Being There

Nir Rosen, who is slowly becoming the Baghdad correspondent, offers a raw glimpse into the New Iraq:

    Hundreds of Iraqis were emerging from the smoke, running away in every direction from the smoking ruin. Hundreds more were just standing in shock, crying, screaming. A woman walked past me, carrying the inert body of a child. American Humvees began arriving in twos and threes, as did Iraqi police cars, and a few dozen Iraqi police and American soldiers tried to take control of the chaos. Jumpy and confused U.S. soldiers tried to turn back the crowd of Iraqis rushing to help, or just to see. “There are many dead people,” one Iraqi man shouted, running from the hotel’s wreckage and asking for aid. The soldiers swung their guns from side to side, looking for an enemy, as Iraqi police with weapons drawn tried to push back the throng. …

Continue reading “Being There”

Fallujah watch

Here’s the latest on how the “heavy weapon” turn-in is going in Fallujah.

Marine Lt. Gen. Jim Conway, in Fallujah, said only about “a pick-up full” of weapons have been turned in.

He agreed with a characterization that the weapons collected so far have been “junk,” saying the weapons are “things I wouldn’t ask my Marines to fire.”

A Marine news release listed weaponry handed over so far: Six machine guns and two SA-7 missile launchers — all broken beyond repair; one sniper rifle and a flamethrower — neither in usable condition; seven rocket-propelled grenade launchers — some inoperable; 21 RPG projectiles that were not explosive and 113 corroded and rusted mortar rounds.

I think part of the problem is that the good General is confusing the Fallujah rebels with statements like this:

Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt, an Army spokesman, said the handover so far “is not a serious expression of intent” and said the minimum required is “a large field full of the heavy weapons that have been used against the people in Fallujah and been used against the coalition forces.”

So, they don’t actually have weapons that were used “against the people of Fallujah,” because they are the people of Fallujah so what should they turn in? Very confusing.

Finally, we get a reporter asking the CPA spokesman Senor what on earth they’re babbling about when they say stuff like this:

Senor said Fallujans must oust “foreign fighters, drug users, former Mukhabarat, Special Republican Guard, former Fedayeen Saddam, and other serious, dangerous, violent criminals operating out of Fallujah.”

Drug users?

Asked by reporters about the drug remark, Senor said city leaders said “that many of the individuals involved with the violence are on various drugs. It is part of what they’re using to keep them up to engage in this violence at all hours.”

Oh, so that’s why the Fallujah rebels have fought the Marines to a standstill! Those cheaters are using drugs!

This stuff would be funny if it weren’t so deadly.

Teaching Iraqis to be free

Jeremy Sapienza’s article today, US Soldiers Puzzled by Iraqi Resistance to Censorship caused me to remember this picture and Rajhul Mahajan just happens to have written an interesting anecdote about this statue, which sits on the pedestal the Famous Toppled Statue used to occupy, back before Iraq was free:

April 9, 2004 – the one year aniversary of the Great Saddam Statue Toppling Farce, Firdaus Square, Baghdad:

april9baghdad

Leaving Iraq 1. Before we go to the airport, I tell the driver I’d like to take a picture of the statue in Firdaus Square. I want to be able to show people back home the ugliest thing in all of Iraq. He is skeptical about whether I will be able to — there is a permanent U.S. military detachment, complete with a big tank, guarding the Palestine Hotel and the Sheraton.

I approach the statue that has replaced Saddam Hussein’s and take several pictures. There are two old men sitting at the base; I wave to them and they wave back. Then, not satisfied with the fact that I have almost no pictures from my trip (on the trip to fallujah, I did the digital equivalent of keeping the lens cap cover on), I suddenly take leave of my senses. With my mind already wandering past Iraq, I forget that my body is still planted very firmly in Iraq. I swivel around to take a picture of the tank. Suddenly the men at the base of the statue erupt, jumping up and gesticulating wildly. I suddenly come back to my senses. the most dangerous thing you can do in Iraq is take a picture of an American soldier with a big gun pointed at you. If they don’t think you’re shooting at them, they’re likely to think you’re a journalist, which is even more dangerous. In front of the “Green Zone,” where the CPA headquarters are, there’s a sign that says, “No photography.” But nobody needs the sign; everyone knows.

