The Occupation of Iraqi Hearts and Minds
By Nir Rosen
07/04/06 "Truthdig" -- -- Three years into an occupation of Iraq
replete with so-called milestones, turning points and individual
events hailed as “sea changes” that would “break the back” of the
insurgency, a different type of incident received an intense, if
ephemeral, amount of attention. A local human rights worker and
aspiring journalist in the western Iraqi town of Haditha filmed the
aftermath of the massacre of 24 Iraqi civilians. The video made its
way to an Iraqi working for Time magazine, and the story was finally
publicized months later. The Haditha massacre was compared to the
Vietnam War’s My Lai massacre, and like the well-publicized and
embarrassing Abu Ghraib scandal two years earlier, the attention it
received made it seem as if it were a horrible aberration
perpetrated by a few bad apples who might have overreacted to the
stress they endured as occupiers.
In reality both Abu Ghraib and Haditha were merely more extreme
versions of the day-to-day workings of the American occupation in
Iraq, and what makes them unique is not so much how bad they were,
or how embarrassing, but the fact that they made their way to the
media and were publicized despite attempts to cover them up.
Focusing on Abu Ghraib and Haditha distracts us from the daily,
little Abu Ghraibs and small-scale Hadithas that have made up the
occupation. The occupation has been one vast extended crime against
the Iraqi people, and most of it has occurred unnoticed by the
American people and the media.
Americans, led to believe that their soldiers and Marines would be
welcomed as liberators by the Iraqi people, have no idea what the
occupation is really like from the perspective of Iraqis who endure
it. Although I am American, born and raised in New York City, I came
closer to experiencing what it might feel like to be Iraqi than many
of my colleagues. I often say that the secret to my success in Iraq
as a journalist is my melanin advantage. I inherited my Iranian
father’s Middle Eastern features, which allowed me to go unnoticed
in Iraq, blend into crowds, march in demonstrations, sit in mosques,
walk through Falluja’s worst neighborhoods.
I also benefited from being able to speak Arabic—in particular its
Iraqi dialect, which I hastily learned in Baghdad upon my arrival
and continued to develop throughout my time in Iraq.
My skin color and language skills allowed me to relate to the
American occupier in a different way, for he looked at me as if I
were just another haji, the “gook” of the war in Iraq. I first
realized my advantage in April 2003, when I was sitting with a group
of American soldiers and another soldier walked up and wondered what
this haji (me) had done to get arrested by them. Later that summer I
walked in the direction of an American tank and heard one soldier
say about me, “That’s the biggest fuckin’ Iraqi (pronounced eye-raki)
I ever saw.” A soldier by the gun said, “I don’t care how big he is,
if he doesn’t stop movin’ I’m gonna shoot him.”
I was lucky enough to have an American passport in my pocket, which
I promptly took out and waved, shouting: “Don’t shoot! I’m an
American!” It was my first encounter with hostile American
checkpoints but hardly my last, and I grew to fear the unpredictable
American military, which could kill me for looking like an Iraqi
male of fighting age. Countless Iraqis were not lucky enough to
speak American English or carry a U.S. passport, and often entire
families were killed in their cars when they approached American
checkpoints.
In 2004 the British medical journal The Lancet estimated that by
September 2004 100,000 Iraqis had died as a result of the American
occupation and said that most of them had died violently, mostly in
American airstrikes. Although this figure was challenged by many,
especially partisans of the war, it seems perfectly plausible to me
based on what I have seen in Iraq, having spent most of the postwar
period there. What I never understood was why more journalists did
not focus on this, choosing instead to look for the “good news” and
go along with the official story.
My first direct encounter with American Marines was from the Iraqi
side. In late April 2003, I was attending the Friday prayers in a
Sunni bastion in Baghdad. Thousands of people were praying and the
devout flooded out of the mosque and laid their prayer rugs on the
street and the square in front of it. A Marine patrol rounded a
corner and walked right into hundreds of people praying on the
street and listening to the sermon, even approaching the separate
section for women. Dozens of men rose and put their shoes on,
forming a virtual wall to block the armed Marines, who seemed
unaware of the danger. The Marines did not understand Arabic. “Irjau!”
