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Iraqis on "Success" and "Progress" in Their Country
"Reality Is Totally Different"
by Dahr Jamail This March 19 will be the fifth anniversary of the shock-and-awe air assault on Baghdad that signaled the opening of the invasion of Iraq, and when it comes to the American occupation of that country, no end is yet in sight.
If Republican presidential candidate John McCain has anything to say about it, the occupation may never end. On January 7th, he assured reporters that he was more than fine with the idea of the U.S. military remaining in Iraq for 100 years.
"We've been in Japan for 60 years. We've been in South Korea 50 years or so As long as Americans are not being injured or harmed or wounded or killed. That's fine with me."
He said nothing, of course, about Iraqis "injured or harmed or wounded or killed." In fact, amid the flurries of words, accusations, and "debates" which have filled the airways and add up to the primary-season presidential campaign, there has been a near thunderous silence on Iraq lately -- and especially on Iraqis.
Tomgram: Dahr Jamail, Missing Voices in the Iraq Debate
There's
an old joke in which a fellow natters on endlessly about himself.
Finally, he turns to his friend and says, "Well, enough about me, how
about you? What do you think of me?" Sometimes, we in the U.S. seem to
be that guy. There are so many voices crucial to understanding our
world that we seldom or never hear. They just aren't attended to. This
week at Tomdispatch, Nick Turse brought us the forgotten voices of a
lost war in Vietnam and now Dahr Jamail offers voices from an ongoing
lost war in Iraq. In many ways, we Americans, whether supporters or
critics of the war, manage to fill all the roles when it comes to that
country. Watch your TV set and ask yourself how often, in the last
years, you've heard an ordinary Iraqi speaking at any length about his
or her life -- or seen the Iraqi equivalent of a "talking head." We've
talked our heads off about Iraq and yet how often have we even
fulfilled the second part of that old joke and asked Iraqis what they
thought of us -- or the lives the United States has brought them?
Dahr
Jamail has been an exception. If you pick up a copy of his riveting
book, Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches from an Unembedded Journalist
in Occupied Iraq, perhaps the most striking thing about it is how many
Iraqi voices you do hear and what a different perspective they offer us
on our version of their country. Here, then, is the latest from Jamail.
Tom
"Reality Is Totally Different"
Iraqis on "Success" and "Progress" in Their Country
by Dahr Jamail
This
March 19 will be the fifth anniversary of the shock-and-awe air assault
on Baghdad that signaled the opening of the invasion of Iraq, and when
it comes to the American occupation of that country, no end is yet in
sight. If Republican presidential candidate John McCain has anything to
say about it, the occupation may never end. On January 7th, he assured
reporters that he was more than fine with the idea of the U.S. military
remaining in Iraq for 100 years. "We've been in Japan for 60 years.
We've been in South Korea 50 years or so As long as Americans are not
being injured or harmed or wounded or killed. That's fine with me."
He
said nothing, of course, about Iraqis "injured or harmed or wounded or
killed." In fact, amid the flurries of words, accusations, and
"debates" which have filled the airways and add up to the
primary-season presidential campaign, there has been a near thunderous
silence on Iraq lately -- and especially on Iraqis.
A recent
ABC News/Washington Post poll indicated that 64% of Americans now feel
the war in Iraq was not worth fighting. American opinion on the war and
occupation, in fact, seems remarkably unaffected by the positive spin
-- all those "success" stories in the mainstream media -- of these
post-surge months. The media now tells us that Iraq is going to be
taking a distinct backseat to domestic economic issues, that Americans
are no longer as concerned about it.
Once again, with rare
exceptions, that media has had a hand in erasing the catastrophe of
Iraq from the American landscape, if not the collective consciousness
of the public. What, it occurred to me recently, do my friends and
acquaintances back in Iraq (where I covered the occupation for eight
months during the years 2003-2005) think not just about their lives and
the fate of their country, but about our attitudes toward them? What do
they think about the "success" -- and the silence -- in America?
