GI SPECIAL
4H2:
[Thanks
to David Honish, Veterans For Peace]
“Without Much Doubt In My Mind, If I Were An
Iraqi Under The U.S. Occupation, I’d Be An Insurgent”
“I Believed In The Mission Because I Had To;
After All, What Soldier Wants To Die For An
Unworthy Cause?”
This was the scene in October of 2003 after
U.S. soldiers nearly broke the arms of a fragile elderly Iraqi man (in pink
head-covering) as they tossed him “zip-tied” to the ground during a
raid in Husaybah, an Iraqi town near the Syrian border that is a suspected
entry point for foreign insurgent fighters. (This is not a photo of the U.S.
Special Forces soldier described in the article.) Nir Rosen
“You
couldn’t escape the fact that our actions only fueled the
insurgency. For every insurgent or
jihadist we caught, we created two times as many future fighters.
Jun 27, 2006 By Nir Rosen, Truthdig, L.L.C.
[Excerpts]
Editor’s note: The
following is an oral history of a U.S. soldier who served with the Army’s
Special Forces during the allied occupation of Iraq in 2003 and 2004, as told
to journalist Nir Rosen.
The oral history is composed almost entirely
of e-mail correspondences that Rosen received from the soldier, who wished to
remain anonymous.
About the soldier: He served in Iraq during 2003 and 2004 as
part of a Special Forces unit whose job, as he told Rosen, was to “hunt
enemies and destroy their networks” --to go after “former
masterminds and leaders of Saddam’s Baath Party.”
His targets soon morphed into members of
“Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia” and insurgents—“a broad term
that extended to criminals, influential gangs, bomb-making masterminds and
generally pissed-off Arabs across the Sunni Triangle laid off by CPA Order
#2--which dismissed all Baath Party members.”
The soldier left the Army in
May 2005 but can be recalled in case of a “national
emergency.” He joked to Rosen that
“the day we invade Iran or North Korea is the day that I become a
Canadian citizen.”
Rosen met the soldier in Washington, D.C.,
during the spring of 2006 and struck up a friendship, “feeling a
bond,” in Rosen’s words, “that all who have served in Iraq in
some way must feel.”
About the soldier’s wish to remain
anonymous, he wrote the following to Rosen:
“If my friends from the army even knew
I was corresponding with a journalist, I’d probably lose a lot of
respect. I am bound by legal contract
and personal loyalty to protect the operational security (OPSEC) of my former
unit.
“Because of the sensitivity of their
work, their insane burden in Iraq (I still have friends in the military), and
the oath of my contract, it is illegal for me to discuss many things; units we
work with, equipment, locations, technology, and activity within the country,
etc. Furthermore, as I was raised in the community of special operations, I am
skeptical almost to the point of paranoia about talking to anyone about Iraq
outside of my former unit and family. There is a good reason for
this—namely: Loose lips sink ships.”
Nir Rosen’s account of the
soldier’s oral history begins below.
********************************
My friend wanted to begin his recounting of
his time in Iraq by discussing “the character of the American men
fighting this war.” He joked that
“it might be a shock to some of the architects of this war that our
fighters don’t read magazines like The Weekly Standard or The New
Republic or give a rat’s ass about where our occupation in Iraq is
headed.”
He continued:
“The reason most of them signed up for
service (me included) was to get some action, destroy Al Qaeda and come home
with a body count to brag about at a local bar.
Who gives a fuck about the rest?
I think it can be best summed up in a conversation I overheard at my
recruitment station. When one kid was
asked why he joined the infantry, he didn’t have any doubts: ‘I
enlisted to kill towelheads.’
“The very nature of special operations
and the infantry is to kill and/or capture dangerous people, destroy shit and
prevent attacks. Creating rapport with
the local population isn’t really part of the vocabulary—especially
if the local population is as insanely dangerous as Iraq. In the eyes of many fellow soldiers who
signed up because of 9/11, and because of the Bush administration’s
portrayal of Iraq as part of the ‘war on terror,’ many of the guys
fully believed that they were in a hunt (for) men responsible for the blood
bath in lower Manhattan.”
