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Authors: Wendell Steavenson

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I remember two or three days later the looting had died down and I went to the big Saddam hospital (quickly renamed
Azadi
, which means freedom in Kurdish) and found a young man lying in a hospital bed. He had the misfortune of a February birth date and on his eighteenth birthday, five weeks before the American invasion, he had been given a uniform, but no weapon, and drafted to stand in a trench. One day a
B52 dropped a bomb which cut off his right leg and his right arm. He was fit and handsome, he tried to smile, he said his stumps ached, but he had some medicine and he could listen to the tape machine his parents had brought him from home to distract him from his sleeplessness. Of all the ragged bits of violence I had seen, thin dead bodies, the wounded baby, death rattles in a blood-spattered emergency room, this image bothered me the most. I don't know why. He had been a soldier, a legitimate target, but now he was just a maimed boy, body and prospects ruined. It seemed a terrible price. His mother worried for him: How would he have a job? Who would marry him now? I held her hand and told her it would be alright, that help was coming, that in a few months there would be Western aid workers and health programs all over Iraq, that there were new technologies and special prosthetic limbs made out of titanium that worked with electrical impulses and were miraculous and bionic, “as good as new,” that her son had a future. I think at the time I believed what I was saying.

The war did not end oppression in Iraq but continued and worsened it, killing and suffering; each year dragged a greater weight of misery behind it. The mistakes and miscommunication of the occupiers and the exile parties who set up shop in Baghdad were legion; their ignorance and ignominy were raked into a heap in the GreenZone and covered with a bit of tarpaulin. When I went back to London or New York, I could barely stomach the TV pundits-politicians-party chit-chat, which ran together as a mash of opinionated blandishment and lies. A year and a half into the disaster, George W. Bush was re-elected.

Ahmed's conspiracy theory was wrong, but maybe no more trite than its opposite: that democracy could be imposed by force. It was only the inverse of an opposite set of beliefs, scorn
and reaction, like two presidents calling each other “evil.” All of us grow up in a community, a society, a country that feels, to us, safe and familiar; outside, across the sea, somewhere else, reside the dragons of the other. Ahmed had absorbed the mores and opinions of his community: family was honor, Islam was right, the larger world was a conspiracy that kept Muslims and Arabs down. He was subject to self-serving information and the odd sticky gobs of propaganda like the rest of us. He might have been cynical or depressed except that he was young and angry and he had, in this condition, as my father used to call it when he was talking about the youthful idealism of the internationalists in the Spanish civil war (Orwell, Koestler, Robert Jordan and other heroes), “caught an ism.” Ahmed had latched on to an ideology—salafism, jihadism, nationalism—that, like all ideologies, offered him clear concrete answers in an unjust and confusing world. It was a one sided view, bent through a prism; facts refracted accordingly. I would argue with Ahmed and call him to order with countered, reasonable explanations, but anything contrary bounced harmlessly off his shiny-armored certainty.

 

O
NE DAY
A
HMED
showed me a video made by one of the resistance groups, Ansar al-Sunna.

The opening scenes were of the brutality of the occupation. American soldiers kicking in gates on hard-knock night raids, a group of Iraqi prisoners, wrists bound, heads cowed, loaded in the back of a truck, American soldiers dragging a man, barefoot and shirtless, along the street, American soldiers firing their guns into a civilian crowd. An over-dubbed voice, screeching and hoarse, asked, “How can you be quiet when such things are happening!”

Cut to a sermon of clerical intonation: “God loves those who fight for the sake of religion. Be patient, have faith and do not participate with the enemy. Jihad in Iraq has become the duty of every Muslim and those who are fighting are the true Muslim people. Everyone in every neighborhood should be called for jihad…to protect our nation. These enemies have come here to stop the religion of God. We must eject the occupiers. The Americans have come here with their interests and they are being backed up by the Jews…You must fight against all those sinners from north to south and rise up with one hand and fight in an organized way according to our religion.”

Then there were scenes of mujahideen resistance. Pickup trucks at night, faces swathed in kuffiyehs, traditional headscarves, carrying homemade rockets. Shaky footage of Humvees exploding from remote-controlled bombs hidden along the road. Close-ups of the passports and documents of assassinated collaborators.

In the final sequence a group of mujahideen were positioning a mortar at night. The scene was lit with a handheld torch, a wobbling circle of green white in the dark.

Ahmed added his own commentary: “They hit the hotels with these.”

“Thanks Ahmed, I live in a hotel.”