Double-crossed by NATO?

A retired Russian general made some explosive allegations last weekend about the NATO attack on Serbia five years ago. It was obvious that in June 1999, NATO double-crossed Yugoslavia and Russia, occupying Kosovo despite the terms agreed in the Kumanovo armistice; they never seriously intended to honor the agreement, or even UNSCR 1244. Now retired Russian general Leonid Ivashov claims his team had negotiated the original armistice, far more favorable to Yugoslavia, only to see it betrayed by a Yeltsin crony close to the Americans.
Now, the agreement he describes looks rather unlikely to have been accepted by NATO. Consider this, however. Russian troops arrived in Pristina shortly before NATO occupiers and the KLA. Someone in Moscow who ordered the deployment must have known or assumed that a deal was made with NATO to include a Russian presence. Yet not only did NATO block reinforcements for those troops, but General Jackson was given orders to shoot at the Russians by his mad superior, Wesley Clark. So either the Russians assumed too much, or there really was a deal, and NATO reneged on it once in a position of strength (i.e. in Kosovo, with the Yugoslav forces gone). Given NATO’s record of trickery, the latter is more likely. Which means that if Ivashov is right, NATO was prepared to agree to anything so long as it could get troops into Kosovo, and planned the treachery in advance.
Ivashov’s statements, reported by Belgrade daily “Politika,” can be read in Serbian here.
Here is a translation, for English-speakers: Continue reading “Double-crossed by NATO?”

Refugees of Fallujah

Jo Wilding speaks in Baghdad with several of the refugees from Fallujah.

    “This is my honeymoon,” Heba said, in the crowded corridor of bomb shelter number 24 in the Al-Ameriya district of Baghdad. Married just under a month, she fled Falluja with her extended family. “There were bombs all the time. We couldn’t sleep. Even if you fell asleep, nightmares woke you up. We just gathered the whole family in one room and waited.

    “It is better here than in Falluja. We hear bombs but they are far away and not so many. But there is no water in here: we have to go outside for water for drinking, cooking and washing ourselves and our clothes and we buy ice. There is no fridge, no fans, no air conditioning, no generator and only one stove for us all. We have to go to the garden for a toilet and that’s a problem at night. Everyone has diarrhoea from the ice that we bought.

    “Now I am a bride but I couldn’t bring any of my clothes.” As if there would be any privacy anyway, the 88 members of 18 families piled on mattresses in the long narrow passage from the door to the kitchen at the end … read more

FOIA Photos from Dover AFB

Russ Kick of the Memory Hole says:

>>> Since March 2003, a newly-enforced military regulation has forbidden taking or distributing images of caskets or body tubes containing the remains of soldiers who died overseas. [read more]

Immediately after hearing about this, I filed a Freedom of Information Act request for the following:

All photographs showing caskets (or other devices) containing the remains of US military personnel at Dover AFB. This would include, but not be limited to, caskets arriving, caskets departing, and any funerary rites/rituals being performed. The timeframe for these photos is from 01 February 2003 to the present.

I specified Dover because they process the remains of most, if not all, US military personnel killed overseas. Not surpisingly, my request was completely rejected. Not taking ‘no’ for an answer, I appealed on several grounds, and—to my amazement—the ruling was reversed. The Air Force then sent me a CD containing 361 photographs of flag-draped coffins and the services welcoming the deceased soldiers.casket05.jpg

Score one for freedom of information and the public’s right to know.

Further info:

“Curtains Ordered for Media Coverage of Returning Coffins”

The first three photographs to break the embargo

Link via Cursor