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Iraq-Jordan
Falluja May Be in Rebel Sights
2005-08-08
FALLOUJA, Iraq — Nine months after U.S. and Iraqi troops killed an estimated 1,000 insurgents here in a battle that also cost more than 70 American lives, intelligence suggests that rebels are trying to filter back into the former capital of Iraq's guerrilla movement.

American commanders in Baghdad and Fallouja say they control the city so completely that the guerrillas cannot regain a foothold. But they acknowledge that Fallouja remains a powerful icon to an insurgency that is keen to stop Sunni Muslim Arabs in western Al Anbar province from participating in an October referendum on Iraq's proposed constitution. "In their minds, I think it's got significance because a lot of insurgents were killed there," Army Lt. Gen. John R. Vines, the commander of coalition forces in Iraq, said in Baghdad.

"This was a resounding defeat for them," added Brig. Gen. Peter Vangjel, who oversees analysis of operations, "and they want it back."
GOOD LUCK!
The prospect of insurgents infiltrating the city presents a daunting problem for military officials. For the embryonic Iraqi government as well as the U.S.-led coalition, commanders say, what happens in Fallouja will symbolize the success or failure of the war. If insurgents succeed in returning, it would amount to rolling back the coalition's largest military victory since the fall of Baghdad in April 2003.

The Marines' allowing former Fallouja residents to return has added to the concern. So far, 140,000 of the city's 250,000 residents have come back to a landscape littered with rubble, its skyline broken by tilting minarets.
The air is filled with the screams of construction equipment, the ground is broken with the trenches for the new water mains, yeah, we get the picture.
As the Marines continue to relax restrictions on the city's entry points, intelligence leads suggest that insurgents who have already entered Fallouja and others who may soon return have continued to plan attacks on Americans.

Fallouja Mayor Dari Ersan reflected that concern as he prepared to leave the barricaded fortress that serves as City Hall after a recent meeting. As a Marine officer explained the procedure for arming the city's new squadron of personal security guards, Ersan cut him off. He was worried about getting home that night. "Just give me a pistol," he said. "I'm talking about my own security."
Practical fellow, I can see why he's mayor.
Marine Maj. Gen. Stephen T. Johnson, commander of coalition forces in western Iraq, said it was not surprising that insurgents would want to return to Fallouja. As he spoke, eight U.S. artillery blasts, apparent retaliation for a guerrilla mortar or rocket strike, rattled the windows behind him. Johnson didn't flinch. "Every time a bomb goes off in Fallouja, people say, 'Here they come. Here it comes again.' We expect that there will be insurgent activity in town. And if he tries, we will continue to defeat him as we have in the past," he said.

So far, there is little evidence in the street of the insurgents' return. U.S. troops who took the city center door by door late last year now roll through in the beds of open-backed Humvees. One group stopped to walk the streets as a Western reporter talked to Iraqis, a liberty unavailable in other major cities in Iraq's perilous Sunni Triangle.

When an 11-year-old boy brandished a realistic toy gun, a potentially fatal move, the Marines offered him a deal: his "gun" for a handful of bubble gum. "Good trade," the boy said in Arabic. "Yeah, good trade," a Marine agreed. "Your life for gum."

Still, beneath the seeming placidity lies a hostile city, said Staff Sgt. Ryan Powell, a Marine reservist who in his civilian life is an LAPD officer who patrols one of Los Angeles' most volatile neighborhoods. "It's a lot like South-Central," Powell said with a shrug. "Nobody wants to talk to you. They say, 'If I talk to you, I'll be a target.' But in L.A., you don't have to worry about someone driving a car and turning into you at the last minute to blow you up."

Residents here have never been very interested in talking to strangers. During Saddam Hussein's reign, "for 35 years the way they survived was by not seeing things," a U.S. officer said.

The current insurgency has deep roots here, and before the U.S. push to drive them out, "they were everywhere, like rats," fruit vendor Fareed Hamad Khalaf said as his melons baked in a 120-degree swelter. "Some are killers. Some are like me, wearing civilian clothes. We don't know who they are. Some of them will sneak back into the city. Some already have."
Marine Sgt. Kent Padmore vividly recalled the July day when a suicide bomber wheeled his car into Padmore's convoy, exploding it into a truck carrying Marines back to their base. In the blast and the shootout that followed, five Marines — three of them women — and one sailor were killed.

Padmore, now recovered from burns he suffered in the attack, rushed to the overturned truck in front of him to find the gunner cut in half and a female Marine crushed beneath the vehicle. Some Marines were tired that night, he recalled. Now, he added in the accent of his native Trinidad, they hardly blink. "Their tiredness goes away," he said. "Everyone is alert."