On
October 6, 2004, George W. Bush proclaimed: "Iraq is no diversion; it
is the place where civilization is taking a decisive stand against
chaos and terror -- and we must not waver."
Iraqis, of course,
continue to witness firsthand this "decisive stand against chaos and
terror." In our world, however, they are largely mute witnesses.
Americans may argue among themselves about just how much "success" or
"progress" there really is in post-surge Iraq, but it is almost
invariably an argument in which Iraqis are but stick figures -- or dead
bodies. Of late, I have been asking Iraqis I know by email what they
make of the American version (or versions) of the unseemly reality that
is their country, that they live and suffer with. What does it mean to
become a "secondary issue" for your occupier?
In response, Professor S. Abdul Majeed Hassan, an Iraqi university faculty member wrote me the following:
"The
year of 2007 was the bloodiest among the occupation years, and no
matter how successful the situation looks to Mr. Bush, reality is
totally different. What kind of normal life are he and the media
referring to where four and a half million highly educated Iraqis are
still dislocated or still being forcefully driven out of their homes
for being anti-occupation? How can the people live a normal life in a
cage of concrete walls [she is referring to concrete walls being
erected by the Americans around entire Baghdad neighborhoods], guarded
by their kidnappers, killers, and occupation forces? What kind of
normal life can you live where tens of your relatives and your beloved
ones are either missing or in jail and you don't even know if they are
still alive or, after being tortured, have been thrown unidentified in
the dumpsters?
"What kind of normal life can you live when you
have to bid farewell to your family each time you go out to buy bread
because you don't know if you are going to see them again? What is a
normal life to Mr. Bush? If we're lucky, we get a few hours of
electricity a day, barely enough drinking water, no health care, no
jobs to feed our kids
"Little teenage girls are given away in
marriage because their families can't protect them from militias and
troops during raids. Women cannot move unescorted anymore. What kind of
educations are our children getting at universities where 60% of the
prominent faculty members have been driven out of their jobs -- killed
or forced to leave the country by government militias?
Is it normal
that areas [on the outskirts of Baghdad] like Saidiya and Arab Jubour
are bombed because the occupation forces are afraid to enter the areas
for fear of the resistance? It is always easier to control ghost
cities. It becomes very peaceful without the people."
On
January 8th, President Bush held video teleconferences with General
David Petraeus and Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker, as well as with the
U.S.-backed Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, and with members of
U.S. Provincial Reconstruction Teams (PRTs) in Iraq. Afterwards, he
told reporters at a press conference, "It was clear from my discussions
that there's great hope in Iraq, that the Iraqis are beginning to see
political progress that is matching the dramatic security gains for the
past year."
Members of the PRTs, he claimed, had told him that"[l]ife
is returning to normal in communities across Iraq, with children back
in school and shops reopening and markets bustling with commerce." Bush
thanked members of those teams for "making 2007, particularly the end
of 2007, become incredibly successful beyond anybody's expectations."
Mohammad
Mahri'i, an Iraqi journalist, has a rather different take on the
situation: "The problem with Bush is that his people believe him every
time he lies to them," he writes me. "His reconstruction teams are
invisible and I wish they could show me one inch above the ground that
they built."
Maki al-Nazzal, an Iraqi political analyst from
Fallujah who has been forced to live abroad with his family, thanks to
ongoing violence and the lack of jobs or significant reconstruction
activity in his city, which was three-quarters destroyed in a U.S.
assault in November 2004, offered me his thoughts on the Western
mainstream coverage of Iraq.
"The media should not follow
the warlords' and politicians' propaganda. It is our duty to search for
the truth and not repeat lies like parrots. The U.S. occupation is bad
and no amount of media propaganda can camouflage the mess inside
occupied Iraq. We are ashamed of the local and Western media [for]
marketing the naked lies told by generals and politicians. Comparing
two halves of 2007 is ridiculous.
