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Checkpoint Baghdad

  • Marla Ruzicka: Lessons and a Legacy

    Larry Kaplow | Apr 16, 2008 03:46 PM

    Three years ago today, April 16, 2005, a suicide car bomber killed 28-year-old Marla Ruzicka and her colleague, Faiz Ali Salim, on the capital's airport road. It's worth noting this anniversary along with the others that recently marked the American invasion and fall of the Iraqi government five years ago.

    Ruzicka founded and headed CIVIC – the Campaign for Innocent Victims In Conflict, which tries to hold governments accountable for compensating the victims of wars. Though she's often called an "aid" worker, she once corrected me on the label saying her group advocated for victims, bringing their suffering to the public, and did not provide direct aid. Much of her whole, short life had been as an advocate for various causes and her work in war showed how awareness, that overworked concept, can actually affect people lives.

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  • Parsing the Bombing Upsurge

    Babak Dehghanpisheh | Apr 15, 2008 04:36 PM
    It's starting to look like the bad old days again. A series of bombings in Baghdad, Baquba, Mosul and Ramadi today killed nearly 60 people and wounded more than 100. Multiple bombings are often the work of Al Qaeda in Iraq and have been rare in recent months, largely because many former insurgents in Sunni-dominated areas are now on the U.S. payroll. The worst attack today was a car bomb near a courthouse in Baquba which, according to the U.S. military, killed 36 and wounded 67. The large bomb wiped out three buses and damaged 10 shops in the area.

    The timing of these attacks is hardly a coincidence. The Iraqi security forces are still reeling from a botched foray into Basra three weeks ago and are currently bogged down with sporadic fighting in Sadr City. The fighting against Moqtada al-Sadr's militant Shiite Mahdi Army and various splinter factions has also drawn in the U.S. military, who have logged the highest casualty count of the year--approximately 20 soldiers killed in the past 10 days alone, mostly from IEDs. So what better time for the Al Qaeda jihadis to make themselves heard? U.S. military officials, including top commander General David Petraeus, have repeatedly warned that Al Qaeda in Iraq, or AQI in military shorthand, hasn't been knocked out and is likely plotting "spectacular attacks." At a briefing yesterday, a senior U.S. military official said he frequently tells his soldiers, "Don't get fooled. Don't think for a second [AQI is] anything more than disrupted." The bombings today, as well as a handful of bombings in northern Iraq which killed 18 people yesterday, are ample proof of that.

    So are these bombings a sign that AQI is back on the scene in their typically brutal fashion? The U.S. military takes great pains to track trends of violence in Iraq and there really haven't been any similarly large bombings in more than two months. At the briefing yesterday, the senior U.S. military commander even rolled out a series of graphs to show that violence levels in Baghdad had dropped after a spike linked to the fighting against Shia militia elements in late March and early April. These graphics have become such a regular part of the U.S. military's briefings on Iraq that they were lampooned on the Daily Show last week. One of the faux-reporters doing a standup from Baghdad agreed to replace disturbing footage of wounded Iraqis and burning cars with innocuous graphs to make his report more palatable. Still, the graphs and charts do show low attack levels prior to the recent fighting with the Shia militias. A spokesman quoted in the U.S. military's release on the Baquba bombing today noted, "Although attacks such as today's event are tragic, it is not indicative of the overall security situation in Baquba." And that's one trend line that few Iraqis or American soldiers want to see change.
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  • Which Iraqis Are Coming Home?

    Larry Kaplow | Apr 10, 2008 04:04 PM
    While the rate of Iraqis fleeing their homes has been lower in the last several months than before, it still looks like only the biggest risk-takers or those with the shortest journeys are ready to bet on a return. They face tough conditions in their old homes--including poor services and low employment, but many say they feel safe.

    A new report from the Switzerland-based International Organization for Migration (www.iom-iraq.net/idp.html), perhaps the best record-keepers of these things, says they have counted about 80,000 Iraqis (13,030 families multiplied by their standard six per family for 78,180 individuals) who have returned to their original neighborhoods from around Iraq or abroad. The report notes that these figures are likely the "majority" of those who have returned, but there's no comprehensive registry of these movements. So the real figure could be more than 150,000 – a sizable amount but just a fraction of the more than 3 million who have fled their homes or country since 2003.  The bulk of the movement since 2003 came in 2006 with the escalation in sectarian killing.

    The group interviewed 900  returning families. It's not a fully representative sampling of all returnees and there are some puzzling trends. For example, the number of returns for March, 2007, is much higher than any month before or after. But it looks like those coming back are probably the most fearless--they stuck it out longer in their homes and returned sooner. Here are some of the hints the survey offers about those braving a return to Iraq:
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  • Decoding Al-Sadr’s Protest Politics

    Larry Kaplow | Apr 8, 2008 06:00 PM


    Ahmad Al-Rubaye / AFP-Getty Images
    Iraqi men work to extinguish a blaze said to have been caused by a
    U.S. rocket attack in Sadr City on April 8, 2008

    Why has Moqtada al-Sadr cancelled his planned “Million Person” march against the U.S. presence in Iraq? Anyone who sees it as a sign of declining tensions between the radical Shiite leader’s Mahdi army and the American and U.S. forces would be wrong.  Nor has al-Sadr’s decision to call off the April 9 protest done much to ease fears in a capital city that is still on the edge. The Iraqi government has ordered a curfew throughout Baghdad for Wednesday. Local residents hustled to buy bread and vegetables for what they fear could end up being an extended time indoors. In the Green Zone, the American Embassy told its staff to sleep in inside their large office building rather than risk rocket barrages in the flimsy trailers where they live.

