Friends
And Occupiers In Mosul By Paul Wood Middle East Correspondent BBC
News 9-20-3
- They're throwing grenades into our vehicles and
blowing our f*cking limbs off and we're handing f*cking footballs
out."
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- The BBC's Middle East correspondent Paul Wood reports
on the US 101st Airborne Division's campaign to win hearts and minds in
the northern Iraqi city of Mosul. His report contains strong
language.
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- "Be aware, be aware, two days ago we got fragged doing
this [place]."
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- This warning is yelled out by a young American
Airborne trooper standing on the open back of a green Humvee as other
members of his squad climb aboard.
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- We are in the northern city of Mosul with the
Widowmakers - more formally the 2nd Brigade, 3rd Battalion-502nd
Infantry of the 101st Airborne Division.
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- The mission today is to return to the street where, 48
hours ago, one of these soldiers had his leg blown off by a home-made
bomb flung from a roof-top.
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- The Widowmakers will go to the house of two brothers
they arrested for this attack - and give their children
footballs.
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- No 'playing nice'
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- This is the 101st's "hearts and minds" strategy, which
the division's commander, Major General David Petraeus, told me earlier
was central to hopes of "handing the ball off" in Iraq.
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- "I still think that the population here sees us an
army of liberation rather than an army of occupation," he said.
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- "But we're in a race for the hearts and minds of the
Iraqi people.
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- "Some people would like to trip us up on the way to
the finish line.
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- "And some of them would actually like to kill us on
the way to the finish line."
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- In the back of the Humvee, the debate is
continuing.
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- "They're throwing grenades into our vehicles and
blowing our fucking limbs off and we're handing fucking footballs out,"
says another trooper.
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- "We ought to be going house-to-house and killing a few
of them."
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- Another soldier says: "They don't play around nice,
sarnt-major."
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- 'Strike, kill'
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- It is not that the soldiers do not like "hearts and
minds".
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- It is just that at the sharp end, there are
contradictions in being both friend and occupying power.
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- So, as the convoy of four Humvees pulls out, first
they pass the sign which General Petraeus has ordered in all barracks:
"What have you done to win Iraqi hearts and minds today?"
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- Then at the gate, the Widowmakers' traditional slogan:
"Strike, Kill."
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- We drive through the streets of Mosul, guns pointing
outwards from the Humvees.
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- Children wave and shout "Mister, Mister", the only
English they know.
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- It is not yet 10 in the morning and already it is
blistering hot and everyone swelters in flak jackets and helmets.
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- When we get there, soldiers take up positions around
the house.
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- Negotiations
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- The "fragging" took place at night.
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- Daytime attacks are rare, but the squad still seem
nervous about the reception they will get.
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- The Americans bunch up at the doorway while
negotiations continue with the men's mother and brothers.
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- One soldier holds a clear plastic sack of bright
silver footballs.
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- The Widowmakers are invited in.
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- There is a throng of little boys - arms out for the
footballs - while the girls and smaller boys get beanie babies.
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- The children's faces are joyful, but the arrested
men's mother is distraught.
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- "We're against Saddam here," she says, pleading with
the Americans soldiers to release her sons.
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- "As much as you are precious to your mother in America
and she loves you, I love my sons and I want them back."
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- "If your sons are not guilty then they will be brought
back home," the young lieutenant in charge of the squad says.
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- "We wanted to come by and make sure all the kids were
doing OK and let you know that your men are fine and they're being well
taken care of."
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- 'Contact, contact!'
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- The mother is still tearful. But she also says the
Americans are welcome to stay for dinner.
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- This visit is another success for hearts and minds. It
happens all the time, say officers of the 101st.
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- Outside, as we leave, a crowd of laughing, shouting
children runs after the Humvees.
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- Then someone in the crowd throws a stone.
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- "Contact, contact," one of the American soldiers
shouts into his radio.
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- The Americans are travelling with members of a new
Iraqi security force they are training.
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- The Iraqis snap the safety off their Kalashnikovs,
then give chase.
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- The children who until a few seconds ago had been
waving and smiling now flee in terror.
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- Modern nation-building
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- Such incidents are an indication of how the mood can
change in a second.
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- "It's a rollercoaster," says Major General Petraeus,
speaking about the more serious attacks on his troops.
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- "We'll go a week or two weeks with a nice
situation.
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- "Then all of a sudden, there's a spate of attacks as
one organiser or another returns with a fist full of dollars and finds
some destitute individuals willing - because they're so desperate - to
take a shot at our soldiers."
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- So at the 101st's daily staff meeting, they spend
money.
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- Millions of dollars have been dispersed by General
Petraus already.
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- When I was there, he discussed funding a volleyball
league for Mosul. Such is modern nation-building.
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- "The solution here is going to be very holistic, it's
going to be military, it's going to be political," the general
said.
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- "When you put an Iraqi face on the government
everything improves."
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- Going home
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- The general stressed that it was only a handful of
people carrying out the attacks.
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- One good sign was that "humint", or human
intelligence, was flowing in, something put down to the success of the
hearts and minds campaign.
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- My last trip out with the Widowmakers was to raid a
bakery suspected of hiding weapons.
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- They asked politely to come in and when they did not
find anything serious, they gave the owner his pistol back.
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- The man said he understood the search - there had been
attacks on US soldiers nearby - and gave the Widowmakers a cheerful wave
goodbye.
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- The 101st know they must remain friends with the Iraqi
people if they are to defeat the last of the old regime... and go
home.
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- � BBC MMIII
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- http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/3124408.stm
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