My friend added that regardless of where
soldiers are, “be that a foreign country or a local bar in a military
town, they usually wear out their welcome anywhere they go—they’ve
perfected the skill.”
My friend stressed that “our officers
took extra special care to fully explain the Rules of Engagement (ROE) in
formal briefings to men in my company, and over the course of 140 missions they
practiced professional restraint with their actions.
But there is also a golden explicit rule with
everything you do in war: Make sure that your ass comes home alive.
This necessitates aggressive
infantry platoon behavior on the part of the U.S. military that ultimately
results in something quite the opposite of our stated goals: ‘building
democracy’ and winning ‘hearts and minds.’
While we
were largely successful in hunting the men we were pursuing, my personal
impression was that we probably created two times more insurgents than we
caught, not to mention the communities we greatly angered with our raids.
Our
actions were a direct contribution to, as (allied commander) Gen. George Casey
said in September 2005, an occupation that is ‘fueling the
insurgency.’ ”
He told me a story about his platoon’s
return to the U.S. after its second deployment to Iraq, when its members went
to see the premiere of the film “Team America.” Made by the creators of television’s
“South Park,” “Team America” was a comical marionette
action flick about a jingoistic fire team whose utter recklessness was matched
by their righteous yahoo attitude that America must preserve the very fabric of
civilization. No film has more accurately depicted our presence in Iraq; it was
a looking glass and it instantly became a platoon favorite.
There is a classic scene in the
movie where Team America’s overbearing red, white and blue helicopter
lands on top of a bazaar in the Middle East, crushing an Arab’s cashew
stand. The side of the helicopter read:
“We Protect, We Serve, We Care.”
That scene hit so close to
home, it was scary.
Later in the movie, in a high-speed
chase against terrorists, a missile gets misfired and destroys the Sphinx (in
Egypt). “The movie theater, packed
with guys from my platoon, was howling with laughter.
We even sarcastically recited
lines from the theme songs ‘Freedom Isn’t Free’ and
‘America, Fuck Yeah’ before and after missions on our third tour in
the winter of 2005.
“By then the disconnect between the
lofty rhetoric of our leaders and the crap we dealt with on the ground
couldn’t have been greater.
The mentality of soldiers in
Iraq is compounded by a group of factors; wrecked relationships, senselessly
drawn-out deployments, sex/alcohol deprivation, and getting mortared on a
nightly basis, to name a few.”
He added that “Iraq is a
scary fucking place. Every hard-hitting
thing we did there was due in large part to our fear of that place.”
My friend explained that over the course of
his three deployments to Iraq he discovered what he described as a
“breakthrough method of communicating in foreign languages. It was so cutting-edge that Rosetta Stone
(the language-training program) doesn’t even know about it. It goes something like this: The louder you
yell at an Arab in English, the more the Arab will understand you.
“I’ve seen this
done by my brothers in arms on a hundred-plus occasions. Hell, even I did it. And let me be the first to exclaim that it
works wonders. The language barrier has
done irreversible damage to our entire occupation.
“On the rare occasions that we’ve
had men who speak the language with us, it has yielded key information; in one
case it almost resulted in the capture of a high-value target. I can’t begin to imagine the kind of
miscommunication damage we could have avoided had we had interpreters during
two of our three deployments.
“Nothing adds to the disconnect between
U.S. soldiers and the Iraqi populace like absolute miscommunication. We are astronauts and they are Martians,
plain and simple. The average soldier
looks like Buzz Aldrin, loaded with enough high-tech gear to land him on the set
of a sci-fi flick.
“Every night we descend
unexpectedly upon Mars from helicopters.
Under the cover of darkness we prowl across mud-hut villages on the
search for wanted Martians that communicate with each other in weird, harsh sounds.
