It was Tuesday 2 December and the 173rd
Airborne Brigade, normally based in Italy, was readying itself for a major
operation to root out resistance in a nearby town of Al Howeija. Howeija
is a town of around 30,000 people which did well in the era of Saddam,
providing senior Baathists, army and intelligence people for the regime,
and the Americans saw it as the coordination center for attacks in the
area which had killed five troops since September. The operation was also
billed as the debut performance of the Iraqi Civilian Defense Corps (ICDC),
a unit of local Iraqis trained to fight alongside the US army. The plan
was to move at 2am in the bitter cold from a position just outside Kirkuk,
a Kosovo-like town where Arabs and Kurds had conflicting claims to majority
and historical precedence.
Some of the international press had been invited along for the show. Helicopters
and Humvees would stream into the vicinity just before dawn for targeted
raids on some 21 sites where the Americans hoped to find 15 men and detain
whoever else was deemed suspicious. They didnt tell us then, but
one of them was Ezzat Ibrahim Al Douri, the deputy general of the Revolutionary
Command Council and Saddams right-hand man. Before moving at 2am,
I met Colonel Malik, the much-hyped Iraqi leader coordinating the ICDC.
The militia force was made up entirely of Kurds. Malik and the band taking
part tonight were only 30, and the entire force of 900-odd volunteers,
sold by the US generals as one third Kurd, one third Arab and one third
the other bits of Iraqs ethnic and sectarian mosaic, was actually
overwhelmingly Kurd with a few token Arabs. Malik was a man of few words
and didnt want his full name quoted in the press. This is
a big area of opponents who were favored by the past regime, he
said. He had been a teacher at military college in Baghdad, he said, which
meant he didnt have to fight in the recent war.
At the briefing on the moorland outside Kirkuk, it was clear that the
fog was too thick for helicopters to take us to the tented HQ that had
been set up just outside Howeija, let alone swoop into the center of the
town. Master Sergeant Jeremiah Inman, who had been in charge of training
the ICDC over the last two months, drove our Humvee in a night convoy
towards the target town. The jeep was open on each side, bringing in a
terrific breeze that made it feel even colder than it was. We were second
in the convoy. Second or third, he pointed out, is normally the favorite
choice for roadside bombers, and if we were hit, we should immediately
run out of the vehicle and get in the one behind us. The one-and-half-hour
drive was one of the more worrying periods of any journalists standard
six weeks in Iraq, though Inman did assure us that night attacks were
pretty rare. We arrived safely. It was too cold for this ragtag resistance.
Howeija didnt know what had hit it. Up to 1,000 men from the worlds
most sophisticated military stormed into the small town and surrounding
villages at dawn, churning up the mud and puddles on streets that were
already a mess. Guided by information gleaned from informers and GPS devices,
they homed in on their list of houses, breaking down doors and stomping
across living room carpets, in many cases only to be directed to a house
further down the street. We stood around and watched 28-year-old Adel
Ali Saleh being dragged out of his home and made to kneel on the muddy
street as a yellow bag was placed over his head. Ive got breathing
problems, he protested. They all say that, the soldier
guarding him said with a knowing smile. He has fedayeen tattoos
on his arm. Hes on our list.
With his stubble and grubby pajamas, I couldnt say if he fitted
the fedayeen profile or not. For what it was worth, I asked him if he
was. Me? I dont know, he smiled, which seemed a waste
of a good chance to deny it all to the media. A concerned neighbor turned
up. Hes a good man. Hes an Arab, Im a Kurd, but
were friends, he said. Adels wife looked on quietly
with a small child in her arms.
Others were less lucky, depending on the mood of the commanding officer.
Whole families were forced to sit outside on the freezing ground as their
fathers were tied up with a bag on their heads. Units in other parts of
town rounded people up randomly off the streets in the vicinity of target
houses simply because he looks like a bad guy, a phrase
which brought to mind that pre-war taunt by Saddam Hussein that the United
States was behaving like an international cowboy. Many of the rows of
men gathered in open spaces were actually Shiite laborers from the south.
If they werent resistance today, surely some would be tomorrow.
We moved on.
The door-breaker (thats breacher in military parlance)
forced his way into the home of an elderly man named Hamza. Before the
soldiers made their way through the house, he came out in his gallabiya
and told one of the military translatorsall minority Kurds, Assyrian
Christians and Turkomenthat the man they were looking for didnt
live here at all but next door. Luckily the unit gave him the benefit
of the doubt. The problem is theyre using informers who give
them wrong information, I told him, in an effort to offer up some
sympathy. Probably some blood feud. We find informers give us information
just to get revenge on people in blood feuds, Major Doug Vincent
explained.