For ten minutes or more the camera recorded luminous hands splicing wires, arranging mortar tubes in an atmosphere of concentrated urgency. One of the mujahideen began to try to light one of the rockets with a match, but the match flared and went out in the wind. He lit another, which flared and extinguished, and another, which burned and died, and another. Five or six failed matches. They were repositioning the mortar tube, whispering, “Move it, move it, just a little, just a little.” Then finally the fire caught the match and the hand lit the fuse and the rocket whooshed into the night like a firework and hit nothing.

 

A
T THE END
of March 2004, four American contractors were hauled from their SUV in Fallujah, hanged, burned and dismembered. The latent insurgency blew into open flame and warfare. The streets were empty, it was a holiday weekend to commemorate the one year anniversary of the liberation of Iraq. I drove out to the Western suburbs one day to get a sense of what was happening and saw a tank on fire on the highway, and two Black Hawk helicopters, like flies after carrion, circling above. Ahmed had stopped going to his religious university; Ali's wife had been attending classes at the Ibn Haithem University, but a bomb had gone off on campus. Now everyone was home, coordinating rumor and news between friends and mobile phones and waiting.

Ahmed had friends from the mosque who were taking supplies to the people. It was a siege. Fallujah had been surrounded by marines and the road to Jordan cut. The marines kept attacking, driving into the town in armor, getting rocketed and withdrawing again.

“They've hit houses and mosques and hospitals.”

Ahmed had spoken to a friend of his from the religious university who lived in Fallujah and who had told him what had happened when the four contractors were killed. The
mujahideen
hit them and then pulled back; it was the people of Fallujah who strung up the bodies. Ahmed shook his head and then related the gory details: there was a butcher among the crowd and he cut the bodies and distributed the meat.

Ali and Ahmed were excited by the Resistance, there was a flash of pride and fire in their eyes. Ahmed told me, “They are not terrorists. They are defending their country.”

“According to
sharia
,” Islamic law, Ali explained, “we cannot
have a foreign force coming in and planning elections for us. In
sharia
it is said that each one called to
jihad
has to fight.”

“The issue is the fighting now,” said Ahmed, determined and resolute. “Many innocents will die, but they will be replaced, when Americans die they will not be replaced. People who are killed are given a next life and those who are wounded can ask from God anything they wish. This raises morale. But if an infidel is killed what is his benefit? If I carry a gun and I am killed, I benefit both ways. If I am killed I benefit and if I am victorious I benefit. The other side has no compensation. They have no reward of heaven because they are sinners.”

I protested: more death? I could no longer believe in its exigency.

Ahmed, always patient, again explained: “The
mujahid
is protecting his country, his honor, his religion.”

“But they are destroying your country and your religion is not under threat.”

“In Iraq the Americans have taken all the names of those who perform the
fajar
prayer because they are mostly
mujahideen
.”

“But you are free to practice your religion! No one is stopping you studying the Koran or preventing you from going to the mosque!”

“I think they are pushing Muslims all over the world. Iraq is a Muslim country.”

“But the Americans do not think they are fighting Muslims because they are Muslims.”

Ali cut in to our debate: “The soldiers are just obeying orders. Their leaders understand very well what they are doing.”

“So it's war.”

“We have been waiting for this day,” replied Ali, pulling his
patriotism upright. “The Americans attacked us in 1991 and destroyed our army. They attacked us again in 1998. They attacked us from the air, with bombs, we could not see their faces. But now they are next to us in the streets; the people who were killing us are very close.”

“With all their power and their planes and tanks and bombs, the worst they can do is kill you,” said Ahmed. “But we're not afraid of death. It is a shameful thing for a Muslim to be afraid of death. God is on our side and Allah has promised us victory.”

I understood that for Ali and Ahmed death was good: martyrdom, paradise and honor. But for an atheist like me it was the nihilistic severance of a future that might allow understanding, regret, forgiveness, compassion and solace.

Ahmed addressed my dismay. “What you have is only the life you are living now and to lose it is very difficult. But we have a replacement, the next life. This life is cheap,
inshallah
. I would wish my brothers to die fighting, rather than at home and in their beds. They would die with honor. We do not believe that fighting can delay or hasten death. It is already written. It is called God's will and it solves a lot of problems.”

“Yes,” I answered, “Islam, submission.”

Ahmed concurred: “If you choose to be a Muslim you should obey and not argue.”

 

A
FEW DAYS
later I went south to Kufa, to see the Shia uprising under the “firebrand cleric” Moqtada al-Sadr and when I returned I told Ahmed about the RPGs in the mosque and how they had shot up an American Humvee patrol. I asked him how he felt about what was happening.