“Go back!” the demonstrators screamed, and some waved their fists,
shouting “America is the enemy of God!” as they were restrained by a
few cooler-headed men from within their ranks. I ran to advise the
Marines that Friday prayers was not a good time to show up fully
armed. The men sensed this and asked me to tell their lieutenant,
who appeared oblivious to the public relations catastrophe he might
be provoking. He told me: “That’s why we’ve got the guns.”
A nervous soldier asked me to go explain the situation to the
bespectacled staff sergeant, who had been attempting to calm the
situation by telling the demonstrators, who did not speak English,
that the U.S. patrol meant no harm. He finally lost his temper when
an Iraqi told him gently, “You must go.” “I have the weapons,” the
sergeant said. “You back off.”
“Let’s get the fuck out!” one Marine shouted to another as the
tension increased. I was certain that a shove, a tossed stone or a
shot fired could have provoked a massacre and turned the city
violently against the American occupation. Finally the Marines
retreated cautiously around a corner as the worshipers were held
back by their own comrades. It could have ended worse, and a week
later it did when 17 demonstrators were killed by American soldiers
in Falluja, and several more were killed in a subsequent
demonstration, a massacre that contributed to the city’s support of
the resistance.
I believe that any journalist who spent even a brief period embedded
with American soldiers must have witnessed crimes being committed
against innocent Iraqis, so I have always been baffled by how few
were reported and how skeptically the Western media treated Arabic
reports of such crimes. These crimes were not committed because
Americans are bad or malicious; they were intrinsic to the
occupation, and even if the Girl Scouts had occupied Iraq they would
have resorted to these methods. In the end, it is those who
dispatched decent young American men and women to commit crimes who
should be held accountable.
Next Page: “I still feel guilt over my complicity in crimes the one
time I was embedded...”
I still feel guilt over my complicity in crimes the one time I was
embedded, in the fall of 2003. (I spent two weeks with the 3rd
Armored Cavalry Regiment stationed in Husaybah, an Iraqi town near
the Syrian border that is a suspected entry point for foreign
insurgent fighters.) Normally, I like to think, if I witnessed an
act of bullying of the weak or the elderly, or the terrorizing of
children, I would interfere and try to stop it. After all, a passion
for justice is what propelled me into this career. It started when I
arrived in the main base in the desert. Local Iraqi laborers were
sitting in the sun waiting to be acknowledged by the American
soldiers. Every so often a representative would come to the soldiers
to explain in Arabic that they were waiting for their American
overseer. The soldier would shout back in English. Finally I
translated between them. One soldier, upset with an Iraqi man for
looking at him, asked him: “Do I owe you money? So why the fuck are
you looking at me?”
After a week, the Army unit I was living with went on a raid
targeting alleged Al Qaeda cells. Included were safe houses,
financiers and fighters as well as alleged resistance leaders such
as senior military officers from elite units of the former Iraqi
army. All together there were 62 names on the wanted list. A minimum
of 29 locations would be raided, taking out the “nervous system” of
the area resistance “and the guys who actually do the shooting.”
The raids began at night. The men descended upon villages by the
border with Syria in the western desert. After half an hour of bumpy
navigating in the dark the convoy approached the first house and the
vehicles switched their lights on, illuminating the target area as a
tank broke the stone wall. “Fuck yeah!” cheered one sergeant, “Hi
honey I’m home!” The teams charged over the rubble from the wall,
breaking through the door with a sledgehammer and dragging several
men out. The barefoot prisoners, dazed from their slumber, were
forcefully marched over rocks and hard ground. One short middle-aged
man, clearly injured and limping with painful difficulty, was
violently pushed forward in the grip of a Brobdingnagian soldier who
said, “You’ll fucking learn how to walk.” Each male was asked his
name. None matched the names on the list. A prisoner was asked where
the targeted military officer lived. “Down the road,” he pointed.
