FROM:  JOHN ROSS
ON THE ROAD TO BAGHDAD

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

COUNTDOWN TO THE CATACLYSM:
HUMAN  SHIELDS IN BAGHDAD WAITING FOR BUSH TO BOMB


BAGHDAD (Feb 22nd) ­ The Syrian-Iraqi border after midnight is a
dimly-lit No Manıs Land.  We sit in a smoke filled café on the Syrian side,
dining on kabobs and guzzling Turkish coffee on the house. When George Bush
pounds a podium while multiple American flags unfurl behind him on the café
TV, the truck drivers, low-rent travelers, and Human Shields in attendance
convulse in waves of laughter and derision at the U.S. presidentıs cowboy
shtick.

This trip has been filled with such media moments as viewed from
the far side of the tube.  In Ankara waiting on the Iraqi visas, we watch
Bush brag that he will feed the people of that axis of evil republic which
Washington has starved for the past decade, and once again the room
collapses in hilarity.  The Bush act plays very badly in this seething
corner of a world he seeks to conquer with bombs and bribery and his yahoo
demeanor makes it into one of the top comedy acts east and west of the
Tigris and the Euphrates.

The Iraqi slice of the border is more congenial than the Syrianside where
every one of one's names (mother, father, your own) ispainstakingly
inscribed in Arabic longhand.  Here Saddamıs portrait smilesbroadly
as dour immigration officials register and sometimes confiscate allcell
and sat phones, laptops, video cams, and other electronic gear (I try
to register my alarm clock which bears the insignia of an obscure Mexican
football team but the Migra man waves me away.)  By dawn the inventory is
complete and the British Shields are kicking around a soccer ball with the
Iraqi border guards.  Godfrey, my 68 year-old companero as grandfather of
this journey to the end of night is leafing through a dog-eared edition of
King Lear, an appropriate text given who is at the helm of the nation we
are about to plunge into.

The Human Shield Action Caravan, 35 bedraggled anti-war
warriors, entered Iraq in two battered but brave London double-decker buses
on the morning of February 15th, a day set aside for unprecedented protest
against the Bush-Blair war on this still-resilient republic.  Although we
are trying to reach Baghdad for a huge, wild mid-day rally, the rage is
patent enough on the border, a dusty, fly-specked wedge of desert where the
kids press up against the bus chanting and dancing so feverishly that you
can feel the heat of their bodies even upstairs on the double-deckers.  The
frenzy feels dangerous as they wave portraits of Saddam and rain curses down
on George Bush, and their youthful energies seem capable of dismantling our
wheezing machines.

As we roll through the oil-splotched desert, we follow the
world-wide marches on truck stop TV screens, the customers loudly dissing
Bush and buying us jiggers of tea and fragrant coffee, a timely reminder of
how fervently much of the world hates Yanqui Doodle imperialism but not
necessarily the American people.  Although for a few brief moments in the
aftermath of 9-11, my fellow citizens seemed to grasp this universal
reality, that understanding has faded to black in Bush's endless demonizing
of Saddam Hussein as the henchman of Osama Bin Ladin, an accusation bereft
of any shred of truth ­ indeed Bin Ladin once put a fatwa on the Iraqi
kingpinıs head.

Given 20 years of war and affliction, much of it manufactured in
the U.S.A, Baghdad is not what you would expect.  Rather, it is a thoroughly
streamlined capital of 6,000,000, skyline by modernesque high-rises with
ample green space and boulevards broad as Texas, a sort of middle eastern
Houston powered by great gobs of oil money (SUVs have become an increasing
hazard here.)

The first Bush tried to bomb this metropolis back to the stone age but the
Iraqi people built it all up again in record time and now Baby Bush seeks to
re-flatten this city and let the construction contracts to Dick Cheney's
Brown & Root (a division of Halliburton Inc.)   Yet despite the evil Bushwa
that envelops them, the residents of this wondrous burg repeatedly stop you
on the streets just to tell you how much they love you.  Yes, love you!  In
four decades of gallivanting the globe, that has never happened to this
reporter before.

