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School Renovations Provide Children New Opportunities in Rashid District

School Renovations Provide Children New Opportunities in Rashid District    
Monday, 29 September 2008

Iraqi children applaud the opening of their newly remodeled school, Sept. 25, 2008, during a ribbon cutting ceremony signifying the start of a new school year in the central Radwaniyah community of the Rashid District in southern Baghdad.  Photo by Capt. Mark Miller, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division Public Affairs.

Iraqi children applaud the opening of their newly remodeled school, Sept. 25, 2008, during a ribbon cutting ceremony signifying the start of a new school year in the central Radwaniyah community of the Rashid District in southern Baghdad. Photo by Capt. Mark Miller, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division Public Affairs.

BAGHDAD — At the beginning of their school year, the kids of the Halwan school in Jari Village and Malaly school in Radwaniyah are not returning to the same schoolhouse they left before the summer break in southern Baghdad’s Rashid District. Multi-National Division – Baghdad Soldiers, partnered with Civil Affairs Soldiers and local Iraqi community leaders, worked to complete required renovations in time to re-open the schools as scheduled, Sept. 25.

“The whole project had to be completed in less than six weeks,” explained Sgt. 1st Class Eric McCoy, non-commissioned officer in charge of the Civil Affairs team, assigned to the 404th Civil Affairs Bn., out of Fort Dix, N.J.

“The buildings have been re-faced, all of the electrical wires re-ran; a new generator has been installed, and the bathrooms were completely renovated as well,” added McCoy, who hails from Middletown, N.J.

At the first ribbon-cutting ceremony in Jari Village, a neighborhood in the Radwaniyah community, eager students and their satisfied teachers found newly renovated buildings with fresh paint, new desks, new roofing and three additional classrooms.

“The community now has better resources thanks to the hard work of the Coalition forces and Iraqi contractors,” said Sheik Ayad, a local leader of the Radwaniyah District.

Less than one hour later, a re-opening ceremony began for the Malaly school in the Radwaniyah community of Rashid.

Capt. Christopher Johnson, a native of Topsfield, Mass., and is the executive officer for HHC, 4th Bn., 64th Armor Regt., spoke to the crowd of students, teachers, and local leaders.

“This is the future of Iraq; it begins here with the children,” Johnson said as he reflected on his memories of the school when he first saw it only months ago.

“We all remember when the roof here was falling in, and it was a dangerous environment for the kids,” he said. “This is a better environment for the students and teachers to focus on education now.”

(By Capt. Mark Miller, 4th Infantry Division)

An example of Great Heroics

Juan Rubio

The citation accompanying his Silver Star Medal detailed how a well-emplaced and determined enemy ambushed Rubio and members of his team along the Euphrates River in a complex attack. As Rubio and an assault element swept through the ambush site, insurgents detonated an improvised explosive device. Rocket-propelled grenades and machine gun and small-arms fire followed immediately after the explosion, wounding three Marines.

Realizing the severity of the Marines’ wounds, and bleeding profusely from his own, Rubio low-crawled across open terrain, exposing himself to enemy fire to provide triage. Simultaneously taking care of three urgent surgical casualties, Rubio coached his fellow Marines who were assisting other casualties as incoming enemy fire intensified.

After stabilizing the wounded for casualty evacuation, Rubio directed the platoon to provide covering fire as he and several Marines began moving the casualties towards safety.
Without regard for his own life, he once again exposed himself to the heavy and accurate enemy fire, moving the
Marines from the ambush site to the shoreline.

Rubio’s Silver Star Medal elevates him to a distinctively exceptional category of valor among Navy corpsmen since the commencement of Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom. Only two others have been awarded the Silver Star, none have received the Medal of Honor, and only one hero has been presented the Navy Cross.
Rubio does not consider himself a hero, though.

While addressing the audience, he revealed who he believes are the true heroes, mentioning his two sons by name and that of the mortally wounded Marine lance corporal who shielded Rubio from 90 percent of the IED’s
shrapnel during the engagement.

“When people ask me what it is like to be looked upon as a hero, I don’t see myself as such, because Joshua and Mathew and every son and daughter who’s out there and who has family members in Iraq, they’re the heroes,” he acknowledged while fighting back emotion. “They’re the ones who sacrifice their fathers and their mothers. That takes honor, courage and bravery to go home every night and pray that their fathers and mothers come home safe.
“And Brian Parrillo, this is for you, brother,” he said. “Thank you for bringing me home.

CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas, May 1, 2006 —U.S. Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Juan M. Rubio, 32, of San Angelo, Texas, was awarded the Silver Star Medal April 27 for conspicuous gallantry against the enemy Jan. 1, 2005, while serving as a Marine platoon corpsman in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

The Silver Star Medal is the U.S. Navy’s third highest award for gallantry in combat, following the Navy Cross and the nation’s highest award, the Medal of Honor.

Rear Adm. Thomas R. Cullison, commander, Navy Medicine East and commander, Naval Medical Center, Portsmouth, Va., made the presentation in front of the Naval Hospital located aboard Naval Air Station Corpus Christi, Texas.

During the ceremony, Cullison spoke about the bond that Navy Medicine, particularly Navy corpsmen, share with Marines.