So is Padmore. When a dozen town leaders lined up to enter the makeshift town hall, Padmore committed what he knew was an affront in Muslim societies. He stood well past the 20-foot "kill zone" of a suicide vest and asked the men to lift their dishdasha robes over their heads to show they weren't wearing one. "You got a dozen guys with man-dresses over their heads," Padmore, a "U.S.M.C." tattoo on his left arm, said apologetically. "I told them, 'I don't mean to disrespect you. But I'd rather offend you than get blown up.' "

Insurgents in the area have made special targets of those who participate in government. Some members of the City Council stopped attending meetings after receiving threats and, in one case, being targeted by a roadside bombing. One sheik continues to attend meetings despite the fact that a suicide car bomber crashed into his house a month ago, killing his son.

In May, Marines found the body of Raja Nawaf Fahan, governor-elect of Al Anbar province, blindfolded and handcuffed to a propane tank after an intense gunfight in the Euphrates River Valley town of Rawah.

Mamoun Sami Rasheed was understandably hesitant to become governor after that, agreeing only after he was unanimously nominated by the Al Anbar provincial council. No one else wanted the job. In Rasheed's first week, a Marine quick-reaction force ran off three carloads of masked men who were circling his house as his frantic wife paced inside, a Marine officer recounted. Officials won't say exactly what they're doing to protect him now, but "he's secure," one said.

Marines will soon get assistance from two Iraqi army brigades that are just starting to operate in the province, including Fallouja. But the country's precarious security situation and bare-bones government infrastructure have left the U.S. diplomatic mission largely unengaged in Al Anbar at large.

As American diplomats mill around their embassy offices in Hussein's former Republican Palace in Baghdad's cloistered Green Zone, 33-year-old John Kael Weston is the lone State Department representative paired with the 28,000 U.S. troops in the massive swath of desert stretching from Fallouja to the borders with Jordan and Syria. Because business in Fallouja takes so much time, he has made few visits to the region outside the city. But in Fallouja, Weston sees progress.

When he asked during a meeting of Sunni sheiks whether Falloujans would vote, all said yes, and coalition officials say internal polls concur. The city's 48 imams have agreed on a religious edict urging Muslims to vote, although it also demands that the Americans leave Iraq, Sheik Younis Subhy Hussein said. Another sheik said, straight-faced, that the Sunnis opted out of January's election only to show that the Shiite Muslim majority was too inept to rule Iraq.

Still, the threat of returning insurgents remains. "With the normal citizens coming back, you're going to have some insurgents too. They ran this city. I don't think they're going to forget what a safe haven they had," Weston said. "If Fallouja turns into a green zone for bad guys again, then what will all this mean?"

Addressing that risk requires delicate planning. In the bullet-scarred fortress where most of the city's business is conducted, Marine Lt. Col. Jim "Hondo" Haveman explains to Ersan that the deputy mayor must be elected. The mayor insists that he can pick his own "assistant" and has one in mind. Haveman leans in, moving closer to the real reason: The deputy needs to be elected, he says, "in case you get sick."

He doesn't need to go further. The mayor agrees to accept an elected No. 2. He understands that the diplomatic reference to his fragile mortality means that his deputy is not merely an assistant. He's a potential successor.
Posted by:Threnter Glomotle2411

#6  I stopped in Quantico for a break and the MacDonald's was green and brown.
Posted by: Kofi Annan   2005-08-08 18:40  

#5  After they recapture Falluja, the insurgents plan to retake their ancient holy city of Quantico, Virginia.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2005-08-08 18:28  

#4  
In Rasheed's first week, a Marine quick-reaction force ran off three carloads of masked men who were circling his house as his frantic wife paced inside, a Marine officer recounted.


By which, I hope that officer meant "blown all over hell's half acre". It strikes me that wearing a mask and holding a gun ought to be an execute-on-the-spot offense in the Triangle.

Pretty much anywhere else, for that matter. Deeply antisocial behavior, wearing a mask and waving a gun.

Well, on any day that isn't a sand-storm, I suppose. But somehow I doubt Anbar's finest are out and about pestering officials during sandstorms.
Posted by: Mitch H.   2005-08-08 18:00  

#3  "You got a dozen guys with man-dresses over their heads," Padmore, a "U.S.M.C." tattoo on his left arm, said apologetically. "I told them, 'I don't mean to disrespect you. But I'd rather offend you than get blown up.' "

Put Padmore in charge. He has the gift of commen sense and isn't afraid to use it."Man-dresses", now that is definately appropriate wear for these cowards.
Posted by: Marine Dad   2005-08-08 17:56  

#2  Let it be known that the city will be levelled next time and watch the locals fight the rebels to keep them out.
Posted by: RJSchwarz   2005-08-08 17:54  

#1  Nine months after U.S. and Iraqi troops killed an estimated 1,000 insurgents here in a battle that also cost more than 70 American lives, intelligence suggests that rebels are trying to filter back into the former capital of Iraq's guerrilla movement.

Next time, kill 10,000. Maybe they'll get the message.
Posted by: tu3031   2005-08-08 17:34  

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