"Bush and his heroes, [head
of the Coalition Provisional Authority L. Paul] Bremer, [Secretary of
Defense Donald] Rumsfeld and now Petraeus always lied to their people
and the world about Iraq. U.S. soldiers are getting killed on a daily
basis and so are Iraqi army and police officers. Infrastructure is
destroyed. In a country that used to feed much of the Arab world,
starvation is now the norm. It is ironic that Iraq was not half as bad
during the 12 years of sanctions. Our liberation has pushed us into a
state of unprecedented corruption."
General David Petraeus,
U.S. surge commander in Iraq, insists that "we and our Iraqi partners
will continue to look beyond the security realm to help the Iraqis
improve basic services, revitalize local markets, repair damaged
infrastructure and create conditions that allow displaced families to
return to their homes."
Iraqis know differently. Al-Nazzal is realistic:
"Petraeus
wants us to celebrate the return [to Baghdad] of 50,000 Iraqis who were
starving in Syria, when five million remain in exile and internally
displaced. What he conveniently forgets to mention is that those who
returned found their houses either destroyed or occupied by others. He
also wants to be praised for handing over the nation's security to
militias he allowed to form rather than to academics and technocrats.
Iraq has no medicines in its hospitals, no electricity, no potable
water, no real security, and no well-guarded borders. Nevertheless,
some people say they are happy for what is going on in Iraq!"
Much
as they would like to believe the claims of success and progress from
American officials, Iraqis -- surrounded by disaster -- cannot do so.
37-year-old
Sammy Tahir, a Kurdish education advisor living in Baghdad, offers the
following assessment of the cautious but upbeat claims being made by
Petraeus and others:
"No improvement in any service can be
found in Iraq. On the contrary, we are much worse now and we are back
to painting old buildings to make them look better. Kurdistan is still
full of displaced Iraqis from southern and mid-Iraq."
About this Mari'i writes:
"It
was the generals who destroyed Iraq in the first place and I do not see
any improvement in basic services. For example, most of Baghdad has
been without electricity for about two weeks at the time of writing!"
Professor Hassan shares a similar view:
"What
the Americans hadn't destroyed by the end of the military operations of
2003, they have finished off over the past four years, and I don't
think that the occupation forces and their assigned government would
like to do anything about the displacement of Iraqi families, simply
because they are the ones who created that situation.
"The
sectarian violence, which led to this mass displacement, was initiated
by the U.S. and its allies to divide the Iraqi community in accordance
with American plans and the published 'new' Iraqi constitution, which
emphasizes sectarian issues. The occupation would like to divide Iraq
into small sectarian and ethnic regions to be able to easily command,
control, and conquer them. The major objective of the occupation is to
control oil production and reserves in Iraq and the Middle East region.
Displacing families is, to them, acceptable collateral damage."
According to Tahir:
"Children
always went to school before the late 2007 crackdown and it was mainly
the military operations that stopped them from doing so in some areas
where the Americans attacked towns and villages. Bush has been saying
the same words since 2003, but things have always gotten progressively
worse in Iraq. He and his generals are destroying both Iraq and the
U.S. by continuing this war. The U.S. economy will never hold against
the expenses of war and Iraq is totally destroyed."
During a
surprise visit to Baghdad on January 15th, Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice, said that last year's "surge" of American forces was
paying dividends and suggested that she could "help push the momentum
by her very presence" in Iraq.
Mahri'i's offers a lament for the American presence and those "dividends":
"It
seems that Americans do not care about what has been done to Iraq. They
decorated Bremer, who is a war criminal, with top medals. [In December
2004, Bush bestowed the Presidential Medal of Freedom on him.] Why not
honor another criminal like Petraeus and other Bush administration
officials with the same medals for lying to them while their soldiers
and our people are getting killed?"
Tahir, on the other hand,
has a warning: "It seems that all U.S. politicians and the majority of
Americans think the way [Sen.] McCain does. But they should not think
Iraq is Japan or South Korea."