“On one hand happy, because it's
intifada
; on the other side sad because so many of them are dying.”

Ali came in and sat down: “And now the Sunna are taking advantage. There was fighting in Adhamiya last night.”

“So it's beginning.”


Inshallah
,” said Ahmed,

“What will you do?”

“What I can do I will do.”

“Do you want to fight?”

“What needs to be done, I will do it.”

“Do you have a gun?”

“Yes, from before the fall of Baghdad we have guns. And we've been taught how to use them.”

“I know, your father taught you all.”

“We used to have air guns.” Ahmed went back to his childhood with a smile. “I used to take it and go hunting, sometimes without my parents' knowledge. I even injured myself in the stomach once—”

I laughed, “How?”

“I was pointing it at myself.”

“How old were you?”

“About nine.”

“Well, that's one lesson. Don't point your gun at yourself.”

Chapter 7
“ARE YOU SURE IT'S NOT KUT?”

T
HE SUMMER OF 1990: A LACUNA OF PEACE. DR.
Hassan had just returned to Baghdad from a sabbatical in Munich (it took years of petitioning to get an exit visa), hopeful that things would now settle and relax and re-establish and that he could resume his practice. Kamel Sachet was writing training manuals for the Special Forces and winning intra-army shooting competitions. On July 25th Saddam Hussein received the American Ambassador to Iraq, April Glaspie, who told him that the United States had no particular interest in a border dispute over slant oil drilling and debt repayments between Iraq and Kuwait. Meanwhile, oblivious to all these people and their concerns, Sgt. Mohammed Jobouri of the Special Forces Parachute Regiment, just another soldier in an army between wars, was locked in the stockade under penalty of death.

Sgt. Mohammed Jobouri was then twenty, young and in love. He had been at home for two weeks, sneaking out at night to crawl into his love's bedroom window and sleeping all day and not thinking about the consequences of desertion. “I am on leave!” he lied to his disapproving father who rolled his eyes at such youth and laziness. And what was there to get up for? Barking drills in the parched heat; the repetitive order
of barrack life? Even in the retelling of the story, after ten years of exile in Syria (he had got out of Iraq in the mid-nineties), Mohammed Jobouri seemed unimpressed by the duty and discipline required by his regiment. He gave himself up to the long nights that eked toward dawn, absorbed in his love and his own sweet apathy; until a military patrol found him AWOL on the street and took him to the Military Prison No. 1 where he was beaten with extra ferocity by military policemen happy to exercise their schadenfreude at a Special Forces paratrooper stripped of his stripes.

He stretched out his index finger and I saw that it still trembled with old traumas. He rubbed his wrists in memory of wire and raw tendon and touched his jaw where it had been whacked with rifle butts. “In the cold weather it aches and hurts so that I cannot eat sometimes.”

He told me that he had been sure he would be executed. He had been missing from duty for fifteen days. He was only a sergeant with no
wasta
, influence, to trade or intervene and he expected to be hanged. One day he was being transferred along with several other prisoners. There were eight or ten of them in the back of a truck, they were not blindfolded or handcuffed and there were only two guards. The truck stopped at a red light, the driver was lost in the streets around Adhamiya, and one of the guards got out to help him look at a map. Mohammed thought quickly, punched the remaining guard in the face, grabbed his rifle clip and threw it into the traffic and leaped out of the truck shouting at the other prisoners: “Run! Split up!” But the rest of the prisoners were struck dumb and paralyzed by the authority of the system in which they found themselves shackled (although unshackled) and did not move.

Mohammed ran as fast as he could until his lungs burned but the neighborhood was full of villas surrounded by high
walls and after several blocks a police car cut him off and he was tackled, kicked a little for good measure and sent back to Military Prison No. 1.

“Why did you think differently from them?” I asked him as he sat opposite me in his down-at-heel office off the main street in Seyda Zeinab, the suburb of Damascus where many Iraqi exiles and refugees had settled. “The others stayed sitting on the truck, perhaps waiting too for their own death sentences and dared not run; but you ran.”

Mohammed Jobouri scratched his head and said he did not wish to seem as if he had left them there: “I don't want to give the impression that I don't like to do things for other people.”

“No, that's not what I mean,” I reassured him, “I mean you thought independently.”

He nodded.

“I don't know whether you will take this as flattery or as an insult,” I said, “but you are the first Iraqi soldier I have talked to who has admitted disobedience.”

