We believe it better to maintain a dialogue with others if we want to influence their actions. Punitive measures such as unilateral sanctions would not be effective in changing Iraq's behaviour over chemical weapons, and would damage British interests to no avail."[18]According toTony Benn,the issue was raised inParliament,but he was told that "Saddam was an ally".[26]Joost Hiltermannstates that Iraq took the U.S. "disinformation" about Halabja as "another green light... to gather up and methodically kill tens of thousands of Kurds" over the course of the ensuingAnfal campaign,which continued until September 1988. In Hiltermann's analysis, the Anfal campaign "surely was not a US policy objective; nevertheless, it resulted directly from failing to call the Iraqis to a halt [after Halabja]."[27]

In response tofurther Iraqi chemical attacks on Kurdish civiliansafter the August 1988 ceasefire with Iran, U.S.senatorsClaiborne PellandJesse Helmscalled for comprehensiveeconomic sanctionsagainst Iraq, including an oil embargo and severe limitations on the export ofdual-use technology.Although the ensuing legislation passed in the U.S. Senate, it faced strong opposition within theHouse of Representativesand did not become law. In a rare rebuke,United States Secretary of StateGeorge Shultzcondemned Iraq's "unjustified and abhorrent" attacks, which Shultz's assistantCharles E. Redmancharacterized as "unacceptable to the civilized world." Even after these pronouncements, however, the State Department advised against sanctions.[28]

Iraqi government documents dating from 16 March 1988 to several weeks later refer to "a firm escalation of military might and cruelty [in Halabja]," "the bombing by our planes and our artillery on the area of Halabja and Khurmal, [killing] approximately 2,000 enemy forces of the Persians and Iranian agents [thePUK], "the" recent attack on Halabja withspecialammunition, "and, in one case, explicitly refer to" the Iraqi chemical attack on Halabja. "[29]A 20 March 1988 Iraqi memorandum "placed the casualty figures 'as a result of the chemical attack' as 900–1,000 'killed and a large number wounded' near Halabjah and some 2,500 in the city itself. These numbers included 'Khomeini guard,saboteurs, and the rest were civilians.' "[30]An Iraqi pilot explained in 2003 that the attack was motivated, in part, by the Iraqi perception that Kurdish collaboration with invading Iranian soldiers constituted "high treason."[31]

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Iraq was a signatory of the 1925Geneva Protocol,which prohibits "the use in war of asphyxiating, poisonous or other gases, and of all analogous liquids materials or devices". However, legal experts stated that such use was only applicable between signatory states and not against its own nationals, noting the Protocol's sentence "That the High Contracting Parties...agree to be boundas between themselvesaccording to the terms of this declaration. "In other words, theIraqi chemical attacks against Iranwas awar crime,but not against its own population.[32][33][34]

Such legality was reinforced when theUnited Nations Security Councilcondemned Iraq's use of chemical weapons against Iran inResolutions 612and620,while leaving out any reference of the same use against its own nationals. The Council was also at the time preoccupied with trying to get Iraq and Iran to acceptResolution 598(which called for aceasefirebetween the two nations), and restrained by concerns about Iraq's sovereignty in what was regarded as an 'internal affair'.[35][36]

A First Lieutenant of the U.S.25th Infantry Divisionpatrolling a local cemetery for some 1,500 victims in February 2005

Destruction and partial restoration of Halabja

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Survivors assisted by peshmerga and Iranians hastily buried most of the dead in makeshift mass graves. After Halabja was retaken from Iranian and Kurdish rebel forces, Iraqi troops inNBC suitscame to Halabja to study the effectiveness of their weapons and attacks. The town, still littered with unburied dead, was then systematically razed[16]by Iraqi forces using bulldozers and explosives. The Japanese government financed a $70 million project to provide access to safe drinking water in response to this.[37]In the meanwhile, an Iraqi high-ranking authority officially confessed in a meeting withJavier Pérez de Cuéllar,theSecretary-General of the United Nationsfor the utilization of chemical weapons by Iraq.[38]

Treatment of survivors at theIran Khodro StadiuminKaraj,April 1988.

