Fractured Lands: How the Arab World Came Apart
This is a story unlike any we have previously
published. It is much longer than the typical New York Times Magazine
feature story; in print, it occupies an entire issue. The product of
some 18 months of reporting, it tells the story of the catastrophe that
has fractured the Arab world since the invasion of Iraq 13 years ago,
leading to the rise of ISIS and the global refugee crisis. The geography
of this catastrophe is broad and its causes are many, but its
consequences — war and uncertainty throughout the world — are familiar
to us all. Scott Anderson’s story gives the reader a visceral sense of
how it all unfolded, through the eyes of six characters in Egypt, Libya,
Syria, Iraq and Iraqi Kurdistan. Accompanying Anderson’s text are 10
portfolios by the photographer Paolo Pellegrin, drawn from his extensive
travels across the region over the last 14 years, as well as a landmark
virtual-reality experience that embeds the viewer with the Iraqi
fighting forces during the battle to retake Falluja.
It is unprecedented for us to focus so much energy
and attention on a single story, and to ask our readers to do the same.
We would not do so were we not convinced that what follows is one of
the most clear-eyed, powerful and human explanations of what has gone
wrong in this region that you will ever read.
– JAKE SILVERSTEIN, EDITOR IN CHIEF
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Preface
Before driving into northern Iraq,
Dr. Azar Mirkhan changed from his Western clothes into the traditional
dress of a Kurdish pesh merga warrior: a tightfitting short woolen
jacket over his shirt, baggy pantaloons and a wide cummerbund. He also
thought to bring along certain accessories. These included a combat
knife, tucked neatly into the waist of his cummerbund, as well as sniper
binoculars and a loaded .45 semiautomatic. Should matters turn
particularly ticklish, an M-4 assault rifle lay within easy reach on the
back seat, with extra clips in the foot well. The doctor shrugged.
“It’s a bad neighborhood.”
Our destination that day in May 2015 was the place
of Azar’s greatest sorrow, one that haunted him still. The previous
year, ISIS gunmen had cut a murderous swath through northern Iraq,
brushing away an Iraqi Army vastly greater in size, and then turning
their attention to the Kurds. Azar had divined precisely where the ISIS
killers were about to strike, knew that tens of thousands of civilians
stood helpless in their path, but had been unable to get anyone to heed
his warnings. In desperation, he had loaded up his car with guns and
raced to the scene, only to come to a spot in the road where he saw he
was just hours too late. “It was obvious,” Azar said, “so obvious. But
no one wanted to listen.” On that day, we were returning to the place
where the fabled Kurdish warriors of northern Iraq had been
outmaneuvered and put to flight, where Dr. Azar Mirkhan had failed to
avert a colossal tragedy — and where, for many more months to come, he
would continue to battle ISIS.
Azar is a practicing urologist, but even without
the firepower and warrior get-up, the 41-year-old would exude the aura
of a hunter. He walks with a curious loping gait that produces little
sound, and in conversation has a tendency to tuck his chin and stare
from beneath heavy-lidded eyes, rather as if he were sighting down a
gun. With his prominent nose and jet black pompadour, he bears a passing
resemblance to a young Johnny Cash.
The weaponry also complemented the doctor’s
personal philosophy, as expressed in a scene from one of his favorite
movies, “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly,” when a bathing Eli Wallach is
caught off guard by a man seeking to kill him. Rather than immediately
shoot Wallach, the would-be assassin goes into a triumphant soliloquy,
allowing Wallach to kill him first.
“When you have to shoot, shoot; don’t talk,” Azar
quoted from the movie. “That is us Kurds now. This is not the time to
talk, but to shoot.”
Azar is one of six people whose lives
are chronicled in these pages. The six are from different regions,
different cities, different tribes, different families, but they share,
along with millions of other people in and from the Middle East, an
experience of profound unraveling. Their lives have been forever altered
by upheavals that began in 2003 with the American invasion of Iraq, and
then accelerated with the series of revolutions and insurrections that
have collectively become known in the West as the Arab Spring. They
continue today with the depredations of ISIS, with terrorist attacks and
with failing states.
For each of these six people, the upheavals were
crystallized by a specific, singular event. For Azar Mirkhan, it came on
the road to Sinjar, when he saw that his worst fears had come true. For
Laila Soueif in Egypt, it came when a young man separated from a
sprinting mass of protesters to embrace her, and she thought she knew
the revolution would succeed. For Majdi el-Mangoush in Libya, it came as
he walked across a deadly no-man’s-land and, overwhelmed by a sudden
euphoria, felt free for the first time in his life. For Khulood al-Zaidi
in Iraq, it came when, with just a few menacing words from a former
friend, she finally understood that everything she had worked for was
gone. For Majd Ibrahim in Syria, it came when, watching an interrogator
search his cellphone for the identity of his “controller,” he knew his
own execution was drawing nearer by the moment. For Wakaz Hassan in
Iraq, a young man with no apparent interest in politics or religion, it
came on the day ISIS gunmen showed up in his village and offered him a
choice.
As disparate as those moments were, for each of
these six people they represented a crossing over, passage to a place
from which there will never be a return. Such changes, of course —
multiplied by millions of lives — are also transforming their homelands,
the greater Middle East and, by inevitable extension, the entire world.
History never flows in a predictable
way. It is always a result of seemingly random currents and incidents,
the significance of which can be determined — or, more often, disputed —
only in hindsight. But even accounting for history’s capricious nature,
the event credited with setting off the Arab Spring could hardly have
been more improbable: the suicide by immolation of a poor Tunisian
fruit-and-vegetable seller in protest over government harassment. By the
time Mohamed Bouazizi succumbed to his injuries on Jan. 4, 2011, the
protesters who initially took to Tunisia’s streets calling for economic
reform were demanding the resignation of Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, the
nation’s strongman president for 23 years. In subsequent days, those
demonstrations grew in size and intensity — and then they jumped
Tunisia’s border. By the end of January, anti-government protests had
erupted in Algeria, Egypt, Oman and Jordan. That was only the beginning.
By November, just 10 months after Bouazizi’s death, four longstanding
Middle Eastern dictatorships had been toppled, a half-dozen other
suddenly embattled governments had undergone shake-ups or had promised
reforms, and anti-government demonstrations — some peaceful, others
violent — had spread in an arc across the Arab world from Mauritania to
Bahrain.
As a writer with long experience in the Middle
East, I initially welcomed the convulsions of the Arab Spring — indeed, I
believed they were long overdue. In the early 1970s, I traveled through
the region as a young boy with my father, a journey that sparked both
my fascination with Islam and my love of the desert. The Middle East was
also the site of my first foray into journalism when, in the summer of
1983, I hopped on a plane to the embattled city Beirut in hopes of
finding work as a stringer. Over the subsequent years, I embedded with a
platoon of Israeli commandos conducting raids in the West Bank; dined
with Janjaweed raiders in Darfur; interviewed the families of suicide
bombers. Ultimately, I took a five-year hiatus from magazine journalism
to write a book on the historical origins of the modern Middle East.
In my professional travels over the decades, I had
found no other region to rival the Arab world in its utter stagnation.
While Muammar el-Qaddafi of Libya set a record for longevity in the
Middle East with his 42-year dictatorship, it was not that different
elsewhere; by 2011, any Egyptian younger than 41 — and that was roughly
75 percent of the population — had only ever known two heads of state,
while a Syrian of the same age had lived his or her entire life under
the control of the father-and-son Assad dynasty. Along with political
stasis, in many Arab nations most levers of economic power lay in the
hands of small oligarchies or aristocratic families; for everyone else,
about the only path to financial security was to wrangle a job within
fantastically bloated public-sector bureaucracies, government agencies
that were often themselves monuments to nepotism and corruption. While
the sheer amount of money pouring into oil-rich, sparsely populated
nations like Libya or Kuwait might allow for a degree of economic
trickle-down prosperity, this was not the case in more populous but
resource-poor nations like Egypt or Syria, where poverty and
underemployment were severe and — given the ongoing regional population
explosion — ever-worsening problems.
I was heartened, in the Arab Spring’s early days,
by the focus of the people’s wrath. One of the Arab world’s most
prominent and debilitating features, I had long felt, was a culture of
grievance that was defined less by what people aspired to than by what
they opposed. They were anti-Zionist, anti-West, anti-imperialist. For
generations, the region’s dictators had been adroit at channeling public
frustration toward these external “enemies” and away from their own
misrule. But with the Arab Spring, that old playbook suddenly didn’t
work anymore. Instead, and for the first time on such a mass scale, the
people of the Middle East were directing their rage squarely at the
regimes themselves.
Then it all went horribly wrong. By the summer of
2012, two of the “freed” nations — Libya and Yemen — were sliding into
anarchy and factionalism, while the struggle against the Bashar al-Assad
government in Syria had descended into vicious civil war. In Egypt the
following summer, the nation’s first democratically elected government
was overthrown by the military, a coup cheered on by many of the same
young activists who took to the streets to demand democracy two years
earlier. The only truly bright spot among the Arab Spring nations was
the place where it started, Tunisia, but even there, terrorist attacks
and feuding politicians were a constant threat to a fragile government.
Amid the chaos, the remnants of Osama bin Laden’s old outfit, Al Qaeda,
gained a new lease on life, resurrected the war in Iraq and then spawned
an even more severe and murderous offshoot: the Islamic State, or ISIS.
Why did it turn out this way? Why did a movement begun with such high promise go so terribly awry?
The scattershot nature of the Arab Spring makes it
hard to provide a single answer. Some nations were radically
transformed, even as others right next door were barely touched. Some of
the nations in crisis were relatively wealthy (Libya), others
crushingly poor (Yemen). Some countries with comparatively benign
dictatorships (Tunisia) blew up along with some of the region’s most
brutal (Syria). The same range of political and economic disparity is
seen in the nations that remained stable.
Yet one pattern does emerge, and it is striking.
While most of the 22 nations that make up the Arab world have been
buffeted to some degree by the Arab Spring, the six most profoundly
affected — Egypt, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Tunisia and Yemen — are all
republics, rather than monarchies. And of these six, the three that have
disintegrated so completely as to raise doubt that they will ever again
exist as functioning states — Iraq, Syria and Libya — are all members
of that small list of Arab countries created by Western imperial powers
in the early 20th century. In each, little thought was given to national
coherence, and even less to tribal or sectarian divisions. Certainly,
these same internal divisions exist in many of the region’s other
republics, as well as in its monarchies, but it would seem undeniable
that those two factors operating in concert — the lack of an intrinsic
sense of national identity joined to a form of government that
supplanted the traditional organizing principle of society — left Iraq,
Syria and Libya especially vulnerable when the storms of change
descended.
In fact, all but one of the six people profiled
ahead are from these “artificial states,” and their individual stories
are rooted in the larger story of how those nations came to be. The
process began at the end of World War I, when two of the victorious
allies, Britain and France, carved up the lands of the defeated Ottoman
Empire between themselves as spoils of war. In Mesopotamia, the British
joined together three largely autonomous Ottoman provinces and named it
Iraq. The southernmost of these provinces was dominated by Shiite Arabs,
the central by Sunni Arabs and the northernmost by non-Arab Kurds. To
the west of Iraq, the European powers took the opposite approach,
carving the vast lands of “greater Syria” into smaller, more manageable
parcels. Falling under French rule was the smaller rump state of Syria —
essentially the nation that exists today — and the coastal enclave of
Lebanon, while the British took Palestine and Transjordan, a swath of
southern Syria that would eventually become Israel and Jordan. Coming a
bit later to the game, in 1934, Italy joined the three ancient North
African regions that it had wrested from the Ottomans in 1912 to form
the colony of Libya.
To maintain dominion over these fractious
territories, the European powers adopted the same divide-and-conquer
approach that served them so well in the colonization of sub-Saharan
Africa. This consisted of empowering a local ethnic or religious
minority to serve as their local administrators, confident that this
minority would never rebel against their foreign overseers lest they be
engulfed by the disenfranchised majority.
This was only the most overt level of the
Europeans’ divide-and-conquer strategy, however, for just beneath the
sectarian and regional divisions in these “nations” there lay
extraordinarily complex tapestries of tribes and subtribes and clans,
ancient social orders that remained the populations’ principal source of
identification and allegiance. Much as the United States Army and white
settlers did with Indian tribes in the conquest of the American West,
so the British and French and Italians proved adept at pitting these
groups against one another, bestowing favors — weapons or food or
sinecures — to one faction in return for fighting another. The great
difference, of course, is that in the American West, the settlers stayed
and the tribal system was essentially destroyed. In the Arab world, the
Europeans eventually left, but the sectarian and tribal schisms they
fueled remained.
Seen in this light, the 2011 suicide
of Mohamed Bouazizi seems less the catalyst for the Arab Spring than a
culmination of tensions and contradictions that had been simmering under
the surface of Arab society for a long time. Indeed, throughout the
Arab world, residents are far more likely to point to a different event,
one that occurred eight years before Bouazizi’s death, as the moment
when the process of disintegration began: the American invasion of Iraq.
Many even point to a singular image that embodied that upheaval. It
came on the afternoon of April 9, 2003, in the Firdos Square of downtown
Baghdad, when, with the help of a winch and an American M88 armored
recovery vehicle, a towering statue of the Iraqi dictator, Saddam
Hussein, was pulled to the ground.
While today that image is remembered in the Arab
world with resentment — the symbolism of this latest Western
intervention in their region was quite inescapable — at the time it
spurred something far more nuanced. For the first time in their lives,
what Syrians and Libyans and other Arabs just as much as Iraqis saw was
that a figure as seemingly immovable as Saddam Hussein could be cast
aside, that the political and social paralysis that had so long held
their collective lands might actually be broken. Not nearly so apparent
was that these strongmen had actually exerted considerable energy to
bind up their nations, and in their absence the ancient forces of
tribalism and sectarianism would begin to exert their own centrifugal
pull. Even less apparent was how these forces would both attract and
repel the United States, damaging its power and prestige in the region
to an extent from which it might never recover.
At least one man saw this quite clearly. For much
of 2002, the Bush administration had laid the groundwork for the Iraq
invasion by accusing Saddam Hussein of pursuing a
weapons-of-mass-destruction program and obliquely linking him to the
Sept. 11 attacks. In October 2002, six months before Firdos Square, I
had a long interview with Muammar el-Qaddafi, and I asked him who would
benefit if the Iraq invasion actually occurred. The Libyan dictator had a
habit of theatrically pondering before answering my questions, but his
reply to that one was instantaneous. “Bin Laden,” he said. “There is no
doubt about that. And Iraq could end up becoming the staging ground for
Al Qaeda, because if the Saddam government collapses, it will be anarchy
in Iraq. If that happens, actions against Americans will be considered
jihad.”
Beginning in April 2015, the photographer Paolo
Pellegrin and I embarked on a series of extended trips to the Middle
East. Separately and as a writer-photographer team, we had covered an
array of conflicts in the region over the previous 20 years, and our
hope on this new set of journeys was to gain a greater understanding of
the so-called Arab Spring and its generally grim aftermath. As the
situation continued to deteriorate through 2015 and 2016, our travels
expanded: to those islands in Greece bearing the brunt of the migrant
exodus from Iraq and Syria; to the front lines in northern Iraq where
the battle against ISIS was being most vigorously waged.
We have presented the results of this 16-month
project in the form of six individual narratives, which, woven within
the larger strands of history, aim to provide a tapestry of an Arab
World in revolt.
The account is divided into five parts, which
proceed chronologically as they alternate between our principal
characters. Along with introducing several of these individuals, Part 1
focuses on three historical factors that are crucial to understanding
the current crisis: the inherent instability of the Middle East’s
artificial states; the precarious position in which U.S.-allied Arab
governments have found themselves when compelled to pursue policies
bitterly opposed by their own people; and American involvement in the de
facto partitioning of Iraq 25 years ago, an event little remarked upon
at the time — and barely more so since — that helped call into question
the very legitimacy of the modern Arab nation-state. Part 2 is primarily
devoted to the American invasion of Iraq, and to how it laid the
groundwork for the Arab Spring revolts. In Part 3, the narrative
quickens, as we follow the explosive outcome of those revolts as they
occurred in Egypt, Libya and Syria. By Part 4, which chronicles the rise
of ISIS, and Part 5, which tracks the resulting exodus from the region,
we are squarely in the present, at the heart of the world’s gravest
concern.
I have tried to tell a human story, one that has
its share of heroes, even some glimmers of hope. But what follows,
ultimately, is a dark warning. Today the tragedy and violence of the
Middle East have spilled from its banks, with nearly a million Syrians
and Iraqis flooding into Europe to escape the wars in their homelands,
and terrorist attacks in Dhaka, Paris and beyond. With the ISIS cause
being invoked by mass murderers in San Bernardino and Orlando, the
issues of immigration and terrorism have now become conjoined in many
Americans’ minds, forming a key political flash point in the coming
presidential election. In some sense, it is fitting that the crisis of
the Arab world has its roots in the First World War, for like that war,
it is a regional crisis that has come quickly and widely — with little
seeming reason or logic — to influence events at every corner of the
globe.
PART I: ORIGINS
1.
Laila Soueif
Egypt
See Map
Laila Soueif attended her first
political rally when she was just 16. It was 1972, and the protesters
were demanding what students have so often desired — a more equitable
world, greater freedom of expression. But they also had a demand that
was a bit more specific to the Arab world: that Egypt’s president, Anwar
Sadat, launch a war to recover the Sinai Peninsula, which was seized by
Israel in the Six-Day War of 1967. From this experience, Laila would
soon be convinced of the power of civil disobedience; Sadat launched an
attack on Israel the following year. What Laila hadn’t counted on was
the more immediate wrath of her parents. Just two hours after she joined
the protest in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, Laila’s mother and father tracked
down their teenage daughter and dragged her home. “From that, I learned
that it was easier to defy the state than to defy my parents,” she
said.
Laila was born into a life of both privilege and
intellectual freedom. Her parents were college professors, and her older
sister, Ahdaf Soueif, is one of Egypt’s best-known contemporary
novelists. She gravitated toward leftist politics at an early age. While
studying mathematics at Cairo University in the mid-1970s, she met her
future husband, Ahmed Seif, who was already the leader of an underground
communist student cell calling for revolution.
By then, Egypt had long been regarded as the
political capital of the Middle East, the birthplace of revolutionary
movements and ideas. In the modern era, it owed that status largely to
the legacy of one man: Gamal Abdel Nasser.
Well into the 1940s, Egypt, along with most of the
rest of the Middle East, remained a lesser global concern, still in the
thrall of the European powers that imposed their will on the area
decades before. That began to change at the end of World War II with the
discovery of vast new oil fields in the region, and with the collapse
of the British and French colonial empires. The pace of change greatly
accelerated when Nasser and his Free Officers Movement of junior
military officers overthrew Egypt’s Western-pliant king in 1952.