“Show us!” he was ordered, and he was shoved ahead, stumbling over
the rocky street, terrified that he would be seen as an informer in
the neighborhood, terrified that he too would be taken away. He
stopped at the house but the soldiers ran ahead. “No, no, it’s
here,” yelled a sergeant, and they ran back, breaking through the
gate and bursting into the house. It was a large villa, with grape
vines covering the driveway. Women and children from within were
ordered to sit in the garden. The men were pushed to the ground on
the driveway and asked their names. One was indeed the first
high-value target. His son begged the soldiers, “Take me for 10
years but leave my father!” Both were taken. The children screamed
‘Daddy, Daddy!’ as the men were led out and the women were given
leaflets in Arabic explaining that the men had been arrested
Home after home met the same fate. Some homes had only women; these
houses too were ransacked, closets broken, mattresses overturned,
clothes thrown out of drawers. Men were dragged on the ground by
their legs to be handcuffed outside. One bony ancient sheik walked
out with docility and was pushed forcefully to the ground, where he
was wrestled by soldiers who had trouble cuffing his arms. A
commando grabbed him from them, and tightly squeezed the old man’s
arms together, lifting him in the air and throwing him down on the
ground, nearly breaking his fragile arms.
As her husband was taken away, one woman angrily asked Allah to
curse the soldiers, calling them “Dogs! Jews!” over and over. When
his soldiers left a home, one officer emerged to slap them on the
back like a coach congratulating his players during halftime in a
winning game. In a big compound of several houses the soldiers took
all the men, even the ones not on the list. A sergeant explained
that the others would be held for questioning to see whether they
had any useful information. The men cried out that they had children
still inside. In several houses soldiers tenderly carried out babies
who had been left sleeping in their cribs and handed them to the
women. When the work at a house was complete, or at the Home Run
stage (stages were divided into 1st, 2nd, 3rd, Home Run and Grand
Slam, meaning ready to move on), the soldiers relaxed and joked,
breaking their own tension and ignoring the trembling and shocked
women and children crouched together on the lawns behind them.
Prisoners with duct tape on their eyes and their hands cuffed behind
them with plastic “zip ties” sat in the back of the truck for hours,
without water. They moved their heads toward sounds, disoriented and
frightened, trying to understand what was happening around them. Any
time a prisoner moved or twitched, a soldier bellowed at him angrily
and cursed. Thrown among the tightly crowded men in one truck was a
boy no more than 15 years old, his eyes wide in terror as the duct
tape was placed on them. By daylight the whole town could see a
large truck full of prisoners. Two men walking to work with their
breakfast in a basket were stopped at gunpoint, ordered to the
ground, cuffed and told to “Shut the fuck up” as their basket’s
contents were tossed out and they were questioned about the location
of a suspect.
The soldier guarding them spoke of the importance of intimidating
Iraqis and instilling fear in them. “If they got something to tell
us I’d rather they be scared,” he explained. An Iraqi policeman
drove by in a white SUV clearly marked “Police.” He too was stopped
at gunpoint and ordered not to move or talk until the last raid was
complete. From the list of 34 names, the troop I was with brought in
about 16 positively identified men, along with 54 men who were
neighbors, relatives or just happened to be around. By 08:30 the
Americans were done and started driving back to base. As the main
element departed, the psychological operations vehicle blasted AC/DC
rock music through neighborhood streets. “It’s good for morale after
such a long mission,” a captain said. Crowds of children clustered
on porches smiling, waving and giving the passing soldiers little
thumbs up. A sergeant waved back. Neighbors awakened by the noise
huddled outside and watched the convoy. One little girl stood before
her father and guarded him from the soldiers with her arms
outstretched and legs wide.
Next Page: “Did they just arrest every man they found?” he asked,
wondering if “we just made another 300 people hate us.”
