-Caveat Lector-

Dear All,

The grassy fields sway as the American helicopters patrol the green, bountiful
bluffs and floodplains of the Tigris River. I'm with my translator, Tahseen, the
same one who worked for me during the war. He made a small fortune working for
me during those months. I urged him to save the money for a rainy day. Instead,
the crazy kid went out and bought a zippy, candy-red Audi that I'm driving now
along the country roads. The windows are down and the radio alternates between
catchy Arab pop tunes and American rap and R&B songs. Thank goodness for Radio
Sawa, the new U.S.-run AM music station.

We vie for the road with long, noisy columns of American military hardware and
rickety tractors. The night before, U.S. forces patrolling the area were
ambushed by a group of proverbial "bad guys." The rocket-propelled grenades they
launched barely scratched the Americans' M-1 tank. But the Americans responded
with full force. Soldiers lit up the night with flares and radioed three Bradley
fighting vehicles and an Apache helicopter for backup.

 Then the story gets messy.

According to the Pentagon, the Americans killed as many as 27 "bad guys" in a
successful counterattack against the terrorists or Saddam loyalists or Ba'ath
Party holdouts or whatever they were. But amid the lush gardens, fields and
orchards, the soldiers were only able to recover seven corpses.

According to the villagers in Elher, the Americans killed two strangers who had
snuck here from another town and five innocent civilians: a father, three sons
and a cousin who were in the wrong place at the wrong time.

I have doubts about the villagers' story. I suspect they're just covering for
their relatives. Frankly, most of the people in this area are Sunni Arab
supporters of Saddam Hussein. This is the infamous Sunni Triangle, stretching
from west Baghdad to Ramadi and north, some say to Tikrit, but I think all the
way up to Mosul. I've clocked a quite a bit of quality time in the towns and
cities of the desert flatlands, marshes and river valleys here. It's the part of
Iraq where locals cried as the Americans tore down the statutes of Saddam. It's
where people spraypaint, "Down to USA. Live Saddam!" on walls. It's where people
give outsiders dirty looks and threaten them with violence.

I call it Saddamistan.

Americans have been getting hurt at a rate almost every day here. One night in
Fallujah, they blew up a power station with a rocket-propelled grenade, injuring
two Americans. The other day they shot up a convoy of American trucks, turning
one into a twisted heap of metal. The other night they wounded a soldier and
killed someone in the ambulance trying to get him to a hospital. The bad guys
are getting better. And recently Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz
conceded that the U.S. was fighting a guerrilla war in central Iraq.

The soldiers, out on patrol or manning checkpoints, say they're getting fired at
constantly at night. Americans are confused by the particularly Middle Eastern
brand of hospitality. "During the day they're all friendly and your buddies,"
said one soldier at a checkpoint near Balad. "At night they're firing at you."

The attacks have gotten so frequent that sometimes the soldiers don't even
report incidents to the higher-ups unless someone gets hurt. "They don't have
very good aim," said one soldier stationed in Tikrit.

In towns like Saddam's birthplace of Oja, the locals readily admit taking part
in ambushes against Americans. Some even whine that not all their operations get
onto al Jazeera or al Arabia, the Arab-language news networks Iraqis can now
watch freely thanks to the post-Saddam lifting of restrictions on satellites.

I arrive at the wake for the five villagers. It is a lovely affair. Three tents
are pitched next to the house to protect mourners from the furious mid-day sun.
The men wear the traditional blanched white headdresses and robes of the country
's Sunni Arab minority. The women cook and weep in their black Abayas. Servants
serve cold water and cigarettes.

I ask one of the relatives point-blank whether the five men were involved in the
attack on the Americans. No, he replies, impossible. Weren't your relatives
opposed to the U.S. occupation? No, he replies, they welcomed the Americans.
This is getting ridiculous What would it take, I ask in a trick question, for
your people to take up arms against the Americans? Why, a fatwa or religious
edict from our spiritual leader, he said. And who might that be?

His answer stuns me: "Mohammad Baqer al-Hakim."

I'm speechless. I know Hakim's folks, inside and out. I've been following his
Iranian-backed organization for over a year. I've spied on its troops. I've had
candid discussions with its intellectuals and soldies. It was among the top
three organizations fighting Saddam for the last few decades.

