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The choice for Iraq's rag-tag army: be killed by the US or by Saddam
guardian ^ | 2/8/03

Posted on 02/07/2003 5:01:47 PM PST by knak

For Private Abass Shomail the war in Iraq ended before it had even begun. Two days ago Abass slipped away from his sentry post and started running in darkness across the muddy frontline. He stumbled past the newly dug trenches designed to protect Iraq's conscript army from American bombardment.

He kept going. Eventually he found himself in a rolling landscape of green hills and pine trees, the Kurdish self-rule enclave in the north of Iraq. Abass was the first deserter from the Iraqi military to cross into Kurdistan for several months. Yesterday, in an interview with the Guardian, he gave a unique insight into the condition of the Iraqi army on the eve of an imminent and massive US attack.

Though defectors are a notoriously unreliable source of intelligence, the fact that he had crossed the border into Kurdish-held territory only days earlier, together with his lowly rank and the lack of any apparent incentives to embellish his story, all point to the credibility of his account.

Morale was very low, he said, both among his fellow conscripts and among civilians. "We want America to attack because of the bad situation in our country. But we don't want America to launch air strikes against Iraqi soldiers because we are forced to shoot and defend. We are also victims in this situation."

Abass was yesterday in custody in Chamchamal, a small Kurdish smuggling town overlooked by low green hills and Iraqi army posts. From the edge of town, the silhouettes of Iraqi soldiers could be seen peering out from their bunkers across the fields.

The Kurdish fighters or pershmerga ("those who do not fear death") who took Abbas into custody interrogated him for a day to establish he was not a spy. Yesterday he was still wearing his olive Iraqi army overcoat and woolly balaclava. His new home was a small heated room with a TV set tuned to the Arabic station al-Jazeera.

Conditions back in the Iraqi trenches were not so good, he said. "We have two blankets for every soldier, but they are very thin and don't keep us warm. The officers beat us. And the food is disgusting. I'm only paid 50 dinars [about £3] a month."

What would have happened if he had been caught trying to run away? "I would have been executed."

As the US military puts the finishing touches to its invasion plan, it is clear that Saddam Hussein's recruits and volunteers face bleak choices in the coming weeks. If they remain in their positions they run the risk of being pulverised by American missiles. But if they try to surrender they risk being shot.

At the moment it is hard to know which is the greater danger. "There are two groups in the Iraqi army," Abbas said.

"One is made up of soldiers like me. The other is the Republican Guard. The special guard will support and defend Saddam. The ordinary soldiers and many of the commanders will surrender."

But for the moment Iraq's military commanders are making frantic preparations for a battle whose outcome nobody seems to doubt. Earlier this week, troops manoeuvred four enormous Russian-made Katyusha rocket launchers into position behind the frontline at Chamchamal.

Some 1,500 Iraqi reinforcements have just arrived. Dozens of tanks have been concealed in trenches, Abbas confirmed, as well as anti-aircraft batteries.

"The Katyusha rocket launchers are not there for aesthetic reasons," the town's Kurdish head of security, Adel Muhammad, joked. "But we have our undercover agents. They tell us that when America attacks the Iraqi soldiers will surrender."

Officials from the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, the party that controls the valleys and mountains around the town of Sulaymaniyah, say they are not expecting a pre-emptive Iraqi offensive in the north, given the huge US invasion force assembling in Kuwait.

But President Saddam's record against the Kurds is brutal. Nothing can be ruled out. And the disconcerting possibility remains that, hidden among the ordnance may be artillery shells fitted with chemical weapons.

Every day hundreds of Kurds cross an Iraqi checkpoint to the oil-rich government-controlled town of Kirkuk, a 30-minute drive away. They bring Kent cigarettes smuggled in from Turkey. They return with plastic containers full of paraffin.

"We have to bribe the Iraqi guards $2 each time we cross," Hersh Abdul Karim, an 18-year-old smuggler, said.

The soldiers Abbas left behind, meanwhile, sit in their hilltop bunkers, pondering an unenviable fate. "We are all very tired," Abbas said. "I haven't heard of Tony Blair. But if George Bush wants to give us freedom then we will welcome it."


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: warlist
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1 posted on 02/07/2003 5:01:47 PM PST by knak
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To: knak
Accordingly, if even semi-true---"all your base belong to us."
2 posted on 02/07/2003 5:06:15 PM PST by prognostigaator
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To: knak
As "Support Free Republic" genuflexes on almost every post: 'Interesting'.
3 posted on 02/07/2003 5:07:12 PM PST by ApesForEvolution (This space for rent (Not accepting bids from the United Nations))
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To: prognostigaator
That would be "all your base are belong to us".
4 posted on 02/07/2003 5:07:55 PM PST by ApesForEvolution (This space for rent (Not accepting bids from the United Nations))
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To: knak
. Dozens of tanks have been concealed in trenches,

They've learned nothing.
5 posted on 02/07/2003 5:10:10 PM PST by tet68
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To: tet68
They've learned nothing. Good, that's just the way we want them.
6 posted on 02/07/2003 5:12:08 PM PST by David1
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To: knak
Should we make public our amnesty policy?