Championing “Arab socialism” and Pan-Arab unity,
Nasser swiftly became a galvanizing figure throughout the Arab world,
the spokesman for a people long dominated by foreigners and
Western-educated elites. Just as crucial to the strongman’s popularity
was what he opposed: colonialism, imperialism and that most immediate
and enduring example of the West’s meddling in the region, the state of
Israel.
Nasser’s success inspired many other would-be Arab
leaders, nowhere more so than in the artificial states of the Middle
East formed by the European powers. By 1968, military officers espousing
the Baathist (“renaissance”) philosophy — a quasi-socialist form of
Pan-Arabism — had seized power in Iraq and Syria. They were joined the
following year by the Libyan lieutenant Muammar el-Qaddafi, and his
somewhat-baffling “third universal theory,” which rejected traditional
democracy in favor of rule by “people’s committees.” In all three
countries, just as in Egypt, Western-favored monarchs or Parliaments
were neutered or cast aside.
But Nasser possessed an advantage that his fellow
autocrats in the region did not. With a sense of national identity that
stretched back millenniums, Egypt never seemed in danger of being torn
apart; the centrifugal pull of tribes or clans or sectarian identity
simply didn’t exist there to the degree it did in Syria or Iraq. At the
same time, Egypt’s long tradition of relative liberalism had given rise
to a fractious political landscape that ran the spectrum from secular
communists to fundamentalist Islamists.
Part of Nasser’s genius was his ability to bridge
these divides, and he did so by appealing both to Egyptian national
pride and to a shared antipathy for the West, a vestige, perhaps, of 70
years of heavy-handed rule by Britain. Thus, even when Islamist
conservatives became alarmed by Nasser’s moves toward greater
secularism, most still saw him as a hero for nationalizing Western
businesses, and for besting Britain, France and Israel in the 1956 Suez
crisis. Similarly, urban liberals like the Soueif family who disdained
Nasser’s strong-arm rule — his was a military dictatorship, after all —
also cheered him for his leadership in the international Nonaligned
Movement, for proudly thumbing his nose at the threats and enticements
of the United States as it sought to compel Egypt into its orbit during
the Cold War. This became the means by which Nasser and his successor,
Anwar Sadat, maintained their grip on power: play left and right off
each other as a matter of course; bring them together when needed by
focusing on an external foe. Such maneuvering resulted in many odd
political turns, including the first protest march of Laila Soueif.
After working on leftist causes together
throughout their time at the University of Cairo, Laila and Ahmed
married in 1978. That same year, Egypt’s political landscape was neatly
turned upside down. In September, Sadat signed the Camp David accords,
which led to an American-brokered peace treaty with Israel. That
stunning about-face simultaneously propelled Egypt into the camp of
American client-states and isolated it from much of the rest of the Arab
world. Even more ominously for Sadat, what was seen in the West as an
act of courage was regarded by most Egyptians as an act of betrayal and
national shame. This was certainly the view of Laila and Ahmed. It was
in the wake of the 1979 peace treaty that some of the men in Ahmed’s
underground cell began buying up arms on the black market and vowing
armed action against the government. Those plans never got off the
ground, though. Instead, it was a cabal of Islamist military plotters
who finally got to Sadat, shooting and killing him at a military parade
in Cairo in October 1981.
A month later, Laila gave birth to her and Ahmed’s
first child, a boy they named Alaa. Their lives took on an air of
increasingly apolitical domesticity, and by 1983, Laila, then 28, was
juggling the demands of child-rearing with her new position as a
professor of mathematics at Cairo University. All normalcy was
shattered, however, when Sadat’s successor, Hosni Mubarak, ordered a
sweeping security crackdown. Among those ensnared in the dragnet were
Ahmed and his colleagues in the underground cell. Severely tortured
until he signed a full confession, Ahmed was then released to await his
verdict. When that verdict was returned, in late 1984, the news was
grim: Ahmed was found guilty of illegal weapons possession and sentenced
to five years in prison.
At the time, Laila was in France, having accepted a
scholarship to further her math studies, but when Ahmed’s sentence was
handed down, she rushed back to Cairo with Alaa. Thanks to a curious
loophole in Egyptian law, sentences for security-related offenses like
Ahmed’s had to be approved by the president, a process that normally
took several months and during which the defendant could remain out on
bail. It presented the couple with a tempting choice.
“We had to decide,” Laila, who is now 60, told me.
“Does he submit and go into prison for five years, do we try to find
some way to get him out of the country or do we go into hiding?” She
gave a nonchalant shrug. “So we went into hiding.”
For several months, the couple lived as fugitives
with their 3-year-old son. Ultimately, though, both realized it was a
futile exercise. “He wasn’t willing to leave the country,” Laila said,
“and he couldn’t stay in hiding forever. He decided it was easier to do
the five years, so he gave himself up.” But not necessarily easier for
Laila. She became pregnant during her and Ahmed’s brief time on the run,
leaving her to tend to a second child, a girl they named Mona, as Ahmed
served out his prison sentence.
It was in prison that Ahmed experienced something
of an epiphany. By continuing the entente with the United States and
Israel that Sadat had begun, Mubarak naturally also inherited the taint
of capitulation in the eyes of many of his countrymen. Unable to forge
national cohesion by turning to the old external enemy card — after all,
Egypt was now in bed with those supposed enemies — Mubarak had devised a
more carefully calibrated system to play his secular leftist and
militant Islamist oppositions against each other. Ahmed, thrown into
prison with both factions, saw firsthand how this strategy played out
when it came to even the most basic of human rights. As he would later
tell Joe Stork of Human Rights Watch, “The communists would say
secretly, ‘It doesn’t matter if Islamists are tortured.’ And the
Islamists would say, ‘Why not torture communists?’ ”
Determined to fight for judicial reform, Ahmed
devoted himself to studying law in his prison cell. Within a month of
his release in 1989, he was admitted to the Egyptian bar.
This placed the ex-political prisoner and his wife
at a crossroads. With Laila a tenured professor at Cairo University and
Ahmed now a lawyer, the couple had the opportunity to carve out a
comfortable existence for themselves among the Cairene elite. Instead,
and at ultimately great personal cost, they would plunge ever deeper
into Egypt’s widening turmoils, trying to cross the very divides that
had for so long been critical to the government's own survival.
2.
Majdi el-Mangoush
Libya
See Map
A once-prosperous port city roughly
120 miles east of Tripoli, the Libyan capital, Misurata was a main
terminus of the old trans-Saharan trade route, the stopping point of
camel caravans taking gold and slaves from sub-Saharan Africa for export
across the Mediterranean. Ever since, it has been one of Libya’s chief
commercial hubs, its residents regarded as industrious and particularly
capitalist-minded. Prominent among those inhabitants is the Mangoush
clan, so much so that one of the oldest neighborhoods of the city bears
the family name. And it was in that neighborhood on July 4, 1986, that
Omar and Fatheya el-Mangoush, civil servants for the Misurata municipal
government, welcomed the birth of the youngest of their six children, a
boy they named Majdi.
By the time of Majdi’s birth, Libya had been ruled
by Muammar el-Qaddafi for 17 years. Viewed in the West as something of a
rakish enfant terrible when he and his fellow military
plotters overthrew Libya’s king in 1969 — Qaddafi was then himself just
27 — the handsome former signal corps lieutenant was wildly popular
among his countrymen in the years immediately following the coup. A key
to that popularity was his emulation of Gamal Abdel Nasser in
neighboring Egypt. Like Nasser, Qaddafi kindled Arab pride by
nationalizing Western business interests, including parts of Libya’s
vital oil industry, and standing in vehement opposition to the state of
Israel. By spreading the wealth around, he also enabled families like
the Mangoushes to live a comfortable middle-class life.
Over time, however, Qaddafi’s rule increasingly
bore less resemblance to Egypt’s “soft” dictatorship and more to that of
two others influenced by the Nasser model: the Baathist regimes of
Saddam Hussein in Iraq and Hafez al-Assad in Syria. The parallels were
quite striking. In all three countries, the dictators developed
elaborate personality cults — their faces adorned posters and murals and
postage stamps — and aligned themselves with the “anti-imperialist”
bloc of Arab nations, their stances helped along by deepening ties with
the Soviet Union. True to the Baathist credo of “Arab socialism” and
Qaddafi’s third universal theory, all three countries embarked on
fabulously ambitious public works projects, building hospitals and
schools and colleges throughout their lands and bankrolling those
enterprises with oil receipts (in the cases of Libya and Iraq), or
through the patronage of the Soviet Union (in the case of Syria). At the
same time, the states established extravagantly bloated governmental
structures, such that their ministries and agencies quickly became the
main pillars of the economy; eventually more than half of the Libyan
work force — Majdi el-Mangoush’s parents among them — was on the
government payroll, and the figures in Saddam Hussein’s Iraq were
similar. “Everybody was connected to the state somehow,” Majdi
explained. “For their housing, for their job. It was impossible to exist
outside of it.”
For all their revolutionary rhetoric, the
dictators of Libya, Iraq and Syria remained ever mindful that their
nations were essentially artificial constructs. What this meant was that
many of their subjects’ primary loyalty lay not to the state but to
their tribe or, more broadly, to their ethnic group or religious sect.
To keep them loyal required both the carrot and the stick. In all three
nations, the leaders entered into elaborate and labyrinthine alliances
with various tribes and clans. Stay on the dictator’s good side, and
your tribe might be given control of a ministry or a lucrative business
concession; fall on his bad side, and you’re all out in the cold. The
strongmen also carefully forged ties across ethnic and religious
divides. In Iraq, even though most all senior Baathist officials were,
like Saddam Hussein, of the Sunni minority, he endeavored to sprinkle
just enough Shiites and Kurds through his administration to lend it an
ecumenical sheen. In Hafez al-Assad’s Sunni-majority Syria, rule by his
Alawite minority was augmented by a de facto alliance with the nation’s
Christian community, giving another significant minority a stake in the
status quo.
This coalition-building had a unique geographic
dimension in Libya. Aside from the historical rivalry that existed
between the principal regions, Tripolitania and Cyrenaica, human
settlement in Libya had always been clustered along the Mediterranean
coast, and what developed there over the millenniums was essentially a
series of semiautonomous city-states that resisted central rule. Thus,
while Qaddafi didn’t need to worry about religious sectarianism —
virtually all Libyans are Sunni Muslims — he did need to think about
drawing into his ruling circle the requisite number of Misuratans and
Benghazians to keep everyone mollified.
And if inducements and handshakes didn’t work,
there was always the stick. Libya, Iraq and Syria erected some of the
most brutal and ubiquitous state security apparatuses to be found in the
world. Operating with utter impunity, the local security forces, or mukhabarat,
of all three dictatorships rounded up enemies of the state, real or
imagined, at will, to be thrown into their nation’s dungeons after sham
trials or simply executed on the spot. The repression wasn’t limited to
individuals but often extended to entire tribes or ethnic groups.
Certainly the most notorious case was Saddam Hussein’s Anfal campaign
against Iraq’s ever-restive Kurdish minority in 1988; before that pogrom
was over, between 50,000 and 100,000 Kurds had been killed. Over a
two-year period, hundreds of thousands more were turned out of their
razed villages and forcibly relocated.
The state also had a very long memory, as Majdi
el-Mangoush discovered growing up in Misurata. In 1975, two of his
mother’s relatives, both midlevel army officers, joined in a failed coup
attempt against Qaddafi. While both were executed, that didn’t remove
the stain on the family name. (Testament to the enduring tribal nature
of Libya, Majdi’s mother was also of the Mangoush clan.)
“It’s not that we were directly persecuted because
of it,” Majdi, who is now 30, explained, “but it was something
officials would always comment on: ‘Ah, so you’re a Mangoush.’ It meant
the government watched you a little closer, that you were never viewed
as completely trustworthy.”
And in all three countries, there dwelled one
group that was deemed wholly untrustworthy, one that almost always
received the stick: Islamic fundamentalists. In Syria and Iraq, even
identifying oneself as a Sunni or Shia could draw state suspicion, and
in all three nations the mukhabarat had a special brief to
surveil conservative clerics and religious agitators. Subtlety was not a
hallmark of these campaigns. When, in February 1982, a group of Sunni
fundamentalists in Syria under the Muslim Brotherhood banner seized
control of portions of the city Hama, Hafez al-Assad had the place
encircled with ground troops and tanks and artillery. In the ensuing
three-week “Hama massacre,” somewhere between 10,000 and 40,000
residents were killed.
But a perverse dynamic often takes hold in
strongman dictators — and here, too, there were great similarities among
Qaddafi, Hussein and Assad. Part of it stems from what might be called
the naked-emperor syndrome, whereby, in the constant company of
sycophants, the leader gradually becomes unmoored from reality. Another
is rooted in the very nature of a police state. The greater the
repression of security forces, the further that any true dissent burrows
underground, making it that much harder for a dictator to know where
his actual enemies are; this fuels a deepening state of paranoia, which
can be assuaged only through even greater repression. By the 1990s, this
cycle had produced a bizarre contradiction in Iraq, Syria and Libya:
The more the leaders promoted a cult of hero worship and wallpapered
their nations with their likenesses, the more reclusive those leaders
became. In Majdi el-Mangoush’s case, despite living in a country whose
total population was less than that of New York’s five boroughs, not
once in 25 years did he ever personally glimpse Qaddafi. This was about
the same number of times he uttered the dictator’s name in a disparaging
way in public. “You would only do that with family, or with the most
trusted of friends,” Majdi explained. “If you were around others and
wanted to say something at all critical, it was ‘our friend.’ ”
There was another notable aspect to the posters
and murals and mosaics of the dictators that could be seen everywhere in
Libya, Iraq and Syria. In a great many of them, framing the image of
the strongman, there appeared the outline of the country’s borders.
Perhaps that juxtaposition was designed to impart a simple message — “I
am the leader of the nation” — but it’s possible that the
artificial-state dictators were also sending a message that was both
more ambitious and more admonishing: “I am the nation; and if I go, then
so goes the nation.” Of course, that may have been just what many
members of the Mangoush clan — celebrated enough to have their own
namesake neighborhood, notorious enough to be permanently marked — were
secretly hoping.
3.
Azar Mirkhan
Kurdistan
See Map
In early 1975, as Laila Soueif, at
Cairo University, continued to agitate for change, Gen. Heso Mirkhan was
serving as a chief lieutenant to Mustafa Barzani, the legendary warlord
of the Iraqi Kurds, in a brutal guerrilla war against the Baathist
government in Baghdad. For more than a year, the vastly outnumbered
Kurdish fighters, known as the pesh merga, had fought the Iraqi Army to a
standstill. Crucial to the Kurds’ success was a steady flow of
C.I.A.-supplied weaponry, along with Iranian military advisers, as Iran
waged a U.S.-sponsored proxy war against Iraq. But when the shah of Iran
and Saddam Hussein abruptly concluded a peace treaty in early March,
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger ordered an immediate cutoff of aid to
the Kurds. In the face of an all-out Iraqi offensive, Barzani was
airlifted out to end his days in a C.I.A. safe house in Northern
Virginia, but thousands of other stranded pesh merga fighters were left
to their fate, including Heso Mirkhan. With Saddam Hussein’s soldiers
closing in, the general led his family in a frantic dash over the
mountains for sanctuary in Iran. Somewhere along the way, his wife gave
birth to another son.
“The treaty was signed on the 6th of March,” Azar
Mirkhan, who is now 41, explained, “and I was born on the 7th. My mother
gave birth to me on the road, on the border between Iran and Iraq.” He
gave a rueful little laugh. “That is why my family has always called me
‘the lucky child.’ Kurdish luck.”
Indeed, it is hard to find any people quite as
unlucky as the Kurds. Spread across the mountainous reaches of four
nations — Iraq, Iran, Syria and Turkey — they have always regarded
themselves as culturally apart from their neighbors and have constantly
battled for independence from those nations they inhabit. The
governments of these nations have tended to view their reluctant Kurdish
subjects with both fear and distrust, and have taken turns quashing
their bids for independence. Those governments have also periodically
employed the Kurds — either their own or those of their neighbors — as
proxy fighters to attack or unsettle their regional enemies-of-the-day.
Historically, when those feuds were brought to an end, so, too, was the
Kurds’ usefulness, and they were soon abandoned — as occurred in the
1975 “great betrayal.”
While the number of rebellions and proxy wars that
have occurred across the breadth of Kurdistan over the past century is
almost impossible to count, the biography of Heso Mirkhan’s commander,
Mustafa Barzani, provides something of a gauge. By the time of his death
in 1979, the 75-year-old Barzani had not only waged war against Turkey,
Iran (twice) and the central government of Iraq (four times), but had
somehow found the energy to also take it to the Ottomans and the British
and a host of Kurdish rivals. Multiply Barzani’s list by four — the
Kurds of Syria, Iran and Turkey have each had their own competing
guerrilla groups and independence movements — and it all becomes a bit
staggering.
Despite the fears of these governments that they
might some day be confronted by an independent “greater Kurdistan,” the
truth is that the differences among the Kurds in these four countries
now rival their similarities. One thing they have in common, though, is a
longstanding warrior tradition, and among the Kurds of northern Iraq,
there is no more celebrated family of pesh merga — literally translated
as “those who face death” — than the Mirkhans.
Following their father, Dr. Azar Mirkhan and four
of his nine brothers have undergone pesh merga training; today, one
brother, Araz, is a senior pesh merga commander on the front lines. But
the family has paid a high price for membership in the warrior caste.
Heso, the patriarch, was killed in combat in 1983, while one of Azar’s
older brothers, Ali, met the same end in 1994.
But it hasn’t been just the region’s governments
that have historically victimized the Kurds. In fact, few nations have
brought the Kurds of northern Iraq more sorrow than the United States.
After their role in the great betrayal of 1975, the Americans would
again be complicit in the Kurds’ suffering — if this time largely
through silence — just 10 years later.
By then, the United States’ chief ally in the
region, the shah of Iran, had been overthrown and replaced by the
hostile Shiite fundamentalist government of Ayatollah Khomeini.
Searching for a new partner in the region, Washington found one in
Saddam Hussein. With the Iraqi dictator waging war against Khomeini’s
Iran, and with the United States secretly funneling weapons to his
bogged-down military, by 1988 Hussein was so integral to the Reagan
administration’s realpolitik policy in the region that it simply looked
the other way when Hussein launched the murderous Anfal campaign against
his Kurdish subjects. A squalid new low was reached in March of that
year, when Iraqi forces poison-gassed the Kurdish town Halabja, killing
an estimated 5,000 people. Despite overwhelming evidence that Hussein
was responsible for the atrocity — Halabja would figure prominently in
his 2006 trial for crimes against humanity — Reagan-administration
officials scurried to suggest it was actually the handiwork of Iran.
What finally ended the American arrangement with
Saddam Hussein was the Iraqi despot’s 1990 decision to invade
neighboring Kuwait, upsetting not just the Western powers but also most
of his Arab neighbors. Perversely, that event very nearly led to yet
another slaughter of Iraq’s Kurds. Instead, it would eventually lead to
their liberation, as well as mark the crucial moment when the United
States propelled itself headlong into Iraq’s sectarian and ethnic
divides.
