January 16, 2007
What I Found In Iraq: Unexpected Hope And Resolve
By
Michelle Malkin
Last week, I
embedded with U.S. Army troops at
Forward Operating Base Justice in northern Baghdad.
Outside the wire, we toured the slums and met with
neighborhood leaders inching toward self-sufficiency in
al Salam. We sipped chai with a sheikh who condemned
terrorists on all sides. We watched residents bicker
over a civil affairs blanket drop in Khadamiyah. We sat
with slimy Mahdi Army apologists in Hurriya. We stopped
by a Sunni insurgent enclave, which soldiers I patrolled
with dubbed a "sniperville," in al Adil.
There's nothing glamorous or romantic about these
missions. No one will make a movie about our men and
women in uniform engaged in the tedious, painstaking
business of moving Iraq toward stability and
governability. But if the war is to be won—if security
is to be established and the foundations of a civil
society bolstered—this is ground zero. The troops I met
ask only three things of their fellow Americans back
home: time, patience and understanding of the enormous
complexities on the ground.
In Washington,
counterinsurgency theory (COIN) is a neat, elite
intellectual abstraction. Since coalition forces simply
can't catch and kill every insurgent lurking in the
populace, the theory goes, it's up to the military to
persuade the Iraqi people to turn on the insurgents,
join the political process and help themselves. At
FOB Justice—former headquarters of Saddam Hussein's
ruthless military intelligence unit, the site of the
dictator's execution by hanging and home to the Dagger
Brigade 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry
Division—COIN is a vivid, hands-on reality. Here, a task
force of brainy commanders, brawny patrol officers,
courageous Arab-American interpreters, wizened trainers
and intel gatherers, baby-faced convoy drivers and
grim-humored gunners attempts to put President
Bush's "winning hearts and minds" idealism into
daily practice.
Modern war in the Middle East is no longer as
cut-and-dried as shooting all the bad guys and going
home. We are fighting a "war
of the fleas"—not just Sunni terrorists and
Shiite death squads, but multiple home-grown and foreign
operators, street gangs, organized crime and freelance
jihadis conducting ambushes, extrajudicial
killings, sectarian attacks, vehicle bombings and
sabotage against American, coalition and Iraqi forces.
Cell phones, satellites and the Internet have allowed
the fleas to magnify their importance, disseminate
insurgent propaganda instantly and weaken political
will.
I came to Iraq a darkening pessimist about the war,
due in large part to my doubts about the compatibility
of Islam and Western-style democracy, but also as a
result of the steady, sensational diet of
"grim milestone" and "daily IED count"
media coverage that aids the insurgency.
I left Iraq with unexpected hope and resolve.
The everyday bravery and consummate professionalism
of the troops I embedded with have strengthened my faith
in the U.S. military. These soldiers are well aware of
the history, culture and sectarian strife that have
wracked the Muslim world for more than a millennium.
"They
love death," one gunner muttered as we heard
explosions in the distance while parked in al Adil.
Nevertheless, these troops are willing to put their
lives on the line to bring security to Iraq, one
neighborhood at a time.
They have teamed with Sunni and Shia, Iraqi civilian
and soldier alike to establish local government
structures and security framework districts. "We are
not here to build the Iraqi Security Forces," Lt.
Col. Steven Miska, deputy commander for the
Dagger Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division,
said. "We're
here to grow them. You can't just plant and
walk away." Capt. Aaron Kaufman of Task Force
Justice added: "It's not a six-month or year-long
process, especially when you're talking about training
the Iraqi forces."
The troops I met scoff at peace activists' efforts to
"bring them home now." But they are just as
critical of the Bush administration and Pentagon's
missteps—from holding Iraqi elections too early, to
senselessly breaking up their brigade combat team, to
drawing down forces and withdrawing last year in Baghdad
and Fallujah, to failing to hold cities after clearing
them of insurgents. They speak candidly and critically
of Shiite militia infiltration of some Iraqi police and
Iraqi Army units and corruption in government
ministries, but they want you to know about the
unheralded good news, too.
Every day, Iraqi Army trainees risk their lives and
their family's lives to come to work at FOB Justice.
Residents of Khadamiyah approach the base with tips.
Schools are re-opening; neighborhood councils are
sharing intelligence. "All those things are coming
together,"
Capt. Stacy Bare, civil affairs officer, said
emphatically.
Winning the counterinsurgency battle is not just
about keeping Iraqis safe. It's about keeping Americans
safe—by sending a message that the mightiest military in
the world cannot and will not be outwitted and outlasted
by the fleas. On the emblem of the Dagger Brigade are
two imperatives: "Continue mission!" and "Duty
first." These troops are committed to their mission.
They deserve our commitment to them.
(Michelle's embed tour in
Iraq, with her HotAir.com colleague Bryan Preston, was
sponsored by the New York Post.
Video reports of their Iraq journey can be viewed at
HotAir.com.)
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
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