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A Capped Volcano of Suffering

by: Dahr Jamail, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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A Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicle, which the US military now uses for most of its patrols in Iraq's Sadr City. (Photo: Dahr Jamail / t r u t h o u t)

     Baghdad today, on the eve of provincial elections, feels like it has emerged from several years of horrendous violence, but do not be misled. Every Iraqi I've spoken with feels it is tenuous, the still-fragile lull too young to trust.

     The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees provides recent statistics showing that more Iraqis continue to flee their country than are returning. Two studies show the number of dead Iraqis to be between 1.2-1.4 million, and the number of those displaced to be nearly five million, or one in six Iraqis. During 2006 and 2008, scores of bodies were found on the streets of Baghdad and fished from the Tigris River as death squads and sectarian militias raged. All but one of my Iraqi friends and translators have either fled the country, or been killed. It is nearly impossible to meet a family that has not had a family member killed or wounded.

     Only within the last half-year has violence lessened, and street life returned to something akin to "normal," which means that as opposed to 50-250 Iraqi being slaughtered each day, now it is an average of one, sometimes two dozen per day.

     The relative lull has allowed me to travel around Baghdad with relative ease, eat at restaurants, and even conduct interviews on the street; all of which was unheard of during my last visits to Iraq. I've been taking stock of what has changed, and what hasn't.

     One of the first things I noted that has not changed did not occur in Iraq. Rather, when arriving in Amman, Jordan and exiting the airplane, I strode into customs to find a Jordanian man holding up a Blackwater USA sign, to be met by four rough looking middle-aged men. The next day, whilst flying into Baghdad, the commercial jet did a "soft-spiral" descent into Baghdad airport, unlike the hard corkscrew descent that they all did when I was last in Iraq, so as not to be shot at by resistance fighters just outside of the airport perimeter.

     The infrastructure remains in shambles. The generator at my hotel is running more than it is shut off. Throughout Baghdad, there an average of four hours of electricity per 24 hours, and people left with no choice but to drink tap water, when it runs - water heavily contaminated by waterborne diseases, fuel, sewage and sediment. Jobs are scarce, and people are suffering greatly. The anger about this seethes just beneath the surface everywhere I turn.

     Previously, while these conditions were similar, there was still some hope that things might improve. That hope has shifted into a resignation of what is. A surrender into a daily life of trying to find enough money to buy food.

     "In 2004 it cost me $1 to fill my car," my interpreter Ali told me yesterday as we drove to Fallujah. "Today it now costs $35. It used to be in Iraq a family could easily live off $500 for two months. Today we are lucky if that lasts a week, because the prices of everything have gone so high."

     Beggars are present at most intersections. Where they are not, Iraqi children walk between the rows of cars carrying cigarettes, fruit, or sweets to sell to drivers stuck in the ever-present traffic.

     Salah Salman, a day laborer in Sadr City I spoke with the other day, raged against the upcoming elections which are set for January 31. He spoke with me while we stood near a street strewn with garbage near a busy traffic circle.

     "I'll not be voting for anyone. We cannot trust any of the candidates, just like during the elections of 2005. What have they done for us? What services have they provided our country? They have achieved nothing for us!"

     Like the 2005 elections (and most elections across the globe, for that matter), there are thousands of politicians running on various platforms, from unifying Iraq, to bringing electricity, to improving security, to promoting reconciliation. Most Iraqis I have spoken with about the elections are not holding out much hope.

     "New thieves will replace the current thieves," an Iraqi refugee in Amman told me before I flew into Baghdad.

     Obvious differences are present. The most evident reason for the decline in US military casualties in Iraq over the last year is that there are clearly far fewer patrols being carried out by US forces, whereas before patrols roamed the streets incessantly. The patrols I do see are carried out in the new Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles, which are mine-resistant beasts that slowly crawl through the congested streets of Baghdad.

     Instead, Iraqi security forces abound. Speeding through the streets with blaring sirens are Iraqi Police in huge, brand new Ford and Chevrolet trucks, which have clearly found their new market since the US has tired of the gas-guzzling behemoths. Further, Iraqi military abound, roaming around in brand new Humvees of the ilk traded in by the US military's upgrade to MRAPs. So much security is deployed on the streets of Baghdad it is impossible to travel more than 15 minutes without finding another checkpoint. To live in Baghdad, like it is to live in many other Iraqi cities, is to live in a police state.

     Contractors are visible flying overhead, often in their two-person Kiowa helicopters. They are running the security at the airport and in the Green Zone, which has been called the International Zone for some time now. The mercenary company Triple Canopy employs former Central American death squad members and various nationals from Uganda, a now mostly de-colonized country, to check ID badges at the countless checkpoints I walked through to obtain my mandatory press card inside the heavily fortified compound. Thus, the changing of the face is complete - Iraqi security forces and private contractor mercenaries are now the face of the US occupation of Iraq.

     The political divides across the country run deep, and this thin, fresh, external skin of the lull in overall violence camouflages the plight of the average Iraqi. Prices of everything from bottled water to tomatoes have skyrocketed, while jobs have become increasingly scarce. While the major US news outlets have downgraded their staff in Iraq, or pulled out entirely because they feel Iraq is no longer an important story, for most Iraqis who remain here, there is no other option. Flee with no money and become a refugee, or remain and try to survive.

     Will the elections bring a lasting stability? Or will groups who feel entitled to power that don't obtain it democratically resort again to violence that will shred what is left of this shattered country?

     We shall soon find out.

  

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Dahr Jamail, an independent journalist, is the author of "The Will to Resist: Soldiers Who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan," (Haymarket Books, 2009), and "Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches From an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq," (Haymarket Books, 2007). Jamail reported from occupied Iraq for nine months as well as from Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Turkey over the last five years.