“When we serve with the Marines and the Marines are with us, it’s a relationship that you can find nowhere else,” said Cullison. “The acceptance between these two groups is like no other. The responsibility that we put on our young corpsmen in battle to perform and to save lives is incredible.”

Clarifying that point, Cullison compared the controlled environment that he and other surgeons work in with the help of many others.

“Young corpsmen who go to Field Medical Service School - usually straight out of high school - perform to save lives in combat, just as Petty Officer Rubio did, and they are amazing!” he said.

Representing the Commanding General, 1st Marine Division, Marine Maj. Gen. R. F. Natonski and Command Master Chief Kelvin Carter hand-carried the award to Texas from Camp Pendleton, Calif., and assisted Cullison with the presentation. He also brought a personal message with him for Rubio.

“I talked to all the Marines and sailors in Iraq before I left, and those back in Camp Pendleton, and they want me to tell you, ‘good job, and outstanding job!’ They are damned proud of you,” he said. “Please continue what you have done for our great nation, the Marine Corps and Navy team, and also for the hospital corps community.”

Rubio had already earned the Purple Heart for wounds sustained in the Jan. 1, 2005, engagement while serving with 4th Platoon, Small Craft Company, 1st Marine Division, I Marine Expeditionary Force, U.S. Marine Forces Central Command

Oil, Water, & Electrical Improvements Continue in Iraq

Oil Projects and Development    
Friday, 19 September 2008
The Gulf Region Division has met its oil projects goals by increasing crude oil infrastructure capacity to 3 million barrels per day; increasing the natural gas infrastructure capacity to 800 million standard cubic feet per day; and increasing the LPG (cooking gas) infrastructure capacity to 3,000 tons per day.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers budget invested $1.7 billion in Iraq’s oil infrastructure, with four additional projects planned, 117 completed and 12 on-going.

Electricity Development    
Friday, 19 September 2008
USACE has strengthened and stabilized the electrical transmission grid through the completion of 29 132/400kV substations, 87 33/11kV substations, and 11 overhead line projects.
 
In addition to the 57 on-going projects, USACE has 5 additional projects planned, increasing the overall capacity of electrical power to 6,000 megawatts.

Water Treatment    
Sunday, 07 September 2008
More than 800 water supply projects have been completed, with 100 on-going and 24 more planned.
Of those, nearly 600 are water treatment and sewage projects, with 536 completed and 55 on-going.
To date, 0.9 million of the planned 1.1 million cubic meters per day of potable water treatment capacity has been achieved affecting millions of people. 

Rashid Olympics Closes Summer with Championship Soccer Match

Rashid Olympics Closes Summer with Championship Soccer Match    
Saturday, 27 September 2008
By Staff Sgt. Brent Williams and Sgt. David Hodge
4th Infantry Division

An Iraqi soccer player from the community of Abu T'shir tries to maneuver past a defender from the Risalah community during the championship soccer match for the Rashid Olympics Sept. 9, 2008 at the Jaza'ir Oil Refinery soccer field in the Rashid district of southern Baghdad.  Photo by Staff Sgt. Brent Williams, 4th Infantry Division Public Affairs.

An Iraqi soccer player from the community of Abu T’shir tries to maneuver past a defender from the Risalah community during the championship soccer match for the Rashid Olympics Sept. 9, 2008 at the Jaza’ir Oil Refinery soccer field in the Rashid district of southern Baghdad. Photo by Staff Sgt. Brent Williams, 4th Infantry Division Public Affairs.

BAGHDAD

— The Rashid Olympics in southern Baghdad came to as end as more than 330 teams from 14 neighborhoods competed in friendly soccer games spanning the course of the summer. The Rashid District Sports and Youth Committee hosted the championship soccer match and closing ceremony Sept. 9, at the Jaza’ir Oil Refinery soccer field to pit the champions of the East and West Rashid beladiyats against each other in the contest to crown a winner and relish the success of the district’s first sports program since the war began.

A team from eastern Rashid Abu T’shir earned a hard-fought 3-1 victory over the team from Risalah in a spirited match during the championship game that represented the zenith of more than four months of youth soccer throughout the summer.

Hard work from volunteers, coaches and all the neighborhoods in the district took care of thousands of kids competing throughout the tournament, said Lt. Col. Dave Hill, commander, 1st Special Troops Battalion, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, Multi-National Division – Baghdad.

Events like these are the cornerstone of Iraq’s future, said Maj. Joe Berthelotte, brigade information officer assigned to Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment, 1st BCT, 4th Inf. Div.

“The people of Rashid are returning to a sense of normalcy,” said Berthelotte, who hails from Nashua, N.H. “Children are afforded the enjoyment of a childhood – uninterrupted by the violence that was once prevalent in southern Baghdad. Events such as these are the cornerstone of Iraq’s future.”

Capt. Thao Reed worked as the special projects manager for the Rashid Olympics and served in an advisory capacity for the project, which engaged approximately 10,000 Iraqi boys and girls. Reed is the commander of Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 1st STB, 1st BCT, 4th Inf. Div.