Medical and genetic consequences

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Ten years later, in 1998, at least 700 people were still being treated for the severe after effects of the attack and 500 of them were judged to be critically ill, even as "the most severe cases may already have died."[18]In surveys by local doctors, a higher percentage of medical disorders,miscarriages(outnumbering live births[18]and 14 times higher than normal),colon cancer(10 times higher than normal), and heart diseases (quadrupled between 1990 and 1996[18]) were found in Halabja compared toChamchamal.Additionally, "other cancers, respiratory ailments, skin and eye problems, fertility and reproductive disorders are measurably higher in Halabja and other areas caught in chemical attacks."[6]Some of those who survived the attack or were apparently injured only lightly at the time later developed medical problems doctors believe stemmed from the chemicals, and there are concerns that the attack may be having a lastinggeneticimpact on the Kurdish population, as preliminary surveys showed increased rates of birth defects.[6]

Some reports indicated that "survivors of this particular attack have permanent injuries, including burns, and some exhibit symptoms of neurological damage, although this cannot yet be adequately confirmed."[17]

In addition to human casualties and loss of life, animals, plants, wild life and the entire environment were severely affected and took years to recover[39]

Trials of Saddam and 'Chemical Ali'

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Saddam Hussein was not charged by theIraqi Special Tribunalforcrimes against humanitybased on the events at Halabja. However, Iraqi prosecutors had "500 documented baskets of crimes during the Hussein regime" and Hussein was condemned to death based on just one case, the 1982Dujail Massacre.[40]Among several documents revealed during thetrial of Saddam Hussein,one was a 1987 memo from Iraq's military intelligence seeking permission from the president's office to use mustard gas and the nerve agentssarinandtabunagainst Kurds. A second document said in reply that Saddam had ordered military intelligence to study the possibility of a "sudden strike" using such weapons against Iranian and Kurdish forces. An internal memo written by military intelligence confirmed it had received approval from the president's office for a strike using "special ammunition" and emphasized that no strike would be launched without first informing the president. Saddam himself told the court: "In relation to Iran, if any military or civil official claims that Saddam gave orders to use either conventional or special ammunition, which as explained is chemical, I will take responsibility with honor. But I will discuss any act committed against our people and any Iraqi citizen, whether Arab or Kurdish. I don't accept any insult to my principles or to me personally."[41]Kurdish survivors had no doubt Saddam was personally responsible and were disappointed he was being tried only over the killings in Dujail.[42][43]Saddam was executed by hanging on 30 December 2006.

Ali Hassan al-Majid"Chemical Ali" during an investigative hearing in 2004

Saddam's cousinAli Hassan al-Majid(who commanded Iraqi forces in northern Iraq during that period, which earned him a nickname of 'Chemical Ali') was condemned to death by hanging by an Iraqi court in January 2010, after being found guilty of orchestrating the Halabja massacre. Al-Majid was first sentenced to hang in 2007 for his role in a 1988 military campaign against ethnic Kurds, codenamed Anfal, and in 2008 he also twice received a death sentence for his crimes against the IraqiShia Muslims,in particular for his role in crushing the1991 uprisingsin southern Iraq and his involvement in the 1999 killings in theSadr Citydistrict ofBaghdad(then called Saddam City). Al-Majid did not express remorse at his trials, stating his actions were in the interests of Iraqi security. He was executed by hanging on 25 January 2010.[9]Among many other captured Iraqi government documents proving Iraqi responsibility for the attack, there is a recording of al-Majid boasting about the Kurds: "I will kill them all with chemical weapons. Who is going to say anything? The international community? Fuck the international community and those who listen to them!"[44]

International sources for technology and chemical precursors

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Theknow-howand material for developing chemical weapons were obtained by Saddam's regime from foreign sources.[45]Most precursors for chemical weapons production came fromSingapore(4,515 tons), theNetherlands(4,261 tons),Egypt(2,400 tons),India(2,343 tons), andWest Germany(1,027 tons). One Indian company, Exomet Plastics, sent 2,292 tons of precursor chemicals to Iraq. Singapore-based firm Kim Al-Khaleej, affiliated to the United Arab Emirates, supplied more than 4,500 tons ofVX,sarinand mustard gas precursors and production equipment to Iraq.[46]Dieter Backfisch, managing director of West German company Karl Kolb GmbH, was quoted by saying in 1989 that "for people in Germany poison gas is something quite terrible, but this does not worry customers abroad."[45]

The 2002International Crisis Group(ICG) no. 136 "Arming Saddam: The Yugoslav Connection" concludes it was "tacit approval" by many world governments that led to the Iraqi regime being armed withweapons of mass destruction,despite sanctions, because of the ongoing Iranian conflict. Among the dual-use exports provided to Iraq from American companies such as Alcolac International and Phillips wasthiodiglycol,a substance which can also be used to manufacture mustard gas, according to leaked portions of Iraq's "full, final and complete" disclosure of the sources for its weapons programs. Thedual-use exports from U.S. companies to Iraqwas enabled by aReagan administrationpolicy that removed Iraq from the State Department's list ofState Sponsors of Terrorism.Alcolac was named as a defendant in the Aziz v. Iraq case, but the case was eventually dismissed (Case No. 1:09-cv-00869-MJG). Both companies have since undergone reorganization. Phillips, once a subsidiary of Phillips Petroleum is now part ofConocoPhillips,an American oil and discount fossil fuel company. Alcolac International has since dissolved and reformed as Alcolac Inc.[47]