In the face of Hussein’s belligerence, President
George H.W. Bush marshaled an international military coalition —
Operation Desert Storm — that swiftly annihilated the Iraqi Army in
Kuwait, then rolled into Iraq itself. With Hussein’s government
appearing on the verge of collapse, Bush encouraged the Iraqi people to
rise up in revolt. Both of Iraq’s marginalized communities — the Shiites
in the south and the Kurds in the north — eagerly did so, only to see
the United States suddenly take pause. Belatedly concluding that
Hussein’s demise might play into the hands of a still-hostile Iran, the
Bush administration ordered American troops to stand down as the Iraqi
Army regrouped and began a pitiless counterattack.
To forestall a wholesale massacre of the rebels
they had encouraged, the United States joined its allies in establishing
a protected buffer zone in Kurdistan, as well as no-fly zones in both
northern and southern Iraq. That still left Saddam Hussein in Baghdad,
of course, and ready to take his revenge at the first opportunity. While
the Bush administration concluded there was little it could do to aid
the geographically isolated Shiites in the south — they soon suffered
their own Anfal-style pogrom — to protect the Kurds, they forced Hussein
to militarily withdraw from all of Kurdistan. Taking matters a step
further, in July 1992 the Kurdistan Regional Government, an autonomous
union of Iraq’s three Kurdish provinces, was established.
The Bush administration most likely regarded this
Kurdish separation as a stopgap measure, to be undone once the tyrant in
Baghdad had gone and the danger had passed. The long-suffering Kurds of
Iraq saw it very differently. For the first time since 1919, they were
free from the yoke of Baghdad, and they had their own nation in all but
name. While very few in the West appreciated the significance at the
time, the creation of the Kurdistan Regional Government, or K.R.G.,
marked the first dismantling of the colonial borders that were imposed
on the region 75 years earlier, the de facto partition of one of the
Middle East’s artificial nations. In the years just ahead, tens of
thousands of members of the Iraqi Kurdish diaspora would abandon their
places of exile to return to their old homeland. In 1994, that included a
19-year-old college student, Azar Mirkhan, who had spent almost his
entire life as a refugee in Iran.
4.
Majd Ibrahim
Syria
See Map
Before its destruction, Homs was a
pleasant-enough place, a city of roughly 800,000 in the flat interior of
Syria’s central valley, but close enough to the foothills of the
coastal mountain range to escape the worst of the region’s tremendous
summer heat. It was never a spot where tourists tarried very long.
Although Homs dated back to before Greek and Roman times, little of the
ancient had been preserved, and whatever visitors happened through the
town tended to make quickly for Krak des Chevaliers, the famous Crusader
castle 30 miles to the west. There was an interesting covered souk in
the Old City and a graceful if unremarkable old mosque, but otherwise
Homs looked much like any other modern Syrian city. A collection of drab
and peeling government buildings dominated downtown, surrounded by
neighborhoods of five- and six-story apartment buildings; in its
outlying districts could be seen the unadorned cinder-block homes and
jutting rebar that give so many Middle Eastern suburbs the look of an
ongoing construction site, or a recently abandoned one.
Yet, until its demise, Homs had the distinction of
being the most religiously diverse city in one of the most religiously
mixed countries in the Arab world. Nationally, Syria is composed of
about 70 percent Arab Sunni Muslims, 12 percent Alawites — an offshoot
of Shia Islam — and a roughly equal percentage of Sunni Kurds;
Christians and a number of smaller religious sects make up the rest. At
the geographic crossroads of Syria, Homs reflected this ecumenical
confluence, with a skyline punctuated not just by the minarets of
mosques but also by the steeples of Catholic churches and the domes of
Orthodox Christian ones.
This gave Homs a cosmopolitan flavor not readily
found elsewhere — so much so that in 1997, the Ibrahims, a Sunni couple,
thought nothing of putting their first child, 5-year-old Majd, in a
private Catholic school. As a result, Majd grew up with mostly Christian
friends and a better knowledge of Jesus and the Bible than of Muhammad
and the Quran. This didn’t appear to bother Majd’s parents at all.
Although raised as Muslims, both were of the nominal variety, with his
mother rarely even bothering to wear a head scarf in public and his
father dragging himself to the mosque only for funerals.
Such secular liberalism was very much in keeping
with the new Syria that Hafez al-Assad sought to shape during his
otherwise typically iron-fisted 30-year dictatorship, a secularism
undoubtedly encouraged by his own religious minority status as an
Alawite. After his death in 2000, the policy was carried on by his son,
Bashar. A bland and socially awkward London-trained ophthalmologist,
Bashar came to power largely by default — the Assad patriarch had been
grooming his eldest son, Bassel, to take over until a fatal car accident
in 1994. But Bashar, while projecting a softer, more modern face of
Baathism to the outside world, also proved adroit at navigating the
tricky currents of Middle Eastern politics. While still publicly vowing
to recover the Golan Heights taken by Israel in the Six-Day War, he
maintained an uneasy détente with Tel Aviv, even pursuing secret
negotiations toward a settlement. By gradually loosening Syria’s hold on
neighboring Lebanon — its troops had occupied portions of the country
since 1976, and Damascus was a prime supporter of Lebanon’s Hezbollah
militia — the younger Assad was viewed increasingly favorably by the
West.
And to a young Majd Ibrahim then coming of age, it
increasingly appeared that it was the West where his nation’s future
lay. Like other middle-class boys in Homs, he wore Western clothes,
listened to Western music, watched Western videos, but Majd was also
afforded a unique window onto the outside world. His father, an
electrical engineer, worked at one of the best hotels in Homs, the
Safir, and Majd — fascinated by the hotel, with its constant bustle of
travelers — made any excuse to visit him as he went about his day. For
Majd, the Safir was also a place of reassurance, a reminder that no
matter what small deviations Syrian politics took along the way, he
would always be able to inhabit the modern and secular world into which
he was born.
PART II: THE IRAQ WAR
5.
Khulood al-Zaidi
Iraq
See Map
As the second-youngest of
six children — three boys and three girls — born to a hospital
radiologist and his stay-at-home wife, Khulood al-Zaidi had a relatively
comfortable middle-class childhood. But like most of the other girls in
Kut, a low-slung provincial city of some 400,000 located 100 miles down
the Tigris River from Baghdad, she lived a life that was both
cloistered and highly regimented: off to school each day and then
straight home to help with household chores, followed by more study.
Save for school, Khulood seldom ventured from home for anything beyond
the occasional family outing or to help her mother and older sisters
with the grocery shopping. In 23 years, she had left her hometown only
once, a day trip to Baghdad chaperoned by her father.
Yet, in the peculiar way that ambition can take
root in the most inhospitable of settings, Khulood had always been
determined to escape the confines of Kut, and she focused her energies
on the one path that might allow for it: higher education. In this, she
had an ally of sorts in her father. Ali al-Zaidi was insistent that all
his children, including his three daughters, obtain college degrees,
even if the ultimate purpose of the girls’ education bordered on the
obscure.
“My father was very progressive in a lot of ways,”
she explained, “but even with him, going to college was never about my
having a professional career. Instead, it was always the idea of ‘Study
hard, get a degree, but then find a husband.’ ” She shrugged. “This was
the Iraqi system.” Khulood pursued a degree in English literature at a
local university, but the expectation was that, degree in hand, she
might teach English at a local school for a few years, then marry and
start a family. Khulood had different plans, though: With her English
proficiency, she would go to Baghdad and look for work as an interpreter
for one of the few foreign companies then operating in Iraq.
That scheme was sidetracked when, just three
months short of her graduation, the Americans invaded Iraq. In the early
morning of April 3, 2003, the fighting reached Kut. Advance units of
the United States First Marine Expeditionary Force encircled the city,
and for the next several hours methodically destroyed one Iraqi redoubt
after another, their tanks and artillery on the ground complemented by
close air support. Of this battle for her hometown, Khulood, then 23,
heard a great deal but saw nothing. There was a simple explanation for
this. “Women weren’t allowed out of the house,” she said.
Before the invasion, Vice President Dick Cheney
predicted that Americans would be “greeted as liberators” in Iraq, and
his prediction was borne out in the streets of Kut on April 4. As the
Marines consolidated their hold on the city, they were happily swarmed
by young men and children proffering trays of sweets and hot tea.
Finally permitted to leave her home, Khulood, like most other women in
Kut, observed the spectacle from a discreet distance. “The Americans
were very relaxed, friendly, but mostly I was struck by how huge they
seemed — and all their weapons and vehicles, too. Everything seemed out
of scale, like we had been invaded by aliens.”
While there continued to be sporadic fighting
elsewhere by remnants of Saddam Hussein’s Baathist government — given
the Orwellian label of “anti-Iraqi forces” by the Bush administration —
the few coalition troops who remained in Kut that spring and early
summer felt secure enough to mingle free of body armor with residents
and to patrol its streets in unprotected trucks. Those soldiers also
quickly returned the city to something close to normalcy. The university
was reopened after just a two-month interruption, enabling Khulood to
obtain her bachelor’s degree that August. The real work now was in
rebuilding the nation’s shattered economy and reconstituting its
government, and to that end a small army of foreign engineers,
accountants and consultants descended on Iraq under the aegis of the
Coalition Provisional Authority, or C.P.A., the American-led
transitional administration that would stand down once a new Iraqi
government was in place.
One of those who came was a 33-year-old lawyer
from Oklahoma named Fern Holland. A human rights adviser for the C.P.A.,
Holland had a special brief in the summer of 2003 that included
developing projects to empower women in the Shiite heartland of southern
Iraq. In September 2003, that mission took her to Kut and her first
encounter with Khulood.
“I will always remember the first time I saw
Fern,” Khulood said. “She brought a group of us women together to talk
about the work she wanted to do in Iraq. She was surprisingly young —
this is easy to forget, because her personality was so strong — with
bright blond hair and a very open, friendly manner. I had never met a
woman like her. I don’t think any of us in that room had.”
What Holland told the women in the Kut meeting
hall was no less exotic to them than her appearance. With the overthrow
of Saddam Hussein, she said, a new Iraq was being established, one in
which democracy and respect for human rights would reign supreme. What’s
more, to consolidate this new Iraq, everyone had a role to play, not
least the women of Kut.
For Khulood, that talk struck with the force of
epiphany. This was the moment she had been waiting for her entire life.
Almost immediately, she began doing volunteer work on women’s rights
projects for Holland. “I had thought about these issues before, but
under Saddam Hussein they were like fantasies,” Khulood said. “Now, I
saw a future for myself.”
Holland was perhaps less confident. From past
experience working in conservative and male-dominated societies in
Africa, she suspected that it would only be a matter of time — and
probably a very short time — before the forces of tradition rose up in
opposition to her work, so she had to set change in motion quickly. She
also knew that, as an outsider, her role needed to be a limited one;
what was required was dynamic local women to spearhead the effort, women
like Khulood al-Zaidi.
The following month, Holland chose Khulood to be a
representative at a national women’s leadership conference, held under
the auspices of the C.P.A. At that conference, Khulood received even
headier news: She had been selected as part of a women’s delegation that
would soon travel to Washington to help draft the new Iraqi
Constitution. When word of this spread at the conference, it provoked a
backlash. “A lot of the other women objected because I was so young,”
Khulood said. “Even I thought it was maybe too much. But Fern insisted.
She told the other women, ‘Khulood represents the youth of Iraq — she is
going.’ She was my biggest supporter.”
On that November 2003 trip to Washington, the
23-year-old fresh out of college met with a parade of dignitaries,
including President George W. Bush. Upon her return, she was formally
hired by the C.P.A. to serve as an assistant manager of the Kut media
office. It was a very long way for a young woman who, less than a year
earlier, had imagined no greater future than finding interpreter work
with a foreign company. “It was a very exciting time,” Khulood said.
“Because you could feel everything changing so fast.”
6.
Wakaz Hassan
Iraq
See Map
Wakaz Hassan is saved
from ordinariness by his eyes. In most every other way, the tall and
gangly 22-year-old would appear unremarkable, just one more face in the
crowd — but so intensely dark and arresting are his eyes that you might
initially think he was wearing mascara. In his stare is a kind of
mournful impenetrability that hints at the hard world he has seen.
Only 8 years old in 2003, Wakaz seemed destined
for an exceedingly normal life, even a prosaic one. The youngest of five
children born to an Iraqi bank clerk and his wife, he spent his
childhood in the drowsy farming community of Dawr, just 15 miles down
the Tigris River from Saddam Hussein’s hometown, Tikrit. “All was very
good there,” he recalled. “Easy.”
That changed with the American invasion. Long
considered a Baathist stronghold by virtue of Hussein’s origins there,
Tikrit and its environs were a prime early objective of the invaders,
with the city itself the target of intense aerial bombardments. By
mid-April 2003, coalition troops occupied the string of gaudy palace
buildings erected by Hussein along the Tikrit riverfront and began
conducting raids through the surrounding river towns in search of
fugitive Baathist officials. The May 15 raid on Dawr netted 30 suspected
Baathists — a startling number for such a small community — but the
town was soon to yield up an even greater prize. In mid-December 2003,
American troops discovered a “spider hole” on the northern edge of Dawr
and pulled out Hussein himself.
The young Wakaz had only the vaguest grasp of all
this. According to him, his family — Sunni, like most all residents of
the Tikrit area — was not particularly religious, nor was it political
in any way. He remembered hearing something about the mistreatment of
Iraqi prisoners at an American-operated prison — clearly a reference to
the Abu Ghraib scandal — and then there was the time American soldiers
searched his family’s home, but those soldiers were quite respectful,
and the episode passed without incident.
“I know others had problems with the Americans,” Wakaz said, “but my family, no. For us, we were really not affected at all.”
What the Hassan family did blame the invaders for,
at least in a general way, was the ensuing collapse of the Iraqi
economy, a downturn that cost Wakaz’s father his job at the Rafidain
Bank. To support his young family, the Hassan patriarch used his savings
to open a small sweet shop on Dawr’s main street. “So yes, our life was
definitely much easier before the Americans came,” Wakaz conceded.
“Even if it wasn’t their fault directly, that is when everything became
much harder.”
7.
Khulood al-Zaidi
Iraq
See Map
As she entered the new world opened
up to her by Fern Holland, Khulood remained unaware that the seeds of
disaster for the American intervention had already been sown.
In their Iraqi war plans, the Pentagon had set
down comprehensive blueprints detailing which strategic installations
and government ministries were to be seized and guarded. But the
American military seemed to have given little thought to the arsenals
and munitions depots that Hussein had scattered about the country. In
one town and city after another, these storehouses were systematically
looted, sometimes under the gaze of coalition soldiers who did not
intervene.
The occupying authorities soon compounded this
misstep. In a move now largely regarded as calamitous, one of the first
actions taken by the C.P.A.’s administrator, Paul Bremer, was to disband
the Iraqi military. Just like that, hundreds of thousands of men — men
with both military training and access to weapons — were being put out
of their jobs by the summer of 2003.
It may have been the edict immediately preceding
that decree, however, that had the most deleterious effect. Under the
terms of C.P.A. Order No. 1, senior Baath Party members were summarily
dismissed from government positions and placed under a lifetime
public-employment ban. In addition, employees in the upper echelon of
all government institutions were to be investigated for Baathist
affiliations. As critics pointed out, tens of thousands of apolitical
Iraqi professionals — a group that included Khulood’s radiologist
father, Ali al-Zaidi — were compelled to join the party in the 1990s as
part of a “recruitment drive” by Saddam Hussein; now these teachers and
doctors and engineers were at risk of being disenfranchised.
The effects of Order 1 stretched far beyond the
dismissed Baathists. In Iraq, as in much of the rest of the Middle East,
government offices operated on an elaborate patronage system in which
most every employee, from senior staff down to the steward who brought
refreshments to visitors, owed their jobs to the head man; as might be
expected, that man — almost invariably a Baath Party member during
Saddam Hussein’s reign — usually handed out those jobs to members of his
extended family or tribe. What the firing of as many as 85,000
Baathists actually meant, then, was the cashiering of countless more
people and the instant impoverishment of entire clans and tribes.
Under the weight of these blunders, it’s
remarkable that the Iraqi occupation didn’t blow up sooner. An omen of
what was to come occurred in August 2003, when the United Nations
headquarters in Baghdad was destroyed by a truck bomb, killing 22,
including the U.N.’s special representative for Iraq, Sergio Vieira de
Mello. That was followed by a steady escalation in attacks against
coalition forces. By the beginning of 2004, C.P.A. officials perceived a
deepening hostility toward their initiatives, so much so that even Fern
Holland began to worry. As she wrote in an email to a friend in late
January: “We’re doing all we can with the brief time we’ve got left.
It’s a terrible race. Wish us luck. Wish the Iraqis luck.”
On March 8, 2004, the new provisional Constitution
of Iraq was signed. The clause that set a goal of having 25 percent of
future parliamentary seats held by women was largely credited to the
behind-the-scenes lobbying of Fern Holland.
The following afternoon, a Daewoo containing three
C.P.A. civilian employees was traveling along a provincial highway when
an Iraqi police pickup truck pulled alongside. With a blast of
automatic gunfire, the car was sent careering across the highway before
stalling on the shoulder; the men in the police truck then clambered out
to finish off their victims with assault rifles. All three of the
Daewoo's occupants were killed in the fusillade, marking them as the
first C.P.A. civilians to be murdered in Iraq. That included the driver
and presumed target of the attack, Fern Holland.
Following Holland’s murder, a sense of trepidation
spread among the thousands of C.P.A. personnel scattered across Iraq.
“We were all in a state of shock, of course,” Khulood al-Zaidi said,
“but I think we were also waiting to see what it meant, if it had been
an attack on Fern in particular or if this was going to be something
larger.”
The answer came very soon. In tandem with the
growing Sunni insurgency in central Iraq, through the first months of
2004, a radical Shiite cleric in Baghdad, Moktada al-Sadr, had been
demanding a withdrawal of all coalition forces from the nation. In early
April, Sadr unleashed his militia, the Mahdi Army, in an effort to
bring that withdrawal about through a series of well-coordinated attacks
against military and C.P.A. installations. Kut’s turn came on April 5,
when some 200 Mahdi militiamen began attacking the C.P.A. compound.
Khulood spent hours trapped in the C.P.A. media
office, as the coalition forces assigned to guard the compound returned
fire. Finally a C.P.A. supervisor turned to Khulood. “If you are not
afraid,” he said, “you should just go.”
With two other local workers, Khulood managed to
thread her way out of the compound and, dodging down side alleys, to
escape. With the C.P.A. compound subsequently abandoned, she remained in
hiding as the Mahdi militiamen who now controlled Kut searched for any
local C.P.A. employees left behind. Even after American forces retook
the city, Khulood remained so frightened she didn’t leave her family’s
home for two weeks.