Reed, who is a native of Fort Worth, Texas, said she believes the project empowered the local Iraqi governance to help return a sense of normalcy to the neighborhoods and communities of Baghdad.

“When children are playing sports, there is an implied situation that means security is present – the reality of kids playing, letting our kids play on the ground, play on the streets – provides the youth and the Iraqi family a sense of normalcy,” said Reed.

The Rashid Olympics served a two-fold purpose: to engage the youth, and to get the local governance involved with the Iraqi people to provide a viable, sustainable community service provided by the local government, explained Reed.

Coalition forces, working with the U.S. State Department, also provided some resources to make the soccer tournament a success, such as providing the uniforms and soccer balls for the ongoing program to help encourage youth participation in the community program.

U.S. Engineers renovated 14 soccer fields and are constructing two gymnasiums in Rashid, added Reed.

Kirkuk Police Force Grows by 3,000

Kirkuk Police Force Grows by 3,000    
Thursday, 25 September 2008

Kirkuk Police Academy graduates wave their berets in celebration during a graduation ceremony Sept. 23, 2008. U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Margaret C. Nelson.

Kirkuk Police Academy graduates wave their berets in celebration during a graduation ceremony Sept. 23, 2008. U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Margaret C. Nelson.

KIRKUK — More than 3,000 Iraqis, including 58 women, joined the ranks of the Kirkuk province’s police force during a graduation ceremony held Tuesday at the Kirkuk Police Academy. Referring to the unprecedented number of graduates, Maj. Gen. Jamal Thaker Baker, the Kirkuk provincial police chief, hailed the moment as “an historic event for the people of the Kirkuk province.”

“This is the direct result of the combined efforts of our Coalition friends and the Ministry of the Interior,” Baker said.

Baker pointed out the number of high-ranking Multi-National Division - North leaders in the audience, including U.S. Army Maj. Gen. Mark P. Hertling, commanding general, MND-North; Brig. Gen. James C. Boozer Sr., deputy commanding general-operations MND-North; Brig. Gen. Tony Thomas, assistant division commander-support MND-North; and Col. David Paschal, commander, 1st Brigade, 10th Mountain Division.

Baker said he considers these men to be among a unique brotherhood. He credited the recent gains in security throughout the province to this brotherhood, whose main concern is for the people of the Kirkuk province and providing “security and stability in this region for them.”

During the ceremony, Police Academy instructors carried a wreath in remembrance of members of the police force who died in the line of duty.

In his remarks, Iraqi Brig. Gen. Kawa Garib Abdul-Rahman, commandant of the Police Academy, said the sacrifices of the police force’s martyrs would never be forgotten and that their dedication to maintaining peace and providing security to the people of the Kirkuk province would be continued in the efforts of the newest members of the police force.

(By Staff Sgt. Margaret C. Nelson, 1st Brigade, 10th Mountain Division)

 

Iraq Passes Crucial Law

September 25, 2008

Iraq Passes Provincial Elections Law

BAGHDAD — After months of negotiation, Iraq’s Parliament passed a crucial election law on Wednesday, but only by setting aside for future debate the most divisive political issues.

The law could clear the way for provincial elections to take place in much of the country early next year. The elections are viewed by many Iraqi and American officials as crucial for the nation to heal its deep-running political and religious fissures and also to shore up the fragile security gains that have been achieved in recent months.

The question of how to settle a fierce dispute over control of the ethnically mixed and oil-rich northern city of Kirkuk, however, was given to a committee for further study. And an article in an earlier version of the law that provided a limited number of provincial council seats for Iraq’s Christians and other minorities was eliminated from the new bill, stirring outrage among the groups.

Still, the bill’s passage represents a significant achievement for a country that has more often resorted to violence than political negotiation in resolving its differences.

The elections are likely to result in broader political representation in many parts of Iraq. And they will be watched closely for what they might forecast for the next parliamentary elections, to be held in 2009.

The law still must be approved by the three-member presidential panel led by President Jalal Talabani.

“We have written what the Iraqi people want, not what the Iraqi politicians want,” said Mahmoud al-Mashadani, the speaker of the Parliament, referring to the new legislation.

The elections would be the first in almost four years. Lawmakers had hoped that they would be held in October, but negotiations over the law encountered one roadblock after another.

In July, Mr. Talabani, a Kurd, vetoed an earlier version of the legislation after it was passed by Parliament. And in early August, the Parliament recessed for a summer break without passing the law because of stalled negotiations over the Kirkuk issue.

It took weeks of talks, brokered by the United Nations, for the Parliament to reach agreement on Wednesday.

Also on Wednesday, President Bush, who had made telephone calls this summer to Iraqi politicians urging them to pass the legislation, said, “Today’s action demonstrates the ability of Iraq’s leaders to work together for the good of the Iraqi people and represents further progress on political reconciliation.

“Nothing is more central to a functioning democracy than free and fair elections,” he said.

The struggle over Kirkuk, where Arabs, Kurds, Turkmens, Christians and other groups have all staked claims, has been among the central obstacles to unifying Iraq. Government officials in the Kurdish region in the north insist that Kirkuk rightfully belongs to them. Sunni Arab and Turkmen lawmakers have proposed a power-sharing agreement to govern the city.

