Update: John Cole wants to make it absolutely clear that white phosphorous is not a chemical weapon. He seems to feel pretty strongly about it.
Earlier this month, a report on Italian television accused U.S. forces of using chemical weapons in Iraq, specifically utilizing white phosphorus as a weapon during an assault on insurgents in Fallujah. The Bush administration responded by calling the report “disinformation.”
“The United States categorically denies the use of chemical weapons at any time 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.”
Yesterday, the Bush administration changed its story.
Pentagon officials acknowledged Tuesday that U.S. troops used white phosphorous as a weapon against insurgent strongholds during the battle of Falluja last November. […]
Lt. Col. Barry Venable, a Pentagon spokesman, said that while white phosphorous is used most frequently to mark targets or obscure positions, it was used at times in Falluja as an incendiary weapon against enemy combatants.
I won’t pretend to be an expert on such matters, but the AP described white phosphorous as “a colorless-to-yellow translucent wax-like substance with a pungent, garlic-like smell. The form used by the military ignites once it is exposed to oxygen, producing such heat that it bursts into a yellow flame and produces a dense white smoke. It can cause painful burn injuries to exposed human flesh.”
And according to the Bush administration yesterday, American forces used this substance as a weapon — and denials to the contrary are no longer operative.
Yesterday, the State Department began to mount a defense.
“There is a great deal of misinformation feeding on itself about U.S. forces allegedly using ‘outlawed’ weapons in Falluja,” the department said. “The facts are that U.S. forces are not using any illegal weapons in Falluja or anywhere else in Iraq.”
Venable said white phosphorous shells are a standard weapon used by field artillery units and are not banned by any international weapons convention to which the United States is a signatory.
It seems there are two controversies — the use of white phosphorous and the administration’s denials that turned out to be untrue. On the prior, the administration apparently admits that it used chemical weapons, but it wants to make clear we didn’t use the really bad chemical weapons. On the latter, the administration hasn’t come up with a compelling spin yet.
Writing for the Washington Post yesterday, William Arkin explained that this is yet another Iraq-related fiasco for the Bush administration, calling its handling of the allegations, “typically clumsy and confused, fueling the controversy.”
What I’m sure of is that the use of white phosphorous is not just some insensitive act. It is not just bad P.R. It is the ill thought out and panicked use of a weapon in an illegitimate way. It is a representation of a losing strategy.
The controversy surrounding the use of white phosphorous hasn’t generated significant media attention, at least not in the U.S., but after yesterday’s Pentagon admission, that’s likely to change.
And whether the justification that white phosphorous isn’t one of the “illegal” chemicals, news reports around the world that the U.S. admits that it used chemical weapons WP as a weapon in Iraq probably won’t help with the whole “hearts and minds” problem.
Update 2: That last sentence was clearly wrong. I corrected it to say what I originally meant. My apologies.
Update 3: John says the sentence is still wrong, because WP is no more a chemical weapon than TNT is. This is just about the point when I start to wonder why I didn’t check with him before writing the post…