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KurdistanObserver.com
Sgt. 1st Class Jose Alvarez Jr:
They love us here
Where The Iraqis Really Do Throw flowers
Salon.com - By David Axe
The Kurds love
American GIs. But will the good feelings continue if the U.S. has to rein in
Kurdish ambitions?
Staff Sgt.
John Murdoch, left, dances with revelers at a Kurdish new year celebration on
March 21.
March 25, 2005 | SULAYMANIYAH, Iraq -- Even New York City traffic pales compared
to this: On March 22, thousands of cars, trucks, tractors and donkeys crowd a
winding mountain highway outside the Kurdish city of Sulaymaniyah in northern
Iraq, lurching and honking and weaving, careening within inches of precipitous
slopes as drivers battle to make their way to mountaintop parks and resorts.
There are no lanes, no traffic lights, and only a handful of weary cops with
resigned expressions waving at passing cars. Despite the tumult, drivers and
passengers alike slow and cheer as their cars pass a log-jammed patrol from the
Idaho National Guard’s 148th Field Artillery Regiment, based at Camp Stone just
outside the city.
"They love us here," Sgt. 1st Class Jose Alvarez Jr., 34, says. He smiles and
waves at a truck full of pretty Kurdish girls in traditional dresses.
Especially today. It’s Noruz, the Kurdish new year, a celebration of the day
more than 1,500 years ago when, they say, a Kurdish blacksmith defeated a tyrant
whose shoulders sprouted satanic baby-eating snakes. Until liberation in 2003,
Kurds in Saddam Hussein’s territory were prohibited from celebrating any
national holidays. Now they’re making up for lost time --- and they have
soldiers like these 148th troopers to thank for it.
Elsewhere in Iraq, in cities like Baghdad, Baquba and Mosul, the armed
insurgency against U.S. and Iraqi forces continues to claim lives. But this is
the other Iraq, the area in and around semiautonomous Kurdistan, where for more
than a decade after the Gulf War, U.S. fighter jets kept Iraqi forces at bay so
that the Kurds could live in relative peace and prosperity. Here, most locals
welcome the American soldiers. Even Staff Sgt. John Murdoch, a 35-year-old math
teacher from Idaho Falls, is a hero. "As far as deployments go, this is a pretty
good one," he says.
Atop the mountain, at a hilly, flower-sprinkled resort teeming with Kurds in
traditional baggy suits and sequined dresses, Murdoch attempts the traditional
Kurdish dance (left foot, right foot, shake your shoulders), jokes with
teenagers who marvel at his over-6-foot height, and holds babies while their
parents snap photos.
In light of Iraq’s volatile sectors, the soldiers almost can’t believe their
luck. Day after day, they play ambassador to an adoring nation. They tour the
countryside with Kurdish colonels and generals, eat kebabs in restaurants where
the patrons smile and wave, and even visit a carnival built atop a former Iraqi
army outpost to shake hands and sip smoothies.
It may seem like a walk in the park -- and sometimes it literally is -- but
there’s a serious military purpose here, the maintaining of a different kind of
order. After a decade of relative autonomy within Iraq’s borders, the unofficial
Kurdistan is strong and self-reliant, with its own armies, courts and national
assembly. And it’s only getting stronger. Kurds living abroad have begun to
return home to set up new businesses. Construction is booming. Families forcibly
evicted by Saddam’s armies are reclaiming their property. The Kurds in Kirkuk,
which lies just outside Kurdistan’s de facto borders and commands 40 percent of
Iraq’s oil, are demanding a greater share of oil revenues and more political
power. And as part of a deal with the Shiite majority United Iraqi Alliance,
Kurdish leader Jalal Talabani is expected to become Iraq’s next president, in
exchange for Kurdish backing of the alliance’s pick for prime minister.
Indeed, the Kurds are rising. And the U.S. Army is here to make sure they rise
only so far. The Kurds’ ambitions for full independence are well known, and U.S.
officials have faced a delicate balancing act in ensuring that the powerful
minority region is integrated into plans for a unified, democratic nation. A
fight over control of key resources, not to mention the eruption of ethnic
vendettas, could spark the civil war many have feared would rock post-Saddam
Iraq.
"Without us, the Kurds would have their own country by now," says 2nd Lt. Rick
Ferrell, whose Tennessee Guard unit -- the 278th Regiment -- performs a mission
similar to the 116th’s, albeit with less dancing, further east near the Iranian
border. "We’re a buffer," Ferrell says.