Under the new bill, passed unanimously by the 190 members of Parliament present, a committee made up of representatives from the major groups involved in the Kirkuk dispute will take up the question and present recommendations by March 31. The election in Kirkuk is to be postponed, and the current provincial council would remain in place until a separate election law for the province could be passed.

Elections in the three provinces of the Kurdish region, an autonomous territory, will be held in 2009.

Sa’adaldin Arkij, head of the Turkmen Front political party, called the passage of the election law “a historical victory for Iraqis.”

“Today there was no winner and no loser, but Iraq won,” he said. “Kirkuk is not an easy issue, and the agreement is a confirmation of Iraqis’ awareness and responsibility for unity in their country.”

The new law eliminates an article that, in an earlier version, had provided 13 seats in six provinces for Iraqi Christians, Yazidis and other minorities — a move that Younadim Kanna, head of the Assyrian Democratic Movement and the only Christian member of Parliament said was “a very, very bad sign.

“We really were disappointed,” Mr. Kanna said, adding that he could “sense disaster” in the Parliament’s action.

“It seems they are confiscating the free will of the minorities and trying to impose their own puppets to represent” them, he said.

In a news conference held on Wednesday, Staffan de Mistura, the United Nations’ special representative to Iraq, called the passage of the election law “a good day for Iraq, a day for democracy,” but he added that the minority issue was a “dark cloud.”

“We have heard your voice,” he said, speaking of the minorities. “We have heard your concern, and it is the right concern.”

Mr. Mashadani, also speaking at the news conference, said that the United Nations would work with Iraq’s electoral commission to develop a plan to give minorities a share in the political process.

Other parts of the election law specify that 25 percent of the council representatives must be women — a stipulation that was hailed by Ala al-Talabani, a member of Parliament, as “a victory for the Iraqi woman” — and place restrictions on the use of religious imagery in political campaigns.

Voting in the remaining provinces will take place by Jan. 31, according to the bill.

The delays in the election law appeared to serve the interest of politicians who held power and feared they would lose seats to rival parties when the polling took place. In Anbar Province, for example, the Iraqi Islamic Party has dominated the provincial council but has little grass-roots support there. The party is widely expected to lose ground to the tribally based Awakening Councils, whose leaders have said they will compete in elections once they are held.

Similarly, the two main Shiite parties, the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq and Prime Minister Nouri Kamal al-Maliki’s Dawa Party, have dominated most provincial councils in the south, but are expected to lose some ground to political forces aligned with the Shiite rebel cleric Moktada al-Sadr.

Riyadh Mohammed, Atheer Kakan and Mohammed Hussein contributed reporting.

Jarred by the Calm, Baghdad Reporter, “At first I didn’t recognize the place.”

The World

Back in Iraq, Jarred by the Calm

Max Becherer/Polaris, for The New York Times

BAGHDAD — At first, I didn’t recognize the place.

On Karada Mariam, a street that runs over the Tigris River toward the Green Zone, the Serwan and the Zamboor, two kebab places blown up by suicide bombers in 2006, were crammed with customers. Farther up the street was Pizza Napoli, the Italian place shut down in 2006; it, too, was open for business. And I’d forgotten altogether about Abu Nashwan’s Wine Shop, boarded up when the black-suited militiamen of the Mahdi Army had threatened to kill its owners. There it was, flung open to the world.

Two years ago, when I last stayed in Baghdad, Karada Mariam was like the whole of the city: shuttered, shattered, broken and dead.

Abu Nawas Park — I didn’t recognize that, either. By the time I had left the country in August 2006, the two-mile stretch of riverside park was a grim, spooky, deserted place, a symbol for the dying city that Baghdad had become.

These days, the same park is filled with people: families with children, women in jeans, women walking alone. Even the nighttime, when Iraqis used to cower inside their homes, no longer scares them. I can hear their laughter wafting from the park. At sundown the other day, I had to weave my way through perhaps 2,000 people. It was an astonishing, beautiful scene — impossible, incomprehensible, only months ago.

When I left Baghdad two years ago, the nation’s social fabric seemed too shredded to ever come together again. The very worst had lost its power to shock. To return now is to be jarred in the oddest way possible: by the normal, by the pleasant, even by hope. The questions are jarring, too. Is it really different now? Is this something like peace or victory? And, if so, for whom: the Americans or the Iraqis?

There are plenty of reasons why this peace may only amount to a cease-fire, fragile and reversible. The “surge” of American troops is over. The Iraqis are moving to take their country back, yet they wonder what might happen when the Americans’ restraining presence is gone. The Awakening, a poetic name for paying former Sunni insurgents not to kill Americans or Iraqis, could fall apart, just as the Shiite Mahdi Army could reanimate itself as quickly as it disappeared. Politics in Iraq remains frozen in sectarian stalemate; the country’s leaders cannot even agree to set a date for provincial elections, which might hand power to groups that never had it before. The mountain of oil money, piled ever higher by record oil prices, may become another reason to spill blood.

