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Checkpoint Baghdad

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  • Is Karbala Ready for Handover?

    Babak Dehghanpisheh | Oct 29, 2007 04:34 PM
    A Blackhawk helicopter lands during the Karbala handover ceremony

    A police SWAT team surrounded the bus this morning as a crowd looked on. Three soldiers ran underneath the windows and squatted; three more soldiers hopped onto their shoulders and pointed their pistols through the windows. Another team stormed the bus and pulled out the “suspect,” a young man in a white dishdasha robe and a red-checked keffiyeh scarf.

    That mock raid was part of the ceremony formally handing over security duties from the coalition to Iraqi security forces today in Karbala, the eighth province that has been handed over to government control so far. Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and Gen. Rick Lynch, commander of Multi-National Division-Center, watched the parade of goose-stepping soldiers and cops, even a group of policewomen decked out in black abayas, at a sports stadium in the city. The speeches were predictably upbeat: Maliki highlighted reconciliation efforts and predicted that Iraqis would soon take the lead in securing the country. “Iraq will emerge from the chaos,” he said.

    But is Karbala ready for the big handover? Last week Iraqi security forces shut down the main roads into the city as militia elements shot it out near the city center, and there were reports of a car bomb in the city yesterday. In late August fighting during the Shaabaniya religious festival, which commemorates the birthday of the 12th Shia imam, left dozens of people dead and hundreds wounded. Today’s ceremony took place with layer on layer of Iraqi and American security: Humvees, Riva armored vehicles and snipers posted on every tall building for at least a mile or two around the stadium. For good measure a couple of helicopters circled the stadium during the entire two-hour ceremony. Some of the overeager Iraqi security guards even insisted on disarming American soldiers before letting them near the VIP tent where Maliki was sitting. Still, Gen. Lynch reassured Iraqi officials in his speech. “We’re only a phone call away,” he said.

    The violence in Karbala has disturbing long-term implications for Iraq as a whole and the south of the country in particular: Shias are killing Shias. The attacks during the Shaabaniya festival are largely blamed on elements of the Mahdi Army, led by cleric Moqtada al-Sadr; the bulk of the security forces in the city are loyal to their rivals, the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council (SIIC) or Maliki’s Dawa party. Abu Aqil, a policeman who participated in today’s ceremony, was caught up in the clashes last August. He says the attacks were well coordinated. Groups of young men with hidden weapons poured into the courtyard between the shrines of Hussein and Abbas, two of Shia Islam’s most holy sites, and began shooting at the shrine guards as well as local security forces. They were chanting slogans praising Sadr. “We defended the shrines, but a lot of pilgrims were wounded,” says Abu Aqil, who lost a cousin in the fighting. There has been a lot of intra-Shiite violence in the south, particularly in Basra, but these clashes in the holiest city on one of the holiest religious occasions were deeply embarrassing for the community as a whole. Sadr publicly called for his followers to lay down their arms afterward.

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  • Fragile Calm in Mahmoudiyah

    Silvia Spring | Oct 24, 2007 07:18 PM

    It felt more like a high school graduation than the signing of a peace accord in the Al-Rasheed hotel's wood-paneled auditorium the other day.  Tribal sheiks from Mahmoudiya, a region of southern Baghdad, were wrapping up a three-day reconciliation conference, and each shook hands with the meeting's facilitators before receiving a certificate saying that he had participated. Senior officials made speeches, praising God and the people of Mahmoudiya, and urged Iraq's national government to look to their region for guidance on how to rebuild the rest of the country.  Depending on what happens next, the government may want to do just that.

    With the number of violent attacks down in some parts of Iraq, the question facing Iraqis now is how best to take advantage of it.  The answer is critical, particularly for a place like Mahmoudiya where the fault lines of conflict run in multiple directions. Tribal, religious and generational clashes divide its 400,000 residents, making the region in some ways a microcosm of the country as a whole. Up until about three months ago, violence was widespread, with criminal gangs and sectarian fighting forcing people from their homes and destroying local infrastructure.  But thanks in part to the "surge" of U.S. troops and in part to the high degree of cooperation between the American and Iraqi soldiers working together in the area, a fragile window of calm has opened.

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  • Spot the Difference: 'Concerned Citizens' vs. Militia

    Kevin Peraino | Oct 16, 2007 04:38 PM

    Yesterday I took a day trip with Gen. David Petraeus – one of his frequent "battlefield circulations" – to a small farming village near the Iraqi town of Yussefiya, about 30 miles southwest of Baghdad. These kinds of excursions are generally dog-and-pony shows: day-long spin sessions that involve a fair amount of theatrics from American officers going on about how much progress has been made. (Yesterday was no exception; the climax came when the four-star general passed out soccer balls to Iraqi kids as flashbulbs flickered.) Still, I try to tag along for them when they come up; you never know when you might come across some news. And I admit I never miss the chance to ride on a Blackhawk helicopter over Iraq – which, even after dozens of trips, is still the cheapest thrill in the Middle East.

    I also happened to be interested in the topic yesterday: the military's new "concerned local citizens" programs. American diplomats and officers love to talk about this new strategy of relying on local strongmen for security – "government from the ground up," as they put it. In the short term the project has produced some noteworthy results in reducing attacks on American troops. Yet in the long term it also presents some significant risks. Two weeks ago I wrote a story for the magazine that looked at the dark side of this phenomenon, which, in practice, includes the rise of dozens of American-supported warlords. Since the story appeared, a couple of things reminded me just how difficult the balancing act will be.

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  • Secret Lives for Mixed Couples

    Larry Kaplow | Oct 16, 2007 02:02 PM
    They are engaged to be married, the soldier and the interpreter. But it's only when they are alone or among confidants that the bride-to-be calls her fiancé by his first name or, sometimes, "Habibi," the Arabic term of endearment for someone beloved. Otherwise, as they walk or work side-by-side on a sprawling U.S. army base somewhere in Iraq, she uses his rank and last name. He fears he could face military punishment if superiors learn of their love. She and her family could face retribution if Iraqis learn of it.  More