Major Vincent was the head of the military public affairs office in Kirkuk;
the man charged with winning those hearts and minds, or giving lollipops
to kids, as he put it. That meant it was his job to clear up the
PR mess the next day or during the event itself, if that was at all possible.
This led to bizarre scenes in Howeija that December morning. Were
very sorry, Vincent told Hamza and handed him a flyer in English
and Arabic. The coalition forces apologize for any inconvenience
you have experienced during the recent operations in your neighborhood.
These operations were conducted with the local authorities to ensure your
security and a more safe and free Iraq for all Iraqis, it said.
The only local authorities involved were the Kurdish ICDC from Kirkuk
and a local council member who got caught up in the security dragnet.
Never mind.
We are committed to providing this community and country a safe
and stable environment in which to raise your children and practice your
religion without fear of oppression, the flyer continued. Coalition
forces will leave this country when, and only when, this condition is
met.
That last sentence sounded more like a threat to a town they considered
a hornets nest of anti-American sentiment. It was a town strewn
with anti-US and pro-Saddam graffiti and posters, such as Saddam
is the pride of the Arabs, Death to the collaborators, and Dont
be armor for the Americans. At the central square soldiers discovered
that a monument bearing a mural of Saddam had recently been cleaned so
that Saddams chipmunk features were fully visible again. A tank
was brought in to smash it up. Townsfolk gathered in large crowds and
stood in silence around the cordoned off center of the townnow a
secure zone. But they erupted in anger when journalists came
near them with questions.
Frankly, I prefer Saddam. Now the streets are filthy, the electricity
goes out and crime has become a big problem, fumed one. Were
importing oil from Turkey now, while this country is full of oil,
another said. None wanted to give their names.
We zoomed through the streets with Vincent, as he waved at bewildered
residents standing in silence with a assalamu aleikum. He
might as well have come from Mars. Go round that puddle, he
suddenly shouted at the driver when an old man in Arab robes stepped up
to the side of the road where he was sure to get soaked. Occasionally
children, ever the ones to voice what the adults are too polite to say,
ran after the jeeps shouting insults in Arabic, such as you infidel
dogs.
Their parents tell them to say that, one of the interpreters
working with the Americans assured me.
The children hanging around the jeeps on street corners were very interested
in Egypt. I had seen this before, another time, when I was here. During
Saddams birthday celebrations in nearby Tikrit in April 2002, a
group of schoolgirls dressed as suicide bombers in a parade of thousands
crowded round. Youre from Egypt? they asked. How
is Egypt? Is Egypt nice, masr helwa? It was a look of longing tinged
with sadness at the impossibility of visiting the mythical land. Egypt
was a proper country, a proper Arab country, where there were films, dramas,
singers, laughter and life. Back then, Egypt provided the popular culture
that Iraq had been deprived of for years because of the mad dreams of
heroic radicalism entertained by its eternal leader. Now here in Howeija,
eons later, the same question. Masr helwa?
The children in Howeija were also fascinated by the military and their
toys. They gathered around the soldiers asking them questions in their
bare English. Mister, they would begin every staccato sentence,
and the Americans, slightly threatened by their boldness, would talk back
in sarcastic English that the children didnt understand. Yet still
they persisted. Mister, pen? Mister, money? There
was no understanding here, none at all. The liberated disdained the liberator
and the liberator feared the liberated. All the self-styled Good Occupier
knew was the language of violence in the face of an enemy he did not understand,
an enemy that extended to most of the Iraqi people bar the minority communities
the Americans had enlisted to help them. An enemy left in the lurch by
the rank failure of American foreign policy.
The logic of force also meant demolishing peoples houses. Israeli
journalist Amira Hass discusses the tactic of house demolition in her
study of the lives of Gazans under Israeli occupation, Drinking the Sea
at Gaza. Demolition for Israel is one aspect of a policy meant to inculcate
a searing sense of impotence and defeat, the ultimate means to realize
the occupiers goals, she says. The demolition is brutal, usually
carried out a few days after the suspects arrest, long before his
guilt or innocence has been established in court, Hass writes. But
when a family shows me the pile of ruins 10 or 20 years later, I cannot
detect any signs of regret for the deed that caused the demolition.
In Iraq, some weeks before Lightning Bayonet, the military had mown down
an orchard of date palms near Tikritanother echo of Palestineand
since the Americans launched Operation Iron Hammer in November massive
firepower had been employed to blow up lone houses in fields around Tikrit
and Baqouba. Half-built houses which the army said guerrillas had been
using to plan operations were also pulled down around Tikrit, Saddams
home town where US troops were also having problems.