The Shields are presently ensconced in a moderately priced hotel at
government expense until we can figure out how to wiggle off this hook. The
Tigris, a slow-moving Mississippi of a river meanders not a block from our
balconies.  We are busy plotting the logistics of how to keep Bushıs bombs
from creaming the civilian population on the ground and trying hard not to
squabble amongst ourselves, a task made gnarly by the re-appearance of the
action's very dodgy instigator, Ken Nichols O'Keefe, a seemingly suicidal
once-upon-a-time Persian Gulf marine with dotted lines tattooed around his
throat that read "cut here."

Miffed by a revolt of his passengers way back in Rome to which he diverted
the caravan in a failed bid for the Pope's blessing, O'Keefe flew into
Baghdad, hijacked the Shields' web page and finances, and tried to resume
his summary expulsions of participants he perceived to be plotting against
him, a ploy the survivors of the bus ordeal have apparently beaten off.  As
more and more volunteers pour into town,  O'Keefe, now draped in a black
djelaba that makes him look like a figment from the Lord of the Rings, has
lost all credibility and control over the action and a fresh leadership
forged from the travails of the road is now running the show.

Meanwhile, Slovenians and Japanese, an indefatigable Turkish contingent,
busloads of Barcelonans and Germans, Italian brigadistas, Syrians,
Estonians, a reported 60 Russians (still on the road), and multitudes of
Scandinavians and Anglo pacifists stage daily marches, anti-war auctions,
peace drum festivals, and die-ins in an outburst of creative outrage that
must surely cause Saddam Hussein to wonder what all this unprecedented
protest is leading up to.

On February 19th, a handful of U.S. citizens gathered outside the El Amiriya
bomb shelter where on Valentine's Day 1991 Papa Bushıs stupid but murderous
"smart" bombs incinerated 407 human lives whose shadows were forever etched
into the structure's walls, to mourn this genocidal attack and contemplate
the coming assault on the city (Baghdadians universally refuse to return to
the shelters, preferring to risk it all at home.).  "Not In Our Name" our
banner read and the neighbors, many of whom lost their loved ones in that
inferno, came out to greet us. "We love you" the young children chorused,
"we love you", and my eyes burned with their tears.

All week, the minders ­ not nearly as menacing as the New York Times would
have you believe ­ have been bussing the Shields around from site to site in
an undisguised effort to convince us to position ourselves near
infra-structure such as power plants, water treatment facilities, and the
Saddam Childrens Hospital.

The press and the Shields are paraded through the wards of sick and dying
kids at that last named facility where their floodlights and video cams and
the unison click of cameras do not do much to improve the failing health of
the babies.  The moment is one of crass exploitation at this government
institution where more than 1700 babies have died from cancers caused by the
depleted uranium shells the first Bush drilled down upon them in the last
war.

Dr. Sefik Salam (not his real name) complains about the never-ending parade
of journalists and pacifists and the manipulation of vital supplies made
scarce by ten years of United Nations sanctions.  Sand fly infections,
sometimes called mountain leprosy or Leshmaniosis, a disease I first
encountered among the Zapatistas in Chiapas, is one example.  Because
U.S.-manufactured pharmaceuticals used to treat this disfiguring affliction
are in short supply, victims are constantly being sent back to the
countryside with incomplete treatments.  Since most of the hospitalıs
patients live in the desert outback, many die en route to the big city or
arrive here so ill that recovery is impossible.

Although the Shields resist the manipulation and seek out less
Saddam-related sites to install themselves, defense of the civilian
population necessitates compromises.  This weekend a score of Shields will
move into a south Baghdad power plant bombed in the last war, paint huge
logos on the roof, and inform their governments back home that they are on
site in a campaign to prevent repeat demolition.

Also on the list of sites to receive human shields are archeological ruins
like Ur in the south, the birthplace of the biblical Abraham, which was
damaged in the first Bush war, and Ninevah and Nimrod around Mosul in the
north.  This Shield has proposed to settle in at Babylon, a cradle of
civilization the U.S. president seeks to erase from the face of the planet
90 kilometers south of Baghdad.   What more could a poet ask for when the
Bush bombs fall?


John Ross will continue to send these dispatches as long as George Bush
allows him to live. You can still stop this war.

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