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“WHY can’t we live together in peace?”, read the
graffiti written on a wall in Fallujah by a weary American soldier. Next to
it a colleague had scrawled: “Die ragheads die!”
The US military has struggled to improve the cultural sensitivity of its troops
— often raw youths on their first trip abroad — since the start
of the occupation when the first soldiers to hit Baghdad slipped a Stars and
Stripes over the head of Saddam Hussein’s statue. Jittery superiors swiftly
ordered them to replace it with an Iraqi flag.
Long before the Abu Ghraib scandal, there were numerous examples of brutality
and insensitivity by US troops to match tales of their courage. Sometimes it
was purely a lack of local knowledge: a minor riot ensued when dogs —
considered unclean in the Muslim world — were used to sniff staff entering
the Oil Ministry.
At other times it was the crudeness of combat troops thrown abruptly into a
peacekeeping role. “I don’t know how many women I’ve seen
in labour. These people s*** out kids like turds,” a National Guardsman
muttered to The Times on a patrol in Baghdad.
That contempt was quickly detected by the population, which was dismayed to
see US forces obsessed with their own protection and doing little to halt the
breakdown of law and order.
Much of the damage was done early on. Battle-hardened troops launched house
raids that horrified Iraqis, who jealously guard their privacy and the modesty
of their women. Doors were kicked in. Money and valuables were reported stolen.
But little has changed. “I’m a door kicker-inner,” one young
Marine blurted out in Fallujah last month, to the dismay of his superiors.
The Marines have tried to teach their men some of the language. But most US
soldiers know only how to say “move on” or “slow down”.
They expect Iraqis to understand their hand signals — a bunched fist meaning
“stop”, a hand waved palm-down meaning “slow” —
and will frequently shoot to kill if confused drivers fail to respond.
The intensifying violence has only increased the distance between US troops
and ordinary Iraqis, with ever-higher walls being built around bases, and US
military vehicles warning drivers they will be shot if they come close. Even
the Iraqi shops on US bases have closed for fear of rebel infiltration.