/ 17 December 2004

Indiana Jones and the battle for Fallujah

Hollywood has joined the war. Universal Pictures announced on Thursday that it is to make The Battle for Fallujah. To prove it is serious, it has enlisted Indiana Jones himself, actor Harrison Ford, to help defeat the insurgency.

The film — Hollywood’s first foray into the second Iraq conflict — is due to go into production next year and will be based on a yet-to-be-finished book, No True Glory: The Battle for Fallujah by Bing West, a former marine, politician and now war correspondent.

The movie and book take as their starting point the killing of four civilian contractors in Fallujah and the ensuing decision to order an assault on the city by United States marines. That first assault, which was abruptly stopped by the White House, was led by General Jim Mattis, who will be played by Ford.

Six months later, shortly after the US presidential election, the marines attacked Fallujah for a second time, successfully occupying the city. Almost 80 US marines were killed in the two assaults, while some sources have estimated that 800 Iraqis and insurgents died in the April assault on the city and a further 1 000 in November.

The film promises to depict the story from the point of view of US soldiers and politicians; it seems unlikely that the plight of the Iraqis will figure too prominently in Hollywood’s take on the subject.

Writing last week for the online journal Slate.com, West said: ”If America needs a hard job done, the marines will do it, and they won’t lose their humanity in the process or any sleep over pulling the trigger. Yes, they are ‘the world’s most lethal killing machine.’ That’s what America needs in battle.” — Guardian Unlimited Â