An Iraqi's firsthand view of a U.S.
sweep
It's nerve-racking when troops roll in to
search your neighborhood and want to have lunch -- at your house.
March 26, 2007
BAGHDAD — The writer is an Iraqi employee of The Times' Baghdad Bureau.
His name is being withheld to protect his safety because the account
mentions the area of the capital where he lives.
*
It was 7:30 a.m. and I was sound asleep when the troops arrived on my
street.
My
neighbor called me on the cellphone and said, "The Americans are
blocking the street." Because I speak English, he thought I might go
talk to them and find out whether we would be allowed to go to work
that day.
I stayed in bed 15 more minutes Saturday morning,
wondering what to do. It was nice that my neighbors counted on me to
help in situations like this, but it was a delicate thing to approach
U.S. soldiers. What if they thought I was a suicide bomber?
I
live on the edge of Ghazaliya, a Sunni Arab neighborhood in the
westernmost part of Baghdad where there are often bombings and
assassinations.
Before the current "surge," the military
crackdown in the capital, the mosques would always call residents to
defend the area from attacks by Shiite Muslim militiamen. The men would
grab their AK-47s and fan out on the rooftops. Sometimes the shooting
went on for an hour.
It had been quieter lately because the
Shiite militias were lying low. But we knew it was only a matter of
time before U.S. and Iraqi forces would come to search for armed
militants.
I finally decided to get out of bed and unlock the
gate. At least that way, the soldiers wouldn't feel the need to break
the lock. Once outside, I found the courage to go over and talk to the
American troops. A Stryker armored vehicle was blocking the end of my
street, and soldiers were putting up barbed wire.
Before I drew near them, the Americans waved their hands and shouted to
me in Arabic to go back.
"I came to talk to you!" I shouted back in English. "Can't I talk to
you?"
But I don't think they heard me over the roar of the Stryker's engine.
I tried again: "I speak English."
That's when one of the American soldiers took a closer look at me and
said: "Aha. And how are you?"
"I'm just fine," I said, relieved.
He
and a colleague explained that they were going to search the area and
asked whether I had seen any weapons coming through. I said, "No, our
street is cool."
Walking back to the house, I wondered what to
do next. I didn't want to miss work because I have been employed by The
Times for only two weeks. But I didn't want to leave my parents, who
are in their late 70s, to face the troops alone.
Last time our
house was searched, I annoyed one of the Iraqi soldiers by talking to
the Americans in English. He stayed behind after they left and warned
me, "If I arrest you now, the Americans won't be able to help you."
I
decided to stay home. I told my parents to put all their money and
cellphones in their pockets, as we had heard many stories about things
being stolen during these searches.
About 11 a.m., I heard the
gate open and my father talking to someone. I opened the kitchen door
to an Iraqi soldier and welcomed him inside.
He was a pleasant
person and we shook hands. Behind him was an American, who asked
whether we had a room where the soldiers could have their lunch.
Surprised, I told him he could use the empty room upstairs.
Two
Americans and several Iraqis first did a short search and asked whether
we had any weapons in the house. I said no, which was the truth.
One
of the Iraqi soldiers asked me to sign a paper stating that my house
had not been damaged in the search. "Well, I should be signing that
when you leave," I said, "but looking at your faces, I guess it is OK
to do that now."
Then they went upstairs to have their meal.
I
don't like armed forces much, either American or Iraqi. But I thought:
They are in my home, and it is Arabic custom to offer something. I
brought them two big bottles of soda.
Before they left, they
offered some of their unused MREs. I accepted with a smile as I like
the American Army food. But to my disappointment, I discovered later
that one of the packets contained pork ribs, which Muslims are
forbidden to eat.
My parents were relieved when they left.
"Thank God they were nice and polite both times," my mother said. I
never told her about my exchange of words with the Iraqi soldier the
last time.
The Americans later reported that they discovered two
car bombs, two weapons caches and detained 16 suspected terrorists
during the search in my area.
One of them, I learned, was my
friend's 22-year-old son, who had been staying over at his buddy's
house to fool around on the computer. His father called me that
afternoon and pleaded with me to have a word with the Americans.
The
soldiers seemed surprised that anyone had been arrested and promised to
look into it. But they told me there really wasn't much that they could
do because he was detained by Iraqi forces.
I went back to my
friend's house. His wife was sitting outside with a sad, worried look
on her face. I told her the Americans would try but had made no
promises. I just wanted to give her a little hope.
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times