It was the middle of May in 2008, with Bush as president, when my unit deployed. After spending two weeks in Kuwait we moved to FOB Freedom, which is no more, in the Green Zone. We just missed the change from 15 to 12 month deployments to Iraq by a little more than a month. Nearing the one year mark feels both like it came too slow and too fast.
On a daily basis the residents of the fertile crescent find solutions to problems at hand with unique engineering skill and ingenuity. The question could be asked "why can't they find a solution to the problems of violence?" My speculation is that the everyday victim is an everyday person busy like the rest with everyday issues. The perpetrators work in numbers just enough to make a spectacle. And the people with money and power are only motivated to serve their own greed oriented interest. So politics becomes like the axiom for philosophy, "...it bakes no bread."
Another day's work, same as the last, for as far as history can see.
Parking Downtown
View of an Iraqi flag through a gun port atop an IP station.
Little ones watching over even littler ones.
What can I say? Everyday I see women working in their black cloaks in the summer sun, herding, reaping, and tending to animals, children, and crops as they have in this part of the world for thousands of years. I might feel a certain way but where does my opinion fall? Nowhere that could ever change anything, and that's what I have to tell myself when I get the wandering urge to act.
Young girls walking toward the middle of town. Which are the ones who end up in the fields, and which are not?
One of those accidental photos, I was set up to take her picture as we passed, but as I did the bike passed, and we passed the stationary man on the corner so I got all three.
Young girls, one with something in her hand that looks like it was made at school.
Almost a discarded shot. For some reason the automatic flash went off, but in spite of the flood of light on the filthy window ruining the shot the expressions on the young faces is priceless.
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
May Days Photo Backlog 3
Still behind by a few days. I've been getting more pictures but less time to mess around on the computer. These are from a couple days ago.
I have plenty of Camel pictures at this point.
An Iraqi Mother
Tobacco
Sheep House
Kids and Trash
MPs and IPs
I have plenty of Camel pictures at this point.
An Iraqi Mother
Tobacco
Sheep House
Kids and Trash
MPs and IPs
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
The Petro-Euro
Watched a BBC documentary, searched the internet afterwards:
Essentially Saddam Hussein was about to begin trading with Europe in Petro-euros (began talks in 2000) as he could not trade with us due to embargoes, and Europe was all too willing. Iraq, which has as much oil as Saudi Arabia and was our enemy was and remains poor while OPEC countries remain allies and make profits. It's the real reason for the rift between the USA and Europe that formed while Bush was president. Never heard of this angle till today, yet I find the Internet over-flowing with petrodollar vs. petroeuro info.
"Petrodollar Warfare" by William R. Clark or click:
http://www.tacomapjh.org/petrodollartheories.htm beneath this link is a synopsis at the beginning of the site.
From the site: A small but significant number of observers consider the issues around which the newspaper discussions of the Iraq war revolve to be nothing but a screen that hides other causes fueling the present conflict -- causes that require some knowledge of economics to grasp. According to this view, a leading motive of the U.S. in the Iraq war -- perhaps the fundamental underlying motive, even more than the control of the oil itself -- is an attempt to preserve the U.S. dollar as the leading oil trading currency, on the view that the institution of petrodollars, as these have developed since the early 1970s (US agreement with OPEC to trade only in US Dollars), is fundamental to well-being of the U.S. economy. A corollary of this view is that the real underlying antagonism in the conflict is not a military or geopolitical or national-security issue between the U.S. and Iraq, but rather an economic struggle between the U.S. and Europe.
Where have I been? This is something the whole financial/government/oil world seems to know about and we lowly peasants who fight and shed blood know little or nothing of the bigger picture. Implications that the world's competitions in exclusive economic circles are the real cause of various states of unrest around the world is something many have suspected and felt. But I never couldn't put my finger on something that seemed real. Most conspiracy theories tend to sound outlandish but the plot in this global version seems plausible.
Essentially Saddam Hussein was about to begin trading with Europe in Petro-euros (began talks in 2000) as he could not trade with us due to embargoes, and Europe was all too willing. Iraq, which has as much oil as Saudi Arabia and was our enemy was and remains poor while OPEC countries remain allies and make profits. It's the real reason for the rift between the USA and Europe that formed while Bush was president. Never heard of this angle till today, yet I find the Internet over-flowing with petrodollar vs. petroeuro info.
"Petrodollar Warfare" by William R. Clark or click:
http://www.tacomapjh.org/petrodollartheories.htm beneath this link is a synopsis at the beginning of the site.