On 23 December 2005, a Dutch court sentencedFrans van Anraat,a businessman who bought chemicals on the world market and sold them to Saddam's regime, to 15 years in prison. The court ruled that the chemical attack on Halabja constituted genocide, but van Anraat was found guilty only of complicity in war crimes.[48]In March 2008, the government of Iraq announced plans to take legal action against the suppliers of chemicals used in the attack.[49]

In 2013, 20 Iraqi Kurds who were victims of the attack requested a judicial investigation into two unnamed French companies, saying that they were among 20 or more companies that helped Saddam Hussein construct a chemical weapons arsenal. The Kurds sought for aninvestigating judgeto open a case.[50]

Controversies

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Allegations of Iranian involvement

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An original bomb casing used as flower pot at the Halabja Memorial Monument in 2011

TheU.S. State Department,in the immediate aftermath of the incident, took the official position that Iran was partly to blame.[22]A preliminaryDefense Intelligence Agency(DIA) study at the time reported that Iran was responsible for the attack, an assessment which was used subsequently by theCentral Intelligence Agency(CIA) for much of the early 1990s. The CIA's senior political analyst for the Iran-Iraq war, Stephen C. Pelletiere, co-authored an unclassified analysis of the war[51]which contained a brief summary of the DIA study's key points. Pelletiere claimed that blue discolorations around the mouths of the victims and in their extremities suggested that a blood agent using cyanide was used in the attack at Halabja, and that only Iran was known to have used blood agents during the war.[52][53]No proof that Iran had previously used hydrocyanic gas, as asserted by the DIA, was ever presented.[2]

Iranian stamp, issued 1988, commemorating the victims of Halabja, including the previously shown image of Omer Khawar.

Joost Hiltermann,who was the principal researcher for Human Rights Watch between 1992 and 1994, conducted a two-year study of the massacre, including a field investigation in northern Iraq. Hiltermann writes: "Analysis of thousands of captured Iraqi secret police documents and declassified U.S. government documents, as well as interviews with scores of Kurdish survivors, senior Iraqi defectors and retired U.S. intelligence officers, show (1) that Iraq carried out the attack on Halabja, and (2) that the United States, fully aware it was Iraq, accused Iran, Iraq's enemy in a fierce war, of being partly responsible for the attack."[22]This research concluded there were numerous other gas attacks, unquestionably perpetrated against the Kurds by the Iraqi armed forces.[54]In 2001, Jean Pascal Zanders of theStockholm International Peace Research Institute(SIPRI)'s Chemical and Biological Warfare Project also dismissed the allegations, arguing that "The coloring of the victims is more suggestive of sarin, which was in Iraq's arsenal."[55]Leo Casey, writing inDissent Magazinein 2003, observed that Pelletiere's analysis was based solely on images and testimony of blue discolorations and ignored all other evidence—including the recollections of hundreds of Kurdish witnesses; academic studies based on medical examinations, soil samples, and autopsies; and captured Iraqi government documents—proving Iraqi culpability.[44]

Hiltermann noted that althoughcyanosis(the medical term for the blue discolorations in question) is etymologically related to cyanide, the former condition indicates only a blood supply deprived of oxygen, and is in no way sufficient to diagnose cyanide poisoning; in fact, "it could just as easily suggest the use of a nerve agent."[56]Furthermore, "Even the proven presence of cyanide gas at Halabja would not necessarily implicate Iran," for two reasons outlined by Hiltermann. Prior to Halabja, Iranian forces made widespread use ofamyl nitriteto counter what they repeatedly alleged was Iraqi cyanide gas. If those Iranian claims are accepted, then "By that logic, Iraq could also be implicated in any Halabja deaths by cyanide." However, cyanide evaporates rapidly and tabun—a major part of Iraq's chemical arsenal at the time—contains cyanide as an essential ingredient, factors that rendered it impossible for the UN to confirm any Iraqi use of cyanide gas during the Iran–Iraq war: "Because of its connection to tabun, if hydrocyanide is found in a given environment, it could be either the residual effect of poorly manufactured tabun or a breakdown element when tabun decomposes."[57]