As a matter of fact, the glow on our eyes created from our night observation
devices earned us a nickname by Sunni Arabs across Al Anbar; they called us the
‘men with green eyes.’ ”
Many of his missions in the Anbar province of
western Iraq involved “ground insertion,” which meant that
“we had to shoot our vehicles through multiple narrow streets to hit the
objective. I remember one night vividly
breaking the rear-view of every car parked on both sides of the street for
three blocks, because our Stryker vehicle couldn’t be accommodated on the
road. When we reversed the vehicle after
a wrong turn, we backed right into a Red Crescent van, putting a four-foot dent
into the side of the ambulance and shattering its rear lights. Every time we went out, vehicular damage onto
Iraqi-owned cars was always common in urban terrain.”
One evening his unit thought it had a
breakthrough of “actionable intelligence,” he told me. “Some
leading figures in the insurgency were believed to be at a meeting in a
farmhouse off the Euphrates River: some six officials in total.
The mission was treated with an abnormal
level of planning. We rolled out with a large group of men, using both ground
and air assets. When reaching the
objective, men in the house burst out running in multiple directions. Brought just for that scenario was an attack
dog trained to stop insurgents from getting away. Trained to attack the arms, he was sent to
catch one of the fleeing men.
“By the time the guy returned, his arm
was so torn up, it looked like it had been shot by an AK-47 7.62-millimeter
round. We rushed the man back for
immediate medical assistance. An
American doctor sewed his arm back together. After a thorough investigation, it
was concluded that all six men had no intelligence value.
“Our interrogators smelled a rat, so
they brought the accuser into the room of the men we captured. From what I heard, they were livid. ‘He is a car thief! He is a criminal!’ Apparently he was
from a rival tribe and had a feud.
“They were taken back to their home,
courtesy of the U.S. ‘Oops, We Fucked Up’ cab company. They dropped off all of the captured men and
the accuser at the same location. After
all of the time and resources spent on that one, street justice was given its
time to take care of that one. This
would be one of the few cases that I was aware of when the innocent men were
given reparations; medicine for the arm and $500, a decent sum by Iraqi
standards.”
The only ice cream my friend ever had in Iraq
was when his unit raided an ice cream parlor run by two suspected resistance
fighters in a major Sunni city.
“After grabbing them in a daytime raid in front of hundreds at a
local souk,” he told me, “we dumped enough of their ice cream to
feed our entire platoon in one of our assault packs. By the time we got back to base, most of it
had melted. A hole at the bottom of the
pack made to let out water was flowing out with a stream of white vanilla cream
onto the sand. It must have been 110
degrees. We ate what we could and
couldn’t stop laughing about what had transpired.”
My friend described a
“highly planned mission that utilized many military assets … over
200 special forces went on a head hunt against a high-value target in the heart
of Al Anbar.” The mission occurred at 1 p.m. on a Friday, prayer time in
the Muslim world.
“What essentially
transpired was the seizure of two central mosques right in the middle of prayer
time—our target was believed to be in one of the mosques.
“Two other platoons were
in charge of taking over three surrounding blocks of families
‘sympathetic’ to the insurgency.
When we rolled up to the central mosque, you could see hundreds of pairs
of shoes and sandals lined out by the front door.
By the time my platoon had
raided a local house, which including the standard demolition of a locked gate
door with a linear charge, we launched into the family’s two-story house
with three fire teams. Our entrance included accidentally stepping all over the
family’s freshly prepared lunch of salad and kabobs—Arabs typically
eat on the floor.
“After kicking down every
door, busting open every cabinet and flipping over every mattress, unearthing
every prayer rug and breaking every lock in the house in the search for weapons
and bombs, we proceeded to detain a 15-old-kid (‘male of active
age,’ i.e. possible insurgent) and tossed him in our Humvee while his mom
cried and pleaded with us that he was innocent (at least that’s what I
thought she said; none of us had an Arabic vocabulary besides ‘Shut
up’ ‘Stop or I’ll
shoot’ and ‘Get the fuck out of my face’).
“It required a unique
form of telepathic genius to understand the people we were liberating if you
didn’t understand Arabic, and none of us possessed that skill. After our block was pacified, we linked up
down the road at the central mosque.
By that point another platoon
had very clearly disrupted prayer service, as testified by hundred of Sunni
Arab men standing on the front landing of the mosque giving us what I could
only refer to as the ‘Arab look of death.’