From the site: A small but significant number of observers consider the issues around which the newspaper discussions of the Iraq war revolve to be nothing but a screen that hides other causes fueling the present conflict -- causes that require some knowledge of economics to grasp. According to this view, a leading motive of the U.S. in the Iraq war -- perhaps the fundamental underlying motive, even more than the control of the oil itself -- is an attempt to preserve the U.S. dollar as the leading oil trading currency, on the view that the institution of petrodollars, as these have developed since the early 1970s (US agreement with OPEC to trade only in US Dollars), is fundamental to well-being of the U.S. economy. A corollary of this view is that the real underlying antagonism in the conflict is not a military or geopolitical or national-security issue between the U.S. and Iraq, but rather an economic struggle between the U.S. and Europe.
Where have I been? This is something the whole financial/government/oil world seems to know about and we lowly peasants who fight and shed blood know little or nothing of the bigger picture. Implications that the world's competitions in exclusive economic circles are the real cause of various states of unrest around the world is something many have suspected and felt. But I never couldn't put my finger on something that seemed real. Most conspiracy theories tend to sound outlandish but the plot in this global version seems plausible.
Sunday, May 10, 2009
May Days Photo Backlog 2
Me in the truck, before we loaded weapons and left Camp Echo. The stop sign is for the gunner to warn drivers.
"Land Nav"
Land
A Iraqi mother, on Mother's Day.
Another Mother.
A Local Iraqi Policeman
Kids Barbwire and Flowers
Market Place Variety
Wish I could say all Iraqis were as happy to see us as some of the kids tend to be, almost without fail.
"Land Nav"
Land
A Iraqi mother, on Mother's Day.
Another Mother.
A Local Iraqi Policeman
Kids Barbwire and Flowers
Market Place Variety
Wish I could say all Iraqis were as happy to see us as some of the kids tend to be, almost without fail.
May Days Photo Backlog 1
Been away from the computer for a few days. It's been in my room where it always is only it's been busy with a temperamental Itunes app download that still hasn't completed. The Internet here at Camp Echo functions with various speeds and reliability. It will be out for a day or an hour randomly, so a download that takes 12 hours takes a huge amount of patience, and more than 12 hours. Also if I go to open my e-mail or something the download will cancel and I have to start over, as I have had to anyway. In spite of computer issues I've still been taking pictures. I have a backlog of bloggable photos, so I'll get right to it.
From atop an IP station near Diwaniya.
Passing by this same corner has netted me several good pictures just out of coincidence.
US troops, just passing through, for over six years now.
Shells of vehicles near roads are a common sight. I have to wonder what happened, abandoned and decayed after stripped or war related?
Being here feels otherworldly sometimes, but there are things that seem to common to everyone everywhere. Breakdowns, a universal problem.
Hard to convey distance in a photograph, but this girls was far off on a hill. I zoomed in and captured her. From an empty desert alone, to my blog on the WWW.
I will see a local side road or intersection coming up, and I'll ready with only a second to grab whatever is up the street, not even knowing if anything is worth shooting. This is the 1 out of 6 that I found interesting. Not sure why, I just like it.
This one has composition. It's luck. Bouncing and rumbling along I have no control over what most photographers do, so it becomes a decision of what to keep and recognizing what has value rather than what angle or approach to take with the subject.
From atop an IP station near Diwaniya.
Passing by this same corner has netted me several good pictures just out of coincidence.
US troops, just passing through, for over six years now.
Shells of vehicles near roads are a common sight. I have to wonder what happened, abandoned and decayed after stripped or war related?
Being here feels otherworldly sometimes, but there are things that seem to common to everyone everywhere. Breakdowns, a universal problem.
Hard to convey distance in a photograph, but this girls was far off on a hill. I zoomed in and captured her. From an empty desert alone, to my blog on the WWW.
I will see a local side road or intersection coming up, and I'll ready with only a second to grab whatever is up the street, not even knowing if anything is worth shooting. This is the 1 out of 6 that I found interesting. Not sure why, I just like it.
This one has composition. It's luck. Bouncing and rumbling along I have no control over what most photographers do, so it becomes a decision of what to keep and recognizing what has value rather than what angle or approach to take with the subject.
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
Four Days of Iraqi Haze
It's been hot humid and hazy for four or so days now. Each day the air just gets thicker with dust and moisture. It feels like the sky is on the verge of raining mud. In spite of the hovering gloom I got several photos of people smiling today, just by chance.
Big smile #1.
A pair of smiles. Reassuring to see someone stop and play with a cute kid just for the sake of interaction. I'm amazed sometimes at all the adults walking by all the street kids without second glance.
Haze layers in the distance.
Smile #4.
Taking out the trash.
A small fan club.
Turning a corner.
Big smile #1.
