From the Los Angeles Times
War-ravaged Iraq city 'alive again'
Fallouja
has been rebuilt since the 2004 battles. Stores again are doing a brisk
business, and the population is nearly back up to 300,000.
By Tony Perry
Time Staff Writer
March 21, 2008
FALLOUJA, IRAQ —
The one-lane bridge over the Euphrates River where a mob hung the
charred bodies of slain Americans four years ago is now a focal point
in the revitalization of this war-ravaged city.
The Iraqi government and the U.S. plan to widen the pedestrian pathways
on either side of the bridge so shoppers can stream into Fallouja's
western neighborhood and buy food, clothing and other goods from stores
that again line the streets of a city once given up for dead.
The comeback of Fallouja, the site of two major battles between Marines
and insurgents in 2004, surprises even the most optimistic U.S.
planners.
"It continues to outpace all expectations," said Navy Capt. John
Dal Santo, part of a State Department-funded effort called the
Provincial Reconstruction Team for Fallouja.
City Council leader Sheik Hamed Ahmed said that he was pleased with the
city's progress but that he needed more generators for his
neighborhood. Ahmed's three predecessors were assassinated by
insurgents, but he has refused to back down.
"Fallouja is alive again," he said.
Restaurants, bakeries, photo shops, tire stores, Internet cafes, a
body-building studio and other businesses line the avenues and side
streets. BMWs share lanes with donkey carts on congested thoroughfares.
The Anbar provincial government and the central government in
Baghdad have poured tens of millions of dollars into street repair,
rubble removal and school reconstruction. The governor has assigned
what Americans might call ward heelers to tend to the needs of the
city's nine districts.
In 2004, Fallouja was a major base for the emerging Sunni Arab
insurgency. On March 31 of that year, it was also the site of one of
the most macabre images since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq: young
Iraqi men dancing in glee as the burned remains of American private
security workers hung from the aging bridge.
Most civilians fled the city before the second Marine assault, in
November 2004. And there are still signs of the fierce battles:
crumpled buildings, downed power lines and bullet-riddled homes.
Other problems also remain: an undersized police department; shortages
of electricity, clean water and gasoline; high unemployment; and a
small but resistant cadre of insurgents waiting to launch a
counterattack.
Yet Fallouja is vibrant again, and its population has climbed back
close to its pre-assault level of about 300,000.
Police are on the streets. A new hospital is set to open this
spring, funded by the U.S. and the Iraqis. Marines have removed many of
the barriers and concertina wire that gave the city what one officer
called the "Berlin 1945 look."
There have been soccer tournaments and art contests. And there are
plans for a soft-drink bottling plant.
"Fallouja has gone through a metamorphosis -- these people want
their lives back," said Lt. Col. Christopher Dowling, commander of the
3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment. "Fallouja has its soul back."
Several hundred Marines live side by side with Iraqi police
officers in outposts across the city. In five months, Dowling's Marines
have carried out 7,000 patrols in the city and its suburbs without
suffering a fatality or major injury.
To ensure continued security progress, Marines conduct late-night
raids several times a week after picking up intelligence about possible
insurgent activities. The troops also have sought to provide employment
to young Falloujans to help win their loyalty.
One of Dowling's more successful efforts has been to pay youths
$10 a day to pick up trash. Many of the main streets are now among the
cleanest of any city in Anbar province.
Fallouja also has a court system and judges, unlike most cities in
the province, which lies west of Baghdad. Elsewhere, judges who fled
the country have not returned.
"Two years ago, even after the war was over, people were stealing
and hiding," Iraqi police officer Jassim Hamid Khousan said. "Now is
better. God willing, if the insurgents come back, we will fight."
Haji Mohammed Hussin feels safe enough to reopen and expand his
kebab restaurant, closed when the city was controlled by insurgents. He
also owns a restaurant in Baghdad that remains closed, he said, because
it has been confiscated by Shiite Muslim militiamen.
When Dowling stopped by to drink tea, Hussin had a request: Extend
the hours at the main checkpoint so more people can come in from the
suburbs for a late dinner.
"We need more people," Hussin said.
Done. The checkpoint will stay open an hour later.
An estimated 20,000 people a day stream through five checkpoints
to shop or work in the city. The checkpoints are staffed by Marines,
Iraqi police and an all-female contingent called the Sisters of
Fallouja.
This is the second Fallouja assignment for the Camp
Pendleton-based 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment. It was a lead unit
in the November 2004 assault, suffering 19 fatalities. Most of the
current officers and enlisted are new to the battalion.
But some are veterans from 2004, including Staff Sgt. Terrance Gant,
who remembers the fight to recapture the bridge. Marines attacked
insurgent strongholds from the north, south and east -- pushing west
toward the bridge was one of the final objectives.
Gant visited the bridge and adjoining streets the other day and
found small boys selling ice cream, a fishmonger hawking catfish, and
food and trinket stores doing a brisk business.
"This is a step forward," Gant said. "It shows me my Marines didn't die
in vain."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times