Where were the panicking crowds? Where were the 
food queues? Where were the empty streets? 
Robert Fisk in Baghdad

05 April 2003

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/story.jsp?story=394169


A kind of fraudulent, nonchalant mood clogged Baghdad 
yesterday. There appeared to be no attempt to block the 
main highway into the city. Save for a few soldiers on the 
streets and a squad car of police, you might have thought 
this a holiday. All day yesterday, I asked myself the same 
question: where was the supposed American assault on Baghdad? 
Where were the panicking crowds? Where were the food queues? 
Where were the empty streets?

And what exactly were the Americans doing? They were surrounding 
the city, every foreign radio and television service insisted, 
but travellers still arrived from Amman. The city authorities 
have put more of their Chinese double-decker buses back on 
the streets – normal service, as they say, has been 
resumed – and the railway company claimed its trains were 
still leaving for northern Iraq.

Then, just before midday yesterday, a low buzzing sound 
insinuated its way into the consciousness of all those on 
the streets of central Baghdad, a long, monotonous, slightly 
wavering sound, a cross between a distant lawnmower and a 
purring cat. And when I followed the pointed arms of a dozen 
shoppers and policemen in Jumhurriyah Street, I at last caught 
sight of the fly-like machine slowly moving up the grey, hot 
skies over the city.

The Americans had sent their first drone over Baghdad, the 
very first pilotless reconnaissance aircraft anyone here had 
seen in this war, flying so slowly that, unlike the supersonic 
jets that eagle their way down on the city to drop bombs, 
it was easy to follow.

It buzzed westwards towards the largest and most bombed of the 
presidential palaces and then wobbled southwards. It seemed 
so fragile a creature, so tiny a presence in the black, angry 
sky, that it was possible to forget the all-seeing eye in its 
belly, the pictures it was showing to the Americans outside 
the city perimeter, the choices it was helping to make about 
which suburbs were to be bombed.

At the Yarmouk Hospital yesterday, the soldier was in agony, 
his comrade in Saddam Hussein's Fedayeen militia weeping in 
sympathy as his friend writhed in pain. The American bullets 
had hit him in the legs and a woman doctor was slowly, with 
infinite care, trying to ease his right boot from his foot. 
He refused to cry out, refused to show his own suffering 
although his eyes were clenched tight shut as the woman worked 
at the boot, pulling the laces apart, fearing to cut the 
trouser leg for what she would find underneath.

"We are the Fedayeen, we are proud men," his friend said, 
brow drenched in sweat, shaking from the battle outside Saddam 
international airport. "We were confronting the Americans and 
we were holding them off. The Americans were scattering. Then 
an officer told my comrade to go and get food and rations for 
the men. It was when he got back that the bullets came and wounded him."

In one corridor at the Yarmouk, a middle-aged, white-haired 
soldier wearing a colonel's uniform hobbled past me on a 
crutch. But he stood erect in the hallway, brushing the 
dust from his shoulders with their gold braid and epaulettes.

So where are the Americans? Only 18 hours earlier, I had prowled 
the empty departure lounges of Saddam airport, mooched through 
the abandoned customs department, chatted to the seven armed 
militia guards, met the airport director and stood by the 
runways where two dust-covered Iraqi Airways passenger jets – an 
old 727 and an even more elderly Antonov – stood forlornly on 
the Tarmac not far from an equally decrepit military helicopter. 
And all I could hear was the distant whisper of high-flying 
jets and the chatter of the flocks of birds that have nested 
near the airport car park on this, the first day of real 
summer in Baghdad.

There was new evidence yesterday of the use of cluster bombs, 
on Baghdad itself this time, not just in the villages outside. 
>From Furad, in the Doura district and Hay al-Ama and other 
areas west of Baghdad, civilians were arriving in emergency 
wards with the usual terrible wounds – multiple and severely 
deep gashes made by shrapnel released by bombs that explode in the air.

The death toll at Furud alone was said to be more than 80. One 
central hospital received 39 wounded, four of whom died in 
surgery. One young man had run for his life when he saw white 
canisters dropping from the sky but he was hit as he tried to 
run through his own front door. Another was a motorist who 
saw the clusters of tiny bomblets, each packed with star-shaped 
steel shrapnel, falling "like small stones" from the sky. 
His feet were bathed in blood and the familiar tiny, jagged 
holes of metal fragments could be found in his chest and arms.

There was a change in the clientele at the city's restaurants. 
On Thursday, I had dropped into the Furud Takeaway for my daily 
fix of chicken shish-taouk, tomatoes and green beans. It was 
packed with Shia families chomping through giant mezzes of 
houmous and tabouleh and lamb and rice. The television was 
showing an Iranian channel, a musical in the Persian 
language – Iranian TV has two Arabic channels whose signal can 
be picked up without a satellite dish – and many Baghdadis 
trust its news service more than that of Kuwaiti or 
Saudi television.

Yesterday the cafés were packed with soldiers from the 
Republican Guard divisions defending Baghdad, men who could 
drive only 15 minutes back from the front to eat between 
battles, their anti- aircraft guns and military vehicles 
parked outside.

So where were the thousands of Guards whom the Americans 
could not find in the desert? They were here in Baghdad, 
defending their capital. Why, I wondered, should the 
Americans find that so surprising?

But still there was that remorseful, illusionary refusal 
among ordinary folk to accept the profound military, and 
thus political, changes being prepared for Baghdad. In 
Mansour, shopkeepers put the stories of America's 
approach – evident from the rumble of shellfire at the city 
limits – down to "foreign lies"; this from a seller of 
pistachio nuts who was not being monitored by any 
government minder

Maybe, I thought, Baghdadis have known so much war over 
the past 23 years that the great armies and air forces that 
have bombarded this country simply no longer register the 
feelings of "shock and awe" that America expects.

Few here believe the Americans cannot bash their way into 
Baghdad if they really want to. But what was meant by that 
weird statement from the Americans that their special forces 
would enter parts of Baghdad to discover whether US soldiers 
would be welcomed or not? Would the Americans move faster 
if they received a friendly response? It sounded here as 
if an opinion poll was to decide the fate of Baghdad. 

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