A pair of smiles. Reassuring to see someone stop and play with a cute kid just for the sake of interaction. I'm amazed sometimes at all the adults walking by all the street kids without second glance.
Haze layers in the distance.
Smile #4.
Taking out the trash.
A small fan club.
Turning a corner.
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
Iraq: US Out of Cities By June 30
Words: ROBERT H. REID, Associated Press Writer
Photos: Versa Vice
BAGHDAD -- Iraq's government Monday ruled out allowing U.S. combat troops to remain in Iraqi cities after the June 30 deadline for their withdrawal, despite concern that Iraqi forces cannot cope with the security challenge following a resurgence of bombings in recent weeks. Asking U.S. forces to stay in the cities, including volatile Mosul in the north, would be embarrassing for Iraq's prime minister, who has staked his political future on claims that the country has turned the corner in the war against Sunni and Shiite extremists. The departure of heavily armed combat troops from bases inside the cities is important psychologically to many Iraqis, who are eager to regain control of their country after six years of war and U.S. military occupation.
U.S. officials played down the Iraqi decision, with Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman saying it's up to the Iraqi government to request an extension of the U.S. presence in the cities and "we intend to fully abide by" terms of the security agreement.
The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen, told reporters Monday that violence had not risen to a level that would force a change in the withdrawal schedule.
Last month, however, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, Gen. Raymond Odierno, said he was worried that Iraqi forces won't be ready to assume full responsibility for Mosul by the end of June. Privately, some U.S. officers fear the Iraqis may lose control of Mosul within a few months after American forces pull out of Iraq's third largest city, where al-Qaida and other Sunni militants remain active.
The U.S.-Iraq security agreement that took effect this year calls for American combat troops to leave urban areas by the end of June, with all U.S. forces out of the country by the end of 2011. But a series of high-profile bombings has raised questions whether Iraqi forces can assume more security responsibilities, especially in Mosul. Nationwide, at least 451 people were killed in political violence last month, compared with 335 in March, 288 in February and 242 in January, according to an Associated Press tally. Even in Baghdad, where violence is down sharply from levels of two years ago, attacks are continuing.
On Monday, two car bombs exploded almost simultaneously near the Oil Ministry and a police academy, killing at least three people and wounding eight. Although those casualties were relatively low, the attack was significant because it occurred in a sensitive, well-guarded area in the heart of the Iraqi capital. The security agreement allows Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to request an extension of the deadlines if he feels Iraqi forces need help. But the prime minister's spokesman said the withdrawal deadlines, including the June 30 date, were "non-extendable."
"These dates cannot be extended and this is consistent with the transfer and handover of responsibility to Iraqi security forces," spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said in a statement.
Kurdish officials would prefer to keep U.S. troops in Mosul after the deadline. "I have doubts about security and stability in Mosul," Kurdish politician Saadi Ahmed Pera said. "Therefore, U.S forces should stay in Mosul until all the pending problems among political groups in the city are solved." However, many other key Iraqi politicians, including the newly elected leadership in Mosul, oppose keeping U.S. combat troops in urban areas after the June deadline. Al-Maliki, a Shiite, needs the support of the Sunni leadership in Mosul as he prepares for national elections by the end of the year.
The new governor of the Mosul area told the AP on Monday that the departure of U.S. troops from the city will actually reduce violence, since much of it is directed at the Americans. "A U.S. withdrawal will reduce the number of targets," Gov. Atheel al-Nujaifi said. "We believe it's important for U.S. troops to stay in camps outside the cities to provide help only if needed." The requirement to leave the cities applies only to combat troops and not to trainers, advisers and others in noncombat roles. The agreement does not preclude combat soldiers from patrolling in Baghdad, Mosul and other cities from bases outside the city limits.
But prominent Shiite lawmaker Abbas al-Bayati said extending the June 30 deadline would "send the wrong signal to the Iraqi people" that the Americans might remain in the country indefinitely. "Thus both sides must stand together to fulfill the withdrawal timetable," he said. U.S. combat troops largely pulled out of many cities in 2005 and 2006 but returned a year later as part of the U.S. troop surge that was designed to protect civilians from Shiite and Sunni extremists living in their neighborhoods.
This time, U.S. and Iraqi officials are gambling that Iraqi security forces are better trained and equipped to prevent the return of extremists than they were years ago. Extending the deadline would also call into question al-Maliki's claim that his government has set the country on the road to stability -- despite the occasional spike in violence.
On Monday, al-Maliki told an audience in Paris that he would not allow Iraq to be used as a "base for any terrorist organization" and that the country was ready for foreign investment. Nevertheless, U.S. officials believe security in Iraq remains fragile because the various religious and ethnic groups have still not agreed on power-sharing arrangements necessary for long-term stability.
