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Iraqi Army Soldier: A story of common courage
Multi- National Corps - Iraq ^ | July 6, 2004 | Press release #040705b

Posted on 07/07/2004 8:31:23 AM PDT by Chieftain

Iraqi Army Soldier: A story of common courage

BAGHDAD, Iraq - A little more than a year ago, shortly before President Bush flew onto the USS Lincoln off the coast of San Diego and announced the end to the war in Iraq, Soldiers of the old Iraqi Army were already on their way home resigned to defeat and an uncertain future.

Also uncertain has been the understanding of exactly what Soldiers in the new Iraqi Army have gone through since that time. There are no stories of Iraqis with medals pinned to their chests like armor plating. There are no stories of courageous actions of Soldiers taking hills and enemy machinegun positions. The true story of Iraq is that of a nation that will one day do well by that standard. And stories like that of Iraqi Army Lt. Col. Ahmed Lutfi Ahmed Raheem - an officer in this country's newly rebuilt army.

Ahmed hasn't stormed any enemy positions lately. But he shows up for work everyday, like a lot of Soldiers in this army. And in this country, being typical is a standard that "courageous" never met.

For Ahmed, the decision to serve his country again began more than a year ago - 7,731 miles, and three weeks before the announcement on the USS Lincoln.

"April 9, 2003," Ahmed said. "I don't forget this day."

"I was on my way home to Baghdad after my brigadier boss had told me the war was over and to go home," Ahmed said, describing his last moments as a major in the old Iraqi Army air defense unit he had been with for nine years. "He said it was an order," he added.

"So I walked home from our station in Al Hillah, south of Baghdad, but I didn't change my clothes," Ahmed said, "And I came to a Marine checkpoint on a bridge in Baghdad. And I still had my uniform on and the Marine sergeant stopped me ..."

"'Where are you going?' he asked me," Ahmed said in his accented but surprisingly good English.

"And I tell him, 'I am a major in the Iraqi Army and I was ordered to go to my house'" Ahmed said, finishing the backdrop to a life-defining moment he had not seen coming; and on what was supposed to be just a long 50-plus mile walk home to his wife and five children.

The encounter would prove to be a pivotal one for the military veteran because for the next two anxious minutes, Ahmed went through what must be emotions impossible to describe to someone who has never known he was about to die. It was more the result of the 33-year-old's lifetime of experience with the ways of Saddam Hussein.

Ahmed, though, was actually two minutes away from a rebirth of sorts.

"He looked at me for a while and I thought he was going to kill me," Ahmed said. "But he didn't kill me," he added.

"Instead he came to the position of attention and saluted me as an officer," Ahmed said, "And said, 'Sir you can go.'"

"I took a few steps and began to cry," he said, "Because I think, 'Why do I fight these people for ten years?

"This moment changed me from the inside," Ahmed said. "What he did was kill me without pistol. He killed the old major in the Iraqi Army who fought America from 1993 to 2003.”

Ahmed was advised by a U.S. Army officer to apply at the recruiting center in Baghdad and was ushered into the army a short time later as an "officer candidate." After training, he was commissioned a lieutenant colonel in the new army having made the cut for promotion from his former rank in the old army.

Ahmed's story, though, doesn't end there. The now 34-year-old engineering graduate from the University of Baghdad and career Iraqi Army officer has since endured great personal tests in his first year of service in the new Iraqi Army that have reaffirmed his commitment to serving his country.

In February 2004, Ahmed, a Soldier whose face belies his real age with the tell-tale signs of a man who has lived a hard life, was at the Baghdad Recruiting Center when a blast killed more than 47 earlier in the year. The psychological toll was great, but he came back.

Several weeks ago, he saw the aftermath of the latest blast at the center only minutes after the attack that left another 35 dead. The wounds were re-opened, but he came back.

And a little more than a month-and-a-half ago on May 15, he was kidnapped by members of the Shiite Muslim Cleric, Moqtada al-Sadr's Mehdi army on a bridge in Baghdad when a vehicle filled with five armed men forced his truck to the side of the road before forcing him into the front seat of their car for transport to a hidden safe-house.

Ahmed was beaten and pistol-whipped before being knocked unconscious only to be interrogated later by the insurgent terrorists for his association with the new Iraqi Army and the Coalition.

Ultimately he was told not to work with the Coalition anymore and released by the militiamen, but not before they stripped him of his uniform, weapon, cell phone and the vehicle that had been issued to him by the Coalition.