According to Hiltermann, the literature on the Iran–Iraq war reflects a number of allegations of chemical weapons use by Iran, but these are "marred by a lack of specificity as to time and place, and the failure to provide any sort of evidence." Hiltermann called these allegations "mere assertions" and added that "no persuasive evidence of the claim that Iran was the primary culprit was ever presented."[54]Many sources state that Iran's chemical weapons capability at the time was extremely limited to non-existent, although it is possible that Iran could have captured chemical munitions from Iraqi troops; for example, military analyst Ahmed Hashim recounted that "The Iranians only had tear gas. No cyanide."[58]In fact, far from having a meaningful chemical warfare capability, Iran's effectiveness merely in protecting its own soldiers from chemical attacks is open to question as the low-quality protective equipment that it belatedly received fromEast GermanyandNorth Koreawas intended for use against paint fumes; the unwillingness of many Iranians to shave their beards also limited the efficacy of the masks.[59]A 1987 UN report conducted at the behest of both belligerents discovered weapon fragments that established Iraqi responsibility for chemical attacks on Iranian soldiers and civilians, but could not substantiate Iraq's allegations of Iranian chemical weapons use: "Iraqi forces have been affected by mustard gas and a pulmonary element, possiblyphosgene.In the absence of conclusive evidence of the weapons used, it could not be determined how the injuries were caused. "Evidence suggests that these Iraqi chemical casualties were likely the result of" blowback, "whereas the evidence that Iraq submitted to the UN—such as two Iranian 130 mm shells that UN specialists found had" no internal chemical-resistant coating "and were" normally used for filling with high explosives "—did not withstand scrutiny; UN officialIqbal Rizalater acknowledged that Iraq's evidence was "clearly fabricated." However, the report's phrasing— "chemical weapons were again used against Iranian forces by Iraqi forces... now also Iraqi forces have sustained injuries from chemical warfare" —contributed to an erroneous perception that Iran and Iraq were equally at fault.[60]

Documents uncovered after the2003 invasion of Iraqshow that Iraqi military intelligence was not aware of any large-scale chemical attacks by Iranian forces, although a March 1987 document describes five small-scale chemical attacks perpetrated by the Iranians (four involving mustard gas and one involving phosgene, with the likely source being captured Iraqi munitions), and there are also reports of Iranian use of tear gas andwhite phosphorus.[61]As recounted byWilliamson Murrayand Kevin M. Woods: "Despite rumors of Iranian chemical threats and occasional battlefield use (mostly [tear gas] and captured Iraqi chemical rounds), by 1988, the Iraqis were satisfied that there was no near-term threat. An intelligence report [dated 27 June 1988] discussing North Korea's help to the Iranians to develop an indigenous mustard gas capability, however, pointed toward a future where Iraqi troops might need to worry about chemical attacks."[62]

Children playing in the Halabja cemetery, 2011

2006 Halabja memorial protest

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In March 2003, the Monument of Halabja Martyrs was built in the still largely ruined city. On 16 March 2006, a few thousand residents, many of them students in high school or university, demonstrated at the site in protest of what they perceived as the neglect of living Halabjans and the Kurdish leadership's commodification of the tragedy. The memorial was set on fire, destroying most of its archives; student protestor Kurda Ahmed was shot dead by the police and dozens of people were injured.[63][64][65]It was later rebuilt as the Halabja Memorial Monument, also known as Halabja Monument and Peace Museum.

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  • In 2008,Kayhan Kalhorand Brooklyn Rider released the albumSilent City[66]in memory of the Halabja Massacre. As Kalhor writes on the back cover, "The piece commemorates the Kurdish village of Halabja in Iraqi Kurdistan. It is based on an altered A-minor scale and uses Kurdish themes to remember the Kurdish people." In 2011, Kayhan Kalhor,Yo-Yo MaandThe Silk Road EnsembleperformedSilent CityatSanders Theater.Silk Road Project released video of the last part of the performance on YouTube.[67]
  • Canadian industrial-electronic bandSkinny Puppycomments upon the Halabja chemical attacks in their song "VX Gas Attack" on their 1988 albumVIVIsectVI.
  • In 2001, the movieJiyanabout the Halabja attack was released.[68]This movie was directed byJano Rosebiani.[68]
  • 1988released in 2023 tells the story of the 1988 Halabja attack.