In Baghdad, coalition officials announced that 112 suspects had been
arrested in a major raid near the Syrian border, including a
high-ranking official in the former Republican Guard. “The general
officer that they captured, Abed Hamed Mowhoush al-Mahalowi, was
reported to have links with Saddam Hussein and was a financier of
anti-coalition activities, according to intelligence sources,” a
military spokeswoman said. “Troops from the 1st and 4th squadrons of
the Third Armored Cavalry cordoned off sections of the town and
searched 29 houses to find ‘subversive elements,’ including 12 of
the 13 suspects they had targeted for capture,” she said.
That night the prisoners were visible on a large dirt field in a
square of concertina wire. Beneath immense spotlights and near loud
generators, they slept on the ground, guarded by soldiers. One
sergeant was surprised by the high number of prisoners taken by the
troop I was with. “Did they just arrest every man they found?” he
asked, wondering if “we just made another 300 people hate us.” The
following day 57 prisoners were transported to a larger base for
further interrogation. Some were not the suspects, just relatives of
the suspects or men suspected of being the suspects.
The next night the troop departed the base at 0200, hoping to find
those alleged Al Qaeda suspects who had not been home during the
previous operation. Soldiers descended upon homes in a large
compound, their boots trampling over mattresses in rooms the
inhabitants did not enter with shoes on. Most of the wanted men were
nowhere to be found, their women and children prevaricating about
their locations. Some of their relatives were arrested instead.
“That woman is annoying!” one young soldier complained about a
mother’s desperate ululations as her son was taken from his house.
“How do you think your mother would sound if they were taking you
away?” a sergeant asked him.
Three days after the operation, a dozen prisoners could be seen
marching in a circle outside their detention cells, surrounded by
barbed wire. They were shouting “USA, USA!” over and over. “They
were talkin’ when we told ’em not to, so we made ’em talk somethin’
we liked to hear,” one of the soldiers guarding them said with a
grin. Another gestured up with his hands, letting them know they had
to raise their voices. A first sergeant quipped that the ones who
were not guilty “will be guilty next time,” after such treatment.
Even if the men were guilty, no proof would be provided to the
community. There would be no process of transparent justice. The
only thing evident to the Iraqi public would be the American guilt.
In November 2003 a major from the judge advocate general’s office
working on establishing an Iraqi judicial process told me that there
were at least 7,000 Iraqis detained by American forces. Many
languished in prisons indefinitely, lost in a system that imposed
the English language on Arabic speakers with Arabic names not easily
transcribed. Some were termed “security detainees” and held for six
months pending a review to determine whether they were still a
“security risk.” Most were innocent. Many were arrested simply
because a neighbor did not like them. A lieutenant colonel familiar
with the process told me that there is no judicial process for the
thousands of detainees. If the military were to try them, there
would be a court-martial, which would imply that the U.S. was
occupying Iraq, and lawyers working for the administration are still
debating whether it is an occupation or liberation. Two years later,
50,000 Iraqis had been imprisoned by the Americans and only 2% had
ever been found guilty of anything.
***
The S2 (intelligence) section in the Army unit I was with had not
proved itself very reliable in the past—a fact that frustrated
soldiers to no end. “You get all psyched up to do a hard mission,”
said one sergeant, “and it turns out to be three little girls. The
little kids get to me, especially when they cry.”
The reason for the lack of confidence in S2 was made clear by the
case of a man called Ayoub. I accompanied the troop when it raided
Ayoub’s home based on intelligence S2 provided: intercepted phone
calls, in which Ayoub spoke of proceeding to the next level and
obtaining land mines and other weapons.
On the day of the raid, tanks, Bradleys and Humvees squeezed between
the neighborhood walls. A CIA operator angrily eyed the rooftops and
windows of nearby houses, a silencer on his assault weapon. Soldiers
broke through Ayoub’s door early in the morning and when he did not
immediately respond to their orders he was shot with nonlethal
ordinance, little pellets exploding like gunshot from the weapons
grenade launcher. The floor of the house was covered in his blood.