In Howeija they wanted to pull down the house of Aziz Abdel Wahhab. Scouring
the streets with Vincent we came upon a nicer part of town where the wide
streets, still a mess, were lined with what you would call one-story villas.
Military were stationed around one home in particular.
This house is the heart of terrorism and if youre going to
harbor terrorism were going to remove you from the community,
First Lieutenant Steve Brignoli said, explaining an order to demolish
the building. On the ground was a box full of the incriminating evidence
that apparently warranted this move. It contained what looked like sticks
of dynamite, electrical cables and switches, all of which would be used
to put together improvised explosive devices, or IEDs. Because of
stuff like this we lost two paratroopers here. This is the stuff they
typically use to take American lives, Brignoli said. It was payback
time. This will be a show of force, to embolden the local authorities,
he explained.
A crowd of locals had gathered in the street by the time Aziz emerged
on crutches with his wife Bushra from inside. Tell him we found
enough explosives to flatten this neighborhood, a soldier ordered
one of the army translators to tell him. The toothless old man could hardly
talk, but mumbled a few words about his son Adel whose whereabouts he
said he didnt know. A bulldozer was now positioned in front of the
house, and the translators were getting nervous.
Wheres he going to go? someone asked the unit commander
Major Andrew Rohling. Hes gonna go with his son whos
building the bombs, he barked back angrily. At that point, Bushra,
wrapped in a black cloak with hands covered in red henna in the manner
of Iraqi fellaheen, offered some information. Maybe Adel was with his
brother Sabah. Okay, Im not gonna destroy the house. Just
the front, as a show of force, Rohling announced, at which the bulldozer
brought down the front wall of the compound and Bushra was bundled into
a Humvee. All of this is a crime against me after all the hardship
Ive suffered in life, the old woman muttered. Adel was actually
the son of another woman, since her husband had another wife. The soldiers
guffawed at what seemed to them an ever-extending tissue of lies and more
evidence of the mendacity of these Iraqis. The bulldozer stays here
until we find him, were Vincents parting words to the crowd,
hearts and minds temporarily off the list of priorities.
The convoy came to Sabahs house. He came out willingly and agreed
to lead the American troops to his brother on the fields he plows outside
the town. Im only doing this because I dont want them
to destroy the house, he told me as we arrived at the farmland outside
town. Adels just a farmer, he goes to the fields in the morning
and comes back at night, he added. After a 15-minute drive through
muddy fields, the convoy came to Adel. There was no shoot-out, and he
raised his hands behind his head and walked over to the jeeps.
Farmers stored weapons in the house before the war. I havent
touched them. Only one of the kalashnikovs is mine, he told the
translators. Im not even an Arab, Im a Turkoman.
The soldiers, who had expected a more violent denouement, demurred. Well
take him to our detention center and intelligence will see if he changes
his story, Vincent said, and then made a point of having Adels
hands untied from their awkward position behind his back. I suspected
that was for our benefit since such niceties hadnt characterized
much else of the days procedures.
By now it was late afternoon and the operation was drawing to a close.
At a high-level briefing in the center of the town, the top brass reviewed
the situation. Twenty-seven men had been seized so far, including the
leaders of two fedayeen cells, the commanders reported back, but there
was still a leader out there. They wouldnt give us names,
but it later transpired this suspected leader had been none other than
Ezzat Ibrahim Al Douri. He appeared to have slipped through their fingers,
though they had briefly detained a relative of his then let him go.
Every one of these guys weve got today are quality targets
and have done something directly against us or our forces, Colonel
William Mayville told the gathering as the townsfolk looked on in the
distance. A column ripped from the Saddam monument lay on the road beside
us.
Amid the mud and the military in this miserable and confused town on a
cold winters day, it was a scene of desolation. This city
is being held hostage. There are thugs, there are bullies, they are armed,
and theres a lot of folks would like to give us information but
fear the consequences, Mayville said.
Finally we were leaving. On the night trip back to Kirkuk the soldier
driving our Humvee was curious about what the outside world was saying
about the US militarys work in Iraq. Im interested to
know what the outside world thinks. Here we only see one side of the story
on Fox or CNN, he said. I told him there was a debate going on in
the media internationally about the occupation and there was a significant
body of opinion that didnt like what the Americans were doing at
all. Demolishing houses didnt help.
We werent really going to do that. Weve never done it,
at least not in Kirkuk, he answered in a tone of hurt and surprise.
But note the old lady only started talking when she saw the bulldozer.
Back in Kirkuk he came up to me to confess that actually they did
bulldoze that house. I know, I said, just the front of it.