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Fallujah

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region.

The region has been inhabited for many millennia and there is evidence that it was inhabited in Babylonian times. The origin of the town's name is in some doubt, but one theory is that its Asyrian name Pallugtha is derived from the word division. There is some evidence that millennia ago a branch of the Euphrates divided off at that point, and that this is the source of the name, but today that branch has today disappeared.

Fallujah was a small and rather unimportant town for most of its history under the Persians, Arab Caliphates. It was overshadowed by the city of Al-Anbar to the north which served as a centre of learning in the region and under the Abbasid Caliphate for a time became the capital of the large empire. With the decline of the Abbassids the region declined and Al-Anbar was abandoned and is today only ruins.

Under the Ottoman Empire the town considered to play a secondary role and even in 1947 the town had only about 10,000 inhabitants. The city grew after Iraqi independence and with the influx of oil wealth into the country.

Under Saddam Hussein Fallujah was a favoured area, along with the rest of the region that has come to be known as the Sunni Triangle. Many senior Ba'ath Party officials came from the town. Residents of this region were far less opposed to Saddam's rule than the population of other regions. The city also saw several large factories built, including one that may have been used to create chemical weapons, but was shuttered by UN weapons inspectors.

During the First Gulf War Fallujah was one of the cities in Iraq with the most civilian casualties. Two separate failed bombing attempts on the city's bridge across the river hit crowded markets killing an estimated 200 civilians, and greatly angering the population.

File:Fallujahcapt.bag11103261717.jpg
Militant Iraqi insurgents prepare to fire a mortar round at U.S forces during a firefight in Fallujah, Iraq. (March 26, 2004 - Larger)

File:Falcapt.sge.dqp95.010404181345.photo00.jpg
Iraqis at the site of the killing of four contractors by guerillas and their subsequent mutilation by a crowd of residents.
(March 31, 2004 - Larger)

Despite this Fallujah was one of the most peaceful areas of the country after the fall of Saddam. There was very little looting and the new mayor of the city Taha Bidaywi, who was sleeted by local tribal leaders, was staunchly pro-American. When the American entered the town in April of 2003 they located themselves at the vacated Ba'ath Party headquarters erasing some goodwill, especially when many in the city had been hoping the Americans would stay outside of the city since it had been relatively calm. These fears were made manifest when on April 28 the occupying forces of the coalition opened fire on protestors outside a school, killing fifteen. While it is still unclear who fired first the killings lead to a public outcry, and turned many in the city against the coalition.

These factors have combined to make Fallujah one of the most dangerous areas for coalition military troops both during the occupation of Iraq. Since the occupation began over sixty Americans have died in Fallujah, more than any city other than Baghdad. On March 31, 2004, it was the site of an attack in which four private security contractors from the U.S. were dragged from SUVs and killed. Their bodies were then mutilated. A crowd of townsfolk, estimated to number over a thousand, beat the corpses, dragged the corpses behind automobiles, and hanged the dismembered remains from the girders of a bridge over the Euphrates River. These acts were recorded on film by journalists and broadcast worldwide on television.

See also