He was dragged into a room and interrogated forcefully as his family
was pushed back against a garden fence. Ayoub’s frail mother,
covered in a shawl, with traditional tribal tattoos marking her
face, pleaded with an immense soldier to spare her son’s life,
protesting his innocence. She took the soldier’s hand and kissed it
repeatedly while on her knees. He pushed her to the grass along with
Ayoub’s four girls and two boys, all small, and his wife. They
squatted barefoot, screaming, their eyes wide in terror, clutching
each other as soldiers emerged with bags full of documents, photo
albums and two CDs with Saddam and his cronies on the cover. These
CDs, called “The Crimes of Saddam,” are common on every Iraqi
street, and as their title suggests, they were not made by Saddam
supporters; however, the soldiers saw only the picture of Saddam and
assumed they were proof of guilt.
Ayoub was brought out and pushed onto the truck. He gestured to his
shrieking relatives to remain where they were. He was an avuncular
man, small and round—balding and unshaven with a hooked nose and
slightly pockmarked face. He could not have looked more innocent. He
sat frozen, staring numbly ahead as the soldiers ignored him,
occasionally glancing down at their prisoner with sneering disdain.
The medic looked at Ayoub’s injured hand and chuckled to his
friends, “It ain’t my hand.” The truck blasted country music on the
way back to the base. Ayoub was thrown in the detainment center.
After the operation there were smiles of relief among the soldiers,
slaps on the back and thumbs up.
Next Page: “Oh shit,” said the S2 captain, “[we’ve got] the wrong
Ayoub.”
Several hours later, a call was intercepted from the Ayoub whom the
Americans were seeking. “Oh shit,” said the S2 captain, “[we’ve got]
the wrong Ayoub.” The innocent father of six who was in custody
actually was a worker in a phosphate plant the Americans were
running. But he was not let go. If he was released, there would be a
risk that the other Ayoub would learn he was being sought. The night
after his arrest a relieved Ayoub could be seen escorted by soldiers
to call his family and report he was fine but would not be home for
a few days. “It was not the wrong guy,” the troop’s captain said
defensively, shifting blame elsewhere. “We raided the house we were
supposed and arrested the man we were told to.”
When the soldiers who had captured Ayoub learned of the mistake,
they were not surprised. “Oops,” said one. Another one wondered,
“What do you tell a guy like that, sorry?” “It’s depressing,” a
third said. “We trashed the wrong guy’s house and the guy that’s
been shooting at us is out there with his house not trashed.” The
soldier who shot the nonlethal ordinance at Ayoub said, “I’m just
glad he didn’t do something that made me shoot him [with a bullet].”
Then the soldiers resumed their banter.
A few days later, the Army did a further analysis of the phone calls
that had originally sent them in search of a man named Ayoub. In the
calls, Ayoub had indeed spoken of proceeding to the next level and
obtaining land mines and other weapons. This had rightfully alarmed
the Army’s intelligence officers. But at some point an analyst
realized that Ayoub was not a terrorist intent on obtaining weapons;
he turned out to be a kid playing video games and talking about them
with his friend on the phone.
The Procrustean application of spurious information gathered by
intelligence officers who cannot speak Arabic and are not familiar
with Iraqi, Arab or Muslim culture is creating enemies instead of
eliminating them. The S2 captain could barely hide his disdain for
Iraqis. “Oh he just hates anything Iraqi,” another captain said of
him, adding that the intelligence officers do not venture off the
base or interact with Iraqis or develop any relations with the
people they are expected to understand. A lieutenant colonel from
the Army’s civil affairs command explained that these officers do
not read about the soldiers engaging with Iraqis, sharing
cigarettes, tea, meals and conversations. They read only the reports
of “incidents” and they view Iraqis solely as security threat. The
intelligence officers in Iraq do not know Iraq.