The Mahdi uprising radically altered the flow of
events in Iraq. Both Sunni and Shia militias sharply increased their
attacks against coalition forces, marking the true beginning of the Iraq
war. Despite this, the C.P.A. went ahead with their program of ceding
control of Iraq to a new central government. In May, the last of the
foreign civilians based in Kut began withdrawing, and within two months,
the whole of the local C.P.A. infrastructure was placed under the
authority of the new Baghdad government.
For a time, this did seem to calm passions in
Khulood’s hometown, enough so that she vowed to continue the women’s
rights initiatives begun by her murdered mentor. That autumn, she helped
found a small nongovernmental organization called Al-Batul, or Virgin.
Its goals were modest. “Kut has a small Christian population,” Khulood
explained, “so my idea was to bring Christian and Muslim women together
to work on projects that were important to both communities. It was
mainly to teach the women how to defend their rights, to show them that
they didn’t always have to obey what men said.”
But in the deepening sectarianism spreading across
Iraq, Sunni and Shia militants alike increasingly viewed the Christian
community as the infidels within; in turn, terrified Christians were
beginning to abandon the nation in droves, an exodus that would
eventually reduce their numbers in Iraq by more than two-thirds.
Further, the only possible source of funding for an endeavor like
Al-Batul was from the foreign occupiers, enabling militants to denounce
it as a front in the service of the enemy. Almost immediately, Khulood
began receiving anonymous threats for continuing her work on “American
issues,” threats that escalated to the point where she was denounced by
name in a local newspaper.
The memory of that time caused Khulood, now 36, to
become somber, reflective. “I can see now that I was quite naïve, that I
didn’t take the situation as seriously as I should have. But my feeling
was that I was only working on things that might give women a better
life, so how was I a threat?”
In October 2004, the Al-Batul office in Kut was
shot up. Undeterred, Khulood rented a second office, only to have it
looted. That January, while attending a human rights training seminar in
Amman, the capital of neighboring Jordan, she received a warning: If
she resumed her work in Kut, she would be killed. She remained in Jordan
for three months, but in April 2005 — a year after the death of Fern
Holland and with the fighting in Iraq now spiraling into sectarian war —
Khulood finally slipped back to her hometown.
She recognizes now that this decision bordered on
the foolhardy. “It was just very difficult for me to give up on this
dream I had for Iraq,” Khulood said, recalling how Holland told her that
“to bring change it takes people with courage, that sometimes you have
to push very hard. Well, I didn’t want to die, but Fern had, and I think
I held onto this hope that if we kept trying, maybe things would
improve.”
Shortly after returning to Kut, Khulood went to
the local police station to file a report about her looted office, only
to be treated dismissively. A more ominous note was struck when she met
with one of her old Al-Batul colleagues. “Why did you come back here?”
the woman asked. “Everyone knows you’re working for the American
Embassy.” Her colleague’s accusation came on the heels of a call
summoning Khulood to the local militia headquarters. “That’s when I
finally saw there was no chance for me in Iraq, that if I tried any
longer, they would surely kill me.”
8.
Laila Soueif
Egypt
See Map
As Khulood was planning her escape from Iraq in April 2005, Laila Soueif was escalating her opposition to the Egyptian dictatorship of Hosni Mubarak.
By then, Laila and her husband, Ahmed Seif, had
been Egypt’s most celebrated political dissident couple for well over a
decade, serving as constant nuisances to the Mubarak government. Since
his release from prison in 1989, Ahmed had become the nation’s
pre-eminent human rights lawyer, the champion of an eclectic array of
defendants in politically motivated cases that included leftist
university professors, Islamic fundamentalists and — in a nation where
homosexuality remains effectively illegal — members of Cairo’s gay
community. When I first met him that autumn, Ahmed was involved in
perhaps the most controversial case of his career, defending a group of
men accused of complicity in a 2004 hotel bombing in the Sinai Peninsula
that left 31 dead.
For her part, and even while retaining her
mathematics professorship at Cairo University, Laila had gained a
reputation as one of Cairo’s most indefatigable “street” leaders, the
veteran of countless protest marches against the government. Part of
what drove her was a keen awareness that, as a member of the Cairene
professional class, she enjoyed a freedom to dissent that was all but
denied to Egypt’s poor and working class. “Historically,” she said,
“that bestowed a degree of immunity — the security forces really didn’t
like to mess with us, because they didn’t know who in the power
structure we could call up — but that also meant we had a
responsibility, to be a voice for those who are silenced. And being a
woman helped, too. In this culture, women just aren’t taken that
seriously, so it allows you to do things that men can’t.”
But she was also quite aware that her activism —
and the government’s grudging tolerance of it — fit neatly into the
divide-and-rule strategy that Hosni Mubarak had employed since assuming
power in 1981. In the past, Egyptian governments were able to gin up
bipartisan support when needed by playing the anti-West, anti-Israel
card, but Anwar Sadat traded that card away by making peace with Israel
and going on the American payroll. The new strategy consisted of
allowing an expanded level of political dissent among the small, urban
educated class, while swiftly moving to crush any sign of growing
influence by the far more numerous — and therefore, far more dangerous —
Islamists.
In Laila’s estimation, what finally caused this
strategy to fray was the launch of the second Palestinian intifada, or
uprising, against Israel in September 2000. With most Egyptians of all
political persuasions holding that their government sold out the
Palestinians with the 1979 peace treaty with Israel, Mubarak was
suddenly powerless to muzzle pro-Palestinian demonstrations lest he be
seen as an even greater lackey of the Americans. “For the first time,”
Laila explained, “we began organizing openly and publicly without taking
any permission from the government and without taking cover under any
of the so-called legitimate political parties. And what was the
government going to do about it? This established the pattern — you
don’t wait for permission, you don’t look for an existing political
party to take you in, you just organize — that we used many, many times
afterward.”
In short order, street protests became a constant
feature of Egyptian life. Even more deleterious from the government’s
point of view, fury over the Palestinian situation galvanized opposition
groups from across the political spectrum to march and work together.
With this new dynamic in place, the last thing
Hosni Mubarak needed was another reminder to the Egyptian people of his
fealty to Washington — but then came the United States’ decision to
invade Iraq.
While astute enough to oppose that invasion in
public, and to engage in high-profile diplomacy to try to head it off,
Mubarak wasn’t able to escape its fallout. In the eyes of many
Egyptians, after 23 years of taking lucre from the Americans, the
dictator was simply too much their puppet to make a show of independence
now. That cynical view only hardened as the war in Iraq dragged on and
the daily body count mounted. From 2002 through early 2005, some of the
largest antiwar demonstrations in the Arab world were taking place in
the streets of Cairo, and Laila Soueif was on the front lines in nearly
every one of them. “Of course, on the overt level it was to protest what
was occurring in Iraq,” Laila said, “but this also reflected the
failure of Mubarak.”
At the same time, the dictator did himself few
favors with a series of domestic initiatives that further inflamed the
opposition. Grooming his son Gamal as his successor, in February 2005
Mubarak engineered a rewriting of the Constitution that, while
ostensibly allowing for direct presidential elections, actually rigged
the system so as to make domination by his political party all but
perpetual. In presidential elections that September, Mubarak won a fifth
six-year term with nearly 89 percent of the vote, after having arrested
the only notable candidate to stand against him, Ayman Nour. Under
mounting pressure at home and abroad, he reduced his interference in the
November 2005 parliamentary elections, only to see the Muslim
Brotherhood, an Islamist party still officially banned, take an
unprecedented 20 percent of the seats.
By late 2005, when I spent six weeks traveling
through Egypt, growing contempt for the government was evident
everywhere. To be sure, much of that antipathy derived from the nation’s
economic stagnation and from the corruption that had enabled a small
handful of politicians and generals to become fabulously rich — the
Mubarak family financial portfolio alone was reported to run into the
billions — but it also had a strong anti-American component, and pointed
up a profound disjuncture. At the same time that Egypt was regarded in
Washington as one of the United States’ most reliable allies in the Arab
world, in no small part because of its continuing entente with Israel,
over the course of scores of interviews with Egyptians of most every
political and religious persuasion, I failed to meet a single one who
supported the Israeli peace settlement, or who regarded the American
subsidies to the Mubarak government, then approaching $2 billion a year,
as anything other than a source of national shame. As Essam el-Erian,
deputy head of the Muslim Brotherhood, bluntly told me: “The only
politics in Egypt now are the politics of the street, and for anyone to
work with the Americans is to write their political death sentence.”
It was during this time of ferment that the three
children of Laila Soueif and Ahmed Seif, who previously had shown little
interest in activism, began to have a change of heart about politics.
The first to make the evolution was their son, Alaa, a pioneering
Egyptian blogger, and it happened when he accompanied Laila to a protest
march in May 2005.
“He had become very interested in citizen
journalism,” Laila said, “so with all the street actions surrounding the
Constitution and Mubarak running again, he had begun coming down to
cover the demonstrations — not to participate, just to report on them.”
But the protest on May 25 was a very different affair. Waiting in ambush were government-hired thugs, or baltageya,
who immediately charged at the demonstrators to beat them with fists
and wooden staffs. Perhaps recognizing the well-known protester in their
midst, the goons soon fell on Laila.
“Well, this was something new,” she said, “for
them to punch a middle-aged woman, and when my son saw that, he jumped
in to help me.” For his trouble, Alaa was beaten up as well. “He had
some toes broken, so we went to hospital, and it was only later that we
discovered we were the lucky ones. After we left, the baltageya
began pulling the clothes off women and beating them in their
underwear. This was something they did a lot later on, to humiliate, but
that was when it began and when Alaa joined the protests. The girls
became involved later — Mona got pulled in with the judges’ independence
movement, and then for Sanaa it was the revolution — but for Alaa, it
started in 2005.”
Laila Soueif is a tough, unsentimental woman, and
if she harbored any pride — or, in light of what was to come, regret —
over her children’s turn to activism, she didn’t let on. “I never tried
to dissuade them. Even if I had wanted to — and I probably did at times —
I didn’t. That kind of thing is useless. They’re not going to listen to
you anyway, so you just get into fights.”
9.
Majdi el-Mangoush
Libya
See Map
It was around this time that Majdi el-Mangoush joined onlookers on a sidewalk in his hometown, Misurata, to witness an incredible sight.
Along Tripoli Street, one of the city’s main
thoroughfares, a municipal work crew with a cherry-picker was
methodically taking down the posters of Muammar el-Qaddafi that hung
from every lamppost.
It was part of an attempt by the Libyan dictator
to put a kinder, gentler face on his government. While ostensibly
directed at the Libyan people, the campaign was really meant for Western
consumption.
In the days leading up to the invasion of Iraq,
there had been talk in President George W. Bush’s inner circle that once
Saddam Hussein was dispensed with, the troublesome Qaddafi would be
next. Once the Iraq invasion began in March 2003, the Libyan dictator
hurried to make amends with the Americans. He offered a settlement over
his country’s role in the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over
Lockerbie, Scotland — without explicitly admitting guilt, the Libyan
government agreed to set aside $2.7 billion in compensation to the
families of the 270 victims — and began quietly dismantling his nation’s
fledgling program for chemical, biological and nuclear weapons. Even
more quietly, Libyan intelligence agents shared dossiers with their
American counterparts on suspected Al Qaeda operatives and other Islamic
fundamentalists in the region. On the home front, the goal was to
create at least the illusion of political liberalization, and one aspect
was to remove some of the tens of thousands of posters and billboards
of “the Leader” that wallpapered the nation.
Qaddafi soon thought better of the whole
egalitarian makeover. By 2006, the United States had restored full
diplomatic relations with his government; while officially a response to
the abandonment of the Libyan unconventional-weapons program,
certainly a contributing factor was that, amid the deepening quagmire of
the Iraqi misadventure, there was not going to be any grand American
crusade against the region’s other dictators. Which also meant that
Qaddafi could quietly abandon his reform drive. “It was just a bit of
theater,” Majdi said. “Nothing really changed, and after a few months, I
don’t think anyone even remembered it.”
But that day hadn’t yet arrived when the
cherry-picker made its way down Misurata’s Tripoli Street. Majdi was
still observing the spectacle when an elderly man emerged from a nearby
alley.
For a long moment, the old man stared slack-jawed
in amazement at the sight before him. He then rushed over to one of the
discarded posters, removed a shoe and — in a gesture of insult common
throughout the Arab world — began beating it against Qaddafi’s likeness
amid a torrent of curses.
A municipal worker came over to ask what he was doing.
“The bastard’s gone at last, no?” the old man asked. “There’s been a coup?”
When the worker set him straight, the man
stammered out an explanation for his behavior — he’d been very ill
lately, given to fits of lunacy — and then hurried away.
10.
Khulood al-Zaidi
Jordan • United States • Iraq
See Map
Khulood did not flee Iraq alone. She
crossed back into Jordan with her next-eldest sister, Sahar, and they
were joined in Amman a few months later by their father and oldest
sister, Teamim. Choosing to stay on in Iraq were Khulood’s three
brothers, along with her mother, Aziza. By summer 2007, Khulood was
especially worried about Wisam, her youngest brother. “The war then was
at its worst,” she said, “and young men were just being taken from the
streets. I called Wisam all the time. I told him there was no future for
him in Iraq, that he had to come out, but he was very softhearted and
said that he needed to stay to take care of our mother.”
One evening that September, as Wisam and a friend
walked along a Kut street, someone with an assault rifle killed them
both in a burst of gunfire. “He was 25,” Khulood said softly. “Some
people say he was killed because of the work I was doing, but I hope
that isn’t true.”
A few months after Wisam’s murder, Khulood faced a
new ordeal when, working for an NGO, she rebuffed the demands of a
corrupt but well-placed Jordanian businessman looking for kickbacks. He
was the wrong person to cross. Shortly after, she was ordered to leave
Jordan. Facing almost-certain death if forced to return to Iraq, Khulood
turned to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees for
emergency resettlement in a third country.
Among the more unlikely possibilities for
resettlement was the United States. In 2008, American troops were still
embroiled in an Iraqi civil war, and the Bush administration had strict
caps in place (albeit recently loosened) on the number of Iraqis to be
given refuge; to let in all those who had fled the country — and there
were an estimated half-million displaced Iraqis in Jordan alone — would
belie its talking point that the corner had finally been turned in the
war. In light of the grave danger Khulood faced, however, the
U.N.H.C.R. placed her in its own special program, reserved for only the
most vulnerable of refugees, and for those in this pool, the Americans
had a spot available. In July 2008, Khulood boarded a plane bound for
San Francisco.
It’s hard to imagine a more extreme transition,
from the cramped, tumbledown apartment she shared with her father and
two sisters in Amman to a pleasant one-bedroom in San Francisco, and
Khulood reveled in her new life. “Just to have the freedom to go
wherever I wanted, and to not think something bad might happen to me.
And I don’t mean just the war. For a woman to travel alone in Iraq —
maybe it happened in Baghdad, but never in Kut, and so some days I would
just take a bus or the metro for hours. It was something I had never
really imagined before.”
Her career prospects were also much improved. In
Iraq, Khulood studied English because it seemed to offer the greatest
chance at future freedom for a young woman, but in the United States the
opportunities were endless. “After one year, I would get my green card,
and then I could apply for scholarships to study whatever I wanted. I
became very ambitious.”
The one continuing source of worry was for her
divided family back in Iraq and Jordan. While she knew those in Kut
wouldn’t leave, Khulood was desperate to release her father and sisters
from their limbo existence in Amman and, soon after reaching San
Francisco, she started the paperwork to have them join her.
Three months later, Khulood received both good and
bad news. Her two sisters were approved for resettlement. Their father,
however, was rejected. The sisters remained in Jordan while the family
appealed the decision, but Ali al-Zaidi was rejected again.
By February 2009, seven months after Khulood’s
arrival in San Francisco, there was still no progress in the effort to
resettle her father. It was then she made a fateful decision: She would
return to Jordan and work on his case there.
“My friends in San Francisco couldn’t understand
it,” she recalled. “Why, when you have a new life here, why would you
ever go back?” Khulood grew thoughtful for a moment, as if still
struggling for an answer. “But how to explain my culture to them? In
Iraq, family is the most important thing, you can never turn away from
it, so how could I and my sisters enjoy this nice life in America but
leave our father behind? We could never live with the shame of that. So I
went back.”
In Amman, Khulood tirelessly pursued any angle she
could think of to win her father’s exit, petitioning for settlement not
just in the United States but also in a half-dozen European nations.
Nothing worked.
Worse, Khulood had walked herself into legal
limbo. As she was warned before leaving San Francisco, under the
stipulations of American immigration law, refugees awaiting the
permanent status of a green card cannot leave the country for longer
than six months. By returning — and staying — in Jordan, Khulood had
lost her refugee classification. Now, along with the part of her family
that she had brought out of Iraq, Khulood was stranded. She could not go
home or to a third country, hostage to the whim of a state — Jordan —
that was anxious to shed her.
11.
Majd Ibrahim
Syria
See Map
The American invasion of Iraq was
initially worrisome for Bashar al-Assad. The Syrian dictator’s relations
with the mercurial and dangerous Saddam Hussein had warmed recently,
and he was no doubt concerned that he could be next on the American hit
list. But just as with Muammar el-Qaddafi in Libya, by the late 2000s,
Assad could be quite confident that he had nothing to fear from a
flailing United States.
Not that this confidence translated into greater
political freedom for the Syrian people. Just as in his father’s day,
Assad’s subjects lived in constant fear of internal security agents and a
network of government-sanctioned thugs, or shabiha. So
pervasive was this spying apparatus — or at least the fear of it — that
politics wasn’t so much a delicate subject in most Syrian homes as no
subject at all.
“I can never remember my father saying anything
about the regime, good or bad,” Majd Ibrahim said. “And I never remember
any of my relatives or neighbors doing it either. When it came to the
state, the most anyone would criticize was maybe the corrupt traffic
policeman at the corner. You just didn’t talk about that stuff with
anyone.”
Because of his liberal upbringing, Majd
experienced a shock when he left his Catholic school at the end of the
ninth grade and transferred into a state high school. His modern and
secular ways often estranged him from his more Islamist-minded
classmates, and the instruction was abysmal. But high school is a bad
time for a lot of people, and Majd’s life brightened considerably upon
graduating in summer 2010. While failing to obtain the high marks on the
national exam that would have enabled him to pursue one of the “higher”
professions — engineering or medicine — he did sufficiently well to
enter Al-Baath University in Homs that autumn to pursue a degree in
hotel management.
This was undoubtedly a better fit for Majd
regardless. The handsome, outgoing young man had a natural charm that
enabled him to develop a quick rapport with most anyone, joined to an
intense curiosity about the larger world beyond Homs. With his degree in
hand, he envisioned a future at one of the luxury hotels in Damascus —
they “represented one of the best ways to advance,” he said, “to have a
good life.”
But there was another feature of his hometown that
Majd had probably scarcely given thought to in his short life: In
almost every way, Homs truly was the crossroads of Syria. Located near
the midpoint of the highway between the nation’s two largest cities,
Damascus and Aleppo, Homs was also the eastern terminus of the highway
linking Syria’s interior to its coastal provinces. Just as significant,
it was the hub of the nation’s gas- and oil-refinery industry — quite
logically, since the pipelines leading from the oil and natural-gas
fields in the eastern deserts passed directly through the city on their
way to the coast. If all this served to make Homs a prosperous town, it
also meant that, in the event of a war, it was a place all sides would
fight furiously to control.