“Another team herded a line of
stumbling blindfolded and handcuffed men like cattle into one of our
vehicles. By that time at least 20 of us
had our weapons pointed at the Muslim congregation, not taking any chances. A fire team across the road was jumping over
a nearby wall and breaking into a backyard shed. Two F-16s flew in figure eights overhead,
buzzing the city and reminding any cavalier haji (our affectionate term for
Arab citizen) that day to think twice before they act.
“We detained some 15 men, including the
target’s brother (the main target was apparently a no-show that
day).
“We rolled out staring at
a thoroughly humiliated community on their most sacred day. Their home doors
blown off their hinges, some of their teenage children stolen by Kafirs, and in
the house that I raided, a hard-earned lunch kicked across the dirty floor. We
would later return to the same neighborhood three times during that deployment,
looking for the same guy.
“Each time, doors were
blown off their recently repaired hinges, house glass was broken, car tires
were slashed, the few interior possessions found in the houses were thrown
around, damaged and destroyed. But
still, we couldn’t find the guy we were looking for. We would go on to
conduct a follow-on mission on that specific day, raiding a building reported
to house ‘eight hard-core Syrian fighters.’ We blew down the door
with electrical charging tape to find a broken Kawasaki dirt bike.
“We also went down the road to an
elementary school (school was out that day) that was reported to be an arms
cache for the insurgency, and our orders were to raid the entire building. After breaking into one room only to find
school books, one of our officers … called back the mission and decided
any further damage to the school was folly, given the apparent effort to win
‘hearts and minds’ across Iraq.”
One summer evening my
friend’s unit targeted a sheik who was reportedly a mastermind of the
resistance. The sheik lived in a mansion
behind a tire store, my friend recalled. “He reportedly had the material
and spiritual support of the surrounding area.
Thus, the objective of our mission would be not just to capture the
sheik, but to capture every male in the entire neighborhood for intelligence
about the sheik.
“I was in the fire team whose objective
was to raid the house next door to the sheik’s. Approaching the house, we
tried to enter in text-book fashion; using something called the ‘hooligan
tool’ to break the lock on the front door.
“After two unsuccessful
tries, we used a steel rammer, which did nothing but break the glass on the
door. Then we went with Plan C: we turned the door handle on the door next to
the one we were trying to break. The door was unlocked. Our two teams then flowed in, full of yelling
to add to the shock value of our dynamic entry. ‘Get the fuck
down,’ ‘Shut the fuck up,’
‘Don’t move,’ etc.
Of the four rooms in the house, two were full of women and children, the
other a kitchen, and the fourth, a middle-aged man and a senior citizen.
Three of our men rushed the man while the old
man on an oxygen tank starting hitting a couple of us with his cane. The old man was quickly dropped to the floor,
next to his oxygen tank, while we zip-tied his arms and legs. This wasn’t out of personal preference,
but we were trying to control the situation.
I walked out the blindfolded middle-aged man, who was weak and fell to
his knees, trembling and mortified. His
wife and two daughters were crying hysterically. I can only guess that they
thought I was going to execute him.
I wish I
knew enough Arabic to tell him that things would be OK if he was innocent, but
honestly, why should I be confident enough to say that? Tens of thousands of
innocent Iraqis have been thrown in detention facilities across the country
with incompetent oversight and filtering processes. Even if I did know Arabic, I probably
wouldn’t want to tell him the honest truth: ‘Sir, after you leave
here, I’m sorry, but I have no fucking idea what’s going to happen
to you.’
“After consolidating the detainees we
got the orders to clear the surrounding structures. After running with two fire
teams across a typical Iraqi backyard farm, we used a shot gun to blast open
the door lock. Unbeknownst to us, we
were about to score a major intelligence victory in the war on terror: a den of
40 smelly goats. We immediately took one
casualty on that raid, a goat got hit in the ass with one of the
buckshots. If our raid on 20 homes
wasn’t yet successful in waking up everyone in the neighborhood, then that
pissed-off goat sure did the job.
We had to seek cover on the rear side of the
building as another team ‘leapfrogged’ to an adjacent house. In all
of our distraction, the goats poured out of their den. When we eventually left the objective, I saw
the group of goats wandering down the main highway that we had taken on our way
to the sheik’s crib. We just had conducted a raid of liberation.
