December 19, 2006 By Borzou Daragahi and Molly Hennessy-Fiske, Los Angeles 
Times Staff Writers [Excerpts]

BAGHDAD — The men with laptops sat around an unadorned conference table, 
chatting amicably about their plans and operations.

The scene on the newly launched Al Zawraa satellite television channel 
could have been footage from the boardroom of any company, if it weren't 
for the ski masks the men wore and the subject of the meeting: future 
mortar attacks on U.S. bases in Iraq.

The renegade, pro-insurgent Al Zawraa channel, with a 24-hour diet of 
propaganda against U.S. forces and the Iraqi government, has become 
something of a sensation throughout the country.

Most hours of the day it plays footage of U.S. soldiers in Iraq being shot 
and blown up in insurgent attacks, often with religious chants or Saddam 
Hussein-era nationalist anthems in the background.  There are segments 
warning Iraq's Sunni Arabs to be wary of Shiite Muslims, and occasional 
English-language commentary and subtitles clearly meant to demoralize U.S. 
troops.

"Your new enlisting qualifications are kind of comical," an announcer says 
in slightly accented American English, over an image of a U.S. soldier in a 
field hospital, a bandage on his newly amputated arm.  "I mean, what are 
you doing?  Thirty-nine years old?  That's the new age of recruiting?  Are 
you recruiting nannies?  I guess if we are patient, we might witness 
crippled people enlisting for the Marines."

The station attempts to present an alternative to images of the war 
appearing in U.S. and other Iraqi media.  It shows footage of Americans 
abusing Iraqis and Baghdad government officials collaborating with the 
"occupier."  Even Michael Moore's "Fahrenheit 911," the 2004 documentary 
critical of the Bush administration's foreign policy, gets drawn into the 
commentary.

"After all, there are honest guys in America," the announcer says in 
comments directed at President Bush.  "If Mr. Moore can talk to you like 
that, so can I."

It's not clear how big an Iraqi audience Al Zawraa captures. But its very 
presence demonstrates the insurgency's abilities.

Despite 140,000 U.S. troops in Iraq and intense diplomatic pressure on 
Iraq's neighbors, the station is able to circumvent U.S. and Iraqi forces 
and stage round-the-clock broadcasts, complete with news bulletins, 
graphics and commentary.

Al Zawraa started out several months ago as an aboveground hard-line Sunni 
channel, but it was shut down by the Iraqi government Nov. 5, the day 
Hussein received the death penalty.  Iraqi police raided the station's 
headquarters after broadcasts criticized the verdict.

Broadcast staples include images of U.S. soldiers manhandling Iraqi women, 
photos from the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal and footage of Iraqi 
children burned and injured in alleged U.S. attacks.

The station also loops shaky, slow-motion footage of U.S. vehicles being 
blown up and American soldiers, often in crosshairs, crumpling to the 
ground after being shot by snipers.

One question-and-answer segment with insurgents shows them installing 
Katyusha rocket launchers on cars and assembling weapons to fire 
rocket-propelled grenades.

"And you still using this tactic?" the announcer asks.

"Oh yes. With the will of God, we will never give up," an insurgent replies.

They attempt to portray the insurgency as a powerful force to be reckoned 
with for years to come. "There will be no negotiating," an announcer 
states. "For us, it's straight and simple.  We are fighting for our 
religion and for our soil. We will fight you while you are packing.  We 
will fight you while you are sleeping.  We will fight you as you are 
evacuating your last soldier."

Some of the images of Americans being attacked are available on the Web and 
in video shops in Iraq.  Some U.S. military officers shrug off Al Zawraa, 
saying it rarely broadcasts anything new.

Some viewers acknowledge the station's sectarian biases but say it's no 
different from other new Iraqi channels beholden to political blocs.

After Iraqis held a reconciliation conference Saturday meant to heal wounds 
between Sunnis and Shiites, the station quickly broadcast denunciations of 
the meeting by the Muslim Scholars Assn., a leading Sunni clerical group.

A recent segment showed Shiite cleric Muqtada Sadr sitting among a group of 
clerics and ordering an unseen person to "send them in there as soldiers," 
a suggestion that his men had infiltrated the security forces and were 
taking part in death-squad operations against Sunnis.

An announcer alleged that Sadr, a critic of U.S. policies here, had stopped 
his fight against the Americans and was now focusing his efforts against 
Sunnis.

Iraqi government efforts to track down the renegade station have come to 
naught.  No one's quite sure where it broadcasts from or even who is behind it.

Iraqi national security advisor Mowaffak Rubaie and a senior U.S. military 
official said it was broadcasting from somewhere near the Kurdish city of 
Irbil at one point and recently signed a distribution deal with the 
Egyptian satellite company NileSat.

There are indications that the Iraqi government is still looking for Al 
Zawraa.  Police in the Sunni city of Hawija near Kirkuk raided the home of 
another member of Jaburi's parliamentary bloc Sunday, arresting him and two 
others on unspecified security charges.



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