But if this is not peace, it is not war, either — at least not the war I knew. When I left Iraq in the summer of 2006, after living three and a half years here following the collapse of Saddam Hussein’s regime, I believed that evil had triumphed, and that it would be many years before it might be stopped. Iraq, filled with so many people living so close together, nurturing dark and unknowable grievances, seemed destined for a ghastly unraveling.

And now, in the late summer of 2008, comes the calm. Violence has dropped by as much as 90 percent. A handful of the five million Iraqis who fled their homes — one-sixth of all Iraqis — are beginning to return. The mornings, once punctuated by the sounds of exploding bombs, are still. Is it possible that the rage, the thirst for revenge, the sectarian furies, have begun to fade? That Iraqis have been exhausted and frightened by what they have seen?

“We are normal people, ordinary people, like people everywhere,” Aziz al-Saiedi said to me the other day, as we sat on a park bench in Sadr City, only recently freed from the grip of the Mahdi Army. The park was just a small patch of bare ground with a couple of swing sets; it didn’t even have a name, yet it was filled to the bursting. “We want what everyone else wants in this world,” he said.

Sewers and Wanted Posters

Everything here seems to be standing on its head. Propaganda posters, which used to celebrate the deaths of American soldiers, now call on Iraqis to turn over the triggermen of Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia and the Mahdi Army. “THERE IS NOWHERE FOR YOU TO HIDE,” a billboard warns in Arabic, displaying a set of peering, knowing eyes. I saw one such poster in Adamiyah, a Sunni neighborhood that two years ago was under the complete control of Al Qaeda. Sunni insurgents — guys who were willing to take on the Qaeda gunmen — are now on the American payroll, keeping the peace at ragtag little checkpoints for $300 a month.

In Sadr City, the small brick building that served as the Mahdi Army’s headquarters still stands. But not 50 feet away, a freshly built Iraqi Army post towers above it now. Next to the army post, perhaps to heighten the insult to the militia, the Iraqi government has begun installing a new sewer network, something this impoverished and overcrowded ghetto sorely needs. “Wanted” posters adorn the blast walls there, too, imploring the locals to turn in the once-powerful militia leaders.

Inside the Sadr Bureau, as it’s called, the ex-militia gunmen speak in chastened tones about moving on, maybe finding other work, maybe even transforming their once ferocious army into a social welfare organization. I didn’t see any guns.

“Please don’t print my name in your newspaper,” one former Mahdi Army commander asked me with a sheepish look. “I’m wanted by the government.”

As for the Americans, they are still here, of course, but standing ever more in the background. Early this month, I joined a convoy carrying Tariq al-Hashemi, one of Iraq’s vice presidents. Hurtling through Baghdad at high speed, we came upon a caravan of American Humvees. I waited for Mr. Hashemi and his men to slow down, but the Iraqis — guns bristling, sirens wailing — barreled past. The Americans hurriedly pulled over and made way. Never in three and a half years in Iraq did I see anything like that.

A Familiar Face

The other day I rode in a helicopter to Ramadi, the capital of Anbar Province, the Wyoming-size slice of desert west of Baghdad. Two years ago, 30 marines and soldiers were dying there every month. In 2005, Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia declared Anbar the seat of its “caliphate.” Since then, violence in Anbar has plummeted. Al Qaeda has been decimated. I was coming in for a ceremony, unimaginable until recently, to mark the handover of responsibility for security to the Iraqi Army and police.

Standing in the middle of the downtown, I found myself disoriented. I had been here before — I was certain — but still I couldn’t recognize the place. Two summers ago, when I’d last been in Ramadi, the downtown lay in ruins. Only one building stood then, the Anbar provincial government center, and the Americans were holding onto it at all cost. For hundreds of yards in every direction, everything was destroyed; streets, buildings, cars, even the rubble had been ground to dust. Ramadi looked like Dresden, or Grozny, or some other obliterated city. Insurgents attacked every day.

And then, suddenly, I realized it: I was standing in front of the government center itself. It was sporting a fresh concrete facade, which had been painted off-white with brownish trim. Over the entrance hung a giant official seal of Anbar Province. The road where I stood had been recently paved; it was black and smooth. The rubble had been cleared away. American marines were walking about, without helmets or flak jackets or even guns.

In the crowd, I saw a face I recognized. It was Mowaffak al-Rubaie, Iraq’s national security advisor. It had been a long time since I’d seen him. Mr. Rubaie is a warm, garrulous man, a neurologist who spent years in London before returning to Iraq. But he is also a Shiite, and a member of Iraq’s Shiite-led government, which, in 2005 and 2006, was accused of carrying out widespread atrocities against Iraq’s Sunnis. Anbar Province is almost entirely Sunni.

As Mr. Rubaie made his way through the crowd, I noticed he was holding hands with another Iraqi man, a traditional Arab gesture of friendship and trust. It was Brig. Gen. Murdi Moshhen al-Dulaimi, the Iraqi Army officer taking control of the province — a Sunni. The sun was blinding, but Mr. Rubaie was wearing sunglasses, and finally he spotted me.

“What on earth are you doing here?” he asked over the crowd.

I might have asked him the same thing.

