THE CONFLICT IN IRAQ: MARINES GAIN GROUND
Taming Iraq's 'wild west'
Business is booming in Husaybah, where the
anti-insurgent efforts of Marines and local leaders have paid off.
By Tony Perry
Times Staff Writer
January 21, 2007
HUSAYBAH, IRAQ — It's midday in this farming-and-smuggling town on the
Syrian border, and the market square is bustling.
A colorful array of fruits and vegetables and plump fish from both
sides of the border is for sale in stalls along the muddy main street.
The smell of freshly baked bread permeates the air. The jewelry stores,
bridal salon, Internet cafe, pharmacy, and bicycle and butcher shops
are crowded with customers. So is the pool hall.
"Business is good," Ahmed Ratib, the town cobbler, said as he nailed
new heels on a pair of shoes. "Not like in the past."
Two years ago, the same streets were fraught with roadside bombs and
snipers, and sellers and buyers stayed away. The area was considered
too dangerous even for a quick tour by a U.S. general in his armored
Humvee.
The Qaim region was routinely described, including in The Times, as an
out-of-control "wild west" where the Marines were fighting with only
limited success to control the smuggling of insurgent fighters and
weapons from Syria.
Today, Marines walk the downtown beat, chatting with residents,
fielding their complaints, encouraging them to contact the Iraqi police
if they suspect insurgent activity.
In a country studded with areas where the U.S. has either failed or
made only limited progress toward stabilization, Husaybah and the
surrounding Qaim region stand out as a success, officials said.
A State Department counterinsurgency expert, who is based in Iraq,
lists Qaim as "very good," Fallouja as "good but backsliding" and
Ramadi as "a mess" (a description the commanding officer there
disputes).
The effort has combined U.S. military and economic power, backed by
help from the municipal and tribal leadership.
In fall 2005, the Marines launched a massive effort to find weapons
caches and confront insurgent sanctuaries in this part of Al Anbar
province. A follow-up campaign is underway to the northeast of
Husaybah, along both sides of the Euphrates River.
The U.S. also has several improvement projects underway, including a
10-lane port of entry from Syria that should provide an economic boost.
Marines are assisting the health clinic and hospital, and the U.S. is
funding construction of a jobs center and vehicle registration site.
Despite the improvement, problems persist. The port-of-entry project,
being built by an American company with Iraqi workers and British
security guards, is behind schedule, in part because building materials
were hijacked.
Insurgents routinely hijack gasoline trucks coming from Baghdad. A City
Council member was recently arrested on suspicion of insurgent
activity, and bombers have tried to knock out the telephone system. The
mayor needs bodyguards around the clock.
Hundreds of families are said to be coming here to escape Baghdad,
which could lead to a struggle for housing and jobs.
"We had better get some tents and be ready," said Capt. Sean Wilson,
commander of Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion, 4th Regiment, as he continued
walking the beat with his troops.
But Husaybah also has major advantages, including a mayor who refuses
to be intimidated and has brokered a deal with local sheiks to get
their support in fighting insurgents. The sheiks, whose tribes are
spread on both sides of the border, were reluctant; but last fall they
committed themselves to the fight.
Calling themselves the Protectors of the Desert, the sheiks have
pledged to eliminate insurgents. U.S. officials, to avoid the rise of
private militias, have asked that the sheiks instead urge tribesmen to
carry on the fight by joining the police force or army. Hundreds of
young men have volunteered for the police force and been sent to the
police academy in Jordan, at U.S. expense.
"Things were very bad here in the past," said Farhan Farhan, mayor of
Husaybah and Qaim. "The tribes and the people decided to fight, along
with the Iraqi forces and the Americans. The terrorists only wanted to
kill innocent people."
Marines are encouraged to spread the idea that the U.S. is not an
occupying power but a transition force, in place until Iraqi security
forces are ready to take charge.
"We try to be genuine, to show them we're trying to make things
better," said Lance Cpl. Carey Tennison, 26, of San Antonio. "We
appreciate that they want to control their own town. They just don't
know how to do it yet."
President Bush, in a speech this month, said the Baghdad government had
promised to take full responsibility for all provinces by November.
The next day, Col. William Crowe, commander of the Twentynine
Palms-based 7th Marine Regiment, told a group of enlisted Marines that
within months, the Americans may no longer be required in Qaim.
As they walk their beat, Wilson and his troops ask residents about
their problems and what changes they hope to see in Husaybah. Some
complain that thieves steal goods from the market stalls at night, and
others complain about the paucity of fuel at the government gas station.
When asked about their own actions to help their town, the residents
often reply that something will happen, inshallah — God willing.
Mohammed Ali was out shopping for dinner when Marines stopped to talk.
He had a plastic bag of greens and radishes and offered the Marines a
taste.
"Do you want the Americans to go home?" the captain asked.
"Someday, but not yet — too many Ali Babas [thieves] are still here,"
Ali said.
After more talk of the radishes and the good weather, Ali asked,
somewhat tentatively, whether the Marines would be leaving soon.
"Inshallah," the captain answered.
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times