This is a non-official list of countries that are reported to have been bombed by the United States over the years.
United States bombings of other countries
It is a scandal in contemporary international law, don’t forget,
that while “wanton destruction of towns, cities and villages” is a
war crime of long standing, the bombing of cities from airplanes
goes not only unpunished but virtually unaccused. Air bombardment
is state terrorism, the terrorism of the rich. It has burned up
and blasted apart more innocents in the past six decades than have
all the antistate terrorists who ever lived. Something has
benumbed our consciousness against this reality. In the United
States we would not consider for the presidency a man who had once
thrown a bomb into a crowded restaurant, but we are happy to elect
a man who once dropped bombs from airplanes that destroyed not
only restaurants but the buildings that contained them and the
neighborhoods that surrounded them. I went to Iraq after the Gulf
war and saw for myself what the bombs did; “wanton destruction” is
just the term for it.
C. Douglas Lummis, political scientist {1}
The above was written in 1994, before the wanton destruction generated by the bombing of Yugoslavia,
another in a long list of countries the United States has bombarded since the end of World War II, which is presented below.
There appears to be something about launching bombs or missiles from afar onto cities and people that appeals to American military and political leaders. In part it has to do with a conscious desire to not risk American lives in ground combat. And in part, perhaps not entirely conscious, it has to do with not wishing to look upon the gory remains of the victims, allowing American GIs and TV viewers at home to cling to their warm fuzzy feelings about themselves, their government, and their marvelous “family values”.
Washington officials are careful to distinguish between the explosives the US drops from the sky and “weapons of mass destruction” (WMD), which only the officially-designated enemies (ODE) are depraved enough to use. The US government speaks sternly of WMD, defining them as nuclear, chemical and biological in nature, and “indiscriminate” (meaning their use can’t be limited to military objectives), as opposed to the likes of American “precision” cruise missiles. This is indeed a shaky semantic leg to stand on, given the well-known extremely extensive damage to non-military targets, including numerous residences, schools and hospitals, even from American “smart” bombs, in almost all of the bombings listed below.
Moreover, Washington does not apply the term “weapons of mass destruction” to other weapons the US has regularly used, such as depleted uranium and cluster bombs, which can be, and often are, highly indiscriminate.
WMD are sometimes further defined as those whose effects linger in the environment, causing subsequent harm to people. This would certainly apply to cluster bombs, and depleted uranium weapons, the latter remaining dangerously radioactive after exploding. It would apply less to “conventional” bombs, but even with those there are unexploded bombs lying around, and the danger of damaged buildings later collapsing. But more importantly, it seems highly self-serving and specious, not to mention exceptionally difficult, to try to paint a human face on a Tomahawk Cruise missile whose payload of a thousand pounds of TNT crashes into the center of a densely-populated city, often with depleted uranium in its warhead.
A terrorist is someone who has a bomb
but doesn’t have an air force
The bombing list
Korea and China 1950-53 (Korean War)
Guatemala 1954
Indonesia 1958
Cuba 1959-1961
Guatemala 1960
Congo 1964
Laos 1964-73
Vietnam 1961-73
Cambodia 1969-70
Guatemala 1967-69
Grenada 1983
Lebanon 1983, 1984 (both Lebanese and Syrian targets)
Libya 1986
El Salvador 1980s
Nicaragua 1980s
Iran 1987
Panama 1989
Iraq 1991 (Persian Gulf War)
Kuwait 1991
Somalia 1993
Bosnia 1994, 1995
Sudan 1998
Afghanistan 1998
Yugoslavia 1999
Yemen 2002
Iraq 1991-2003 (US/UK on regular basis)
Iraq 2003-05
Afghanistan 2001-05
Plus
Iran, April 2003 — hit by US missiles during bombing of Iraq, killing at least one persdon {2}
Pakistan, 2002-03 — bombed by US planes several times as part of combat against the Taliban and other opponents of the US occupation of Afghanistan {3}
China, 1999 — its heavily bombed embassy in Belgrade is legally Chinese territory, and it appears rather certain that the bombing was no accident (see chapter 25)
France, 1986 — After the French government refused the use of its air space to US warplanes headed for a bombing raid on Libya, the planes were forced to take another, longer route; when they reached Libya they bombed so close to the French embassy that the building was damaged and all communication links knocked out.{4}
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, May 13, 1985 — A bomb dropped by a police helicopter burned down an entire block, some 60 homes destroyed, 11 dead, including several small children. The police, the mayor’s office, and the FBI were all involved in this effort to evict a black organization called MOVE from the house they lived in.