Now, there may come a day when Hakim orders his flock to violently fight the
American occupation. But for now, Hakim and his little brother, Abdel Aziz, are
too busy sitting down with the Americans, sipping tea and cutting deals. Its
disciplined, 10,000-man army has left its heavy weapons in Iran and begun
reinventing itself as a public works and charity organization.

But more importantly, Ayatollah Hakim's a Shiite. So why would Sunni Arabs
follow Hakim? "Wait a minute. I'm confused," I say to my host. "Are you
 Shiites?"

Of course, we're Shiites, he says. This whole village is Shiite.

I'm blown away. I begin to protest that they don't look like Shiites but I shut
my mouth. What the hell do I know about Iraq anyway? Just what the hell does a
Shiite look like anyway? Just because they're dressed in the clothes that I and
most people associate with Sunni Arab tribesman, I assumed they were Sunni Arab.
In reality, there was no way on earth these people were diehard Ba'athists, no
way they launched an ambush on Americans. The Shiites are happy Saddam is gone.
He evicted them from their villages and executed their young in droves. They're
not delighted to see Americans occupy their country, but they're not too enraged
about it either. That is, they won't be until incidents like the one at Elher
are repeated and the Americans find themselves in Vietnam 2, starring, oh, I
dunno, Saddam Hussein as Ho Chi Minh, Iran and Syria as China and Russia, and
the Kurdish peshmerga as the Hmong militiamen.

Indeed, in contrast to the rest of Iraq, the trees, gardens and bushes of the
Triangle make it ideal for guerrilla warfare.

I sit down for a glass of sweetened tea. The story of the five men trickles out:
during the attack that night, one of the Americans' flares landed on the family'
s farm and set a field a fire. The old man ran out of the house to douse the
flames. The old man was 70. His three sons couldn't let him go out alone, and
ran out behind them. A young cousin followed after them. The Americans, just
under attack, fired at everything that moved. Through night-vision goggles, the
five men might have looked like people trying to attack them or flee. In any
case, all five were killed.

Back beneath the tents, the women weep and wail. The men work their prayer beads
and shake their down-turned heads. The Americans, one relative says, were
supposed to come here and offer an apology. They have yet to show up. Maybe they
still have their doubts. I mean, even I who have devoted the better part of a
year to figuring out Iraq and decades to understanding the Middle East just
assumed these folks were Sunni Arab Saddam sympathizers.

I don't have doubts. The family members ask me if I now believe their relatives
were innocent. I say I do

An Army colonel up in northern Iraq once explained to me the triple pressures
under which American soldiers strain. In the mornings, they might work at a
ministry handing out meager salaries to mobs of angry desperate Iraqis. In the
afternoons they patrol neighborhoods, playing with the local children and acting
like jolly ol' officer friendly with an M-16 and flak jacket as well as a
sidearm. In the evening they go out on night patrol, shooting down Fedayeen. You
can imagine the confusion: Am I here to help, make friends with or kill the
Iraqis?

Morale among the soldiers is at a low point. I'm not sure if I can find in my
vocabulary the adjectives to describe the intense summer heat here. It's
mind-addling. Day and night. Many soldiers are desperate to go back home. Hell,
I'm about getting desperate to go home and I've been here just a month. It's
hell here.

The intense conditions have bred a sense of camaraderie among all the foreigners
here. In Tikrit, I once approached a brigadier general as he planned helicopter
attacks. "Excuse me, sir. Could we chat with you for a minute?" No problem. In
Oja we asked a bunch of Marines if we could tag along as they conducted
house-to-house raids. "Sure," said the squad commander, "just stay out of the
line of fire."

"Ah, man, it's just so good to talk to an American," one soldier - a
Chicago-area native whose high school played mine in football and basketball --
told me after a 20-minute chat. A good guy.

This is why I don't understand the appeal of the embed program. You get so
little for all that you give up, which includes a translator and the freedom to
publish what you want when you want to. I mean, sure, during the war it was
being embedded was about the only way to get safely to the action. But these
days, soldiers offer to give me rides and join in patrols and without having to
sign away my freedom as a journalist.

Besides, I've ridden in a Humvee. The windows are narrow slits on the world. I
prefer my wacky young translator's little red Audi.

Sincerely,
Borzou

 P.S. Feel free to distribute this letter to whomever you want. But please do
not republish this one without express permission from me... I just need to
think about it.

***************
Thuraya satphone: 00 88216 5110 9414
Send Thuraya text message by visiting:
http://services.thuraya.com/sms.html

www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:

http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
<A HREF="http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to