By the time Majd started at Al-Baath University, that war was just months away.
PART III: ARAB SPRING
12.
Laila Soueif
Egypt
See Map
Laila had been involved with Egyptian
politics for far too long to believe all the talk about the plans to
protest in Tahrir Square on Jan. 25, 2011. “It’s not going to be a
demonstration,” one young activist told her. “It’s going to be a
revolution.” She understood the man’s excitement. Only days earlier,
street protests after the self-immolation of the fruit-and-vegetable
vendor in Tunisia had forced the longtime Tunisian strongman Zine
el-Abidine Ben Ali from power. Throughout the Arab world, rebellion was
in the air. But this was Egypt. Laila expected news conferences and
solidarity committee meetings, perhaps some paper reforms, certainly not
insurrection. She even joked about it. She was attending an educational
conference the day before the demonstration, and when an organizer
asked if she would be returning the next day, she replied, “Well,
tomorrow we’re having a revolution, but if the revolution ends early,
yes, I’ll be here.”
The following day, as Laila approached Tahrir
Square, she realized this indeed was something altogether different from
the toothless Egyptian protests of the past. Until now, the Cairene
activist community had considered a protest successful if it drew
several hundred demonstrators. In Tahrir Square on Jan. 25, the crowd
was at least 15,000, and Laila soon heard about the many thousands more
who had converged on different rallying points around Cairo and in other
towns and cities across Egypt. In Tahrir, as elsewhere around the
nation, the stunned security forces simply stepped aside, as the
emboldened crowds’ calls for reform gave way to open demands for Hosni
Mubarak’s fall.
The protests continued over the next two days,
until, on Jan. 28, Laila concluded that they truly did have a revolution
on their hands. That morning, she and some friends traveled to the
Imbaba neighborhood in northwest Cairo to join a group intending to
march on Tahrir, only to be met by a wall of soldiers in riot gear.
After dispersing the protesters, the soldiers pursued them into Imbaba’s
narrow alleyways, firing tear gas as they went.
“That was a very stupid mistake,” Laila explained.
“These are small alleys where people are practically living in the
street, so that just brought down Imbaba. It became a fixed battle
between the troops and the residents, and there was absolutely no moving
those people. They were going to break down these soldiers and torch
the police stations, or die trying.”
The battle for Imbaba continued late into the
afternoon. Laila, having become separated from her friends, decided to
walk to downtown alone. It was an eerie journey. The streets were
deserted, and fires raged in the growing dusk: cars, barricades, police
stations burning. Echoing off the surrounding buildings came the sound
of gunfire, some single shots, others the sustained bursts of assault
rifles. With darkness falling, Laila finally emerged onto Ramses Street,
a major thoroughfare in central Cairo.
“And suddenly, this huge crowd of demonstrators
appeared,” she recalled, “running down Ramses. They had just broken
through the police cordons, and they were running to get to Tahrir. One
young man saw me standing there, and he came over and hugged me — he’d
obviously seen me before, in Tahrir — and said, ‘I told you we would
have a revolution!’ And that was the moment when I knew it was true, and
that we would be victorious.”
Over the next week, both the size and the
militancy of the demonstrations grew, but so did the harshness of the
government’s response, with soldiers and the police increasingly trading
tear gas for live ammunition. On Feb. 1, a defiant Mubarak took to the
airwaves vowing never to leave Egypt — “On its soil I will die” — and
the following day there came the bizarre spectacle, called the Battle of
the Camel, when scores of state-sponsored thugs astride horses and
camels attacked those encamped in Tahrir Square with riding crops and
whips.
The following day, Ahmed Seif’s law center was
raided by the military police, and he and dozens of others were hauled
off for questioning at the headquarters of military intelligence. For
two days, Ahmed was interrogated by a variety of officers, but he would
have reason to recall one encounter in particular. It came on the
morning of Feb. 5, when the chief of military intelligence, a colorless
general named Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, going about other business, happened
to stride past Ahmed and several other prisoners. In an impromptu
lecture, Sisi warned his captive audience that they should all respect
Mubarak and Egypt’s military leadership and that, once released, they
should go home and forget Tahrir Square. When Ahmed, forgoing respectful
silence, retorted that Mubarak was corrupt, the general’s haughty
manner swiftly changed. “He became angry; his face became red,” Ahmed
recalled a few years later to The Guardian. “He acted as if every
citizen would accept his point and no one would reject it in public.
When he was rejected in public, he lost it.”
Upon his release that day, Ahmed stopped by his home for a change of clothes and then immediately returned to Tahrir Square.
It soon became clear that the regime was losing
control. Across Egypt came reports of army units refusing orders to fire
on demonstrators, and in Tahrir Square television cameras captured
images of soldiers embracing the protesters and sharing cigarettes with
them.
On Feb. 11, the clock finally ran out on Hosni
Mubarak. After submitting his resignation, the president and his
immediate family boarded a plane and fled to their palatial retreat in
the Red Sea resort town Sharm el Sheikh. At the news, all of Egypt
erupted in celebration, and nowhere more so than in Cairo’s Tahrir
Square.
But among a small handful of Egyptians, joy was
already tinged with a note of disquiet, especially when it was announced
that a group of senior military officers, the Supreme Council of the
Armed Forces, or SCAF, would serve as an interim government until
elections were held. One of those who worried was Laila Soueif.
“In the last few days of Mubarak,” she said, “when
we could see what was coming, I and some of the other independents, we
tried to talk to all the different political factions. ‘Seize power.
Don’t wait for permission. Just seize power now before the military
steps in.’ And everyone said: ‘Yes, of course, that’s a good idea. We’ll
organize a meeting to talk about it in a couple of days.’ ” Laila shook
her head, gave a bitter little laugh. “But maybe it was asking too
much. Maybe we simply couldn’t do it at that point. People needed to
feel they had won. Not us, the politicos, but all these millions of
people who had come down to the street. They needed a time to feel
victorious.” She sighed, and then fell silent for a moment. “I don’t
know. To this day, I don’t know. But I think that was our critical
moment, and we lost.”
13.
Majdi el-Mangoush
Libya
See Map
By January 2011, Majdi was completing
his third and final year in the national air force academy, a sprawling
compound in southwest Misurata, hoping to earn a degree in
communications engineering. He was an unlikely soldier — softhearted,
slightly pudgy — but the academy was an easy choice for Majdi, allowing
him to spend regular leaves at his family home, just a few miles away,
and hang out with his civilian friends. He and his fellow cadets
followed the news of the upheavals in Tunisia and Egypt in astonishment,
but none connected that tumult to their situation in Libya, much less
imagined it might spread there. Then, on the evening of Feb. 19, a
Saturday, the cadets heard a series of crackling sounds coming from
within the city. At first, they thought it might be firecrackers, but
the sounds intensified and drew nearer, until the students realized it
was gunfire. Soon they were ordered to assemble at the drill ground,
where they were informed that all leave had been canceled. By then, the
watchtowers that ringed the compound — usually empty or occupied by a
single bored sentry — were manned by squads of soldiers with mounted
machine guns.
“That’s when we knew something big had happened,”
Majdi recalled, “because this was unlike anything we’d seen before. But
still, no one would tell us what was going on.”
Majdi hoped he would get an explanation when
classes resumed the next morning, but the civilian instructors failed to
show up. Throughout that day, Majdi stayed in the constant company of
his best friend at the academy, Jalal al-Drisi, a 23-year-old cadet
from Benghazi. In contrast to the shy Majdi, Jalal, wiry and quick on
his feet, was always ready with an irreverent joke or an elaborate
prank. What the two shared was a fascination with science and gadgetry —
Jalal was studying aviation weaponry — and over the course of the
previous two and a half years, they had become inseparable. Jalal
frequently spent his weekend leaves at the Mangoush family home in
Misurata, a hospitality that was reciprocated when Majdi spent part of
the summer of 2009 with the Drisis in Benghazi. In the bizarre news-free
environment that existed at the academy, the young men tried to puzzle
out what was happening.
Over the next two days, the gunfire beyond the
walls continued sporadically. The sound would draw near at times, only
to recede; intense exchanges would be followed by long periods of quiet.
A measure of clarity finally came on Feb. 22, when
Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, clad in an olive-drab robe, addressed the
nation. In what almost instantly became known as the Zenga Zenga
speech, the dictator laid blame for the social unrest then spreading
across Libya on foreign conspirators and “rats,” and he vowed to purify
Libya “inch by inch, house by house, room by room, alley by alley” — “zenga zenga” in Qaddafi’s pronunciation of the Arabic word for “alley” — “person by person.”
No sooner did Qaddafi’s address end than the
gunfire in Misurata significantly escalated. “It was like the security
forces had been awaiting orders for what to do,” Majdi said. “After the
speech, they just opened up everywhere.”
The cadets remained quarantined; they were
besieged by elements outside the compound walls whose goals they weren’t
allowed to know and kept within those walls by soldiers who clearly
didn’t trust them. As the days passed and the unseen gun battles raged,
the students lounged around their barracks wondering what was to become
of them. It was virtually all Majdi el-Mangoush and Jalal al-Drisi
could talk about. “We would sit together for hours and go over every
little detail, every clue we had picked up,” Majdi said. “ ‘What did it
mean? Did it mean anything?’ But sometimes it got to be too much. We had
to stop. We had to talk about football or girls, anything to distract
us.”
Their peculiar limbo ended on the night of Feb.
25, when soldiers of the elite 32nd Brigade suddenly appeared on the
base. Announcing that they had come from Tripoli to “rescue” the cadets,
the commandos ordered the students to gather their things and run to a
gathering point at the edge of the compound where buses were waiting.
Someone in the vaunted 32nd had made a logistical
error, however. To transport the 580 cadets, just two buses had been
ordered. With each vehicle filled to bursting, the excess students were
crammed wherever they might fit in the brigade’s jeeps and armored cars,
and then the convoy trundled into the night for the long journey to
Tripoli.
Beyond effecting their “rescue” from Misurata, the
regime in Tripoli didn’t really seem to know what to do with its young
charges either. Bused to a vacant military high school compound on the
southern outskirts of the city, the cadets were billeted in barrack
halls and empty classrooms but barred from leaving or having any contact
with their families. That edict was enforced by armed soldiers posted
at the gates.
But the confines of the Tripoli high school were a
good deal more porous than those of the air force academy, and from
their minders the cadets gradually learned something of the conflict
that had befallen their nation. Although the unrest was fomented by
criminal gangs and foreign mercenaries in the hire of Libya’s Western
enemies, they were told, misguided segments of the population had joined
in to spread it. By the beginning of March, this foreign-spawned
criminality was most intense in Misurata and Benghazi, and both cities
had become pitched battlegrounds.
Provided with this narrative, Majdi was not
altogether surprised when, in mid-March, Western alliance warplanes
began appearing over Tripoli to bomb government installations. It seemed
merely to confirm that the nation was being attacked from beyond.
Naturally, the situation also caused both Majdi and Jalal to worry about
the fate of their hometowns and wonder which of their friends might
have been seduced into joining the traitors’ ranks. “That’s something we
talked about a lot,” Majdi said. “ ‘Oh, Khalid was always a little
crazy; I bet he’s gone with them.’ ”
The cadets seemed gradually to win the trust of
the regime, enough for one large group to be transferred to a military
base in mid-April to begin training on missile-guidance systems.
Neither Majdi nor Jalal were selected for this mission, however, and
their stay at the high school dragged on. Then one day in early May,
Majdi ran into an old acquaintance at the barracks. The acquaintance,
Mohammed, was now a military intelligence officer. He wanted to talk to
Majdi about Misurata. The two chatted for some time, with Mohammed
asking about different locations in the city and if the young cadet
might know who the town’s “civic leaders” were. Majdi thought nothing of
the conversation, but one afternoon a few days later, he was called to
headquarters.
There, an officer informed Majdi that he had been
selected to join the cadets undergoing missile-guidance training; the
jeep that would transport him to the base was leaving immediately. So
hurried was his departure that Majdi didn’t even have time to say
goodbye to Jalal.
But the jeep driver didn’t take him to the army
base. Instead, he followed the Tripoli ring road to the coastal highway
and then turned east.
By early evening, they had reached Ad Dafiniyah,
the last town before Misurata and the farthest limits of government
control. There, Majdi was led into a small farmhouse, where he was told
someone wanted to speak to him on the phone. It was Mohammed, the
military intelligence officer.
As Mohammed explained, the young air force cadet
had been chosen for a “special patriotic mission”: He was to slip into
Misurata and find out who the rebel leaders were and where they lived.
Once he had done this, he would pass the information to a liaison
officer secreted within Misurata, a man named Ayoub. To make contact
with Ayoub, Majdi was given a Thuraya satellite phone and a number to
call.
Upon hearing all this, Majdi had two thoughts. One
was about his friends at home: Ever since hearing about the scale of
fighting in Misurata, he assumed that some of his friends must have
joined the other side. If he carried out this mission, it might very
well result in their deaths.
The other thought was of a recent conversation he
had with Jalal. His friend had awoken in a despondent state of mind,
explaining that he’d had a terrible dream, and it took Majdi some time
to coax out the details. “I dreamt that you and I were sent to fight in
Misurata,” Jalal finally revealed, “and that you were killed.”
But any hesitation swiftly passed. In his
goldfish-bowl existence in Tripoli, Majdi had heard only what the
regime wanted him to hear, and if he didn’t believe all of it, he
believed enough of it to want to help defeat the foreigners and their
followers who were destroying Libya, even if this included people he
knew. Perhaps most of all, he just wanted the limbo to end. For nearly
three months, he had been cut off from both his family and the outside
world, and he simply wanted something — anything — to happen. So he
agreed.
Early the next morning, Majdi said goodbye to his
companions at the farmhouse and headed alone into no man’s land.
Misurata lay some 10 miles to the east. In the right front pocket of his
pants he carried his military identification card. If stopped by the
rebels, this card in itself was unlikely to cause him problems;
countless government soldiers had deserted, and the fact that Majdi was
from Misurata would certainly lend credence to his explanation that he
was trying only to go home. The satellite phone in his left pocket was a
very different matter, though. With the severing of internet and
cellphone reception, the Thuraya had become the standard mode of
communication for regime operatives in the field, and if the rebels
discovered Majdi’s — sure to be found in the most cursory of searches —
they would inevitably conclude that he was coming into Misurata as a
spy. Under those circumstances, summary execution was probably the most
merciful outcome he could hope for.
As he walked, the sound of gunfire grew in
intensity, and there was the occasional rumble of distant artillery
explosions. But between the light wind and the rolling-hill topography
of the Misurata coastal shelf, it was quite impossible for Majdi to
determine how close any of it was or even its direction. He tried to
bear in mind something he picked up in basic training, that the most
worrisome noise on a battlefield wasn’t gunshots but rather a soft
popping sound, like the snapping of fingers. This was the sound the air
made as it rejoined behind a bullet, and you heard it only when a bullet
passed close to your head.
Majdi’s memory of that journey is vague. He
doesn’t remember how long it took; he estimates that he walked for about
three hours, but it could have been shorter or twice as long. Only one
moment sticks out in his mind. About halfway across no man’s land, Majdi
was suddenly filled with a sense of joy unlike anything he had ever
experienced before.
“I can’t really describe it,” he said, “and I’ve
never had a feeling like it since, but I was just so happy, so
completely at peace with everything.” He fell silent for a time, groping
for an explanation. “I think it’s because I was in the one place where I
was out from the shadow of others. I hadn’t betrayed my friends yet, I
hadn’t betrayed my country yet — that is what lay ahead — so as long as I
stayed out there, I was free.”
14.
Majd Ibrahim
Syria
See Map
Like Majdi el-Mangoush in Libya,
Majd Ibrahim was at first merely a long-distance observer of the
deepening turmoil in the region. The Syrian dictatorship made no attempt
to conceal the revolts in Tunisia and Egypt from its people, and indeed
spoke of them openly, with a certain smugness. “We have more difficult
circumstances than most of the Arab countries,” President Bashar
al-Assad grandly informed The Wall Street Journal on Jan. 31, “but in
spite of that, Syria is stable. Why? Because you have to be very closely
linked to the beliefs of the people.”
Shortly after that interview, however, Syria’s
state-controlled media went silent on the whole topic. Certainly there
was scant mention when, in early March, demonstrators took to the
streets of the southern Syrian city Dara’a to protest the arrest and
reported torture of a group of high-school students for writing
anti-government graffiti on walls. “I heard about what happened in
Dara’a through social media,” Majd said, “from Facebook and YouTube.”
It was from the same venues that Majd learned of a
solidarity protest, called the Day of Dignity, that was to take place
in front of the Khaled bin al-Waleed Mosque in downtown Homs on March
18. Heeding the admonitions of his parents, Majd stayed well away from
that rally, but he heard through friends that hundreds of demonstrators
had shown up, watched over by a nearly equal number of police officers
and state security personnel. It was a shocking story to the 18-year-old
college student; Homs had simply never experienced anything like it.
And that demonstration was tiny in comparison with
the next, held a week later. This time, the protesters numbered in the
thousands. Majd, figuring there was safety in numbers amid the throngs
of onlookers, managed to get close enough to hear their demands: for
political reform, greater civil rights, a repeal of the
state-of-emergency edict that had been in place in Syria for the
previous 48 years.
On March 30, Assad delivered a speech to the
Syrian Parliament, carried live by state television and radio outlets.
While protests had spread to a number of Syrian cities, they were still
largely peaceful, with dissenters calling for changes in the regime
rather than for its overthrow. As a result — and with the assumption
that the regime had learned something from the recent collapse of the
Tunisian and Egyptian governments and the widening chaos in Libya — many
expected Assad to take a conciliatory approach.
That expectation was also based on Assad’s
personality. In the 11 years he had ruled the nation since the death of
his father, the unassuming ophthalmologist had adopted many trappings of
reform. With his attractive young wife, the British-born Asma, he had
put a pleasing, modern face on the Syrian autocracy. Behind the charm
offensive, however, little had truly changed; Syria’s secret police were
still everywhere, and the “deep state” — the country’s permanent ruling
class of bureaucrats and military figures — remained firmly in the
hands of the Alawite minority. The Alawites, along with many in Syria’s
Christian minority, feared that any compromise with the protesters was
to invite a Sunni revolution and, with it, their demise.
After offering vague palliatives about future
reform, Assad instead used his parliamentary speech to accuse the
troublemakers in the streets of aiding the “Israeli enemy” and to issue a
stern warning. “Burying sedition is a national, moral and religious
duty, and all those who can contribute to burying it and do not are part
of it,” he declared. “There is no compromise or middle way in this.” In
keeping with a tradition begun during his father’s reign, Assad’s
speech was repeatedly interrupted by members of Parliament leaping to
their feet to shout out their undying love and gratitude to the
president.