Them other guys are really shocking
“We should expect conflicts in which adversaries, because of cultural affinities different from our own, will resort to forms and levels of violence shocking to our sensibilities.”
Department of Defense, 1999 {5}
The Targets
It’s become a commonplace to accuse the United States of choosing as its bombing targets only people of color, those of the Third World, or Muslims. But it must be remembered that one of the most sustained and ferocious American bombing campaigns was carried out against the people of the former Yugoslavia — white, European, Christians. The United States is an equal-opportunity bomber. The only qualifications for a country to become a target are: (1) It poses a sufficient obstacle to the desires of the American Empire; (2) It is virtually defenseless against aerial attack.
The survivors
A study by the American Medical Association: “Psychiatric disorders among survivors of the
1995 Oklahoma City bombing”:
Nearly half the bombing survivors studied had an active postdisaster
psychiatric disorder, and full criteria for PTSD [posttraumatic stress
disorder] were met by one third of the survivors. PTSD symptoms were
nearly universal, especially symptoms of intrusive reexperience and
hyperarousal.{6}
Martin Kelly, publisher of a nonviolence website:
We never see the smoke and the fire, we never smell the blood, we
never see the terror in the eyes of the children, whose nightmares
will now feature screaming missiles from unseen terrorists, known
only as Americans.
NOTES
1. The Nation, September 26, 1994, p.304
2. RFE/RL Newsline, April 9, 2003 (Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty is a “private” international communications service in Europe and Asia funded by the US government.)
3. Washington Post, January 1, 2003, Australian Broadcasting Company, January 1, 2003, Agence France Presse, September 19, 2003
4. Associated Press, “France Confirms It Denied U.S. Jets Air Space, Says Embassy Damaged”, April 15, 1986
5. U.S. Commission on National Security/21st Century, “New World Coming” (Phase I Report), September 15, 1999, p.3
6. Journal of the American Medical Association, August 25, 1999, p.761
This is a chapter from the book Rogue State: A Guide to the
World’s Only Superpower, by William Blum
Filed under: Geopolitics, History Tagged: | bombings
Of course, you leave out the full history of our bombings. Except in some of the asinine indirect correlations, failures and half-hearted attempts in your own listing, you’ll find an amazing correlation between countries the U.S. has bombed and those that now live under free democracies. Your list just goes to show that throwing a handful of shells in spite (the tendency under the Clinton years) doesn’t do much good, nor does actually losing a war (like in Vietnam). Tends to suggest that finishing what one starts is generally the best approach.
I would be interested in your sources of our ‘bombing’ in El Salvador and Nicargua in the 80s, however. I am very familiar with those areas and- other that in the fantasies of the anti-war crowd- I don’t recall much in the way of bombings there. Not exactly much of an ‘air war’; especially thanks to a certain operation down there that I found out about from participants that never made it to the headlines.
http://www.krysstal.com/display_acts.php?article=1963_elsalvador
El Salvador
http://www.krysstal.com/display_acts.php?article=1948_nicaragua
Nicaragua
BTW I’m not really making moral judgments here, I just saw the article and I knew at least most of those countries listed was true. People can look it up for themselves what the bombings were about ,some were justified and others were not.
“Tends to suggest that finishing what one starts is generally the best approach.”
I say, “Yes, the best approach is finishing what one starts; but, be sure what we’re tending is what we began some 232 years ago–not a far-spread, unnourished, vainly attempted empire.”
Lance, the reference indicate nothing about bombings and are NOT from the 80s. As one who has some familiarity of the nastiness in Central America during the 80s (where- like most Cold War matches- a lot of shades of gray involved, although ours generally turned out to be a lot lighter shades), you need to not mix incidents, tactics and timeframes to make your point.
It’s nice to sit here at our comfortable desks, vastly separated by time and space where rose-colored glasses, pure ignorance of the facts on the ground, and good wishes give one 20-20 vision. As one who has done relief work in the resulting aftermath of world events, American policy has- over the years- lead to a lot less suffering than the policy of our opponents when they win. But their mass graves rarely get publicized to the same extent. Ask the 60 million dead in China, the 4 million in Cambodia; not to mention the 5 million in the ongoing Congo (a continuation of the 1 million in Rwanda), without any involvement from the outside world.
