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Iraq-Jordan
Former Iraqi fighter pilot defies insurgents by joining forces with neighbours
2005-01-30
Lieutenant-Colonel Mowatassam Hachem al-Jebouri is determined to vote despite living in a guerrilla-infested district of Baghdad. He has devised a plan to do so. The former Iraqi Air Force fighter pilot has identified ten like-minded families from his neighbourhood. The men of those households will set off for their local polling station early in the morning, hoping that the terrorists will be deterred by their numbers. If they return unscathed, if they deem the streets and polling station safe, they will send their wives in the afternoon. Colonel al-Jebouri, 41, the father of two young girls, refuses to be cowed by the insurgents and their threats to kill those who vote. Having suffered 18 months of fear and bloodshed, he insists on his right to participate in Iraq's first free election in half a century. "This is a milestone which will lay the foundations for building a new future in Iraq," he told The Times.
snip
Brigadier-General Erv Lessel, the chief US military spokesman in Iraq, predicted a surge of violence tomorrow, with some officials saying that the insurgents would probably attack early "to create the image and perception that it's unsafe to go out". But Colonel al-Jebouri was undaunted. He drew inspiration for his plan from a television advertisement produced by the Iraqi Government that shows an elderly man confronted by a group of masked and menacing youths in an alley.
This ad was incredible!! If you haven't seen it, let me know and I'll send link
The old man refused to retreat and is slowly joined by more and more fellow citizens until, as a group, they move forward and the thugs disperse. The message is simple: together ordinary Iraqis are stronger than the extremists. "We held a meeting. We decided to go all together, taking the idea from the advert," the colonel said. The ten men, Sunnis and Shias, went yesterday morning to check out the polling station in Ghazaliya, a violent area on the western highway towards Fallujah where gunmen sometimes set up checkpoints to intimidate the population. Like the rest of the capital's polling centres, it had become a veritable Fort Knox, with razor wire and concrete barriers blocking the roads to thwart suicide car bombers. Police frisked everyone going in. The mere act of casting their ballots could cost this group their lives, but Colonel al-Jebouri says that fear is not an election issue. "Voting is just another risk in Iraq," he said. "But this one is worth is taking."
The new Iraqi election counting game: how many BUT's will an article on the election contain? Lileks calls them the Damned Buts. Many we can have a Rantburg award for the article or TV commentator with the most Damned Buts!
Posted by:Sherry

#13  There was a Christiane Amanpour piece on CNN this morning that played the ad -- all except for the end.
Posted by: Matt   2005-01-30 3:37:49 PM  

#12  Barbara / Sherry - in comment #6 someone has given a valid link - and the spot is perfect.
Posted by: .com   2005-01-30 3:31:09 PM  

#11  Sherry - that clip has gone to archives at MEMRI.

Too bad - it was the most moving, most powerful ad I have ever seen.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2005-01-30 11:33:22 AM  

#10  The ad the General is referring to is here:
http://www.memritv.org/Search.asp?ACT=S9&P1=453#

Posted by: Sherry   2005-01-30 11:08:30 AM  

#9  No stockpiles of WMD? Right on! Nor are there likely to be any now.

People always said "What if Hitler had been stopped in the '30s?" My guess is that about the same proportion of carping would have been heard about how the Germans were no threat... blah-blah-blah.
Posted by: eLarson   2005-01-30 9:59:02 AM  

#8  There are no WMD's because we took the bastard who wanted them out of Baghdad in the spring and summer of 2003. No doubt in my mind that Saddam wanted WMD's and would have eventually got them again. The word IS a safer place .... right Duke ?
Posted by: tex   2005-01-30 9:57:03 AM  

#7  but, but...no WMD...says the whiners and weeners.
Posted by: Duke Nukem   2005-01-30 9:49:01 AM  

#6  The ad is here. (Via MJT.)

What a great day in human history.
Posted by: someone   2005-01-30 5:44:15 AM  

#5  Fox is reporting live all night. One story was similar to the AD mentioned in Sherry's post. A group of (apparently anti-election) "toughs" had assembled not far from one of the Baghdad polling stations - presumably to intimidate voters. The Fox reporter and his crew saw them and grabbed their gear to do a spot on them - and they ran away. 3 guys with a camera and they scrammed. Heh.
Posted by: .com   2005-01-30 4:33:17 AM  

#4  Thanks Seafarious, I was hoping for the link of the AD.
Posted by: Slomoling Choque7531   2005-01-30 4:17:20 AM  

#3  SC7531, you must be new here. You can go to the link by clicking on the headline of the article. And welcome to Rantburg.
Posted by: Seafarious   2005-01-30 3:04:30 AM  

#2  This isn't just Iraqi history, but a great moment in US History. What other noble cause to fight for than allow people to choose their own destiny.

Please post the link! Im interested!
Posted by: Slomoling Choque7531   2005-01-30 2:58:38 AM  

#1  My hopes and Prayers are with the Iraqi people. They deserve to be free. Look at the smiles and tears of joy on the faces of the Iraqis and you jusk know they're gonna make it work. They know this may be their last chance at freedom. God Bless 'em all.
Posted by: Tom Dooley   2005-01-30 12:19:11 AM  

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