In Majd’s memory, a kind of uneasy quiet fell over
Homs after Assad’s address. There were still scattered protests about
town, watched over by phalanxes of heavily armed security forces, but it
was as if no one was quite sure what to do next — each side fearful,
perhaps, of leading the nation into the kind of open warfare then
roiling Libya.
The interlude ended abruptly on April 17, 2011.
That evening, as reported by Al Jazeera, a small group of demonstrators,
maybe 40 in all, were protesting outside a mosque in Homs when several
cars stopped alongside them. A number of men clambered out of the cars —
presumably either local plainclothes police officers or members of the
largely Alawite shabiha — and proceeded to shoot at least 25 protesters at point-blank range.
It was as if gasoline had been thrown on a
smoldering fire. That night, tens of thousands of demonstrators gathered
at Clock Tower Square downtown, and this time, the police and shabiha
took to the roofs and upper floors of the surrounding buildings to
shoot down at them. “That is when everything changed,” Majd said. “Where
before it was protests, from April 17 it was an uprising.”
As protesters started to be killed almost every
day, their funerals the next day became rallying points for more
protesters to take to the streets; the evermore brutal response of the
security forces at these gatherings then created a new round of shaheeds,
or martyrs, ensuring greater crowds — and more killing — at the next
funerals. By early May, the cycle of violence had escalated so swiftly
that the Syrian Army came into Homs en masse, effectively shutting down
the city.
“Nobody trusted the local security forces,” Majd recalled, referring to the vast apparatus of mukhabarat
and uniformed police who traditionally held sway in Syrian towns. “But
everyone liked the soldiers coming in. Even I did, because we believed
they had come to protect the people and stop the killing. And it worked.
The army had tanks and everything, but they didn’t use them, and very
soon the killing ended.”
After just a short time, however, the regime
withdrew the bulk of its military forces from Homs in order to deploy
them on “pacification” operations elsewhere — and with the army no
longer able to provide order, the mukhabarat began distributing heavier weapons to the semiofficial shabiha.
The city swiftly fell back into bloodletting. Around Homs, vigilante
forces set up roadblocks and conducted raids into neighborhoods now
controlled by the rebels. Throughout the summer the fighting continued,
with different factions of pro- and anti-regime gunmen taking control
of ever more sections of the city.
Then matters took an even more sinister turn. In
this most religiously mixed of Syrian cities, suddenly people began
turning up dead for no other discernible reason than their religious
affiliation. In early November 2011, according to an unconfirmed account
from Reuters, gunmen stopped a bus and murdered nine Alawite
passengers. The next day, at a nearby roadblock, Syrian security forces,
seemingly in retaliation, led 11 Sunni laborers off to be executed. All
the while, a terror campaign of kidnappings and assassinations targeted
the city’s professional class, leading many of them to go into hiding
or flee.
The fighting also had a surreal inconstancy. Some
districts saw scorched-earth battle, even as, in others, shops stayed
open and the cafes were full. Throughout, Majd Ibrahim continued his
hotel-management courses at Al-Baath University. His neighborhood,
Waer, remained one of the least affected by the violence, and by
carefully monitoring the news for reports of specific conflagrations, he
was able on most days to navigate the two-mile journey to his campus.
By February 2012, however, the combat had become so indiscriminate that
the university announced it was temporarily closing. At the same time,
rumors began circulating through Homs that the Syrian Army would be
returning in force, this time to put down the rebellion once and for
all.
“That’s when my parents decided to send me to
Damascus,” Majd explained. “With the university closed and the fighting
about to get worse, they felt there was no reason for me to stay — and
it was going to become especially dangerous for young men.” When Majd
left for the Syrian capital in early February, he passed a seemingly
endless line of army transport trucks, tanks and artillery pieces parked
on the shoulder of the highway just outside Homs. The next day, the
Syrian Army moved in.
15.
Majdi el-Mangoush
Libya
See Map
The first living soul that Majdi
el-Mangoush saw upon reaching Misurata’s western outskirts was a young
boy, perhaps 8 or 9, playing in the dirt. The homes all around were
deserted and shell-pocked, but then he noticed a car parked in the
shadow of a farmhouse wall.
“Is your father here?” Majdi asked the boy. “Will you take me to your father?”
At the farmhouse, he met the boy’s father, a man
in his 30s, who was both astonished and deeply suspicious of this
stranger emerging from no man’s land. Majdi repeated his cover story:
that he had deserted from the regime and was trying to reach his family.
He was helped in this subterfuge by his surname, for everyone in
Misurata knew of the Mangoush clan. The man’s wariness eased off, and he
offered Majdi a lift into town.
As much as he’d heard about the fighting in his
hometown, Majdi was unprepared for the reality. Since late February
2011, Misurata had been increasingly under siege by government forces,
its residents becoming almost wholly dependent on whatever food and
medical supplies could be brought in by sea. All the while, the army had
rained down artillery shells, while its soldiers fought the rebels
alley by alley, person by person, just as Qaddafi had promised. The
siege abated somewhat with the advent of Western alliance airstrikes in
late March, but the damage done to the city was staggering. Everywhere
Majdi could see buildings blasted by tank shells or scorched by fire,
destruction so great that in some places he couldn’t even tell which
street or intersection they were passing.
The man from the farmhouse dropped Majdi off at
his family’s home. “I just came through the front door,” he recalled.
“The first person I saw was my sister. And then there were my
sister-in-law and my brother’s children.” At the memory, Majdi blinked
back tears. “It had been three months. I thought I would never see them
again.”
Majdi spent the rest of that day in reunion with
his family. He learned that after his father became seriously ill, his
parents had gone out aboard a medical evacuation ship to Tunisia. He
also learned that the list of local “traitors” to the regime didn’t just
consist of old friends but extended to his own family; in fact, for
several weeks, his oldest brother, Mohammed, had secreted a group of
deserting air force helicopter pilots in his own home. Everyone, it
seemed, had joined the revolution and was now committed, after all
Misurata had suffered, to see it through to the finish.
At some point during this family gathering, Majdi
briefly excused himself to go to his old bedroom. There, he took the
Thuraya from his pocket and hid it on a shelf behind a bundle of
bedding. “I didn’t know what I was going to do yet,” he said. “I just
knew that I had to hide that phone.”
Over the next week, the returned son of Misurata
wandered about his ruined city, meeting up with friends and learning of
those who had been wounded or killed in battle. In the process, he came
to see that everything he had been told and had believed about the war
was a lie. There were no criminals, there were no foreign mercenaries —
at least not among the rebels. There were only people like his own
family, desperate to throw off dictatorship.
But this realization placed Majdi in a very
delicate spot. Ayoub, his intelligence contact, surely knew of his
arrival in Misurata and was expecting him to report in. Majdi briefly
entertained the idea of simply discarding the Thuraya and going on as if
nothing had happened, but then he thought of the repercussions that
would befall his family if the regime won out in the end. Or what if the
rebels uncovered the regime’s spy cell in the city and his name
surfaced?
Faced with these possibilities, the air force
cadet came up with a far more clever — and dangerous — plan. In mid-May,
he presented himself to the local rebel military council and revealed
all. As Majdi well knew, for a would-be spy to throw himself on the
mercy of the enemy in wartime is never a good bet — the rebels’ most
expedient path would be to imprison or execute him — but against this
outcome, he made a bold offer.
The next morning, Majdi finally contacted Ayoub,
his regime handler, and agreed to meet two days later in a vacant
apartment building downtown. At that meeting, a group of rebel commandos
burst in with guns drawn and quickly wrestled both men to the ground.
Majdi and Ayoub were then placed in different cars for transport to
prison. By the time the rebel military council announced that it had
captured “two regime spies” in Misurata, Majdi was already back at his
family home.
Although the sting had come off perfectly, there
were apt to be other regime operatives aware of Majdi’s assignment,
making it risky for him to move about the city. He took advantage of the
moment to slip off to Tunisia to visit his parents.
For Majdi, then 24, the contrast of Tunisia —
modern, peaceful — was yet another journey into bewilderment. “It was so
quiet, so relaxed,” he recalled, “that it took me some time to believe
it was real.”
Majdi might easily have stayed on in Tunisia; it’s
certainly what his parents wanted. But after a few weeks, he grew
restless, gnawed by a sense that his role in his country’s war wasn’t
complete. “I think part of it was a kind of revenge. I had been with the
army, but they had lied and manipulated me. And, of course, the war
wasn’t over yet; people were still fighting and dying. I told my parents
I had no choice. I had to go home.”
Back in Misurata, Majdi immediately became active
with a local rebel militia, the Dhi Qar Brigade, for the march on
Qaddafi’s redoubt in Tripoli. Before he could be deployed there,
however, the government forces in the capital collapsed, and the
dictator and his remaining loyalists retreated down the coast to Surt,
Qaddafi’s tribal homeland district. There, surrounded and with their
backs to the sea, they waged a desperate last stand. For a month,
Majdi’s unit held a stretch of the Surt bypass highway, shelling regime
strongholds and engaging in the occasional firefight whenever the
trapped soldiers tried to break out. As elsewhere in the Libyan war — as
in most wars, frankly — combat in Surt was an oddly desultory affair,
moments of intense action followed by long stretches of tedium, and to
Majdi it seemed this rhythm might continue indefinitely.
Instead, it ended very suddenly on Oct. 20, 2011.
That morning, a fierce firefight erupted in the western part of Surt,
punctuated by a series of airstrikes from Western coalition warplanes;
from his perch on the bypass road, Majdi saw enormous plumes of fire and
dust rising up from the bombs exploding around the city. Around 2 p.m.,
there came another concentrated flurry of small-arms fire from the
western suburbs, one that lasted about 20 minutes, before all fell
quiet. Initially, Majdi and his comrades thought it meant that Qaddafi’s
men had surrendered, but there soon came even better news: The dictator
himself had been captured and killed. “We all cheered and hugged each
other,” Majdi recalled, “because we knew it meant the war was over.
After all that killing — and after 42 years of Qaddafi — a new day had
finally come to Libya.”
With the fighting at an end, Majdi returned to
Misurata and transferred to a militia unit more suited to his gentle
character: an ambulance crew ferrying the more severely war-wounded
from Misurata’s hospitals to the airport for advanced medical treatment
abroad. He greatly enjoyed this work, which he felt showed tangible
evidence of recovery after so much death and devastation, and it
fortified his optimism about the future.
Then one December day at the Misurata airport,
Majdi received a visitor. He was Sameh al-Drisi, the older brother of
his friend Jalal, and he had traveled the 500 miles from Benghazi to ask
a favor. The Libyan revolution had been over for two months, but the
last time anyone in the Drisi family had heard from Jalal was in May.
That communication was a short phone call from the Tripoli high school
where the air force cadets had been sequestered, and it came just days
after Majdi left for his spying mission to Misurata.
Changing course once again, Majdi set out in
search of his lost friend with a tenacity that bordered on obsession.
Returning to Tripoli, he spent weeks tracking down some of their former
academy classmates and, from them, was able to piece together at least
part of the mystery. In May 2011, Jalal had been among a group of some
50 cadets at the Tripoli high school who were assembled and told they
were being sent to assist front-line troops as they advanced on the
rebels in Misurata, checking for old booby-traps and guarding
communication and supply lines. Instead, the cadets were used as bait
there, sent out over open ground to be shot and shelled at, while the
regime’s more seasoned soldiers sat back to observe where the enemy fire
was coming from. As one cadet after another fell on this suicide
mission, Jalal and two of his comrades managed to reach an outlying
farm, where they begged an old farmer to take them south, away from the
battlefield; instead, the farmer betrayed the students and delivered
them to internal security forces, who in turn delivered them right back
to the army. After a round of beatings, the three were sent back to
their suicide squad.
But that was as far as the tale went. Shortly
after, Jalal’s two companions had made a second escape attempt — this
time successfully — but by then Jalal had been moved to a different part
of the front.
This set Majdi off on a new search. He finally
found another former classmate who completed the story. One day in June,
a small group of the cadets — Jalal and others who had managed to
survive that long — were bivouacked along a farm road on Misurata’s
southern outskirts when an officer drove up and called the students over
for a situation report. In that same moment, a missile from an unseen
Western alliance warplane or drone blew apart the officer’s car,
instantly killing him and most of the cadets standing nearby. When the
missile struck, Jalal was sitting beneath a tree some 50 yards away, but
it was there that an errant piece of shrapnel found him, tearing off
the top of his head. His surviving companions buried Jalal’s spilled
brain beneath the tree but put his corpse in a truck with the other dead
for transport to some unknown cemetery.
“Of course I was reminded of the dream he’d had,”
Majdi said. “Yes, we’d both gone to Misurata to fight, but it was he who
died.”
For most people, this might have meant an end to
the search, but not Majdi. Recalling the time he had spent with Jalal’s
family in Benghazi, the hospitality they had shown him, he was
determined to find his friend’s body so that it might be returned to
them. After knocking on the doors of countless functionaries in the new
revolutionary government, he was finally directed to a Tripoli cemetery
where the “traitors” — that is, Qaddafi regime loyalists — had been
gathered up and buried.
It was a grim, trash-strewn stretch of land
dotted with hundreds of graves. Majdi methodically passed down each row,
but Jalal’s name wasn’t listed. Finally, he came to a far corner of the
cemetery where he saw a grave marked “unknown.” Majdi felt a burst of
excitement, for it occurred to him that given Jalal’s terrible head
wound, identification might have been impossible — but then he noticed
three more graves with the same “unknown” markers. Returning to the
cemetery office, he asked for the photographs taken of the unidentified
corpses before burial: The faces of all four were so horribly damaged as
to be unrecognizable.
Still, Majdi was now convinced that one of the
four was Jalal. He broke the news to the Drisi family and several months
later flew to Benghazi to pay his respects to them in person. “It was a
very emotional meeting,” he said, “and I apologized to them for not
being able to watch out for Jalal, but. ...” He drifted off in sadness
for a moment, but then abruptly righted himself. “So that is it. Jalal
is in one of those four graves, that is for sure.”
16.
Majd Ibrahim
Syria
See Map
Majd spent three months in Damascus
as street battles raged throughout his hometown, and even though the
atmosphere in the capital was tranquil — disconcertingly so — he was
eager to get back to his family and his studies. Finally in May 2012,
the situation in Homs had sufficiently calmed to allow the university to
reopen.
Majd had kept in regular contact with his parents
and friends during his Damascus stay, so he knew that the fighting in
Homs had been centered in the Baba Amr neighborhood south of downtown.
He’d been told that the damage was extensive, but he wasn’t prepared for
the reality. “We drove past it on the day I got back,” he recalled,
“and — well, it was just gone. Everything was gone. I remember thinking —
trying to find something positive, you know? — Everyone should come see
this. If people saw Baba Amr now, maybe it would be a lesson. They
would understand how terrible war is.” The naïveté of that notion soon
became obvious; within weeks of Majd’s return, the battle for Homs
started up in earnest again. This time, the regime was targeting the
insurgents in the Khalidiya neighborhood, and because the army’s main
artillery staging ground was next to the Waer district, it meant shells
passed directly over the Ibrahims’ apartment building at all hours.
“When they went overhead,” Majd said, “it was like
the air was sucked away. I don’t know how else to describe it, but you
felt it in your lungs. It was hard to breathe for maybe a half-minute
afterward, like all the oxygen was gone.”
The fighting in Homs raged on through the summer
of 2012, with the Syrian military methodically targeting one rebel-held
neighborhood after another, their ground-troop assaults backed up by
tanks, artillery and helicopter gunships. Throughout, though, the
middle-class neighborhood of Waer remained an oasis of comparative
calm. Majd attributed it to Waer’s diversity; with its mixed population
of Sunnis, Alawites and Christians, none of the rebel militias could
truly control the enclave — and if the militias weren’t there in force,
the overextended Syrian Army couldn’t be bothered.
By the autumn of 2012, that began to change. On
the streets of Waer, Majd noticed more and more young men toting
weapons, and of those who wore insignia, by far the most common was that
of the Free Syrian Army, or F.S.A. The militiamen also took notice of
Majd. Of perfect combat age at 20, he found his daily ventures to the
university growing ever more stressful as the gunmen demanded to know
who he was allied with or taunted him for not “joining up.”
In response to the growing tension in Waer, the
Ibrahims began renting a “shelter home” — a safety measure that many of
the city’s more affluent residents were adopting. By now, so many
families had fled Homs that furnished apartments sat empty throughout
the city. Contacting one such family that had left for Damascus, Majd’s
father arranged to rent their apartment in an outlying neighborhood for
use whenever trouble cropped up in Waer. At first, the Ibrahims decamped
to their shelter home only occasionally, but by early 2013 their
flights had increased in frequency to two or three times a week. Their
greatest concern was for the safety of their eldest son at the hands of
the militias.
“Most of them were just guys from the neighborhood
who’d managed to get their hands on some guns,” Majd explained. “I knew
a lot of them — I’d grown up with them — so that was good. But more and
more were coming in from the outside, and those guys were tough. A lot
of them were survivors of the battles in Baba Amr and Khalidiya. They
were suspicious of everyone, and you just never knew what they were
going to do.”
Adding another unsettling element to the mix, a
lot of the fighters were on drugs, habitually popping an amphetamine
called Captagon that could keep them alert for days, counteracted by an
anti-anxiety drug called Zolam to bring them down.
Of all the various armed groups that had pitched
up in Waer — and many were little more than neighborhood self-defense
committees — the Free Syrian Army spurred a particular disdain in Majd.
While many in American foreign-policy circles were professing to see
secular progressives who, if supported, might lead Syria to democracy,
Majd saw only a bunch of opportunists and cowards.
“At least the guys in the Islamist groups had some
beliefs and discipline,” he said, “but most of the F.S.A. in Waer were
just young guys who wanted to walk around with guns and scare people.
And the funny thing about that is they were the ones who scared very
easily. If another group came into their area, they would just turn
around and join that group.”
One day, Majd came upon a young F.S.A. commander
he’d come to know quite well, an incessant chain-smoker, sitting
dejectedly and cigarette-less. When Majd asked why he wasn’t smoking,
the militiaman explained that he wasn’t F.S.A. anymore. His unit had
been taken over by an Islamic group that had decreed smoking was haram, or forbidden.
17.
Majdi el-Mangoush
Libya
See Map
In his quest to learn the fate of his
best friend, Majdi had stumbled upon a tragedy of far greater
dimension. Every side in the Libyan revolution, it seemed, had taken
turns killing off the air force cadets. As in Jalal’s case, the Qaddafi
forces had used some as bait against the rebels, but they had also
executed others for simply trying to go home. In turn, the rebels, after
killing many cadets on the battlefield, had executed countless more as
“regime loyalists” in the flush of victory. In early 2012, scores of
cadets who had survived this collective bloodletting were being held in
revolutionary prisons, while many more were living in hiding. Of his
approximately 580 colleagues at the Misurata air force academy, Majdi
estimates that between 150 and 200 were killed during the war and its
immediate aftermath.
