-Caveat Lector-

http://truthout.org/docs_03/031803E.shtml

     Activists in Baghdad Brace for Consequences of War
     by Greg Barrett
     Gannett News Service

     Wednesday 12 March 2003

     BAGHDAD - If the invasion that the Pentagon has dubbed "Operation
     Shock and Awe" commences, Charlie Liteky is unlikely to feel
     either.

     He expects the United States to bomb Iraq. He expects noise and
     destruction more powerful and frightening than he has ever known.
     He expects the Earth to shake and houses to go dark and children to
     scream themselves hoarse.

     But Liteky sounds more determined than frightened.

     Like 20 other members of the Chicago-based Iraq Peace Team who
     remain in Baghdad even as hostilities appear certain, Liteky abhors
     cluster bombs, cruise missiles and the civil unrest that combat
     causes. As a decorated Vietnam veteran, he knows firsthand the
     chaos and carnage of war.

     That's precisely why he sounded elated Tuesday morning when he told
     his wife that the Iraqi government had extended his tourist visa 10
     days and is likely to extend it again, long enough for him to help
     Iraqi children through the difficult time.

     Most of the peace activists who descended by the hundreds on
     Baghdad this fall and winter have fled. Those who remain have no
     intentions of leaving. They are anchored to the bull's-eye despite
     the fact - or maybe because of it - that the World Health
     Organization predicts 100,000 Iraqis could die.

     "I'm here because I hear the children cry," Liteky said. "In my
     mind ... I imagine the bombing and the noise and the windows
     shattering and something coming down from the ceiling and children
     looking up and parents grabbing them and fear being transferred
     from parents to children."

     Save yourselves

     Washington has warned the activists to clear out. The Pentagon has
     said its assault will leave no place in Baghdad to hide. So the
     rundown hotels that enjoyed full houses as recently as February are
     shuttering their windows.

     At the Hotel Al-Fanar on the Tigris river, the Iraq Peace Team is
     moving to the lower floors because the eight-story building is old
     and seems unsteady. Its bomb shelter is a musty basement that
     stores the hotel's chemical cleaning supplies.

     Members of the peace team have signed an ominous-sounding contract:
     "In the event of your death, you agree to your body not being
     returned to your own country but being disposed of in the most
     convenient way."

     They have had awkward discussions about what to do with the corpses
     that might collect around them. Wrap the dead in hotel drapes, they
     decided. Pray for help.

     Iraq Peace Team founder Kathy Kelly had a photo enlarged that shows
     her with some of her dearest friends - the family of an Iraqi widow
     and her nine children. The photo is being mailed to Kelly's mother
     in Chicago.

     "She can see by that photo that I am very, very happy," Kelly said,
     sounding serenely calm despite the gathering storm.

     On Monday, Kelly helped an Iraqi friend pack to leave. Teacher and
     artist Amal Alwan rushed her three young children into a taxi and
     paid $300 for the 10-hour drive from Baghdad to Damascus, Syria.
     Alwan doesn't have relatives in Syria and couldn't tell the cabbie
     exactly where to go.

     "She doesn't have a clue where she will stay, but she can't
     possibly stay in Baghdad, not with children," Kelly said. "Her
     house is next to a communications center."

     As Kelly spoke it was almost 1:30 a.m. on Tuesday in Baghdad and
     she was awake reading "A Fine Balance," a novel about civil war in
     India. She planned to rise six hours later for a daily prayer
     meeting then go with the peace team to the United Nations offices
     in Baghdad. They would hold aloft several enlarged photos of Iraqi
     families.

     Each photo would carry a single question: "Doomed?"

     "I don't have the slightest sense of not belonging exactly where I
     am right now," said Kelly, 50, a three-time Nobel Peace Prize
     nominee. "The thought of leaving has not even crossed my mind."

     The Pentagon says the presence of U.S. pacifists will not deter the
     course of war. Although there are no plans to arrest them for
     violating sanctions on Iraq by traveling to Baghdad, officials
     throughout the U.S. government, from the White House to the State
     Department to the Pentagon, sound confused about how to best to
     deal with them.

     "There's not a whole lot of precedence," said Pentagon spokesman
     Lt. Dan Hetlage. "It's not like you had human shields protecting
     the Taliban."

     Armed for war

     Members of the Iraq Peace Team say they are as prepared for war as
     they will ever be. They have "crash kits" packed neatly and set by
     their hotel doors. Liteky's is the size of carryon luggage. It
     bulges with bandages, antibiotics, water-purification tablets,
     three liters of water, dried fruit, canned tuna, biscuits, power
     bars and a short-wave radio.

     He hopes to ride out Operation Shock and Awe in Baghdad's Orphanage
     of the Sisters of Mother Teresa. Or at least to rush there as soon
     as the bombing subsides. He's compelled to at least try to quell
     the inevitable trembling of the children.

     "I'd rather die doing something," he told his wife, Judy, "then die
     ... in some old folks home."

     Liteky, 72, is a former Roman Catholic priest and Vietnam war hero
     awarded the congressional Medal of Honor for crawling under volleys
     of gunfire in 1967 to rescue 23 injured U.S. soldiers.

     According to Army reports, during the firefight near Phuoc-Lac the
     wounded became too heavy to carry so Liteky turned onto his back in
     the mud, pulled the men on top of him and crawled backward under
     gunfire, using only his heels and elbows.

     He's plenty scared of war, he said, but his fear is for the
     children.

     When the attack comes, he said, "the most beautiful thing that can
     happen for me is if I am permitted to be at the orphanage. At least
     I could pick the children up, hold them, and try to let my calm and
     love transfer to them."

     Liteky speaks every morning to his wife 11 times zones away in San
     Francisco. Since arriving in Baghdad three weeks ago, it has become
     increasingly difficult to hang up the phone. On Tuesday they spoke
     for 40 minutes, said goodbye twice, and kept talking.

     "I don't have a death wish," he said in an interview Monday. "I
     have everything to live for. I have a wonderful wife and a
     wonderful life back home."

     Liteky and his wife have thought for a week that the invasion of
     Iraq would begin sometime between March 10 and 17. So when Judy
     Liteky, a math teacher at a community college, left for work on
     Monday, she put a bumper sticker on her car.

     "Attack Iraq? No!," it read.

     "The bumper sticker made me feel just a little bit better," she
     said

     Kelly heard late Monday that the United Nations would evacuate most
     of its remaining office staff on Tuesday. Still, she sounded
     steadfast in her decision to stay in Baghdad, even if it meant
     dying.

     "A lot of people are concerned for the foreigners who remain here;
     you wonder if anyone is concerned for these very ordinary Iraqi
     people who are going to die here," she said.

     When photographer Thorne Anderson chose to travel to Baghdad with
     Kelly in January to document the people and the war, he informed
     his family of the trip in an email.

     Anderson, who has freelanced for Gannett News Service, Newsweek,
     The New York Times and other publications, said he expected a
     little preaching, lots of concern, and some pleas to reconsider.

     Instead, his father, the Rev. Eade Anderson of Montreat, N.C., was
     succinct in his reply.

     "I've always said life shouldn't be wasted on the small things," he
     wrote in an email. "Love, Dad."

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