WWW,
2005 (Archived) U.S. Army Spc. Dandrea
Harris handcuffs a family during a night
raid in Iraq. More often than not the people
are innocent.
Iraq's future
Iraq raids are 'ugly business'
Operation nets innocent people and a few of
the most wanted.
By William Booth / Washington Post
TIKRIT, Iraq -- The roosters were just
beginning to crow in that lost hour before
dawn when Lt. Col. Steve Russell of the
Army's 4th Infantry Division ordered his men
to "go dark" and roll their
Humvees up to the edge of a lone farmhouse
here.
It was quiet, the village shuttered by a
curfew. Desert wind rattled dry grass. One
of the U.S. soldiers in the shadows lit a
match to his cigarette. Then the radio
sputtered, barely audible, a report from the
reconnaissance patrol. "Movement on the
roof."
The troops smashed an M2 Bradley Fighting
Vehicle through the front gates. This is the
unfinished work of the U.S. occupation of
Iraq.
In an operation dubbed Desert Scorpion, U.S.
forces gather intelligence from Iraqis by
day then head out on raiding parties at
night, hunting senior leaders from the
government of former President Saddam
Hussein. The operation began in part to
stanch the string of attacks on U.S. troops
that have killed 17 soldiers since May 1,
according to the Pentagon and news reports.
It is, Russell said, "an ugly business,
but it is the business we are in."
Russell's men come in like SWAT teams,
ramming down compound walls. Children cry,
women are terrified, and men are handcuffed
and led away, sometimes with nylon bags over
their heads.
More often than not they are innocent, or
family members of the targets, or
housekeepers or guards, and later released.
Sometimes, as in last week's capture of Abid
Hamid Mahmud, Saddam's trusted aide, they
are among the most wanted men in Iraq.
By day, U.S. troops put on what one soldier
in Russell's unit called "the smiley
face." By night, during a raid, Lt.
Chris Morris, leader of the scout patrol,
said, "if I see some guy sticking his
head around a wall, and he doesn't show me
his hands, and then he pops out again, he's
likely to get shot."
Here in Saddam's hometown, their efforts
have produced results. In the past week,
they snared not only Mahmud but a senior
bodyguard for Saddam, a former brigadier
general and a nephew of Saddam's who was
caught with a gym bag filled with $800,000
in cash. In a raid at a farmhouse, they
uncovered $8 million in $100 bills and
plastic tubs filled with jewels.
Russell said he believed the money was used
in part to pay for the low-level
"triggermen" who are carrying out
most of the attacks at the behest of former
senior Baathists in hiding. Soldiers have
found weapons caches buried in orchards and
fields, including rocket-propelled grenade
launchers and sniper's rifles, as well as
night-vision goggles.
Yet the hunt also has turned up "dry
holes," Russell said. On Saturday
night, his men stormed a house in Tikrit,
seeking the son of one of the 55 Iraqis who
are most wanted by U.S. officials and whose
pictures have been placed on playing cards.
But the target had left the house three days
before.
U.S. military intelligence officials suspect
former Iraqi authorities are hiding out in
Tikrit and its surrounding villages,
especially the walled town of Auja, where
Saddam and many of his closest aides and
bodyguards were born.
Here, the search is being led by troops from
the 1-22 Battalion, 4th Infantry Division,
out of Fort Hood, Texas, with a Special
Operations group moving throughout the
region.
Their headquarters is a former Saddam palace
on a bluff above the Tigris River. During
the day, Russell and a few of his men make
the rounds, visiting Iraqi police, officials
in the interim government, tribal sheiks,
friendly merchants and others who might be
hearing about possible targets.
On a warm summer evening in Auja, Russell
and his three Humvees pulled up to a mansion
on the Tigris to meet with Sheik Mahmud
Needa, an elderly leader of a large and
powerful tribe. Just so Russell would
understand whom he was dealing with, the
sheik produced an autographed photograph of
the late King Hussein of Jordan. "My
brother," Needa said.
Russell played the courteous commander,
drinking cups of strong Turkish coffee with
Needa. Russell was willing to trade such
things as weapons permits, or assistance for
Auja's police chief, to receive information
and build trust.
Needa's palace overlooks the lands where
Saddam was born. The two are relatives, and
their farms abut each other.
"Everything will be better here,"
Needa told Russell, "when you catch
Saddam Hussein."
Needa said his tribal council members had
decided they would turn over to police
anyone they suspected of plotting to harm
Americans.
Russell told him, "I appreciate the
great respect you have from your people and
your efforts to secure a better Iraq for the
future."
Russell said obtaining the cooperation of
sheiks -- especially in Auja, one of the
towns most hostile to U.S. occupation --
shows that the remnants of Saddam's
government may be facing their final days of
freedom.
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