At U.S.
base, Iraqis must use separate latrine
By Mike Drummond
08/07/07 "McClatchy
Newspapers"
-- -- FORWARD OPERATING BASE WARHORSE, Iraq — The sign
taped to the men's latrine is just five lines:
"US MILITARY CONTRACTORS CIVILIANS ONLY!!!!!"
It needed only one: "NO IRAQIS."
Here at this searing, dusty U.S. military base about four
miles west of Baqouba, Iraqis — including interpreters who
walk the same foot patrols and sleep in the same tents as
U.S. troops — must use segregated bathrooms.
Another sign, in a dining hall, warns Iraqis and
"third-country nationals" that they have just one hour for
breakfast, lunch or dinner. American troops get three hours.
Iraqis say they sometimes wait as long as 45 minutes in hot
lines to get inside the chow hall, leaving just 15 minutes
to get their food and eat it.
It's been nearly 60 years since President Harry Truman ended
racial segregation in the U.S. military. But at Forward
Operating Base Warhorse it's alive and well, perhaps the
only U.S. military facility with such rules, Iraqi
interpreters here say.
It's unclear precisely who ordered the rules. "The rule
separating local national latrines from soldiers was enacted
about two to three rotations ago," Maj. Raul Marquez, a
spokesman for the 3rd Brigade Combat Team of the 1st Cavalry
Division, from Fort Hood, Texas, wrote in an e-mail. That
was before his brigade or the 3rd Stryker Combat Brigade of
the 2nd Infantry Division, from Fort Lewis, Wash., the other
major combat force here, was based at Warhorse.
There's also disagreement on the reason.
Marquez cited security. "We are at war, and operational
security (OPSEC) and force protection are critical in this
environment," Marquez wrote. "We screen all our local
nationals working and living in the FOB, however, you can
never know what's in their mind."
Other soldiers traced the regulations to what they called
cultural differences between the Iraqis and the Americans.
"We've had issues with locals," said Staff Sgt. Oscar
Garcia, who mans Warhorse's administrative hub. "It's not
because we're segregating."
Garcia said some Iraqis squatted on the rims of unfamiliar
American-style toilets or had used showers as toilets,
forcing private contractors who maintain the facilities to
clean up after them.
Another soldier at the administrative hub who declined to
give his name or rank cited conflicts over hygiene habits.
"We can't accept people washing their feet where I brush my
teeth," he said.
"It's to keep problems from happening," said Army Capt.
Janet Herrick, a public affairs officer. "It's a preventive
measure . . . so no one gets belittled."
But the Iraqis who're paid $80,000 to $120,000 a year for
their interpreting services are offended.
"It sucks," Ahmed Mohammed, 30, said of the latrine policy.
He called the signs — in English and Arabic — "racist."
He's worked as an interpreter for the U.S. military since
2004. He's college educated and well versed in the ways of
Western plumbing. He said Warhorse was the only American
base where he'd encountered U.S.-only signs on latrines and
country-of-origin restrictions on dining hours.
"I live in the same tent with 80 Americans," he said.
Mohammed works for L-3 Titan Group, a unit of New York-based
L-3 Communications. He declined to have his picture taken
for publication. He fears for his life. He said his brother
was killed last year in Baghdad for working for an American
company.
Mohammed has sold his house and has squirreled away enough
money to buy visas for his family of four. He said he
intended to quit soon and emigrate to Germany. The latrine
policy is part of the reason, he said.
L-3 officials didn't respond to a request for comment.
"On one hand we're asking Iraqis to help us," often at great
risk, said Laila al Qatami, spokeswoman for the
American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee in Washington.
"But at the same time we're saying, 'We want to keep you at
a distance.' It's a mixed message we're sending.
"I don't understand having separate bathrooms. It seems to
go against everything that the United States stands for."
McClatchy Newspapers 2007
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