Los Angeles Times
February 29. 2004
THE WORLD
Making Bombers in Iraq
* It has been widely held that suicide attackers are all foreigners, but 
recent evidence points to home-grown cells of religious extremists.
By Patrick J. Mcdonnell and Sebastian Rotella, Times Staff Writers

RASHIDIYA, Iraq --Namir Awaad was a suicide bomber made in Iraq.

There is no evidence that he belonged to Al Qaeda or trained in a 
terrorist camp. He spent 23 apparently uneventful years on the planet 
until the chilly morning of Dec. 9.

That's when the slender, bearded loner strode up to a Bradley fighting 
vehicle guarding a U.S. Army base here and detonated a backpack bomb, 
blowing himself apart and injuring a soldier.

Because a quirk of physics left his face intact, Awaad became one of the 
few suicide bombers in Iraq to be definitively identified. The case 
helped expose a home-grown network suspected in a string of suicide 
bombings that have killed more than 25 people in this volatile zone 
northeast of Baghdad. Authorities have detained several Iraqis suspected 
of being accomplices and believe that three car bombers were Iraqis.

The developments here--and signs elsewhere of Iraqis plotting or 
training for suicide attacks--throw into question the widely held view 
that Iraq's suicide bombers are exclusively foreign jihadis. U.S. and 
Iraqi officials repeatedly have said that Iraqis are unlikely to engage 
in such missions because they do not have a history of violent religious 
extremism.

The prospect of Iraqi suicide bombers represents a widening of an 
already brutal offensive.

The cases in this area suggest that the jihadist culture of suicide 
bombing has taken root in the ravaged landscape of postwar Iraq. Less 
than a year after the fall of Saddam Hussein, militant recruiters--be 
they foreigners or Iraqis--are grooming disaffected young Iraqis to 
become human missiles targeting occupation forces and Iraqis seen as 
collaborators, officials say.

"In the beginning, we were pretty sure that it could not be Iraqis," 
said Lt. Susan M. Greig of the California National Guard, who oversees 
law enforcement in Diyala province from her headquarters in nearby 
Baqubah. But "after the war, you have a lot of farmers, a lot of 
unemployed people&. They don't understand why we are here. All they can 
see is that their life has gotten worse. So what we are seeing is that 
those are a lot of the people being used as foot soldiers."

It seems clear that foreign suicide attackers operate in Iraq. But the 
more complex picture that is emerging indicates that various factions 
have embraced the most devastating weapon in the insurgency's arsenal.

Extremism festers in places like the lush farmland where Awaad came of 
age among orange trees, date palms and walled tribal compounds along the 
Tigris, U.S. and Iraqi investigators say. Awaad was a morose 
middle-school dropout who became consumed by Islam: a trajectory typical 
of holy warriors throughout the Muslim world.

This insular town also was home to two attackers who pulled off 
synchronized suicide car bombings in November at police stations in 
Baqubah and the nearby town of Khan Bani Saad, investigators say. The 
insurgency here unites die-hard loyalists of Hussein's secular 
dictatorship with adherents of the ultraconservative Wahhabi sect of 
Sunni Islam.

"These are people who would never get together," said Lt. Col. Michael 
T. Mahoney, commanding officer here with the Army's 4th Infantry 
Division. But "none of them wants the Americans here. So they join 
forces temporarily."

In the background is the elusive specter of Al Qaeda-style groups.

In recent weeks, top coalition officials have accused Abu Musab Zarqawi, 
a Jordanian affiliated with Al Qaeda, of masterminding the terrorist 
campaign in Iraq. U.S. forces are hunting for Zarqawi in Iraq and say 
they killed his top bomb maker in a firefight west of Baghdad last week.

The car bombers in the Baqubah area "were Iraqis working with Al Qaeda," 
an Iraqi police chief said. "An Iraqi is not ready to do this unless he 
is with those linked to Al Qaeda."

In recent weeks, security forces have seized video CDs that feature 
Muslim extremists conducting clandestine ideological and training 
sessions in which recruits wear white cloaks designated for suicide 
bombers, U.S. and Iraqi officials said. Investigators believe the 
videotaped training took place in Iraq and Syria.

Despite the widespread focus on an external threat, it is difficult to 
identify a bombing in which foreign fighters have been arrested or their 
participation as bombers has been confirmed.

"Overall, the facts say the majority of the folks we are fighting here 
are Iraqis," said Lt. Col. Ken Devan, intelligence officer of the Army's 
1st Armored Division in Baghdad, which has arrested fewer than 30 
foreign fighters. "Even if we said every car bomber is a foreigner, it's 
not that many. Are there Iraqis who are willing to suicide themselves? 
There probably are. Do we know conclusively who's responsible? The only 
conclusive way we are going to be able to tell is if we find an ID card 
on them, and we just don't see that after a suicide bombing."

After one of five car bombers initially survived a coordinated strike on 
the first day of Ramadan last fall in Baghdad, he told a doctor that he 
was Yemeni. But investigators could not confirm the wounded man's 
nationality before he died, said a senior military official who declined 
to be identified.