In every market in Iraq hundreds of wooden crates can be found piled
one atop the other. Sold for storage, upon further examination these
crates reveal themselves to be former ammunition crates. For the
past 25 years Iraq has been importing weapons to feed its army’s
appetite for war against Iran, the Kurds, Kuwait and America. When
empty, the crates were sold for domestic use. The soldiers with the
Army unit I was with assumed the crates they found in nearly every
home implicated the owners in terrorist activities, rather than the
much simpler truth. During the operation described here I saw one of
the soldiers find such a crate overturned above a small hole in a
man’s backyard. “He was trying to bury it when he saw us coming,”
one soldier deduced confidently. He did not lift the crate to
discover that it was protecting irrigation pipes and hoses in a pit.
Saddam bestowed his largesse upon the security services that served
as his praetorian guard and executioners. Elite fighters received
Jawa motorcycles. Immediately after the war, Jawa motorcycles were
available in every market in Iraq that sold scooters and
motorcycles. Some had been stolen from government buildings in the
frenzy of looting that followed the war and was directed primarily
against institutions of the former government. Soldiers of the Army
unit I accompanied were always alert for Jawa motorcycles, and
indeed it was true that many Iraqi paramilitaries had used them
against the Americans. On a night the troop had received RPG fire,
its members drove back to base through the town. When they spotted a
man on a Jawa motorcycle they fired warning shots. When he did not
stop they shot him to death. “He was up to no good,” the captain
explained.
On Nov. 26, 2003, after two weeks of brutal daily interrogations by
military intelligence officers, Special Forces soldiers and CIA
personnel, Maj. Gen. Abed Hamed Mowhoush, the former chief of Iraqi
air defenses whose arrest I had witnessed, died in a U.S. detention
facility. Twenty-four to 48 hours before that, he had been
interrogated and beaten by CIA personnel. The Army’s Criminal
Investigation Division began looking into Mowhoush’s death that same
day. The next day an Army news release stated that he had died of
natural causes. “Mowhoush said he didn’t feel well and subsequently
lost consciousness,” according to the statement, “ … the soldier
questioning him found no pulse and called for medical authorities. A
surgeon responded within five minutes to continue advanced cardiac
life support techniques, but they were ineffective.” On Dec. 2,
2003, an Army medical examiner’s autopsy said the general’s death
was “a homicide by asphyxia,” but it was not until May 12, 2004,
that the death certificate was issued, with homicide as the cause.
The Pentagon autopsy report in May said he had died of “asphyxia due
to smothering and chest compression” and that there was “evidence of
blunt force trauma to the chest and legs.” Mowhoush was one of
several Iraqis whose death certificates were not issued until May of
2004, long after their deaths.
Next Page: “Iraqis in their own country are reminded at all times
who has control over their lives, who can take them with impunity.”
American soldiers had no mission and viewed Iraqis as “the enemy”
through a prism of “us and them.” An officer returning from a
fact-finding mission complained of “a lot of damn good individuals
who received no guidance, training or plan and who are operating in
a vacuum.” Inside the G2, or intelligence, section of the Army’s
civil affairs headquarters in Baghdad, on a bulletin board I saw an
anecdote meant to be didactic. It told of American soldiers
suppressing Muslim Filipino insurgents a century before. They dipped
bullets in pig’s blood and shot some Muslim rebels, to send a
warning to the others. A Latino civil affairs officer, fed up with
Iraqis, explained that the only solution was to shut down Baghdad
entirely. Military civil affairs officers are supposed to provide
civil administration in the absence of local power structures,
minimize friction between the military and civilians, restore
normalcy and empower local institutions. One brigade commander
explained to a civil affairs major that “I am not here to win hearts
and minds, I am here to kill the enemy.” He failed to provide his
civil affairs team with security, so it could not operate.
