http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-
outpost1aug01,1,6167642.story?coll=la-headlines-world


August 1, 2005          
THE CONFLICT IN IRAQ

Rebels on the Run, Locals Too

# U.S. forces appear to have driven militants from a safe haven near 
the Syrian border, but most of the town's residents have also fled.

By John Hendren, Times Staff Writer

RAWAH, Iraq — In the barren streets of this dusty town, Iraqis say 
the U.S. Army has chased away the foreign fighters who for two weeks 
staged sporadic battles with the Americans.

Also gone are nearly all of the town's 20,000 residents. The sheep 
munching shrubs on the outskirts appear to outnumber people.


Over the last two weeks, three out of four residents fled the town, 
which military strategists say was an insurgent safe haven. A few 
have since returned, but many have sought temporary shelter with 
friends and relatives across the Euphrates River in the village of 
Anah.

"The current situation is not good. A lot of people are leaving for 
nearby villages," said Ibrahim Kassam, a resident of Fallouja who 
passed through a U.S. checkpoint at the bridge to tend to a small 
shop he owns here. "There were some foreign forces, but since the 
Americans came, there are none."

Since arriving in mid-July, the 2nd Infantry Division's 2nd Squadron 
of the 14th Cavalry Regiment has defeated the fighters here and will 
now spread out to seal the border with Syria, said Lt. Col. Mark 
Davis, the unit's commander.

U.S. strategists say insurgents led by Jordanian-born militant Abu 
Musab Zarqawi have used this town and a smuggling route along the 
Euphrates to train and ferry foreign fighters, weapons and 
explosives southeast to Baghdad and north to Mosul.

Under a plan ordered by Gen. George W. Casey, the top U.S. military 
commander in Iraq, American units are trying to gain control of 
Iraq's ill-guarded border with Syria.

Having wrested control of Rawah, the division's Stryker Brigade 
Combat Team now hopes to press westward toward the border and, for 
the first time, gain control of a broad swath of the land north of 
the Euphrates that has eluded the U.S.-led coalition for more than 
two years.

On Thursday and Friday, soldiers searched every one of the town's 
estimated 3,000 to 5,000 homes, capturing some suspected insurgents 
and a bounty of weapons, including mines, rocket-propelled grenades, 
mortars, bomb-making equipment, sniper rifles and rockets.

"Since then, there has been no enemy attack, no explosions, nobody 
shooting at us in Rawah," Davis said.

The town might be quiet now, but it's not necessarily friendly. On 
an outer school wall, spray painted in Arabic, is a note of 
defiance: "Praise the people of Fallouja" — a former insurgent 
stronghold where U.S. and Iraqi forces prevailed in November.

Davis acknowledged that most Iraqis had left town but said they 
didn't leave under instructions from U.S. troops.

The insurgents apparently had held the town hostage, American 
officials said. There were no police, a dormant city council, a 
compound of schools with no children and no teachers inside.

A lone firetruck and ambulance were all that was left of the 
governmental structure, their crews acting as repairmen more than 
anything else.

"It was pretty much a government on autopilot, heavily influenced, 
heavily guided by Al Qaeda in Iraq," he said, referring to Zarqawi's 
organization.

Moments later a gray-bearded imam approached to offer his support, 
saying he had urged the few remaining townspeople to cooperate.

"We need peace here. The guerrillas are all dead or gone," the 
bespectacled imam said. "I am a religious leader, and I have asked 
the people of the city to be honest and help your forces here."

Rawah's streets are pocked with holes left from roadside and car 
bombs that targeted the Americans. Less than a mile from the 
Americans' base on the outskirts of town is the site where a 
roadside bomb exploded near Davis' Stryker combat vehicle.

The explosion was followed by a volley of rocket-propelled grenades 
and heavy machine-gun fire, Davis said.

"That kind of set the tone that the enemy was not happy that we were 
here," he said.

Over the next few days the soldiers also faced four suicide car 
bombings, two bombs in unmanned cars, mortar fire, 11 roadside bombs 
and six attacks with small arms.

Some of the insurgents were bold, if overmatched. On July 19, a 
gunman opened fire from a well-tended two-story brick house 
overlooking the strategic bridge. U.S. soldiers fired back, killing 
two men. A search of the building and a nearby car turned up 
explosives, weapons and ammunition, Davis said.

Near the Euphrates bridge is a new patch of blacktop that covers the 
site of a truck bomb.

At the base of the bridge lies the collapsed front of a cinder-block 
home so packed with weapons and explosives that Davis' men opted to 
blow the place up rather than remove the arms.

The Army is now encouraging Rawah residents to return, raising the 
number from about one in four last week to one in three now, Davis 
said.

The guerrillas are apparently gone, but the base is not going 
anywhere.

When Davis' soldiers return to their home at Ft. Lewis, Wash., in 
two months, another American unit will take over. Eventually, he 
said, the base will be occupied by Iraqi troops who now are staying 
at an unfinished water treatment plant.

Until then, Davis said, his soldiers will follow the insurgents. "We 
believe that since we arrived north of the river, a lot of activity 
is picking up south of the river," he said. 






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