"He was a Yemeni only because he said he was Yemeni," a senior military 
official said.

The apparent cell detected in this town is not the first sign that 
Iraqis may be lining up for so-called martyrdom operations. Iraqi Kurds 
associated with the Ansar al Islam group have trained as suicide 
attackers. And in November, soldiers of the Army's 3rd Armored Cavalry 
in western Iraq captured three would-be suicide bombers with an 
explosives vest ready for action. They were Iraqis, said Col. David 
Teeples, the commanding officer.

About the same time, a wave of attacks hit the region around Baqubah. 
Two car bombers hit the police stations in Baqubah and Khan Bani Saad 
during morning roll call Nov. 22, killing more than 17 people. Two weeks 
later, Awaad struck at the gate of Lt. Col. Mahoney's base here. Six 
days after that, a car bomb outside a police station killed eight in the 
town of Husseiniya, on the road to Baghdad.

Iraqis are suspected in all three car bombings.

The almost simultaneous attacks in Baqubah and Khan Bani Saad were 
related, investigators concluded. Officials established that the two 
drivers were young Iraqis from the Rashidiya area, U.S. and Iraqi 
investigators said. The two young attackers were seen together at a gas 
station with the vehicles used in the attacks before the dual strike.

"People saw them kissing and saying goodbye," Greig said. "We can trace 
them back to where we know they knew each other."

Holy warriors from abroad and from insurgent strongholds such as the 
city of Fallouja are said to be enlisting young Iraqis for suicide 
bombings as well as guerrilla-style attacks, military intelligence 
officers say.

Commanders suspect Awaad fell under the spell of recruiters in 
Rashidiya. He made his strike at the entrance of the U.S. base, which 
occupies a former hospital complex run by the Iraqi military.

Awaad's backpack bomb was wired to his torso and legs under a 
traditional dishdasha robe. He wrapped his head in white bandages, 
apparently posing as one of the injured Iraqis who show up at the gate 
seeking treatment from U.S. troops inside. "He walked up to the vehicle 
and they thought it was somebody who was hurt," Mahoney said. A crewman 
in the Bradley "had just gotten on top of the turret to go down and see 
what was wrong with this guy when he blew himself up."

The soldier suffered only minor injuries. Awaad may have been an amateur 
or ill-prepared. His pack contained no ball bearings or other potential 
shrapnel. After the explosion, U.S. troops found the largely intact 
front of Awaad's head next to the Bradley fighting vehicle. They 
distributed photos of the face in the community.

The bomber's father came forward. He told U.S. officers that his son had 
become obsessed with Islam upon his return last year from three years of 
military service.

Awaad refused to work in the fields, his family said. He took refuge at 
a Wahhabi mosque, where he served as a prayer chanter, or muezzin. He 
spent hours reading his red-bound Koran in the two-story stucco house 
his family shared with his uncle's family.

Awaad argued often with his father, a farmer of modest means who had 
endured 10 years in an Iranian prisoner-of-war camp in the 1980s. Their 
final blowup came in December when the father refused to let Awaad marry 
unless he got a job.

"His father did not have money to offer him for his marriage," said 
Fahad Abad Salima, a neighborhood sheik. "He became angry with his 
father. He had so many problems. He could not complete his marriage. His 
life was so complicated by these things."

Awaad dropped out of sight for four days, reappearing on the morning of 
his attack. It is likely that accomplices helped him rig the bomb and 
manipulated him psychologically, authorities said.

"They tricked him into thinking he was in a whole ring of guys who were 
going to do this," Mahoney said. "At the time of the mission, he stepped 
forward, and they stepped back."

Commanders suspect that some young men in the area who have gone missing 
may have died in suicide attacks. In the aftermath of the wave of 
bombings, military officials here have investigated several "martyrs" 
funerals, services without bodies, but have not conclusively linked them 
to specific attacks.

The reaction in Awaad's village to his "martyrdom" differs markedly from 
the glorification prevalent in the Palestinian territories, where 
bombers are celebrated in posters plastering village walls.

Awaad lived on a narrow road that winds through edgy hamlets where U.S. 
military convoys venture with caution. Family and neighbors do not 
openly praise Awaad's exploits.

Salima, the tribal leader, is intent on downplaying the incident. The 
gravelly voiced sheik held court recently in the Awaad family living 
room. The bomber's male relatives knelt on the carpet and nodded as the 
sheik, hoisting a teacup ceremoniously, said he knew nothing about any 
unexplained disappearances of young men.

As for Awaad, the sheik and others insisted that he was not a terrorist 
pawn. Even though suicide bombers usually get indoctrination and help 
preparing their devices, Salima said he was convinced that Awaad had no 
accomplices.

He theorized that perhaps the young man had picked up explosives 
expertise in the army, where he served as a cook and, according to 
villagers, spent a lot of time chopping onions.

"He had no friends," Salima said. "He could not have been influenced by 
any friends. You can see our young men here sitting together, talking 
together. He was not that kind. He wanted to die."

There are no terrorists in this village, the sheik declared--Awaad was 
just a solitary, tormented soul who decided, on his own, to end it all.
----

Reply via email to