    Sadr’s protest plans are hardly new. The cleric calls annually for marches on April 9, the date in 2003 when U.S. troops drove into central Baghdad and the last vestiges of Saddam Hussein's regime dissolved. Typically, the demonstrations have had mixed success. They're always called with little time for preparation and have probably never reached a real million, in part because of active efforts to foil them. I remember walking in Firdos Square, where the Marines had yanked down the statue of Saddam, on the first anniversary in 2004. Sadr's Mahdi Army had just unleashed a violent uprising against American troops and was planning a march in the square. U.S. troops declared the area a closed "military zone," setting it off with barbed wire while a Humvee circled slowly, blaring heavy metal out of loudspeakers to the frustration of weary residents living along the route. Sadrists stayed away but their movement grew.

    This time Sadr blamed interference as one of the reasons for canceling the demonstrations. In a statement Tuesday, he said government forces were blocking followers trying to get to Baghdad to join in. "The government is still under the occupation pressure and its deceiving policies, therefore it is trying to prevent the million-person annual demonstration," the statement read. He said he was calling off the march for the safety of his supporters. In fact, there have been three days of fighting in the stronghold of Sadr City and some of its entrances are blocked by wire and Iraqi security forces guard towers. He compared it to the way Saddam used to prevent movement. And, while calling off the march, he congratulated his supporters for their resistance: "Allah salutes your efforts, and jihad and resistance of the occupation who violated our lands and sanctities, killed our youth and elderly, bombed our cities and took over our territories." Late Tuesday, the government announced that the curfew would still allow for an anti-occupation rally in one square in Sadr City, providing a little relief valve--though the ban on vehicle movement will prevent many others from attending.

    Sadr may be seeking to avoid, for now, clashes with security forces that would create the impression that his followers were at fault. Members of his Mahdi Army militia have just fought government forces to a draw in the southern port city of Basra. (The standoff prompted repeated questions from U.S. Senators grilling U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker and Gen. David Petraeus in Washington on Tuesday.) But, as the cliché goes, Sadr knows he can win the battle and still lose the war. Each assertion of militia power also alienates conservative Shiite Muslims who look down on Sadr's movement as a power-crazed rabble. And the other Shiite parties in the government, led by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, seem to be unified among themselves and in an alliance with powerful Kurdish factions in standing up to Sadr. That has opened the door for the Iraqi and U.S. military to press into militia areas and provoked the recent fighting in Baghdad, killing scores and causing hundreds to flee Sadr City for safer neighborhoods.

    Sadr knows he is in a long-term power struggle with fellow Shiites even as Shiites in general crave unity. While those fighting against his militia wear government uniforms, they are largely loyal to rival Shiite parties in alliance with Maliki. It's as much about politics and power as it is about law and order. Maliki has made an unprecedented call for Sadr to disband the militia or risk having his movement disqualified from the local elections later this year. As things stand now, Sadr's partisans are expected to do well and the rival parties are expected to lose seats in those elections, which might take place by December.

    The prospect of winning a sweep of southern governorships is a goal Sadr wants to preserve and he has to make sure his militia is not seen as the aggressor in an intra-Shiite war. Instead of just rejecting the call to disband the Mehdi Army (and no one who wants to be a player in Iraq wants to disband his militia), he said he would consult with high religious authorities who are backed by all the Shiites. Those consultations might go better for Sadr if the militia is not seen causing trouble in the streets. In the meantime, he threatens to end the general ceasefire he called for his militia to follow since August. So a pronouncement calling off the march will help him look like a peacemaker even if he's not ready to put down the guns.

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  • One Basra Militia Leader Taken Down

    Larry Kaplow | Apr 5, 2008 01:44 PM

    There's one less player now on the chaotic streets of Basra, where the Iraqi government and contending parties and gangs are scrapping for control of Iraq's oil-rich second city. Reports have emerged in the last couple of days that government forces have detained Yussef al-Mussawi, leader of a shadowy fundamentalist group, Thar-Allah–"God's Revenge." Newsweek wrote about Mussawi last October, describing how local warlords exert more authority than the central government. He worked from a compound on the edge of the city, surrounded by his heavily armed aides.

    Government officials say he is behind a string of assassinations, including the killings of professionals and women, the latter apparently because they were not maintaining strict codes for modest dress and behavior. They also accuse Mussawi of ties to Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps. But some see the recent wave of arrests as an attempt by leading government Shiite parties to neutralize Shiite rivals.

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  • Light-Up Saddam Available for Cheap

    Larry Kaplow | Apr 2, 2008 01:00 PM


    credit: Larry Kaplow

    Iraqis still nostalgic for Saddam Hussein--and you find them fairly often--have a secret way to sneak a peak at the old dictator. Cheap cigarette lighters on sale in his hometown Tikrit, apparently just in the last few months, have small flashlight projectors in the end that illuminate the leader in his classic poses. Point it toward a wall or the ground and you can see the strongman in his heyday, firing a pistol.

    Stall owners selling the items say they come from "China," which could mean from anywhere in Asia. More innocuous models offer pictures of Iraqi soccer heroes.

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