He smiled a little at this.

“Where did it come from?” I asked, “Was your family well educated?”

His father had been a mechanic, his grandfather a simple farmer, his great-grandfather had died on the boat during
Haj.
He could see nothing special about his family background; but then he plumbed a little into his childhood and remembered that it was his grandfather that he had always revered and looked up to. When he was a child his grandfather had often taken him aside and led him through his fields and farm chores. There was something in his calm deliberation, his attention to his work, the careful way he tended to his crops and his cattle; he was a man who preferred listening to talking, but his words, when they came, held old wisdom. The example of
his grandfather was buried deep inside him: common sense, arbitration—his grandfather was the great problem-solver of the family—and grace. Perhaps, he thought, that is why he behaved differently to most of the other soldiers.

By the time he was delivered to his regimental brig at the barracks next to the airfield at Abu Ghraib, pending tribunal (Special Forces soldiers were dealt with in their own units) he had been beaten so badly his head was swollen like a watermelon, his ribs were broken and he could hardly move. He lay on a straw pallet chewing small handfuls of rice, passing in and out of the healing oblivion of a coma sleep. When he woke one morning and managed to sit up he asked his guards if he could be taken to the shower. The guards were men he had served with and knew, but he was marked as an escape risk and they dared not let him out, so instead they threw buckets of water through the top of the door while he sat on the other side rubbing his wet body clean.

In the dark he suffered flashbacks from the beatings, shards of silver life and pain. He rubbed his wrists again; “There were times when I cried. I asked God to help me, not to free me, because I had brought this trouble on myself, but just to let me see my family one last time—”

These last words were wrenched from his closing throat and he fished in his pocket for a pair of sunglasses, which he put on. He looked somewhat ridiculous, hiding his gathering tears so obviously—suddenly he found he could not hold himself back any longer, and acutely embarrassed, he rushed out of the room.

When he returned, I told him he did not have to—

He said no, he wanted to continue, he wanted people to know. His voice was hoarse, a torn cadence stretched thin and blocked by tears as his words returned to his cell and took up his
prayer. While he prayed softly, unbelievably his small brother Raed, then just a boy of six, appeared beside him, smuggled into the camp by his friends and pushed through the bars of the window, “like an angel.” He crawled over to Mohammed and told him all about his adventure, wide-eyed, quite pleased with himself and without any fear or pity or reprimand.

I let this miracle rest for several heartbeats. “What happened to the angel Raed?”

Mohammed looked down and sighed, “Raed went in a different direction.”

Raed had joined the Saddam Fedayeen units and become part of Uday's murderous entourage. Gripped in the eye of the madness. “He was transformed into a ruthless Bedouin, like Saddam.” Mohammed was disgusted and sad. “He knew nothing but what they told him, he was indoctrinated.”

One night, after the fall of Saddam, when Mohammed had returned to Baghdad for a visit, he sat up with Raed watching an American movie. Raed didn't believe that the skyscrapers were real. He had never been outside of Iraq and for him they were legends of invented foreign propaganda.

“An innocent child turned into a beast. I don't blame him, it was his surroundings.”

 

M
OHAMMED'S TIME AWAITING
the due process of sentence of death was helped by his friends who brought him fruit and bottles of frozen water. In his end days he felt the joy of his family's love and he read the Koran straight through for the first time and began to feel as if God was testing him as he was testing God. He learned patience in prison, for what else was there to learn but inward strength and tropes of survival?

Still he tested the system; somehow God was not the solace
of fate to him, but will. He borrowed ink from a soldier who was a calligrapher and drew a picture of disembodied eyes looking toward a figure that had a crown like the Statue of Liberty and held a weighted balance in her hands. For that piece of sarcasm he spent the night standing outside as shifts of soldiers threw buckets of filthy water over him. When he was put back in the cell he took a nail and scratched on the wall a picture of the punishing officer as a devil being stabbed by an angel, like St. George with a sword. For this he was made to stand at attention outside all night under a glaring burning light bulb so that the mosquitoes came and ate him.

As long as the Koran lasted, his patience held, but when he had finished it, he ran out of patience and prayed for his own skin. If this was a parable, salvation would have come the next day with a cracking bolt of lightning. But instead of God, it was Saddam who was omnipotent, and it was the fickleness of his whim, not God's, that rescued Sgt. Jobouri.

The next morning he was woken by the Red Alert trumpet and a commotion of frenzied activity as everyone hurried to muster. A friend of his ran up to his cell door, calling his name, “Mohammed,” out of breath with the news. “I remembered you, Mohammed!”