A General’s Choices

In August, before I came back to Iraq, I visited Gen. Ray Odierno in his office at the Pentagon. As the deputy commander in Iraq from late 2006 to early 2008, General Odierno had helped execute the buildup of American troops that has helped quell the violence. When we met, he was preparing to assume command of the American forces here, taking over for Gen. David H. Petraeus.

General Odierno, an enormous, imposing man, has come a long way in Iraq. As the commander of the Fourth Infantry Division in 2003 and 2004, he earned a reputation as an iron-fisted officer whose harsh tactics alienated the Iraqi population and helped the Sunni insurgency grow. General Odierno rejects that characterization, pointing out that he was based in Saddam Hussein’s hometown, possibly the toughest place in all of Iraq. “I had no choice,” the general told me. “There is a line you have to cross; you have to decide whether to use violence or not. I just felt at the time that I had to do that. It wasn’t that I wanted to.”

When he returned to Iraq in late 2006, General Odierno concluded that the American project in Iraq was headed for defeat. The American officers whom he was replacing had reached the same conclusion. “I knew that if we continued the way that we were, then we were not going to be successful,” he said.

Hence the troop increase. At its most basic level, General Odierno explained, the premise of this “surge” was that ordinary Iraqis didn’t want the violence. That is, that the chaos in Iraq was being driven by small groups of killers, principally those of Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, who, by murdering Shiite civilians in huge car and suicide bomb attacks, were driving ordinary Iraqis into the arms of Shiite deaths squads and the Mahdi Army. If that dynamic could be broken, ordinary Iraqis would stop relying on militias to protect them. Something approaching normalcy might return.

“We believed that the majority of the Iraqi people wanted to move forward, but you had these small groups that didn’t,” General Odierno said. “So we had to protect the people, and go after these groups.”

And so they did, with a series of offensives against the Qaeda insurgents in and around Baghdad in 2007 and then, earlier this year, in Basra and in Baghdad against the Mahdi Army. Along the way, the Americans got a huge break: The leaders of Iraq’s large Sunni tribes, which had included many insurgents, decided to stop opposing the Americans and join them against Al Qaeda. The Americans, seizing the opportunities, agreed to put many of the tribesmen, including many former insurgents, on the payroll.

The Sunni Awakening, as it is called, cascaded through Sunni areas across Iraq.

The result, now visible in the streets, is a calm unlike any Iraq has known in the five and a half years since the Americans arrived. Iraqi life is flowing back into the streets. The ordinary people, the “normal people,” as Mr. Aziz called them, have the upper hand, at least for now.

But for how long?

By any measure, General Odierno faces a huge challenge in the coming months: consolidating the gains the American military has achieved with possibly fewer troops, depending on the decisions made by Iraq’s leaders and America’s next president. Second, in all likelihood, General Odierno will have to oversee a potentially chaotic transition from one Iraqi government to another, assuming that Iraqi leaders hold nationwide elections in 2009 or 2010.

For reasons that are obvious — as a soldier, he takes orders from America’s civilian leaders — the general was less than precise on how he saw it all unfolding.

“If the next president changes the mission, then I have to figure out,” General Odierno said, stopping himself. “You know, whoever that may be.”

The Specter of Chaos

In Iraq, the calm is very fragile. The arrangements that keep the peace here are, by their nature, extremely tentative. They could come apart overnight. You don’t have to be a pessimist to recognize that.

I got a good sense of the fragility the other night in Adamiyah, the big Sunni neighborhood in northern Baghdad. I was standing on Al Camp Street as a wedding procession, made up of perhaps 25 cars, suddenly turned my way.

An Iraqi bride and groom sat in the back seat of the lead sedan, a black Mercedes-Benz, while a mass of revelers danced and tooted their horns. Two years ago, like the scene in Abu Nawas park, such a sight was inconceivable.

Spotting me, an American in ordinary clothes, the wedding train halted, with the music and the dancing carrying on. The groom, dressed in a dark suit, climbed out of the Mercedes, leaving his bride, in flowing whites and heavy rouge, inside.

“It’s wonderful, wonderful,” said the groom, Yassin Razzaq, 25, shaking my hand. And then Mr. Razzaq pointed to a group of plainclothes Iraqi gunmen who had gathered at the roadside to watch. “It’s all thanks to them.”

The “them” Mr. Razzaq was referring to were the members of the local Awakening Council, the name given to the Sunnis, many of them former insurgents, who now keep the peace in Iraq’s Sunni neighborhoods.

“Did you hear that — did you hear what he said?” asked Abu Safa al-Tikriti, a mustachioed former officer in Saddam Hussein’s army and a member of the tribe that dominates the dictator’s hometown. “Without us, there would be chaos.”

Chaos, indeed. Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki has expressed an intention to dismantle the Awakening Councils, which employ about 100,000 men, most of them Sunnis. Mr. Maliki doesn’t like the idea of paying people who used to be shooting at him. But many American and Iraqi officials worry that firing these men would drive them underground, and back to the gun. Mr. Tikriti, the Awakening leader, doesn’t make much of a secret of that. “I’ve come too far to turn back now,” Mr. Tikriti said. “It’s this or death.”