One morning in Albu Hishma, a village north of Baghdad cordoned off
with barbed wire, the local U.S. commander decided to bulldoze any
house that had pro-Saddam graffiti on it, and gave half a dozen
families a few minutes to remove whatever they cared about the most
before their homes were flattened. In Baquba, two 13-year-old girls
were killed by a Bradley armored personnel carrier. They were
digging through trash and the American rule was that anybody digging
on road sides would be shot.
The 4th Infantry Division was especially notorious in Iraq. Its
soldiers in Samara handcuffed two suspects and threw them off a
bridge into a river. One of them died. In Basra, seven Iraqi
prisoners were beaten to death by British soldiers. A high-ranking
Iraqi police official in Basra identified one of the victims as his
son. It is common practice for soldiers to arrest the wives and
children of suspects as “material witnesses” when the suspects are
not captured in raids. In some cases the soldiers leave notes for
the suspects, letting them know their families will be released
should they turn themselves in. Soldiers claim this is a very
effective tactic. Soldiers on military vehicles routinely shoot at
Iraqi cars that approach too fast or come too close, and at Iraqis
wandering in fields. “They were up to no good,” they explain. Every
commander is a law unto himself. He is advised by a judge advocate
general who interprets the rules as he wants. A war crime to one is
legitimate practice to another. After the Center for Army Lessons
Learned sent a team of personnel to Israel to study that country’s
counterinsurgency tactics, the Army implemented the lessons it
learned, and initiated house demolitions in Samara and Tikrit,
blowing up homes of suspected insurgents.
It is hard to be patient when mosques are raided, when protesters
are shot, when innocent families are gunned down at checkpoints or
by frightened soldiers in vehicles. It is hard to be patient in
hours of izdiham, or traffic jams, that are blamed on Americans
closing off main roads throughout Baghdad. The Americans close roads
after “incidents” or when they are looking for planted bombs. Their
vehicles block the roads and they answer no questions, refusing to
let any Iraqi approach. Cars are forced to drive “wrong side,” as
Iraqis call it, with near fatal results. Iraqis have become experts
in walking over the concertina wire that divides so much of their
cities: First one foot presses the razor wire down, then the other
steps over. They are experts in driving slowly through lakes and
rivers of sewage. They are experts in sifting through mountains of
garbage for anything that can be reused.
It is hard to relax when the soldier in the Humvee or armored
personnel carrier in front of you aims his machine gun at you; when
aggressive white men race by, running you off the road as they scowl
behind their wraparound sunglasses; when soldiers shoot at any car
that comes too close. Iraqis in their own country are reminded at
all times who has control over their lives, who can take them with
impunity.
An old Iraqi woman approached the gate to Baghdad international
airport. Draped in a black ebaya, she was carrying a picture of her
missing son. She did not speak English, and the soldier in body
armor she asked for help did not speak Arabic. He shouted at her to
“get the fuck away.” She did not understand and continued beseeching
him. The soldier was joined by another. Together they locked and
loaded their machine guns, chambering a round, aiming the guns at
the old woman and shouting at her that if she did not leave “we will
kill you.”
The explosive-sniffing dog in front of the Sheraton and Palestine
hotels is hated by the Iraqi security guards as well as the American
soldiers who stand there because it, like the rest of us who live in
the area, is subject to olfactory whims as it imagines every day
that it smells a bomb, forcing them to close off the street for
several hours. Two of my friends were arrested for not having a bomb
last week when the dog decided their bag smelled funny. They were
jailed for four days.
Imagine. The American occupation of Iraq has lasted over three
years. The above stories are based on my two weeks with one unit in
a small part of the country. Imagine how many Iraqi homes have been
destroyed. How many families have been traumatized. How many men
have disappeared into American military vehicles in the night. How
many crimes have been committed against the Iraqi people every
single day in the course of the normal operations of the occupation,
when soldiers were merely doing their duty, when they were not angry
or vengeful as in Haditha. Imagine what we have done to the Iraqi
people, tortured by Saddam for years, then released from three
decades of his bloody rule only to find their hope stolen from them
and a new terror unleashed.
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