I was reminded of one of Gen.
Zinni’s early warnings about Iraq: ‘There are congressmen today who
want to fund the Iraqi Liberation Act, and let some silk-suited, Rolex-wearing
guys in London gin up an expedition.
We’ll equip a thousand fighters and arm them with 97 million
dollars’ worth of AK-47s and insert them into Iraq. And what will we have? A Bay of Goats, most likely.’ Just add 130,000 U.S. soldiers and hundreds
of billions of dollars to the equation and the statement still stands.
“Acting
on intelligence and orders beyond our control, we succeeded that night in
sending a father of four off to who knows where, losing his livestock
livelihood that barely made ends meet, detaining five others guilty of living
in that neighborhood and finding no sheik.
“Before departing, I remember a wild
dog staring at me in the eye as he consumed the flesh of a fellow dead dog. Our
presence didn’t seem to faze him.
On the way back from this glorious mission,
we came onto an unexpected surprise. To
our great amusement, in the middle of desert nowhere (the closest village was
eight miles away), we found two men engaged in passionate homosexual
intercourse on top a sand dune. I don’t think they were expecting any
extra company. I guess nowhere was safe
in Al Anbar from the U.S. occupation.”
My friend quipped that “infantry
soldiers have never been known for their raw talent in mathematics.” Therefore the explosives charges made by
soldiers sometimes exceed the bare minimum necessary to blow off a door handle.
“In one case,” he
told me, “I watched a charge succeed in blowing a door five feet across a
living room. Being as the suspect was about to open the door after hearing the
ruckus on his doorstep, he went airborne as well. And the steel door landed on
top of him. Like in a scene out of the movie ‘Heat,’ blood and puss
flowed down both of his ears on the trip back to base.”
During the summer, my friend’s unit
temporarily inhabited one of Uday Hussein’s palaces on the Tigris
River. “It was fully furnished
with gold-leaf furniture,” he said, “working bidets and a nice
swimming pool. As the story goes, he had
women walk in circles by the pool and he chose which one to rape for the
evening. We just used the pool to forget
about the fact that we were in Iraq.
That summer our tanning sessions by the pool
were often interrupted by mortar attacks on our compound. Apparently the chain of command threatened a
scorched-earth policy on the surrounding farm communities if they didn’t
put a stop to whoever was doing it.
We also did our part by directing warning
shots at local fishermen floating slowly down the Tigris River and staring at
the compound. If they didn’t get
the point the first time, we shot closer to their boat. They would get the message and start rowing
like Vikings on speed until they were out of our eyesight. It was only in our self-interest to keep all
unwanted activity away from our bases.
By the summer of 2004, all trust had fully dissipated.”
My friend was rare in that he had somehow
overcome the necessary brainwashing soldiers undergo and was able to critically
assess his role in Iraq.
“In hindsight,” he
said, “I have often asked myself what my reaction would be like if I were
on the opposite end of this equation.
“After years of living
under a harsh dictatorship, 150,000 soldiers of Sharia show up and offload into
Georgetown from boats on the Potomac River after shelling the Capitol.
“They have a simple
mission, they say: transplanting Islamic enlightenment in the decadent land of
Kafir. They take over the D.C. Mall and
throw a wall around the Smithsonian buildings; they call it the ‘Halal Zone.’ The White House becomes the embassy of
Iraq. Some asshole like John Walker
Lindh (Ahmed Chalabi), who has lived in the Middle East while the U.S. suffered
under dictatorship, is Iraq’s favorite child for taking over the peacock
throne of the U.S.
“My house gets raided and
my mother patted down by hygiene deficient Wahhabis, so I go to Georgetown to
force the humiliation off my mind. A
group of wirey majahedin show up at Haagen Daaz while I’m enjoying a cone
of cookies and cream, a rare moment of bliss in a country going to shit, and
grab the owners while taking their ice cream.
I return to my home, after walking through one foot of raw sewage water,
to turn on the radio and hear the Arab ‘viceroy’ declare in a fatwa
that all Christian values should be erased from our governing culture.
