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Baghdad’s ‘normal life’ still harrowing

Posted: Thursday, November 15, 2007 2:17 PM
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I had been warned. "It's been the quietest I've known it in Baghdad," a work colleague* had called to tell me as I was preparing to leave London.  "For the first time, I have not been woken by bombs or gunfire while I was there."

I was encouraged, but it still didn’t stop me from worrying at a dinner party the night before departing, where the conversation revolved around how hopeless the situation in Iraq seemed and would likely remain.

So I steeled myself as usual for the Baghdad experience. First days are usually the worst. Everything you've conveniently forgotten in order to get through being back home with a semblance of normality suddenly comes flooding back.

But once safely ensconced in the armored cars in the capable hands of our security team upon arrival in Baghdad, it’s like you've never left. Flak jackets on, you settle into an automatic routine of familiar jibes and catch up chat that helps to fill the space of fear which goes with the airport road ride.

The dusty streets whizzed by as we sporadically did U-turns and other odd driving techniques in an effort to make it back to the bureau safely.

This time though, we saw some unfamiliar afternoon images from the darkened windows of our armored car.

VIDEO: Baghdad -- positive signs of life

I actually saw Iraqis on the streets, families eating out at roadside cafes, students hanging out by the university campus entrance, (a spot which had been targeted by suicide bombers in the past). There was even a man selling colorful balloons on the side of the highway. Signs of life in Baghdad I hadn't seen for years.

Weddings and kidnappings
As if to confirm my impressions, I sat down at the Baghdad news desk and was briefed that the bureau was working on a story about how life is getting back to normal.

"Weddings have started up again in big way; there was a recent job fair. People are going out again in the evenings and the street lights even function in some places," I was told.            

Another even more upbeat colleague chimed in. "The other evening Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki had an impromptu stroll along the river banks where restaurants are getting back to business and a famous soccer player was out teaching the kids.

"We are not sure whether it’s because of the U.S. military surge, or the fact that areas have been so ethnically cleansed that they are now safer; or a mixture of both. We don't know how long it'll last, but for now it look likes things are on the up."

Our conversation was interrupted when my colleague turned to the translator as our office cleaner walked in. 

"Tell him I am very sorry about his brother," he said.

"Thank you, we are looking everywhere," was the reply.

"What happened?" I asked. "His brother has just been taken hostage," was the response.

"Months ago another brother was kidnapped and he has never been found. And there isn't much hope for the second one. The family received a phone call saying they had his brother and would kill him, so need to bother looking for him. We think it’s because he is Shiite and still lives in a Sunni neighborhood," was the grim explanation.

"And did you hear about Ali?" the conversation continued.

"Which Ali?" I asked (sometimes it seems like half our staff is named Ali)."Ali from Diyala," was the answer. 

"He was kidnapped, but finally released when his family paid 10 times his salary."

"Oh, I thought you meant Ali from Sadr City," I explained, as I knew he had been tortured last year after a short spell in the hands of a Shiite militia. "No, not that Ali. He left for Sweden."

I took a look at the "life back to normal article" near my computer and noticed it had been written by a former NBC colleague and bureau chief.

"Be lovely to see him again," I said. "We should give him a call."

"What's the point? We can't go out and meet him.""another colleague said, referring to the fact that despite the advances, it was still far too dangerous on the streets of Baghdad for us to go out without a full security entourage.

Normal – Baghdad-style. It just seemed all too familiar.

*Names of NBC News Baghdad staff are not used to protect their identity.

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Comments

Dear Michele, It is nice to know that Baghdad is quieter than it used to be. I think that can be felt as a "false positive" and it may be because of the "surge" in troops. Also the fact that Al-Sadr's militia has not been in action for a while. Whatever the reason it is a step in the right direction. I never thought of weddings being on the rise, but that is wonderful. Celebrations are always great. Although one does receive a dose of reality when you mentioned about the kidnapping, yet thankfully he was released. When you mentioned the name Ali my mind went straight to Richard's friend Ali whom Richard spoke about in his documentary "War Zone Diary" and in his book. I presume he was the one from Sadr City who was tortured for a short time by the Shiite militia. I am happy he is in Sweden. He seemed like a really nice person and did very good work with Richard. Anyway, one still has to be extremely cautious when going out into the streets of Baghdad. Always keep safe Michele, Richard and everyone on the Baghdad Bureau and Middle East Bureaus. Keep safe always!! Peace to all!    
Let me be fair as much as I hate the war. If the surge is able to create enough room for the political solution to start and finish then fine and good. But if it does not lead to the political solution then we are back at square one. Am I hopeing against hope?
I was there and this guy gives little credit to the hard work and sacrifice by good Iraqis and Americans.  People out on the streets during the day is a vast improvement in less than a year and shows just how stable the Iraq Government is becoming.
The statement about "normalcy" being partly the result of ethnic cleansing strikes a chord of truth.  So much is said of "success" based on the reduction of violence and how there is hope for "winning" in Iraq.  It is difficult to imagine a unified Iraq after what has happened and continues, even if on a drastically reduced scale.  How do you forget your dead husband, brother and children? The only "normalcy" evident is the silence of the dead and a tenative peace based on segregation.  No appreciable number of the 2.4 plus Iraqis that fled the country have returned.  To even suggest that life in Bagdad is remotely related to normalcy seems a cruel joke.  

things won't be back to normal for a long time, but at least people are coming out again and doing some normal human activities.
The Bush administration had better use this lull to declare a victory and get out.  The Shiites will remain quiet for only so long.  We've pacified the Sunnis by arming them and al-Qaeda was never the presence the American media made it out to be.  We couldn't get rid of it, the Iraqis are doing that on their own.  But the sectarian war is certainly not over or drawing down.  Both sides are simply waiting for the Americans to leave because they know we must go soon.

We have no decent govt to hand Iraq over to and it's too late to try and build another.  Declare victory and get out while the getting's good.

The military is complaining that the Iraq central govt is not taking advantage of the lull in the fighting.  What did they expect??  Rather it is the United States that better start taking advantage.  Just say we did our job and now the rest up to Iraq and let's get out of there.

Yes, of course Iraq will degenerate to war when we leave, of course Turkey will invade, of course Iran will meddle, of course our victory is hollow when we're crowing about getting Iraq back reasonably close to the way it was before we invaded it--but this is the best we can hope for.

The Iraq govt will miss this window to establish control and I'm afraid we'll miss this window to finally just get out.
I noticed ethnic cleansing will get credit for the relative peace we are experiencing in Iraq at present. I guess when one party needs any rationalization to declare defeat that ethnic cleansing would provide that answer. As a human rights activist, and a peron opposed to this war from the beginning, I must say I see this kind of bait-and-switch tactic all the time. However, I do have to ask the question of those who now throw ethnic cleansing into the debate about improving conditions in Bagdhad: where was your sense of justice when Hussein engaged in the ethnic cleansing of the Marsh Arabs? Where was your sense of justice when Hussein gased Kurds?

What I read in this article could be a very compelling point, a very tragic, true point, but those who embrace that point have no ethical or moral high ground. All around the world "genocide" and "ethnic cleansing" are words we throw out when it suits our agenda politically. When we need political trump cards we throw those words into debate, but they are just words because we put no action behind them. Baghdad is still unsafe or if it is safe it's because of ethnic cleansing. Sounds to me as though we better be fully funding a continued presence there and further increasing troop strengths to prevent the ethnic cleansing. After all, THAT is a mandate we agreed to when we signed the UN Declaration on Genocide.


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