Acting as a buffer sometimes feels like a strange role to the 116th. Most
soldiers here say they like the Kurds as much as the Kurds like them. At Camp
Stone, in stark contrast to most bases in Iraq, there’s a real sense of kinship
between occupiers and occupied. Many soldiers are learning Kurdish from the
handful of translators who live and work alongside them at this tiny outpost
sandwiched between a chicken farm and the national headquarters of the
peshmerga, Kurdistan’s fierce green-suited militia. On March 23, over omelets
whipped up by an Army cook in a brown T-shirt, 24-year-old medic Spc. Sean Peine
recites the handful of phrases he’s learned from K.G., a translator in his
mid-20s:
"Spas -- Thanks."
"Choni bashi -- How are you?"
"Zor bash -- Very good."
At the hilltop resort, Peine strolls rolling green slopes and talks about the
dental missions he leads into isolated villages in these mountains. Despite
Kurdistan’s relative prosperity, there are plenty of places with no dentists and
lots of health problems. He says it breaks his heart to see these people suffer.
The 148th’s Noruz celebrations are hosted by Iraqi army Brig. Gen. Anwar Dolani,
47, an enormous bear of a man wearing a brown suit and clutching a bottle of
scotch in one hand and a cigarette in the other. He presses Peine and the other
Americans into plastic seats and barks at his men to bring soft drinks, kebabs
and chai. Then he sits, drinks, smokes and watches his liberators stuff
themselves with food that’s almost guaranteed to give them indigestion.
Fourteen years ago, Dolani was a renowned peshmerga officer. In 1991, when the
old Iraqi army moved to crush Kurdish resistance in these mountains, Dolani and
one of his lieutenants, Ahkmed Mohamed Kamal -- now a colonel under Dolani in
the new Iraqi army -- were there to stop them. On a mountain road near the
celebrations, the rusting hulk of a destroyed Iraqi tank marks the spot where
Dolani and Kamal’s soldiers stopped the Iraqis cold. It was a heady moment in
the decades-long Kurdish resistance, and sweet revenge for a defining atrocity
that had occurred only three years earlier.
It was March 16, 1988: Iraqi fighter jets swooped low over the Kurdish town of
Halabja, a peshmerga stronghold, dropping the lethal agents sarin, tabun and VX,
and canisters of mustard gas. Thousands died instantly. Thousands more clawed to
rivers and streams seeking relief from the burning only to die in the water.
Kamal and his troops cautiously approached the town. When they sensed the gas,
they turned and fled back into the mountains that had protected them for so many
years.
In 2003, after the fall of Baghdad and the liberation of Kurdistan, survivors of
the Halabja attack built a memorial in the ruined town. Inside, there’s a black
wall inscribed with the names of all 5,000 victims. Outside, there’s a cemetery
with rows of identical headstones under a sign that reads "It’s not allowed for
Baaths to enter."
Today, Kamal and K.G. stand among the headstones, Kamal alone with his thoughts,
K.G. recalling the day in 1991 when his family fled Kurdistan ahead of Saddam’s
army. After years of flight that claimed the life of his father, K.G. settled in
Texas in 1997 and took a job translating for the Defense Department.
(Translators in Iraq have been threatened by insurgents for collaborating with
U.S. forces; K.G., who works in Sulaymaniyah for the Army, asked that his full
name be withheld.) K.G. says he’s proud of America’s work in Kurdistan -- but in
spite of all the local goodwill today, the United States still shares the blame
for the area’s troubled past. "The U.S. helped out Saddam," he says, referring
to the Reagan administration’s support of Saddam during the Iraq-Iran war two
decades ago -- which included helping supply the Iraqi dictator’s chemical
weapons program.
Nevertheless, Kamal is back home now -- one of his homes, at least -- and it’s
all about "freedom," he says.
In light of the region’s wealth and progress, Kurdistan’s freedom may be Iraq’s
loss. After lunch, Dolani sounds a conciliatory note. "We Kurds are never
against anyone," he says. "On earth, a human’s a human. We want to have a
unified Iraq."
But on the way back to Camp Stone after a pensive afternoon at Halabja, Kamal
sings a different song. "There are 40 million Kurds in the world. This is the
21st century. Everyone’s getting educated, getting technology," he says. "But we
don’t even have a country."
David Axe is a reporter for Free Times in Columbia, S.C., embedded with TF-82
in Baquba, Iraq.
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