An ‘empire’ of democracies- many which haven’t agreed with us for decades- is not too bad of a bad legacy.
* too bad of a legacy* Got a bit fumble-fingered there
I read the book by Blum as well as many others covering the CIA and the US miltary . In my opinion there was never any justification for any bombing. Period! You just don’t solve anything by dropping bombs on people. You only make them hate you. Why did 9/11 happen? Osama said it was because he felt the US should see what it feels like to have our buildings bombed. It was his response to what we did in Lebanon. He hoped it would make us think twice before doing it again. But he was so wrong. All he did was make us behave worse and kill even more. Panama was a tragedy that didn’t get much press besides the propaganda. BTW where is Noriega now? He was supposed to be released but I think they sent him to France on more trumped up charges to keep him quiet. The truth would be troublesome to some people( especially a certain ex president.) Read “American Prisoner” by Manuel Noriega for another side of the Panamanian invasion(” Operation Just Cause”.) I like to call it Operation Just Because.
If someone would just get it throught the Chinese heads, that the USA is NEVER going to pay back all that money they are loaning it …….. the USA cut off from cheap loans would be out of the bombing business. As someone said — “America goes around the planet with a gun in one hand, and a Beggar’s bowl in the other”
No beggars bowl. We will just print up more money. Pretty soon all the world will reject our funny money and it will be time for WWIII. We will be like the Vikings and plunder to survive.
I read a history of air warfare from a scandinavian author, about a decade back. If one wishes to understand the American/ European obsession with dropping bombs from the air, one should start at the beginning, with the first ever air raids in north Africa, and the brittish air raids in Iraq.
A century ago caucasians saw no reason to hide their racism and arrogance with arguments like MIKE O’s, they openly admitted the point was to kill the women and children, to force the men to give up, or risk loosing their families.
The most interesting progression in this history was Churchill’s decision to bomb caucasians which Hitler had avoided, because bombing white people had been a taboo till then.
The second interesting progression is the advent of DU, which is originally designed as a ‘permanent land contaminant for resource rich areas’, hinting towards a new trend in ariel warfare (which clinton demonstrated by bombing Iraqs water infrastructure [linking the sewers and drinking water], and causing more casualities then the Bushes combined.)
Hello, let’s join hands. Sent you email. Probably check the spam box. You’ve got the email and website. Let’s crosspost and at minimum swap links.
The U.S.S.A. has been a murdering torture gulag from it’s inception, mostly due by control of the European Jew bankers ROTHSCHILDS, dating back to well before the FED came into existence in 1913.
unfortunately the bullshit stories and LIES the schools teach are a bunch of tripe like; “George Washington could not tell a lie….” and “Lincoln made us fight the Civil War to end SLAVERY” which are, on their faces, such crocks of shit that it makes one wonder if the government EVER TELLS THE FUCKING TRUTH EVER….(doubtful).
so this is no surprise to me. The U.S.S.A. has been the sole mass murderer who is the only country to use nuclear weapons on a people that did not deserve it.
and you asshole vets, fuck you. It was GENOCIDE what the U.S.S.A. did to Hiroshima and Nagasaki. GENOCIDE and a WAR CRIME!!!!!!!!!
“It’s nice to sit here at our comfortable desks, vastly separated by time and space where rose-colored glasses, pure ignorance of the facts on the ground, and good wishes give one 20-20 vision,” said keyboard warrior MikeO, while proudly defending state-sponsored violence from the comfort of his desk.
Who could disagree? It would be much less nice to find oneself in Iraq wihtout access to reliable information, following orders to torture, maim and exterminate brown-skinned people in the name of some rose-coloured myth about WMD.
Whoops! Sorry Mike. Mea Culpa!
“For bureaucratic reasons” I meant to say “in the name of some rose-coloured myth about spreading democracy.”