"Soldiers wearing nothing more than underwear and waving a piece of white cloth will be taken as POWs under our new War Amnesty policy. These people will be repatriated as soon as we are finished mopping up the bad guys."

(I'd sign it G.W. Bush, but I'm not sure he's approved it yet.)
7 posted on 02/07/2003 5:12:57 PM PST by Maelstrom (To prevent misconstruction or abuse of the Constitution: The Bill of Rights limits government power.)
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To: knak
I believe the Regulars are safe. We will blow right past them, I doubt we even slow down for them.

The Republican Guard, on the other hand, may well be annihilated. They must stay well away from their equipment if they want to live.
8 posted on 02/07/2003 5:21:25 PM PST by marron
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To: knak
They return with plastic containers full of paraffin.

???? Paraffin -- making candles? burning for heat?

9 posted on 02/07/2003 5:22:51 PM PST by xzins
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To: knak
I hope the US military has thought this whole thing through.
When the Iraqi army finally surrenders 15 minutes after we anounce the war...will we have enough MREs(meals ready to eat) to feed Saddam's army? Does it make sense to build internment camps for a 24 hour war?

I think these are important questions and I want to know these issues have been accounted for.

God Bless America.
10 posted on 02/07/2003 5:26:51 PM PST by Once-Ler (I vote Dubya)
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To: knak
I think the worst job in the entire world would be to be an Iraqi Army regular in the next few weeks.

These guys have little hope, either way.

11 posted on 02/07/2003 5:35:49 PM PST by Dog Gone
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To: Once-Ler
I think these are important questions and I want to know these issues have been accounted for.

I think that you can be quite sure that the Pentagon is looking at all of these issues. Contingency planning seems to be a rather favorite pastime in the military.

12 posted on 02/07/2003 5:36:18 PM PST by Bob
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To: knak; marron
At the moment it is hard to know which is the greater danger. "There are two groups in the Iraqi army," Abbas said.

"One is made up of soldiers like me. The other is the Republican Guard. The special guard will support and defend Saddam. The ordinary soldiers and many of the commanders will surrender."

I have a pretty good idea as to what 'soldiers like him' are..............guys grabbed off the street, put in a uniform, and told that if they don't hold their positions, their families in 'protective custody' back home won't be so protected.

I think every effort to spare these men should be made. Without endangering our forces of course.

I'm sure that these units have hard core "SS" officers dispersed among them to ensure that they do what Saddam wants them to. They'll have a choice, albeit a hard one. Perhaps they will choose to make a more profound case for themselves; Mukhabarat and Republican Guard trooper being marched ahead of them at bayonet point towards American lines.

13 posted on 02/07/2003 5:36:25 PM PST by He Rides A White Horse (I)
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To: xzins
They return with plastic containers full of paraffin.

???? Paraffin -- making candles? burning for heat?

We say gasoline, Brits say petrol. We say kerosene, Brits say paraffin.

14 posted on 02/07/2003 5:41:33 PM PST by aculeus
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To: *war_list; Ernest_at_the_Beach
http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/bump-list
15 posted on 02/07/2003 5:44:16 PM PST by Libertarianize the GOP (Ideas have consequences)
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To: tet68
Dozens of tanks have been concealed in trenches,

If they're in trenches, they aren't exposed. If they're not exposed, they can't shoot, and there's no point in firing up their engines. If they don't shoot, and they don't fire up their engines, they might not be noticed. If they're not noticed, there has got to be at least a .01% chance they won't be turned into smoking charnel houses, the interior of which are coated with a thin, greasy paste that once was their crew.

Sound to me like they've learned a lot. *grin*

16 posted on 02/07/2003 5:46:38 PM PST by fourdeuce82d
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To: tet68
Oh man, are our bulldozers gonna have fun again.
17 posted on 02/07/2003 5:51:56 PM PST by July 4th
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To: knak
These poor boys are primed to surrender.

We should announce a surrender policy.

IRAQIS! Strip to your shorts, put your hands up and you will be hustled to safety, fed and clothed.

They will surrender by the millions.

18 posted on 02/07/2003 5:53:12 PM PST by LibKill (ColdWarrior. I stood the watch.)
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To: marron
I hope we are able to tear into the Republican Guard right when the war starts. Surround them and do what we should have done the last time we had them by the throat.
19 posted on 02/07/2003 6:14:27 PM PST by DeuceTraveler
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To: knak
Or you could surrender now (hint, iraqis) or suffer the fate of the republican guard
20 posted on 02/07/2003 6:40:09 PM PST by Marines981 ("Rattle the big dogs cage and get your a** bit")
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