"I said, 'Sir I lost my pistol, my mobile, my uniform and my vehicle,'" Ahmed said, describing the humiliating moment he faced upon returning to the OST headquarters later that day to report the catastrophe.

He had begged the militiamen to kill him thinking the loss of equipment was the end of his military career. But when the Coalition officer Ahmed worked with found out that everything he had been issued had been lost that morning, the officer's response surprised Ahmed.

"And when he saw me crying," Ahmed said, "He stood up and gave me another key to a vehicle. And gave me another pistol and another mobile phone."

"'Don't worry, we trust you,' he said," Ahmed said.

"I really love America for this," Ahmed said. "This is what I wish I could tell every Iraqi."

Ahmed, like so many others in the Iraqi Security Forces that show up for work everyday, knows that security and protection from the individuals bent on denying Iraq its chance at freedom is paramount to his country's future.

"I want to provide security to my country," Ahmed said.

"Saddam Hussein didn't just destroy the buildings and the streets," Ahmed said. "He destroyed something inside of all Iraqis. He destroyed the truth and something inside us.

"You know what Saddam Hussein did inside us from 1979 to 2003?" asks Ahmed. "He was president of Iraq for 25 years. In this period of time what did he teach Iraq? What did Saddam teach Iraq? Fight. Take your rifle. Take your pistol and fight. Fight, fight. Fight for what? Eight years with Iran - fight for nothing. And he told us to go to Kuwait and steal. And he laughed. He taught the people how to steal. He made people forget Islam and the Al Koran.

"So now inside of all Iraqis it is just to 'fight,'" Ahmed said. "And now we're fighting between us.

"I do my best, though," Ahmed said. "I do my best to protect my country and to give my country its security."

And he does one more thing that doesn't earn medals in any army on earth: he continues to show up for work.

And in the face of suicide bombings, targetings, and abductions and beatings, in Iraq, this is just the typical story common to all the 230,000-plus Iraqi Army Soldiers and police service officers choosing to serve their country.

It's not a story of the courageous actions of Soldiers storming enemy machinegun positions. And there are no medals awarded for the simple act. But it's a typical story of valor in this country.

And a standard that courage never met.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News
KEYWORDS: force; goodnews; iraq; iraqiarmy; multinational
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You'll never see this in the lamestream press.
1 posted on 07/07/2004 8:31:28 AM PDT by Chieftain
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To: OXENinFLA; Taxman; Warrior Nurse; Howlin; TexasCowboy; tet68; 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub; ken5050; ...

News from Iraq PING!


2 posted on 07/07/2004 8:33:34 AM PDT by Chieftain ('W' in '04!)
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To: Chieftain

I agree! Too bad.


3 posted on 07/07/2004 8:39:04 AM PDT by Sunshine Sister
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To: Chieftain

Damn the mainstream media for not telling these stories. An American salutes an Iraqi officer who has been ordered home! How much does that mean to such a man? What does that say about the U.S. military in general? Instead, every little thing that makes us look bad is reported over and over. /rant

Although, inwardly, I'm still seething.


4 posted on 07/07/2004 8:42:30 AM PDT by stylin_geek (Koffi: 0, G.W. Bush: (I lost count))
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To: Chieftain

Bump.


5 posted on 07/07/2004 8:44:20 AM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion (Pseudo objective journalism is the noise and smoke brigade of the Democratic Party.)
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To: Chieftain

Dang, I hate it when I get tears in my eyes...awesome story, I just wish more Americans could read it.


6 posted on 07/07/2004 8:45:37 AM PDT by el_texicano (Liberals are the real Mind-Numbed Robots - No Brains, No Guts, No Character...Just hate)
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To: Chieftain

Great Post!


7 posted on 07/07/2004 8:46:31 AM PDT by agincourt1415 (Liberals - ignorance in action)
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To: stylin_geek
"Damn the mainstream media for not telling these stories."

Double damn, with a pox on top...

8 posted on 07/07/2004 8:53:21 AM PDT by eureka! (May karma come back to the presstitutes and Rats in a material way.....)
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To: Chieftain

Soldiers live in an existence apart from whoever happens to be issuing orders at the top. Most soldiers give their allegiance first to their country, then in varying degrees, to the current leaders. Some leaders, they would follow into the jaws of Hell, while other leaders, they privately wish would go to Hell.