“And we were just students,” he said. “That’s all we were. Both sides used us. Both sides slaughtered us.”
Despite all this, Majdi was initially very
optimistic about the future in post-revolutionary Libya; the country
had oil, smart people and, after the 42-year reign of Col. Muammar
el-Qaddafi, the will for a better life. In his view, the first great
misstep was when the interim government in Tripoli, the Transitional
National Council, announced that it would pay stipends to all those who
had fought against the Qaddafi regime. Within weeks, the number of
“revolutionaries” — approximately 20,000 by the most generous estimate —
had mushroomed to some 250,000. Worse, the structure of the
compensation, acquiesced to by Western governments allied with the
transitional council, created an incentive for new armed groups not just
to form but to remain independent of any central command, the better to
demand their own share of the compensation pie. Already by the close of
2012, Libyan militias — some composed of true revolutionary veterans,
others no more than tribal or criminal gangs — had begun carving the
country into rival fiefs, their ability to do so bankrolled by the very
central government that they were undermining. That instability was made
painfully clear to the Obama administration when the American
diplomatic compound in Benghazi was attacked in September 2012, leading
to the deaths of Ambassador J.Christopher Stevens and three others. But
for Majdi, final disillusionment took a more personal form. In the
autumn of 2012, he received his “diploma” from the air force academy,
announcing that he had successfully completed all the requirements for a
degree in communication engineering.
“I hadn’t completed anything,” he said. “There had
been no classes for a year and a half, so this paper was absolutely
meaningless. But this was the new Libya: Everything was just lies and
corruption. And maybe I felt it more because of what I had gone through,
all my friends at the academy who had been killed, but I just couldn’t
accept that. ‘Here, take this paper. No one has to know. Call yourself
an engineer.’ Maybe others felt it in a different way, or they think of
it more in political terms, but it was when I received my diploma that I
saw the revolution had been betrayed, that Libya was a failed state.”
Majdi faced a stark choice: He could use his sham
diploma to land some inconsequential government job, or he could start
over. The next year, he enrolled in Misurata University to study
engineering. Around the time he started back at school, Majdi also
became involved with an environmental group based in Tripoli called Tree
Lovers. He was so inspired by its work that he helped start a Misurata
branch. While both money and supplies are tight, Majdi and other
volunteers have planted flowers and shrubs along many of the city’s
dusty median strips and sought to raise awareness about the importance
of preserving the very little vegetation Libya possesses. “The desert is
spreading in lots of places in Libya,” he said, “and the only way to
stop that is with trees.”
But there may have been a more personal impulse at
work on Majdi. One of the more intriguing phenomena observed among
ex-soldiers most everywhere is a desire for solitude, to be out in
nature, and when I visited him in Misurata, Majdi was eager to show me
the forest that he and his fellow conservationists tended. On an early
morning, we drove out of Misurata for the farm fields and small villages
at its southern outskirts.
Majdi’s “forest” proved to be little more than a
few rows of scraggly pines set beside a farm road, with trash strewn
about from careless picnickers, but he was very proud of it. Stepping
around the garbage, he strolled among the trees and breathed in deeply
of the pine scent with a satisfied smile.
18.
Laila Soueif
Egypt
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For Laila Soueif, the news of May 28,
2012, couldn’t have been worse. That afternoon, Egypt’s national
election commission announced the names of the two men who would compete
in a runoff to become the first democratically elected president in
Egyptian history. There had been 13 candidates, and the only one certain
to advance was Mohamed Morsi, the leader of the Muslim Brotherhood, the
one party that had unified enough Islamist voters to form a meaningful
voting bloc. Against him, Laila was ready to support any of the others —
save one. That was Ahmed Shafik, Hosni Mubarak’s former prime minister.
That afternoon, it was announced that the runoff contenders were Morsi
and Shafik.
“So what to do?” Laila asked rhetorically. “Morsi
was completely unacceptable, but now it was him or Shafik, so we were
stuck. Well, never Shafik — that meant a return to the Mubarak era — so.
...”
In just this way, Laila Soueif, the stalwart
feminist and leftist, found herself backing the election of a man who
advocated returning Egypt to traditional Islamic values. Many other
Egyptians were aghast at the choice given to them; in the June runoff,
Morsi barely squeaked in with 51.7 percent of the vote.
In his inaugural speech on June 30, Morsi promised
that “in the new Egypt, the president will be an employee, a servant to
the people.” But a servant to the deep state may have been more
accurate. Just days before the new president assumed office, the Supreme
Council of the Armed Forces, or SCAF, the military junta that had ruled
Egypt since Mubarak’s overthrow, transferred most presidential powers
to the military. That followed a decree by the Supreme Constitutional
Court, a holdover from the Mubarak era, that dissolved a sitting
Parliament dominated by the Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamist
political parties. On the day he assumed office, then, Morsi was barely
more than a figurehead, the public face to a democracy already gutted.
Morsi tried mightily to claw back the authority
taken from his office. Ignoring the fiat of the Supreme Constitutional
Court, he ordered the dissolved Islamist-dominated Parliament
reinstated. Even more boldly, he dismissed the senior military
leadership, including the powerful defense minister. In his place, Morsi
promoted his own man, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, the general who had
lectured Ahmed Seif during his 2011 detention.
But then Morsi overreached — badly. In October
2012, he tried to expand the powers of the presidency by decree, a move
that alarmed both the deep state and the secular opposition, already
growing increasingly fearful of creeping Islamization. Morsi swiftly
reeled back some of the more controversial planks in his decree, but the
damage was done; in a new round of protests across Egypt, the president
was denounced for trying to become a new “pharaoh” or “ayatollah.”
And here was the opening the deep state seemed to
have been waiting for, the chance to reopen the traditional schism that
existed between its Islamist and secular opponents. For decades, the
Egyptian generals had held up the Islamists — and most particularly the
Muslim Brotherhood — as the greatest threat to the modern secular state
and naturally positioned themselves as the guardians against them. This
strategy had broken down during the heady days of revolution, with
Islamists and progressives alike turning against the generals, but Ahmed
Seif had seen how easily it could be resurrected. At a meeting of human
rights activists organized by Amnesty International the year before,
when Egypt was still under the control of the SCAF generals, one
attendee after another expressed concern about the possibility of an
Islamist electoral victory. As Scott Long, an activist who was at the
meeting, recalled on his personal blog, the normally soft-spoken Ahmed
finally slapped his hand against the conference table. “I will not
accept that the American government, or Amnesty, or anyone, will tell me
that I need to tolerate a military dictatorship in order to avoid a
takeover by Islamist people,” he said. “I will not accept such false
choices.”
Now, with Morsi’s overreach as president, that “false choice” was becoming increasingly stark.
“It was very clear what the state was doing,”
Laila said. “First, block everything that Morsi tries to do, so that
nothing gets done. ‘He’s a failed president.’ But second, feed the fears
about him. That was easy to do, because the propaganda against the
Muslim Brotherhood — ‘They’re terrorists’ — went back 50 years,” and the
propaganda had at least some basis in reality: In the 1990s, factions
of the Muslim Brotherhood had formed alliances with actual terrorists
groups.
By the spring of 2013, Egypt was becoming rapidly
polarized between Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood followers and nearly
everyone else. Perversely, many of the same young demonstrators who took
to the streets in 2011 to demand democracy were now calling for Morsi’s
overthrow. Even more perversely, they looked to the one state
institution capable of carrying that out: the Egyptian military.
This wasn’t simply a case of national amnesia. One
of the more curious aspects of Egyptian society has been a longstanding
reverence for its military, a tradition inculcated in Egyptian students
from primary school. As a result, even during Mubarak’s era, many
Egyptians regarded the military as somehow apart from the venal
dictatorship it upheld. Nevermind that the army was, in fact, a major
beneficiary of that corrupt system — the Egyptian military owned
construction companies, engineering firms, even a pasta factory — what a
lot of those who took to the streets in anti-Morsi demonstrations in
2013 recalled was that the army had been instrumental in finally
toppling Mubarak two years before. If the guardians of the nation had
acted to overthrow one dictator, why not a second one in the making?
“You could see what was about to happen,” Laila
said. “Yes, Morsi was a disaster, he had to go, but to invite in the
military was worse. But so many people I knew, even people who had been
in Tahrir, this is what they wanted.”
On June 30, 2013, the first anniversary of Morsi’s
inauguration, huge demonstrations took place throughout Egypt, with
protesters demanding that he step down. They were met in the streets by
counterdemonstrations of Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood supporters. All but
invisible between these two great factions was a small group of
protesters advocating a third path. It included Laila Soueif and her
daughter, Mona.
“We gathered in one corner near Tahrir,” Mona
recalled with a rueful laugh, “and chanted, ‘Not Morsi, and not the
army.’ People going by gave us these confused looks, like we were all
crazy, and I’m sure we kind of seemed that way.”
It was at this critical juncture that the defense
minister, Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, until then regarded as a bland
functionary, finally stepped from the shadows. On July 1, the general
delivered an ultimatum to the man who had appointed him, giving Morsi 48
hours “to meet the demands of the people” or the army would step in to
restore order. Pointing out that he was the elected head of state, the
president defiantly dismissed the threat.
“Morsi made two great mistakes,” Laila said.
“First, he thought the army wouldn’t move against him without the
approval of the Americans. He didn’t realize the generals didn’t care
about the Americans anymore. Second, he trusted Sisi.”
True to his word, on July 3, Sisi overthrew the
Egyptian government. He also annulled the Constitution, arrested Morsi
and other Muslim Brotherhood leaders and shut down four television
stations. Within days, he announced the formation of an interim
“transitional” government, one composed of military officers and
Mubarak-era apparatchiks, but all Egyptians knew that the real
authority now lay with Sisi.
It was on the streets of Egypt where the face of
the new regime was most nakedly revealed. In the days after Sisi took
power, clashes between his supporters and those of the ousted president
turned increasingly violent, with the police and the military making
very clear whose side they were on. On July 8, security forces fired on
Morsi loyalists gathered in central Cairo, killing at least 51. That
episode set the stage for far worse. On the afternoon of Aug. 14,
security forces moved in to Cairo’s Rabaa Square with orders to disperse
the several thousand Morsi holdout supporters who had been camped there
during the previous month. By the most reliable estimates, at least 800
and perhaps more than 1,000 protesters were killed in the ensuing
massacre. In an obscene parody of the 2011 revolution, hundreds took to
Cairo’s streets over the following days to praise the army for its
actions.
For Laila Soueif, there was to be another, far
more personal indication that the new Egyptian regime was different from
those that had come before.
Laila’s son, Alaa, bore the dubious distinction of
having been arrested by all three Egyptian governments that preceded
Sisi’s takeover: those of Mubarak, SCAF and Morsi. In 2006, he spent 45
days in jail for joining a demonstration calling for greater judicial
independence. During the SCAF administration, he did a two-month stint
in detention for “inciting violence.” He fared better under Morsi, if
only because the judges, Mubarak-era holdovers, detested the new
president; his March 2013 charge of “inciting aggression” was summarily
dismissed, while his conviction for arson resulted in a one-year
suspended sentence.
Given this track record, it was probably just a
matter of time before Alaa was picked up by the new Egyptian regime.
That occurred on Nov. 28, 2013, when he was arrested on charges of
inciting violence and, in a nice Orwellian touch, protesting an
anti-protest law enacted just four days earlier. That note of black
humor aside, under the rule of Sisi, matters were to play out very
differently for Laila’s son from the way they had in the past.
19.
Majd Ibrahim
Syria
See Map
One of the more baffling features of
the Syrian civil war has been the fantastic tangle of tacit cease-fires
or temporary alliances that are often forged between various militias
and the regime, or even with just a local army commander. These can take
any permutation imaginable — radical Islamists teaming up with an
Alawite shabiha gang, for example — and they pose a horrifying
puzzle to anyone trying to navigate the battlefield, for it means that
no one is necessarily who they seem, that death can come from anywhere.
But this pattern of secret deal-making also served to long inoculate
the Waer district from the scorched-earth tactics the Assad regime was
employing elsewhere in Homs because, at any given time, at least some of
the myriad rebel militias roaming the neighborhood were apt to be in
secret concord with the state.
That dynamic ended in early May 2013. In a
colossal misstep, the Free Syrian Army had recently moved back into the
devastated Baba Amr neighborhood, and there had been surrounded and
slaughtered. Those who managed to escape the regime’s cordon made for
Waer and took near total control of the enclave. Sure enough, Syrian
army artillery shells soon began raining down on Majd’s neighborhood.
While the scale of shelling was nothing like what befell Baba Amr or
Khalidiya, it was enough to keep the Ibrahim family in their
fourth-floor apartment, forever trying to guess where safety lay.
“You just never knew what to do,” Majd explained.
“Is it better here or in the shelter home? And if it’s safer there, how
dangerous is it to try to get there?”
As bizarre as it might seem, one reason the
Ibrahims stayed on in Homs despite the ever-worsening situation was
that Majd’s finals were coming up at the university. Their insistence on
his finishing was not some homage to the value of higher education;
under Syrian law, college students were exempt from conscription, so as
long as Majd stayed in school, he was safe from being drafted. Once he
took his exams at the end of July, his parents decided, they would
reassess the situation and decide what came next.
That gamble nearly led to disaster. On the
afternoon of July 5, Majd was talking with friends on a Waer street when
a white station wagon pulled up and three young F.S.A. fighters with
Kalashnikovs jumped out. Grabbing Majd, they dragged him into the car
where, blindfolded, he was driven to their nearby base.
“I thought it was a joke at the beginning,” Majd
said. “But they knew my name, my age, what I was studying in the
university. They wanted me, not anyone else.”
For the next few hours, Majd’s captors insisted
that he admit to being a regime spy, meeting protestations of innocence
with kicks and punches. Finally, he was forced to his knees, and an
F.S.A. man put a large knife to his throat. Another aimed a Kalashnikov
at his head.
“Well, this is the standard way they execute,”
Majd said softly, “so I knew this was about to happen to me. They wanted
to kill me very badly.”
In prelude to his execution, however, the chief
interrogator thought to look through Majd’s cellphone. With each phone
number and photograph he flipped to, he demanded that Majd finally give
up the identity of his “controller.” The 20-year-old’s continued
professions of innocence brought more kicks, more punches. The
interrogator came to the stored photograph of one young man in
particular and stopped.
“Why do you have this guy’s photo?” he asked.
“Because he’s my best friend,” Majd replied.
The F.S.A. commander slowly turned to his captive. “We will call him.”
The commander left the room, and for a long time
Majd remained on his knees, the knife to his throat and the gun to his
head. Quite unbeknown to Majd, his best friend was also an acquaintance
of the F.S.A. commander, and he came to the base to assure the
militiaman that Majd Ibrahim was no regime spy. Majd learned this only
when the commander returned to the interrogation room and told him he
would be set free.
“So that is what saved my life,” Majd said, “that photograph.”
During the drive back to Waer, the F.S.A.
commander started a long sales pitch on why Majd should quit the
university and take up arms against the regime. Majd said he would think
about it.
When he arrived at the spot where he had been
picked up earlier that day, his parents and friends were waiting for
him. The next morning, July 6, the Ibrahim family left for their shelter
home, never to return to the Waer neighborhood where Majd had lived his
entire life. It was his 21st birthday.
20.
Khulood al-Zaidi
Jordan
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Since her return from San Francisco
in 2009, Khulood had been marooned in Jordan. By 2014, she was living in
a small apartment in a working-class neighborhood of eastern Amman
with her father and two sisters, Teamim and Sahar. It was a dreary
place, a three-story walk-up overlooking a dusty commercial road, but it
was softened by the presence of Mystery, the sisters’ pet cat, and
Shiny, a small box turtle they rescued from the street.
Before leaving for the United States in 2008 Khulood had briefly worked for a Japanese humanitarian organization called Kokkyo naki Kodomotachi
(Children Without Borders), or KnK, and she rejoined the agency upon
her return to Amman the following year. Her principal task was to help
acclimate some of the countless thousands of Iraqi children whose
families had fled to Jordan to escape the war, and so impressed were the
KnK supervisors with Khulood’s connection to the children that they
soon hired her two sisters as well. Around the same time, Ali al-Zaidi,
the retired radiologist and patriarch of the family, found work on the
loading docks of a yogurt factory on the industrial outskirts of Amman.
In 2014, the family was at least scraping by.
Khulood’s work at KnK had undergone a shift,
though. With the war in Iraq having abated, the number of Iraqi refugees
in Jordan was drastically reduced from its half-million peak. They
were soon replaced, however, by new refugees from the war in Syria —
just a trickle at first, but by the end of 2014, their number was more
than 600,000.
In certain ways, Khulood found the Syrian children
quite different from their Iraqi counterparts. “The Iraqis, because
they had become so tired of war, they were very peaceful and easy to
work with,” she said. “But the Syrian children — the boys — they have
this idea, ‘We have to go back to Syria to fight.’ They hear this
constantly from their fathers — ‘You’re going to be a soldier and go
back to Syria’ — so they’re like little rebels, not little kids. It’s
all about home, missing home, how they need to go back and avenge what
happened.” By contrast, the girls had far more in common. “In both Iraq
and Syria, girls are taught to keep everything inside. They aren’t
listened to. This makes it much harder to reach them, so their problems
are deeper.”
Khulood still hadn’t given up on her quest to get
her family out of the region. For several years, she continued to
petition for the United States to reopen their case, but those efforts
went nowhere. By 2014, she was holding out special hope for Britain; in
Jordan, she had worked as an interpreter for a British film company, and
with letters of support from her former co-workers, Khulood reasoned,
the authorities there might look favorably on her. She had recently
become aware of a rather diabolical Catch-22, however. Nearly the only
way to win asylum in Britain — or in any other country, for that matter —
was to present the petition in person. To do that, Khulood first needed
to obtain a British visa, and to get that, she needed to have legal
residency in Jordan. “And that’s impossible,” she said. “Jordan only
gives residency to wealthy refugees who, of course, have no problem
resettling in Europe anyway.”
Still, in April 2014, Khulood hadn’t completely
given up hope. Possessed of a seemingly unconquerable will, over several
days of conversation, she seemed determined to put the very best face
on her situation, and she was far more interested in talking up her
current plans than her past failures. Only once did this brave facade
crack, and it came amid a discussion about the future she imagined for
the refugee children she worked with.
“I stay with this because I want these kids to
have a better life than me,” she said, “but frankly, I think their lives
will be wasted just like mine. I try not to think that way, but,
really, let’s be candid: This is their future. For me, these past nine
years have been wasted. My sisters and I, we have dreams. We are
educated, we want to study, to have careers. But in Jordan we cannot
legally work, and we cannot leave, so we are just standing in place.
That’s all. Now we’re becoming old, we’re all in our 30s, but still we
can’t marry or start families, because then we will never get out of
here.”
Khulood sat back and let out a dispirited sigh.
“I’m sorry. I try to never pity myself or to blame anyone for this
situation, but I really wish the Americans had thought more about what
they were doing before they came to Iraq. That’s what started all this.