‘God Willing’

For obvious reasons, almost no one in Baghdad seems willing to predict the future anymore. Ask anyone, and you are likely to get to the all-purpose Arabic expression, “Insha’Allah” — “God willing.” Everyone, it seems, is trying to enjoy the calm while it lasts.

But if people here do not want to talk about the future, they still have to plan for it.

Sadiya Salman’s four sons and their families, for instance, returned home to Adamiyah recently after two years away. I found them crowded into their small, dimly-lit home in Zhrawaya, Adamiyah’s only Shiite neighborhood.

Like so many other of Baghdad’s mixed neighborhoods, Zhrawaya was the scene of terrifying sectarian violence in 2006 and 2007. As Shiites in predominantly Sunni Adamiyah, the Salman brothers — Wajdi, Luay, Rushdi and Feraz — considered themselves likely targets.

Then came the men in black masks one day, who spray-painted a warning on the wall: “Rafida,” Arabic for “rejectionist.” It is a derogatory word that some militant Sunnis use for Shiites.

And so the brothers left, taking their wives and children with them, 13 in all. Ms. Salman, an intense and energetic woman of 68 years, stayed behind with her four daughters; as a female, she felt safe.

“I never did get a look at them because they always wore masks,” Ms. Salman, seated on the couch in her home, said of the gunmen who took over Zhrawaya. “But the accents were Iraqi.”

Every other Shiite family also fled Zhrawaya; it is still largely empty. To slow the death squads, the Americans built a two-mile-long cement wall around the outskirts of her neighborhood. It’s 20 feet high and painted baby blue. It gives the neighborhood a bleak and claustrophobic feel.

In the 24 months that her sons were gone, Ms. Salman said she rarely ventured outside. The exception, she said, was when she saw American soldiers.

“Oh, I love them,” Ms. Salman said, brightening in her darkened house. “I always knew I was safe with them.”

With life returning to normal in Adamiyah, the Salman brothers and their families recently returned.

“We are the first Shia to come back,” Feraz said. “The rest of the families are still too afraid.”

Life is difficult; during the day, the temperature soars well above 120 degrees. For most of the day there is no electricity. When the sun goes down, the interior of the Salman house goes dark.

Yet for all the hardship endured by the Salmans, they appear to have lost neither their generosity nor their sense of grace. As I sat in their darkened apartment, Zaineb, one of Ms. Salman’s daughters served me tea. Her son Luay shone a flashlight over my shoulder for well over an hour while I took notes. As I talked and scribbled, another son, Rushdi, stood behind me, waving a fan to keep me cool.

Vets for Freedom Captain Says Success in Iraq is Paramount

September 21, 2008

Veteran still serving country

Vets for Freedom captain says success in Iraq paramount

Rachel Gallegos
Iowa City Press-Citizen

When Ben Hayden was deployed with his U.S. Marine Corps unit in 2004, Fallujah was “considered hell on Earth.”

But when he returned to the Iraqi city during the first two weeks of August this year, he was “amazed how much things have changed.”

Hayden went back to Fallujah this year as part of Vets for Freedom. The organization, made up of combat veterans from the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, uses the veterans’ first-hand experiences to educate the public about the importance of a strategic victory in Iraq.

The “Back to Iraq” tour sent eight Iraq war veterans back to the areas they once patrolled for the first two weeks of August as a policy assessment tour to see how things had changed.

While on the tour, the veterans did written and video updates for different Web sites. When they returned, Vets for Freedom issued a report to elected officials and the public with findings and recommendations.

“When I was there in 2004, there was no one in the city,” Hayden said.

Now, he compared one of the marketplaces to Iowa City’s pedestrian mall.

“That’s how busy it was,” he said.

Four years ago, the city largely was a deserted battle area. Now, there are children playing, people mowing lawns, markets and developing businesses.

“People now aren’t worried about terrorism,” he said.

He said he was impressed by developments in Fallujah, such as the city adding solar panels to the street lights to reduce power usage and a business development center and women’s center each providing small business loans to boost the economy.

“I thought it was neat to see that,” he said. “It’s working. Everything is going in the right direction.”

Hayden said he joined Vets for Freedom in September 2007 because when he returned from deployment, what he read versus what he saw firsthand in Iraq was “two completely different things.”

“It’s almost discouraging,” Hayden said. “Nobody can hear the good things that we’re doing.”

As the Vets for Freedom Iowa captain, Hayden does a lot of media interviews and talks to others, including at community events such as parades this summer.

Hayden said he joined the Marines in the summer of 2002, between his junior and senior years of high school.

“I had a pretty strong desire to serve,” he said, also following in the footsteps of his brother, Matt, who also became a Marine.

Based out of Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton in southern California, Hayden served with the First Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion. He was first deployed in February 2004 to Camp Korean Village in Iraq, close to the Syrian border, serving all over the Anbar Province, he said. He was involved in the first battle of Fallujah and came home in October 2004.

He left again in August 2005, serving in the same area, and returned April 2006. During both deployments, the main point was “to find the bad guys,” he said, through lots of raids, sweep and clear missions and vehicle checkpoints. He got out of the Marines in 2007 to go to school and start a family.

Hayden’s mother, Linn, said she believes her son’s involvement in Vets for Freedom is “his way of still serving his country.”