___
Associated Press Writers Mazin Yahya in Baghdad and Qassim Abdul-Zahra and Jenny Barchfield in Paris contributed to this report.
Photos: Versa Vice
BAGHDAD -- Iraq's government Monday ruled out allowing U.S. combat troops to remain in Iraqi cities after the June 30 deadline for their withdrawal, despite concern that Iraqi forces cannot cope with the security challenge following a resurgence of bombings in recent weeks. Asking U.S. forces to stay in the cities, including volatile Mosul in the north, would be embarrassing for Iraq's prime minister, who has staked his political future on claims that the country has turned the corner in the war against Sunni and Shiite extremists. The departure of heavily armed combat troops from bases inside the cities is important psychologically to many Iraqis, who are eager to regain control of their country after six years of war and U.S. military occupation.
U.S. officials played down the Iraqi decision, with Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman saying it's up to the Iraqi government to request an extension of the U.S. presence in the cities and "we intend to fully abide by" terms of the security agreement.
The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen, told reporters Monday that violence had not risen to a level that would force a change in the withdrawal schedule.
Last month, however, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, Gen. Raymond Odierno, said he was worried that Iraqi forces won't be ready to assume full responsibility for Mosul by the end of June. Privately, some U.S. officers fear the Iraqis may lose control of Mosul within a few months after American forces pull out of Iraq's third largest city, where al-Qaida and other Sunni militants remain active.
The U.S.-Iraq security agreement that took effect this year calls for American combat troops to leave urban areas by the end of June, with all U.S. forces out of the country by the end of 2011. But a series of high-profile bombings has raised questions whether Iraqi forces can assume more security responsibilities, especially in Mosul. Nationwide, at least 451 people were killed in political violence last month, compared with 335 in March, 288 in February and 242 in January, according to an Associated Press tally. Even in Baghdad, where violence is down sharply from levels of two years ago, attacks are continuing.
On Monday, two car bombs exploded almost simultaneously near the Oil Ministry and a police academy, killing at least three people and wounding eight. Although those casualties were relatively low, the attack was significant because it occurred in a sensitive, well-guarded area in the heart of the Iraqi capital. The security agreement allows Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to request an extension of the deadlines if he feels Iraqi forces need help. But the prime minister's spokesman said the withdrawal deadlines, including the June 30 date, were "non-extendable."
"These dates cannot be extended and this is consistent with the transfer and handover of responsibility to Iraqi security forces," spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said in a statement.
Kurdish officials would prefer to keep U.S. troops in Mosul after the deadline. "I have doubts about security and stability in Mosul," Kurdish politician Saadi Ahmed Pera said. "Therefore, U.S forces should stay in Mosul until all the pending problems among political groups in the city are solved." However, many other key Iraqi politicians, including the newly elected leadership in Mosul, oppose keeping U.S. combat troops in urban areas after the June deadline. Al-Maliki, a Shiite, needs the support of the Sunni leadership in Mosul as he prepares for national elections by the end of the year.
The new governor of the Mosul area told the AP on Monday that the departure of U.S. troops from the city will actually reduce violence, since much of it is directed at the Americans. "A U.S. withdrawal will reduce the number of targets," Gov. Atheel al-Nujaifi said. "We believe it's important for U.S. troops to stay in camps outside the cities to provide help only if needed." The requirement to leave the cities applies only to combat troops and not to trainers, advisers and others in noncombat roles. The agreement does not preclude combat soldiers from patrolling in Baghdad, Mosul and other cities from bases outside the city limits.
But prominent Shiite lawmaker Abbas al-Bayati said extending the June 30 deadline would "send the wrong signal to the Iraqi people" that the Americans might remain in the country indefinitely. "Thus both sides must stand together to fulfill the withdrawal timetable," he said. U.S. combat troops largely pulled out of many cities in 2005 and 2006 but returned a year later as part of the U.S. troop surge that was designed to protect civilians from Shiite and Sunni extremists living in their neighborhoods.
This time, U.S. and Iraqi officials are gambling that Iraqi security forces are better trained and equipped to prevent the return of extremists than they were years ago. Extending the deadline would also call into question al-Maliki's claim that his government has set the country on the road to stability -- despite the occasional spike in violence.
On Monday, al-Maliki told an audience in Paris that he would not allow Iraq to be used as a "base for any terrorist organization" and that the country was ready for foreign investment. Nevertheless, U.S. officials believe security in Iraq remains fragile because the various religious and ethnic groups have still not agreed on power-sharing arrangements necessary for long-term stability.
___
Associated Press Writers Mazin Yahya in Baghdad and Qassim Abdul-Zahra and Jenny Barchfield in Paris contributed to this report.
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