“I hope that you remember me when you do good deeds so that God might save me!”

“We were in the canteen last night, it was on the radio—it is a general amnesty!”

All day the barracks were full of noise and clamor and scurry. A helicopter took off ferrying the Colonel to a meeting at the Republican Palace, leave was canceled, officers recalled, soldiers rushed to and fro, equipment was counted, checked and packed. Drill or exercise? No one knew, rumors flew about, but the Colonel's summons to the Republican Palace and his
agitation on his return kept the usual excitement of mobilization to a grimmer hum.

In the late afternoon, a sergeant major of the regiment, a respected man, came across Mohammed in prison: “Are you still here? You should have been released!”

“No one dares to ask the Colonel to countersign the order—”

The sergeant major, braver than two lieutenants and a regimental secretary, got the order signed and told Mohammed to gather some borrowed kit, double-time, because they were jumping that night.

They were dropped after midnight, seventy-five paratroopers on the first drop and then the plane turned around and seventy-five were dropped on the second pass. Mohammed felt himself fall out of the large white noise of the plane into the pure dark of an unexpected night. He had missed two training jumps and was as nervous as if it was his first time. The lurching fall sucked his spirit upward from his toes to the tingling roots of his hair, the wind rushed in his ears and his eyes streamed tears because he had no goggles. When the canopy yanked open with a jolt and a split-second terror of tangle and malfunction, his heart stopped and then his spirit re-entered his body in reverse, as if he was returning to himself. He settled himself in midair and lit a cigarette, cradling the match flame in his shirt collar against the wind. Small spark in the middle of the hanging night, surrounded by a silence as dense as water.

He floated for a few moments, inhaling the smoke and the quiet. He looked down at his feet—it was always hard to judge the distance to the ground at night, their parachutes were of an old Russian design and unsteerable and they carried no altimeters—the black earth flew up toward him unseen but some old
instinct kicked in as he hit the ground and he managed to roll and gave quick thanks that he had not broken anything.

He took stock: he was weak and thin from his injuries and his confinement, when he ran his hand over his face his cheekbones felt sharp and alien. But he had his uniform on again and he touched, a little in disbelief, the Special Forces badge on his shoulder, and felt the outline of a parachute suspended above an ox head with the words “Sacrifice Martyrdom Glory” embroidered beneath. His equipment was meager but weighed heavily enough: helmet, Kalashnikov, three extra clips of ammunition; a further seventy-five bullets and four grenades were strapped to his vest. Below that he carried a bed roll stuffed with food for two days, cans of cheese and stew (they used to open the cans with the sharp edge of an ammunition clip), tea bags and sugar, a razor, shoe polish, a gas mask, a roll of bandages, a change of underwear and dog tags. He carried no personal items, rings, jewelry and money were forbidden, but he had a tattoo on his inner forearm so that his body could be identified. It was the name of his love, “Sabrina.”

The unit gathered in the desert. He could see the lights from a town some way off, but there was little traffic on a nearby road. The Lieutenant opened the envelope containing his orders, it was a handwritten note with no official stamps or signatures (for plausible deniability) and it commanded the unit to take control of their area, capture any passers by, avoid shooting and wait for one hour before they turned on their radios.

There was nothing in the vicinity but a few shepherds, these they duly captured. When the Lieutenant finally made radio contact they were ordered to proceed south to support the Republican Guards in their capture of Kuwait City.

Saddam's invasion of Kuwait was a classic Bedu desert raid. After the war with Iran, Iraq was crippled with debt, a big
chunk of it, upward of $10 billion, owed to Kuwait, who together with the Saudis and the Americans had pumped money to Saddam as long as he was fighting Khomeini's Shia revolution. Saddam had hoped to raise money by getting some kind of discount on the debt and by cashing in on rising oil prices, but Kuwait's Emir proved recalcitrant on debt negotiation, upped Kuwait's oil production, which depressed oil prices, and ignored Iraqi complaints about Kuwaiti slant drilling under the border that tapped southern Iraqi oil fields. Originally Saddam had discussed a limited incursion into Kuwait, but the few generals that he confided in did not dare to try to temper his ambition or his hubris. Saddam was goaded by Kuwaiti arrogance and encouraged by the apparent uninterest of the Americans, confirmed, for him, during his meeting with their ambassador April Glaspie. History—and people's lives—are so often reduced to the whim of a bully and some stupid bit of crossed-purpose misunderstanding.

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