A few flashbacks for ya:
Basra: Why they are not cheering
Paul Reynolds , BBC, March 26, 2003
Napalm by another name: Pentagon denial goes up in flames
By Ben Cubby, Sydney Morning Herald
August 9, 2003
The Air Is Thick With Lies
Jimmy Breslin, newsday.com
August 24, 2003
US asks Israel to explore reopening Iraq pipeline
Margaret Neighbor, The Scotsman, August 26, 2003
Reasons for IraqWar? We Got a Million of ’Em
James. P. Pinkerton, newsday.com
August 28, 2003
U.S. Raid Herds Iraqi Old and Young in Barbed Wire
By Andrew Cawthorne, Reuters
September 1, 2003
Farah tried to plead with the US troops but she was killed anyway
Peter Beaumont, Guardian UK
September 7, 2003
Iraqi Teenagers Watch as Americans Bleed
Michael Georgy, Reuters
November 12, 2003
US soldiers allegedly kill two girls in Iraq
ABC News Online
November 28, 2003
Iraq to Stop Counting Civilian Dead
Niko Price, Associated Press
December 10, 2003
13 Journalists Killed Covering Iraq War
Deepti Hajela, AP Writer, editor & publisher
January 02, 2004
US deaths rise in wake of Saddam capture
Charles Clover, Financial Times
January 29, 2004
Iraqi ‘beaten to death’ by US troops
Agence France-Presse
April 14, 2004
Rape Rooms: A Chronology
What Bush said as the Iraq prison scandal unfolded.
William Saletan, Slate/MSNBC, May 5, 2004
Rumsfeld apologizes to abused Iraqis
Defense secretary warns that worse photos, videos are yet to come
MSNBC, May 7, 2004
Soldiers Back in U.S. Tell of More Iraq Abuses
NYT/Reuters, May 7, 2004
Shiite cleric wants Bush checked by shrink
United Press International
May 11, 2004
Atrocities in Iraq: ‘I killed innocent people for our government’
By Paul Rockwell, Sacramento Bee
May 16, 2004
Wedding party massacre
Iraqis claim more than 40 killed in US helicopter attack
Rory McCarthy, Guardian UK
May 20, 2004
Rumsfeld bans camera phones in Iraq – report
SMH/AFP May 24, 2004
Rumsfeld approved torture techniques: top brass
SMH/AP, June 4, 2004
They Behead; We Do It With Smart Bombs
Michael Takiff, LA Times, July 4, 2004
US abuse worse than Saddam’s, say inmates
Scott Wilson, SMH, May 4, 2004
U.S.: Detainee Begged For Death
CBS/AP, June 25, 2004
US Marine claims unit killed Iraqi civilians
AFP, December 8, 2004
Demands grow for Iraq death count
BBC, December 8, 2004
Christmas isn’t very merry for Iraqi Christians
Edmund Sanders, Chicago Tribune/LA Times,
December 20, 2004
Iraqi Victim Says U.S. Torture Worse That Saddam
Adam Tanner, Reuters, January 11, 2005
* too bad of a legacy* Got a bit fumble-fingered there
Fumbled all righ, Mike O. To claim, as you do, that the US has nothing to do with the Cambodian debacle, for instance, is really wishful thinking. Maybe Mike O has forgotten the carpet bombing of Cambodia by the US and the resultant destruction of the civil society of that benighted country. And that is just scratching the surfacce. There isn’t a single place on this planet that this behemoth hasn’t plundered or interfered with for the best part of the whole of the 20th Century. And that is not an exaggeration Mike O!
What the heck
oh .. we got linked from whatreallyhappened .. was wondering why there were 10 comments
[...] List of countries bombed by the United States « The Political Inquirer. August 6th, 2009 | Category: Uncategorized | Leave a comment | [...]
you’re all a bunch of bitch-ass commie cowards. get off your asses and go join the marines. maybe then you’ll amount to something in life.
amen
But we’re a peaceful nation, a free nation, a nation of laws, compassion, and honor. AH, BULL SIHT.
Why did you forget Japan?
[...] airpower so routinely and frequently that in one sense what is happening in Libya not new. The list of countries that have been bombed by the US is long and growing longer by the day. (This is an old list and [...]
There are just so many reasons why I’m thankful I left the US several years ago. They’re the planet’s terrorist. It’s nice to finally no longer be contributing to that with taxes, work etc.
[...] to wonder why no American government seems to learn from history. In fact, a cursory look at the history of illegal American bombing campaigns over the last six decades (Korea, Cambodia,Vietnam, Iraq, Grenada, Iran, Lebanon, Libya (the first [...]