Comments

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Ahhh, that's it, we have

Ahhh, that's it, we have less casualties because we cut way back on patrols and NOT because of "the surge." "The surge" was another lie within a lie about this war. Also, it took the government 6+ years to finally get our soldiers the equipment (MRAPs) they need. What a disgrace. We shouldn't have started a war in the first place, then when we do we don't even properly equip our soldiers? This war is a disgrace.

Ah, Dahr Jamail.

Ah, Dahr Jamail. Remembering his reports from the past, this is a good, partial update. I so very much appreciate his work and finding it here. I would like to see more about "the police state" he describes, and how much of a "puppet" government and how it works, since Iraq is an occupied country.

thank you for your

thank you for your reporting, Mr. Jamail. Please stay safe.

How much does that MRAP

How much does that MRAP weigh? What kind of mileage does it get? Why did so many of our troops have to get their legs blown off before we finally got these? Were they built on a no-bid contract? By Haliburton? And, last but not least, how much are they costing us, the taxpayers?

There you go; you bombed

There you go; you bombed them out of the modern age. Seething. Not a good lookout. Blackwater: fecal matter. ( yes, that's the definition) Dahr is the only American i respect. No one hates you for your "freedom" You're hated for "your actions". Tell Prez O.

I am so disgusted with the

I am so disgusted with the US for illegally invading and destroying an entire country, so much shame for all Americans. And still all you here from most americans is how much it is costing the tax payer to be in Iraq. SHAME ON YOU AMERICANS!!!! YOU TRULY DESERVE THE ECONOMIC MELTDOWN THAT IS OCCURRING AND IT IS JUST THE BEGINNING, YOU'RE ENTIRE CULTURE IS CONTAMINATED FROM ALL THE TERRORIST ATTACKS ON OTHER COUNTRIES THAT YOU HAVE ENGAGED IN AND YOU ARE JUST BEGINNING TO EXPERIENCE THE KARMA FOR ALL THESE ATROCIOUS CRIME!!! gOOD LUCK AND GOOD NIGHT...FROM A DISGUSTED CANADIAN....and no, I'm not muslim; I am a white christian.

War is always a disgrace.

War is always a disgrace. Thanks Dahr, for your bravery in continuing to chronicle the dire horror of our time.

Well, one of the ironies of

Well, one of the ironies of war is that it DOES cost taxpayers a lot of MONEY, (Yes, money- that wonderful stuff you can do all kinds of great things with, rather than kill lots of innocent people, and endanger your own country as well) If you can't reach morons from the moral standpoint, you can at least argue from the pocketbook standpoint, and if they can't get it that way, they might not ever get it any other way. If they get it that way, they get it, so there is no point in insulting anyone from there. And, no, they probably don't know what is going on in Iraq, let alone probably even find it on a map.

Damn, don't that vehicle

Damn, don't that vehicle look absolutely ridiculous? I mean it reminds me of the nazi's idea of bigger is always better. So to help win the minds and hearts of more Iraqis, we just build a bigger piece of nothing for the insurgents to figure out how to blow it up or at least brain damage the whole human cargo inside of it.

How much does the MRAP cost?

How much does the MRAP cost? How much does it way? What's the gas mileage? Ah, a true American. Always thinking about cost. We should never have been there in the first place, as well as Afghanistan. Everything else is moot. Bush, Cheney, and all their handlers and backers, should be taken to the Iraqi deserts, stripped naked, and left on their own. Perhaps THEN justice will be served. Perhaps.

Another police state. What

Another police state. What is the normal evolution of a police state? We can expect more corruption, a degradation of human values, a social split. In the end, we can expect something like Egypt, at best. Thank you for you report.

To "Disgusted

To "Disgusted Canadian", There is blood on canadian hands as well. The 07/08 surge was made possible by Canada agreeing to send more troops to Afghanistan so US troops could redeploy to Iraq. The munitions used in Iraq come from SNC Technologies Inc in Quebec (between 300-500 million bullets/year). On the diplomatic site, Canada has provided quiet cover for the continuation of US war crimes. To all Canadians: please stop pointing fingers and look at the big picture.

The war in Iraq is a

The war in Iraq is a disgrace and a travesty made even worse by the lack of criminal charges being brought against those in the former and administration and in Congress who perpetuated the lies leading to the war. In addition, an investigation will disclose that the large number of casualties suffered by the media in Iraq was perpetuated by those contractors, like Blackwater, particularly Blackwater, who were given carte blanche instructions to keep those reporting about the war from doing so. Hopefully, the United Nations will take action to name the perps and ask for their extradition to international courts for committing crimes against humanity and more.

To the writer who responded

To the writer who responded to my message: the 'disgusted Canadian', thank you for the addition Canada's complicity in the so called 'war on terror'; you are absolutely write and it was a grave oversight that I did not mention this crucial fact. I have written, in response to other articles, that Canada has terrible blood on it's hands with the approval of our prime minister for the Israeli genocidal terrorist attack on Gaza! We have, in fact, given tacit support to the Bush/Cheney cabal for eight ugly political years that committed many crimes against humanity and as such, we too bare the guilt of these atrocious acts that have defamed both our countries.We Canadians stand at an all time low, both morally and ethically, with our alliance with terrorist states such as Israel and the US. We are no better than they and I hang my head in abject shame! I call on all decent citizens of the world to join the boycott, divestment and sanctions of the terrorist state of Israel, US and Canada until we decide to join the civilized world that lives by the rule of law! A corrected disgusted Canadian.

Previously, while these

Previously, while these conditions were similar, there was still some hope that things might improve. That hope has shifted into a resignation of what is. A surrender into a daily life of trying to find enough money to buy food. mpcoc

Does anyone know where

Does anyone know where Riverbend is?