“Meanwhile my dad is laid
off from his paycheck for the crime of serving in the U.S. Army to provide for
his struggling family.”
My friend concluded that
“without much doubt in my mind, if I were an Iraqi under the U.S.
occupation, I’d be an insurgent.”
I sympathized with what must have been his
painful realization that he had inadvertently committed crimes. “All the way up to my third deployment
I was an avid reader of a lot of foolish writing on the war,” he
said.
“I believed in the
mission because I had to; after all, what soldier wants to die for an unworthy
cause?
“I wanted to believe in the propaganda
and I willfully avoided things that harshly rubbed against my hope that we were
sacrificing for a good cause. When you
put your life on the line every night, you don’t have the luxury to be
skeptical or even critical.
In certain ways, I feel
embarrassed about my belief that this was once a noble mission, but I have the
honesty to admit that I was wrong.
I deployed to this war with
many great assumptions about our national leadership: I assumed that the WMD intelligence case
wasn’t a cherry-picked house of cards, I assumed we had a plan for the
aftermath of the invasion, I assumed our leaders had a greater understanding of
the character of Iraq outside the mouths of Ahmed Chalabi and Kana Makiya. I assumed, I assumed, I assumed.”
“As a soldier trained exclusively to
fight, destroy and capture,” my friend said, “I was no more
different than any of the rest of the men in my platoon who viewed Iraq as a
broken country, loaded with assassins and inhospitable people.
“Hardly any of us spoke Arabic, which
added to the dehumanization of the people (or should I say,
‘targets’) that we hunted and disrupted on a nightly basis; during
my time there we conducted over 140 missions.
“We were always decent to the men we
captured, but a raid by definition can never be a humanitarian act.
“I could never escape the
impression from our heavy-handed insertions into hundreds of family homes that
our presence only fueled more and more hatred.
“Every night we returned to base, the
adrenaline rush faded and everything in hindsight looked like a black comedy.
“You couldn’t
escape the fact that our actions only fueled the insurgency.
For every insurgent or jihadist
we caught, we created two times as many future fighters.
And that is the tragedy; good men inadvertently pissing off an entire
population.
As our fearless leaders walked into this
debacle without a plan, you can rest assured that few at the top ever
considered the historical meaning of occupation to Arab civilization.
Also, the White House fixation on figureheads
like Zarqawi, which bolstered the Al Qaeda/Iraq smokescreen, ensured that our
myopic obsession with foreign fighters blinded us to the understanding that 90%
of the insurgency was home-grown.”
Nir
Rosen
IRAQ WAR REPORTS
ONE SERVICE MEMBER KILLED, ONE WOUNDED IN IED
ATTACK ON CONVOY
8/1/2006 HEADQUARTERS UNITED STATES CENTRAL
COMMAND NEWS RELEASE Number: 8/1/2006
Logistical Support Area Anaconda, Iraq; A service member assigned to the 16th Corps
Support Group was killed in action by an improvised explosive device while
conducting a convoy south of Baghdad, Iraq July 31. A second service member from the unit was
wounded in the same attack.
U.S. Soldier Killed In Anbar
Aug 1 By VIJAY JOSHI, Associated Press Writer
An American soldier, who was assigned to the
1st Armored Division, died "due to enemy action" in Anbar province
west of Baghdad, the U.S. command said.
British Soldier Killed In Basra Mortar Attack
August 1, 2006 AFP/Reuters
A British soldier was killed in a mortar
attack on a multinational force base in southern Iraq early on Tuesday, the
Ministry of Defence (MoD) says.
The soldier from Britain's 1st Battalion
Light Infantry died after the strike on the base in Basra.
The soldier suffered serious injuries from
the explosion and was airlifted to an army hospital, where he died of his
wounds. There were no other casualties
Roadside Bomb Kills
Guardsman From Pender
August 01 AP
Sgt. Joshua Ford, a 20-year-old Nebraska
National Guardsman from Pender, was killed Monday in Iraq.
Ford died when an improvised explosive device
struck his vehicle during a convoy mission in south central Ir
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