Mahri'i agrees:
"Such leaders
will write the final page of history for their country. If Americans
keep electing such adventurers, then I can see the end of their country
approaching fast."
Professor Hassan states what is clearly on
the minds of many Iraqis as the occupation grinds on and the American
presidential race revs up, though she may be more charitable than many
of her compatriots:
"Most Americans figured out the real
reasons behind the invasion of Iraq and the terrible consequences of
that war for them, currently and in the future. The American people I
know are kind, considerate, and understanding. I am sure they will do
what it will take to end this occupation. They know by now that this is
not a war of the American people; it is the oil companies' war, so why
should they sacrifice their young men and women for oil companies'
greed?"
Last October, speaking of the U.S.-led invasion and
occupation at Stanford University, where he is now a visiting fellow of
the Hoover Institute, former CENTCOM Commander General John Abizaid
told the audience, "Of course it's about oil, we can't really deny
that." General Abizaid's comment came roughly a month after former
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan wrote in his memoir, "I am
saddened that it is politically inconvenient to acknowledge what
everyone knows: the Iraq war is largely about oil."
While many
in the U.S., along with Bush administration officials and leading
presidential candidates (both Democratic and Republican) continue to
refuse to grasp the magnitude of the catastrophe that is the occupation
of Iraq, Iraqis don't have the same luxury.
Early on in my
time in Iraq, during the first year of the occupation, the Iraqis I met
were generally quick to differentiate between the policies of the U.S.
government and the desires of the American people.
Over time,
after brutal U.S. military operations against cities like Najaf,
Fallujah, Al-Qa'im, Samarra, and Ramadi, after Abu Ghraib, after
Haditha, after the near-total collapse of their country's
infrastructure and the shredding of its social fabric, I began to
witness occupation-weary Iraqis ceasing to draw that same critical
line.
Recently, a resident of Baquba (who asked not to be
identified by name for fear of retribution for talking to the media),
told my Iraqi colleague Ahmed Ali, "The lack of security is a direct
result of the occupation. The Americans crossed thousands of miles to
destroy our home and kill our men. They are the reason for all our
disasters."
Abu Tariq, a merchant from Baquba, believes the U.S. military intentionally destroyed Iraq's infrastructure. He told Ali,
"The
Americans destroyed the electricity, water-pumping stations, factories,
bridges, highways, hospitals, schools, burnt the buildings, and opened
the borders for the strangers and terrorists to get easily into the
country. The one who does all these things is void of humanity. I hate
America and Americans."
Abu Taiseer, another resident of Baquba, summed up Iraqi bitterness this way:
"At
the very beginning of the occupation, the people of Iraq did not
realize the U.S. strategy in the area. Their strategy is based on
destruction and massacres. They do anything to have their agenda
fulfilled. Now, Iraqis know that behind the U.S. smile is hatred and
violence. They call others violent and terrorists while what they are
doing in Iraq and in other countries is the origin and essence of
terror."
Jalal al-Taee, a retired teacher, told Ali what more Iraqis than ever likely believe:
"In
Baquba, people have severe hatred towards the Americans and a large
number of residents have become enemies of the U.S. army. The people of
Diyala province have been oppressed and treated unjustly by the U.S.
army and the [Baghdad] government. In order to improve the situation,
the U.S. army should let the people of this city rule it by themselves."
Dahr
Jamail, an independent journalist, is the author of the recently
published Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches from an Unembedded
Journalist in Occupied Iraq (Haymarket Books, 2007). Over the last four
years, Jamail has reported from occupied Iraq as well as Lebanon,
Syria, Jordan, and Turkey. He writes regularly for Tomdispatch.com,
Inter Press Service, Asia Times, and Foreign Policy in Focus. He has
contributed to the Sunday Herald, the Independent, the Guardian, and
the Nation magazine, among other publications. He maintains a website,
Dahr Jamail's Mideast Dispatches, with all his writing.