“I’m absolutely so proud of Benjamin,” she said of his work with the organization and the August trip. “I think it was something that needed to be done.”

Hayden said he thinks with the United States’ involvement, things are moving in the right direction in Iraq, but are not complete.

“Iraqis want Iraqi solutions for Iraqi problems,” Hayden said. “We just have to allow them that chance.

“The most successful way to end the war is if Iraqis stand alone.”

The end of the war and troop removal “has to be based on conditions,” he said.

“We want people to understand that success is paramount,” he said. “Everybody wants to end the war. We just need to do it in a responsible way.”

Iraqi Soldiers Tackle New Mission

Iraqi Soldiers Tackle New Mission    
Sunday, 21 September 2008

Iraqi Army (IA) Soldiers patrol in the town of Nassir, northwest of Baghdad, Sept. 5, 2008. The continued growth of the IA, both in terms of numbers and operational experience, allows them to take on missions formerly handled exclusively by Coalition forces.  Photo by Sgt. Michael Moody, 2nd Stryker Brigade 25th Infantry Division.

Iraqi Army (IA) Soldiers patrol in the town of Nassir, northwest of Baghdad, Sept. 5, 2008. The continued growth of the IA, both in terms of numbers and operational experience, allows them to take on missions formerly handled exclusively by Coalition forces. Photo by Sgt. Michael Moody, 2nd Stryker Brigade 25th Infantry Division.

CAMP TAJI — Iraq has seen remarkable gains in security during the last nine months, due in part to the hard work of the Iraqi Army (IA). Until recently the IA only dealt with kinetic-type missions such as kicking in doors, serving arrest warrants, patrolling and defending security sites. However, the continued growth of the IA, both in terms of numbers and operational experience, allows them to take on missions formerly handled exclusively by Coalition forces.

Now, due to the increased confidence and experience of IA Soldiers and their leaders, they are beginning to tackle missions through diplomacy, public relations and engaging local leaders.

One such example is the role the IA is taking in the town of Nassir, northwest of Baghdad.

Up until late spring Nassir was a suspected area of activity for the insurgency and there was not a firm grasp on security in the area.

That all changed in June.

When approximately 4,000 workers returned to the steelworks factory at Nassir, securing the area became a priority, said Capt. Gary McCormick, a native of Orlando, Fla., and former company commander with Multi-National Division – Baghdad. McCormick was responsible for Nassir from December 2007 until July 2008.

The U.S. Soldiers worked together with the IA to ensure the security of the residents and the factory workers.

More than 20 percent of the Nassir factory’s 4,000 employees are from the surrounding area. The fact they can move freely, without fear of attack, serves as a testament to the effectiveness of joint Coalition and Iraqi security forces operations, McCormick said.

To keep the people of the area safe, the IA Soldiers conducted an operation, Sept. 5, in and about the town of Nassir. The purpose of the operation was to introduce themselves to the residents and show them they care about the safety of their everyday lives.

An IA officer spoke with residents about their security concerns and reported insurgency threats in the area.

During the mission the IA Soldiers took time to meet the children of the town and pose for pictures. The citizens of Nassir seemed appreciative and responsive to the efforts of the IA, said a military transition team chief. They showed enthusiasm at the prospect of seeing more of the Iraqi Army in the future.

(By Sgt. Michael Moody, 25th Infantry Division)

Sheik Vowes Support to Government of Iraq

Sheik Vowes Support to Government of Iraq    
Sunday, 21 September 2008
By Pfc. Adam Carl Blazak
11th Public Affairs DetachmentKHARMAR — When he speaks, they want to listen. That is how respected Sheik Fares Mohammad Al Taha is to his people of the Al Jehaishi tribe. So when Iraqi Soldiers stopped by to deliver food and water to his village, Taha delivered an unprecedented speech.

Addressing many of the village head-of-households, Taha, surrounded by Iraqi and U.S. Soldiers, publicly declared his support for the Government of Iraq along with the Iraqi security and Coalition forces.

“Having this [food] campaign only brings us closer to the Government of Iraq,” Taha told the men and women present from his tribe. “We support the security forces and GoI. We know this, because we have never had any activity against the government in our village.”

After his speech, Taha helped the IA in distributing more than 100 boxes of food along with bottled drinking water to the poorest households in his tribe.

The food drive comes after Iraqi and U.S. forces led a medical campaign in the village just weeks ago.

One of the villagers at the food drive was 40-year-old Thiab Khalaf Ali, a husband and father who struggles to make ends-meet.

“The boxes of food are important, because there are a lot of poor families who can benefit from them,” he said.

This campaign proves the Iraqi government is taking care of its people, Taha said.

By helping with many key concerns of the village, Taha believes the government will continue its support.

The Iraqi and Coalition forces have provided medical care, food and water to the Al Jehaishi tribe and hope the village’s electricity issues will be taken care of in the near future.

“We thank the Government of Iraq and security forces for the help they continue to provide us,” Taha mentioned.

The Iraqi Army, by providing security to the village, has gained the trust and respect of the tribe.

“We understand the importance of gaining the trust of the people,” one IA Soldier said. “The more people trust us, the more we can move forward as a country.”