But the military, being what it is, remains subservient to the titular head of state, obeying either with alacricy for the leader they genuinely like, or sullenly and hesitantly for the fake and phony they intuitively recognize as being without authority.

Only Saddam's elite Republican Guard really believed their allegiance was to Saddam alone. The rest of the Iraqi army followed reluctantly, more out of fear than faith.


9 posted on 07/07/2004 9:00:39 AM PDT by alloysteel
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To: alloysteel

bump


10 posted on 07/07/2004 9:33:07 AM PDT by crusty codger (Arrogance often covers a minimum of intelligence)
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To: Chieftain

When I see these articles on FR I will copy and paste into an email and send it to a select mailing list (people who don't necessarily read FR consistently), with the source cited. I believe they get spread farther than I would know through the web of email forwarding.

It's my small contribution to spreading this suppressed information.


11 posted on 07/07/2004 10:25:16 AM PDT by aught-6
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To: aught-6
I believe they get spread farther than I would know through the web of email forwarding.

That is my campaign also. I have relatives and some friends who are amoung the sheeple. I send them these stories with the source link so they too can ponder why the lamestream depressed aren't covering these stories.

12 posted on 07/07/2004 10:47:33 AM PDT by Chieftain ('W' in '04!)
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To: stylin_geek; All
Seething is right. An American Marine sergent saluting a defeated Iraqi major in a show of respect that simply broke the man down - semper Fi Marine. Damn good show! Like the reporter was reputed to say, "Where do they get guys like this?"

And then the major, after being humiliated by thugs is expecting to be treated by the Americans like Saddam would treat him and what he gets instead is respect and a vote of confidence.

Now that is enough to make all Americans puff out their chest with pride. We seek to redeem, not destroy. To lift up, not grind underfoot. (Just don't let us catch you trying to subject someone else).

Given enough time for the Iraqi people to be exposed to this type of treatment and they will begin to realize what it means to be FREE. May God grant them that experience.

13 posted on 07/07/2004 10:54:33 AM PDT by el_texicano (Liberals are the real Mind-Numbed Robots - No Brains, No Guts, No Character...Just hate)
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To: Chieftain

Damn! That is one powerful story! Great find and thanks for the post, Chieftain.

Send it to Fox News -- send it to Ollie North! Gotta be a way to get that story (and the many others like it out there for other Americans and our Allies to see!


14 posted on 07/07/2004 12:01:18 PM PDT by Taxman (So that the beautiful pressure does not diminish!)
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To: Taxman; OllieNorth
Send it to Fox News -- send it to Ollie North!

Will do!

Hello Ollie, did you get that? I hope you can do a feature on it real soon.

15 posted on 07/07/2004 12:28:28 PM PDT by Chieftain ('W' in '04!)
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To: Chieftain; WKB; onyx; bourbon; wardaddy; Magnolia; Yudan

Bumping, and passing along this
great story to a few FRiends.


16 posted on 07/07/2004 12:44:46 PM PDT by dixiechick2000 (President Bush is a mensch in cowboy boots.)
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To: Chieftain

Great post... thanks.


17 posted on 07/07/2004 1:09:34 PM PDT by Interesting Times (ABCNNBCBS -- yesterday's news.)
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To: el_texicano
An American Marine sergent saluting a defeated Iraqi major in a show of respect that
simply broke the man down - semper Fi Marine. Damn good show!


That's in the same rank with the US military (Army?) group that defused the possible
riot next to a holy site during the drive north to Baghdad.

The film footage of the leader haveing the presence of mind (and throwing the dice!)
to tell his soldiers to "take a knee" and smile was a classic moment of professional soldiering.

It was incredible training to keep peace in a situation like that, going on short sleep for days.
18 posted on 07/07/2004 1:17:07 PM PDT by VOA
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To: Chieftain
Iraqi Army Soldier: A story of common courage

It may be asking too much...
but it will be incredible if there is fairly free and peaceful Iraq...
and we see veteran reunions in Bahgdad (and other spots) in another 10 years or so.

I suspect there will be some pretty incredible "now it can be told" stories.
19 posted on 07/07/2004 1:19:05 PM PDT by VOA
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To: Ragtime Cowgirl; ALOHA RONNIE

pardon the ping...thought this might be of interest


20 posted on 07/07/2004 1:36:04 PM PDT by VOA
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