See also

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References

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  1. ^abc"Halabja, the massacre the West tried to ignore".The Times.Archived fromthe originalon 28 January 2010.Retrieved28 August2013.
  2. ^abcHiltermann, Joost R.(2007).A Poisonous Affair: America, Iraq, and the Gassing of Halabja.Cambridge University Press.p. 195.ISBN9780521876865.
  3. ^"1988: Thousands die in Halabja gas attack".16 March 1988.Retrieved5 June2024.
  4. ^"Chemical Weapons Programs – Iraq Special Weapons Facilities".Federation of American Scientists.Archivedfrom the original on 14 December 2017.Retrieved28 August2013.
  5. ^abc"BBC ON THIS DAY | 16 | 1988: Thousands die in Halabja gas attack".BBC News.Archivedfrom the original on 10 February 2018.Retrieved28 August2013.
  6. ^abc"Kurds look back with fear".BBC News.22 July 2002.Archivedfrom the original on 11 September 2013.Retrieved28 August2013.
  7. ^"1988 Kurdish massacre labeled genocide".United Press International.8 March 2010. Archived fromthe originalon 23 October 2017.
  8. ^"House adopts Karygiannis Motion on Halabja Gassing as a Crime Against Humanity".16 March 2010. Archived fromthe originalon 13 July 2011.Retrieved19 March2010.
  9. ^abc"'Chemical Ali' executed in Iraq after Halabja ruling ".BBC News.25 January 2010.Archivedfrom the original on 10 March 2016.Retrieved28 August2013.
  10. ^"1988: Thousands die in Halabja gas attack".16 March 1988.
  11. ^"Halabja: Survivors talk about horror of attack, continuing ordeal".Ekurd.net. 15 March 2008.Archivedfrom the original on 14 November 2013.Retrieved28 August2013.
  12. ^"Birmingham – Your Community – The Smell of Apples".BBC. 22 June 2006.Archivedfrom the original on 9 December 2012.Retrieved28 August2013.
  13. ^"Whatever Happened To The Iraqi Kurds? (Human Rights Watch Report, March 11, 1991)".hrw.org.Retrieved26 November2022.
  14. ^"Whatever Happened To The Iraqi Kurds? (Human Rights Watch Report, March 11, 1991)".Hrw.org.Archivedfrom the original on 23 October 2017.Retrieved28 August2013.
  15. ^"Dlawer's Library - Death Clouds".sites.google.
  16. ^ab"We blame Saddam for everything".The Guardian.17 March 2003.Archivedfrom the original on 27 August 2013.Retrieved28 August2013.
  17. ^abEric Croddy with Clarisa Perez-Armendariz & John Hart,Chemical and Biological Warfare: A Comprehensive Survey for the Concerned Citizen(Spring Science+Business Media, 2002), p. 164.
  18. ^abcde"Saddam's secret weapon (Channel 4, 1988)".Publications.steveplatt.net. 16 March 1988. Archived fromthe originalon 23 April 2017.Retrieved28 August2013.
  19. ^ab"Halabja: whom does the truth hurt?".openDemocracy. 4 September 2007.Archivedfrom the original on 29 May 2014.Retrieved28 August2013.
  20. ^A committed defender of free expressionArchivedSeptember 27, 2007, at theWayback Machine
  21. ^Hiltermann, Joost R.(2007).A Poisonous Affair: America, Iraq, and the Gassing of Halabja.Cambridge University Press.pp. 172–174.ISBN9780521876865.
  22. ^abcHiltermann, Joost R. (17 January 2003)."Halabja – America didn't seem to mind poison gas".The New York Times.Archivedfrom the original on 24 July 2012.Retrieved28 August2013.
  23. ^Pelletiere, Stephen C. (2003)."A War Crime Or an Act of War?".The New York Times.ISSN0362-4331.Archivedfrom the original on 6 April 2018.Retrieved22 February2018.
  24. ^"CNS – DC: Briefing Series: Iranian Use of Chemical Weapons: A Critical Analysis of Past Allegations March 7, 2001 by Jean Pascal Zanders, SIPRI Chemical and Biological Warfare Project".2 January 2003. Archived fromthe originalon 2 January 2003.Retrieved22 February2018.
  25. ^Hiltermann, Joost R.(2007).A Poisonous Affair: America, Iraq, and the Gassing of Halabja.Cambridge University Press.p. 183.ISBN9780521876865.Today, few observers question the assertion that it was Iraq that gassed Halabja.
  26. ^"Capitalism: the case against".15 October 2003.Archivedfrom the original on 14 October 2019.Retrieved14 October2019.
  27. ^Hiltermann, Joost R.(2007).A Poisonous Affair: America, Iraq, and the Gassing of Halabja.Cambridge University Press.pp. 239–240.ISBN9780521876865.
  28. ^Sciolino, Elaine(1991).The Outlaw State: Saddam Hussein's Quest for Power and the Gulf Crisis.John Wiley & Sons.p.171.ISBN9780471542995.
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Literature

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