Without that, we would be normal.”
But for Khulood and her sisters, the situation was
about to grow even worse. In the autumn of 2014, Khulood said, KnK was
having problems with the Jordanian government, which insisted that the
organization’s foreign staff members have legal work permits. While KnK
said the sisters’ work was exemplary, its efforts to keep them were in
vain; that December, all three Zaidi sisters were dismissed from their
jobs on the same day.
21.
Laila Soueif
Egypt
See Map
On Oct. 27, 2014, Laila Soueif and
her oldest daughter, Mona, climbed the short row of steps leading to the
main entrance of the Egyptian Supreme Court building, then stopped and
sat beside one of its stone columns. From her backpack, Laila drew out a
small sign written on cardboard. It announced she and her daughter were
going to intensify the partial hunger strike they began in September to
protest the injustices committed against their family. They would
remain there off and on for the next 48 hours, taking no food or
liquids.
“The idea wasn’t to kill ourselves,” Laila
explained, “but to draw attention to what the Sisi regime was doing. It
was the only weapon we had left.” As for its efficacy, she was
matter-of-fact. “A few people passing signaled that they supported us —
sometimes quite a subtle signal.”
Adding another layer of pain to the experience, it
came at a time when Laila’s family had, quite literally, disappeared
before her eyes.
The first sign that the Sisi regime was to take a
much dimmer view than its predecessors of dissent to its rule came with
Alaa’s arrest in late November 2013. Rather than being released on bail
to await trial, he and his 24 co-defendants were held for the next four
months. In a tactic apparently designed to break his will, Alaa’s
release on bail in March 2014 was followed by his rearrest three months
later.
If average Egyptians were alarmed by the deepening
repression in their country — less than a year after Sisi took power,
there were already far more political prisoners in Egypt’s jails than
there had ever been under Mubarak — they gave scant evidence of it. In
presidential elections that May, Sisi, now officially retired from the
military, won with more than 96 percent of the vote. While this surely
wasn’t a wholly accurate reflection of his popularity — between those
political parties that had been banned and those that boycotted the
election, Sisi faced only token opposition — even an ardent opponent
like Laila Soueif recognized that the former general had widespread
support. She had even seen it among many of her friends and university
co-workers. “They had this idea that, ‘O.K., maybe he’s a little rough,
but he saved us from the Islamists,’ ” she said. “That’s all they cared
about, all they saw.”
Up to that point, Laila’s youngest daughter,
Sanaa, then 20, had avoided the family tradition of run-ins with the
law. On June 21, 2014, that changed. Increasingly infuriated by the
treatment of her brother and Egypt’s other political prisoners, Sanaa
joined a human rights rally in Cairo. Within minutes, she was arrested
on the same charge as her brother: violating the protest law.
Even under the tightening Sisi regime, members of
the Cairene upper class like Sanaa enjoyed a degree of immunity — the
main enemies of the state, after all, were the working-class followers
of the Muslim Brotherhood, and they were to be ruthlessly hunted down.
But when brought before a magistrate, the college student took a bold
step. Despite suggestions from the judge that she stay quiet, Sanaa
insisted that she had been a chief organizer of the demonstration and
refused to sign her statement until this detail was included. “She
wasn’t going to let them do the usual thing of letting the high-profile
activists go and pound on the lesser-known ones,” Laila said. Sanaa,
like her older brother, was held in jail pending trial.
For Ahmed Seif, Egypt’s pre-eminent human rights
lawyer, it had meant that his ever-expanding roster of clients now
included two of his own children. At a news conference the previous
January, the former political prisoner took the microphone to eloquently
address his imprisoned son, Alaa. “I wanted you to inherit a democratic
society that guards your rights, my son, but instead I passed on the
prison cell that held me, and now holds you.” By June, that haunting
message applied equally to his youngest daughter.
Soon, matters took an even grimmer turn for the
family of Laila Soueif. Long in frail health, Ahmed had been scheduled
for open-heart surgery at the end of August; on the 16th of that month,
he suddenly collapsed and then fell into a coma. Only after intense
lobbying by both influential Egyptians and international human rights
organizations did the Sisi regime grant Alaa and Sanaa afternoon
furloughs to visit their father before he died.
“And that was the absolute worst day,” Laila said,
“maybe the worst day of my life. Sanaa was being held in a police
station, so we had been able to see her and tell her what was going on,
but Alaa had no idea. He showed up at the hospital with flowers for
Ahmed, so I had to take him aside to say his father was in a coma. He
said, ‘So he won’t even know I’m here then’ and just threw the flowers
out.”
The day after that hospital visit, Alaa went on a
hunger strike in his cell. Sanaa stopped eating also, on Aug. 28, the
day of her father’s funeral. A week later, Laila and Mona announced
their partial hunger strike, in which they would take only
anti-dehydration liquids.
In light of both Ahmed’s death and the family’s
prominence, many observers believed that Alaa and Sanaa would be shown
leniency by the courts. That belief was misplaced. On Oct. 26, 2014,
Sanaa was sentenced to three years in prison for violating the protest
law. The next day, Laila and Mona took to the courthouse steps for their
intensified hunger strike. Laila braced herself for more bad news when
Alaa went to trial the following month, by remembering something her
husband had said.
“Because Ahmed had spent so much time in
courtrooms and knew what certain things meant,” she said, “he was always
very accurate in his predictions. Before he died, when he was still
representing Alaa, he told me, ‘Prepare yourself, because they’re going
to give him five years.’ ”
22.
Majd Ibrahim
Syria
See Map
By the time Laila had begun her
hunger strike and Khulood and her sisters were losing their jobs and
Majdi el-Mangoush was back in school, Majd Ibrahim had himself found a
moment of respite — one that, although brief, had been a long time
coming.
With the serial siege of Homs steadily grinding
ever more of the city’s neighborhoods to dust, by early 2014 even the
Ibrahim family’s shelter home was no longer safe. That March, the family
moved once again, this time to New Akrama, a neighborhood that had been
spared the worst of the violence. There, they simply waited along with
everyone else for something, anything, to change.
That change finally came in May, when the last of
Homs’ rebels accepted a brokered cease-fire and safe passage from the
city. The three-year siege of Homs was over. What had once been a
thriving, cosmopolitan city was now known as Syria’s Stalingrad, with
vast expanses of its neighborhoods uninhabitable. It was also only then
that the full horror of what some of its residents had been subjected to
came to light. In the total-war environment, some residents had starved
to death, while others had survived by eating leaves and weeds.
But even if a kind of peace had reached the
shattered streets of Homs, the war continued elsewhere in Syria, and in a
form that boded poorly for all its citizens. Majd Ibrahim heard the
names of so many new militias competing with the plethora of already
existing ones, it was quite impossible to keep track of them all. For
sheer daring and cruelty, however, one group stood out: the Islamic
State, or ISIS.
An even more radical offshoot of Al Qaeda, the
newcomers attracted Islamic extremists from around the world. In Syria,
the group announced its presence with a series of sudden, brutal attacks
in Aleppo and the desert towns to the east, battling not just the
Syrian Army but also those rival militias it deemed “apostate.” What
most drew the attention of Majd Ibrahim was the group’s reputation for
complete mercilessness, for eliminating by the most horrific means
possible any who would resist its will.
Just a month after the Homs siege ended, most of
the rest of the world would hear of ISIS, too, when it stormed out of
the Syrian desert to utterly transform the Middle Eastern battlefield
yet again.
PART IV: ISIS RISING
23.
Wakaz Hassan
Iraq
See Map
Wakaz Hassan always struggled in
school. “I felt whenever I tried to study, I failed,” he said. At least
some of his struggles might have been a result of a hearing impairment —
he speaks in a loud, slightly atonal voice, often asking others to
repeat themselves. But children around Tikrit were seldom tested for
such things, and he simply accepted that he would never quite catch up
with his classmates. After being forced to repeat a year of school,
Wakaz dropped out.
By the time he was a teenager, Wakaz had joined
the legions of other unskilled young Iraqi men who scraped by with
day-labor construction jobs: hauling bricks, cutting rebar, mixing
cement. When no construction work was to be had, he sometimes helped out
in the small candy shop that his father, a retired bank clerk, had
opened in Dawr, his home village just outside Tikrit. But it was all a
rather meager and dull existence.
There was one potential way out. In stark contrast
to Wakaz’s own middling ability to find employment, his oldest brother,
Mohammed, had been hired as an intelligence officer for the local
security forces, and this sinecure held out considerable promise for the
entire Hassan family. Given the culture of nepotism that Saddam
Hussein had fostered in Iraq, and which continued to flourish after his
demise, Wakaz could reasonably hope that Mohammed might someday work his
way far enough up into the municipal ranks to bring his three younger
brothers, including himself, into the security forces as well. But in
June 2014, a series of cataclysmic events were about to break over the
Sunni heartland of Iraq, and they would radically alter the fortunes of
the 19-year-old day laborer in Dawr.
At the very beginning of that year, ISIS
insurgents wrested control of the crucial crossroads city of Falluja in
Iraq’s Anbar Province, then spread out to seize a number of nearby
cities and towns. At the time, Wakaz knew very little about the group,
other than that it sought to establish an Islamic caliphate in the Sunni
lands of Iraq and Syria. Over subsequent months, however, Wakaz, like
most other young Tikriti men, had seen the elaborate recruitment videos
that ISIS produced and distributed on social media. The videos depicted
warriors, or “knights,” as ISIS called them, clad in smartly turned-out
uniforms and black ski masks as they rode triumphantly through towns
they had conquered, great black flags flapping from their new Toyota
Land Cruisers. Other videos from that time showed a decidedly darker
side of ISIS — executions and crucifixion displays — but Wakaz claimed
never to have seen those. In any event, the budding caliphate seemed far
away from the sleepy and economically moribund town of Dawr.
By that June, it was far away no more. On June 6, a
band of ISIS fighters entered the western suburbs of Mosul, northern
Iraq’s largest city, just 140 miles up Highway 1 from Tikrit. Although
it’s estimated that a mere 1,500 ISIS fighters participated in the
attack on Mosul — and by some accounts, the number was far lower —
within a couple of days, they had put the tens of thousands of Iraqi
Army and security forces in the city of two million to panicked flight.
By June 9, the Highway 1 bypass road around Tikrit was the scene of a
frantic stampede as thousands of Iraqi soldiers, many having already
shed their uniforms, sped for the safety of Baghdad, 100 miles farther
south. But ISIS wasn’t done. After Mosul, they quickly advanced on
Baiji, the oil-refinery town 40 miles north of Tikrit, and then on June
11 rolled into Tikrit itself.
In Tikrit, just as in Mosul and Baiji, the Iraqi
Army offered virtually nothing in the way of resistance, with different
units seeming only to compete on how quickly they could escape and how
much of their weaponry they could leave behind for the enemy. But if the
army fled the region, few of the local people did. Those remaining
behind included Wakaz and his brother Mohammed.
The ISIS offensive of June 2014 marked one of the
most stunning military feats in modern history: In less than one week, a
lightly armed guerrilla force of, ultimately, perhaps 5,000 fighters
scattered a modern and well-equipped army at least 20 times its size,
capturing billions of dollars worth of advanced weaponry and military
hardware, and now controlled population centers that totaled some five
million people. While such a colossal collapse as that experienced by
the Iraqi Army must necessarily be a result of many failures —
certainly, incompetence and corruption played major roles — much of it
could be attributed to recent history.
Under the eight-year rule of Prime Minister Nuri
Kamal al-Maliki, Iraq’s Shiite majority had come to dominate most every
aspect of the national government, including its military, and to lord
their newfound primacy over the Sunnis. For many residents in the Sunni
heartland — and this included Baiji and Tikrit — this heavy-handed
treatment spawned a deep contempt for both the central government and
its army, whom they regarded as occupiers. Of course, that
Shiite-dominated army was well aware of the locals’ contempt and deeply
distrusted them in turn, to such an extent that at the first sign of
trouble — in this case, a few Sunni jihadists riding into town vowing
vengeance — the soldiers, fearing a mass uprising against them, simply
bolted.
This was not a completely unfounded fear, because
ISIS had cleverly established sleeper cells in these cities ahead of
time, both to begin attacks when the battle was joined and to recruit
new members to the cause. Among those recruits was Wakaz Hassan.
According to Wakaz, he joined ISIS on June 10,
2014, just as the guerrilla group became active in the Tikrit area but a
full day before its attacks there began in earnest. His chief
recruiter, he claimed, was none other than his brother, the 26-year-old
American-trained and Iraqi-government-employed intelligence officer
Mohammed. “It wasn’t for religion,” Wakaz maintained, “and it wasn’t as
if I had any emotional connection to the group — at that point, I didn’t
really know what they were fighting for — but because Mohammed said we
should join.”
Omitted from Wakaz’s account was the matter of
money. By the summer of 2014, ISIS was so flush with funds from its
control of the oil fields of eastern Syria that it could offer even
untrained foot soldiers up to $400 a month for enlisting — vastly more
than an unskilled 19-year-old like Wakaz could make from pickup
construction jobs. Of course, having now also seized the Baiji oil
refinery, ISIS stood to turn its financial spigot into a geyser.
As pledging members of ISIS, Mohammed and Wakaz
assisted in the seizing of Tikrit on June 11. The brothers also played
at least a supporting role in the most horrific atrocity to occur during
ISIS’ June blitzkrieg.
Just to the north of Tikrit is a large Iraqi
military training base still known by its American name: Camp Speicher.
Thousands of cadets were undergoing training there when ISIS closed in.
As might have been predicted from the conduct of Iraqi soldiers
elsewhere, the regular army units and senior military command garrisoned
at Speicher simply fled the compound at word of ISIS’ approach, leaving
the students stranded. Wakaz said he helped round up the cadets but
insists he played no role in what came next.
After separating the trainees by sect — Sunni to
one side, Shiite to the other — ISIS gunmen marched hundreds of the
Shiite cadets to various spots around Tikrit to be machine-gunned, the
mass murders dutifully videotaped by ISIS cameramen for posting on the
internet. Traditionally, armies and guerrilla groups try to deny or
minimize their war crimes, but not so with ISIS; when outside observers
first estimated that 800 cadets were murdered that day in Tikrit, ISIS
spokesmen boasted that they had actually killed many more. (The final
death toll remains unknown, but estimates now range as high as 1,700.)
After the Camp Speicher massacre, Wakaz signed up
with ISIS for a one-year enlistment — for a terrorist organization, it
has a surprisingly formal bureaucracy — and was ferried up Highway 1
with a large group of fellow recruits to an ISIS compound outside Mosul.
There, he learned the rudimentary skills imparted to new soldiers
everywhere: running obstacle courses, breaking down and firing various
weapons, tactical drills on maintaining squad cohesion on the
battlefield. But soon enough his training took a more brutal turn.
On a morning in late June, Wakaz was summoned from
his barracks by a senior commander. Instructing the 19-year-old to
follow, the commander led Wakaz to a field at the edge of the compound.
After a few moments, they were joined by two other men, an ISIS fighter
and a civilian who appeared to be in his 30s. The civilian was
blindfolded, with his hands tied behind his back, and he was crying. The
ISIS fighter roughly forced the crying man to his knees, as the
commander handed Wakaz a pistol. The former day laborer from Dawr knew
precisely what was expected of him.
“They showed me how to do it,” Wakaz said. “You
point the gun downward. Also to not shoot directly at the center of the
head, but to go a little bit off to one side.”
In the training-compound field, Wakaz dutifully
carried out his first execution. Over the following few weeks, he was
summoned to the field five more times, to murder five more blindfolded
and handcuffed men. “I didn’t know anything about them,” he said, “but I
would say they ranged in age from about 35 to maybe 70. After that
first one, only one other was crying. With the others, I think maybe
they didn’t know what was about to happen.”
Wakaz related all this — even physically acted out
how a proper killing was done — with no visible emotion. But then, as
if belatedly realizing the coldbloodedness of his account, he gave a
small shrug.
“I felt bad doing it,” he said, “but I had no
choice. Once we reached Mosul, there was no way to leave — and with
ISIS, if you don’t obey, they kill you too.”
24.
Azar Mirkhan
Kurdistan
See Map
Driving through the desert, Azar
Mirkhan told me about the death of his father, Gen. Heso Mirkhan, the
pesh merga warrior who helped lead the 1974 Kurdish uprising against the
Iraqi government, and who then took his family into exile in Iran. When
the Iran-Iraq war began six years later, Azar said, the Khomeini regime
suddenly saw a use for the Iraqi Kurd exiles in their midst and allowed
Heso to resume his pesh merga leadership role, as well as his
cross-border incursions. That caught up with him in April 1983, when he
was killed in an ambush in northern Iraq.
“I don’t really remember him that well, because I
was only 8 when he died,” Azar said. “My strongest memory is that there
was just a constant parade of pesh merga commanders coming to our house,
conferring with my father.”
For nearly 30 years, Heso’s remains were lost
somewhere in the mountains of Kurdistan, but a few years ago Azar and
his brothers began a monthslong quest to locate them. By talking with
villagers and Heso’s surviving companions, they finally found his bones
at the bottom of a remote ravine.
“We brought them back to our village, and he was
given a hero’s funeral,” Azar said. “Even Barzani was there” — the
K.R.G.’s president, Massoud Barzani.
The doctor’s sense of personal loss was more
evident when he talked of the death of his brother Ali, the
second-oldest of the 14 Mirkhan siblings and the first to follow Heso
into the ranks of pesh merga leadership. “When Ali was killed, it was a
tragedy not just for the family, but all Kurdistan,” Azar said. “He was a
natural leader of men — charismatic, brilliant — and, O.K., he was my
brother, but I believe we would be in a very different place now if he
had stayed alive. Many, many people who knew him have said this to me.”
Azar told me these stories on the drive described
in the preface, perhaps in part to explain why our destination, a little
village in Iraq called Gunde Siba, still haunted him. He was on an
indefinite leave of absence from the hospital where he worked in Erbil,
the K.R.G. capital, to devote all his energies to confronting the crisis
caused by the ISIS invasion. His duties, which appeared to be largely
self-determined, consisted of periodically touring the pesh merga front
lines and advising its commanders. Everyone in the K.R.G., it seemed,
knew the Mirkhan name, and one of its happier consequences was that its
bearers could expect to be treated with immediate respect and deference.
As we spoke, it became clear that Azar’s
self-appointed mission went far beyond confronting the threat of ISIS.
He saw in the K.R.G.’s current situation a precious and unprecedented
opportunity to create a true Kurdish nation. To achieve that meant not
just defeating the ISIS fanatics but ridding the land of the Kurds’
historical enemies, the Arabs, once and for all. “For fourteen hundred
years, they have sworn to destroy us,” he said. “At what point do we
take them at their word?” To Azar, that point had now been reached. In
his view, which is by no means a minority one in the K.R.G., the first
task at hand is to sever the remaining vestiges of the Iraqi state — it
is a point of pride with Azar that he doesn’t speak Arabic and has only
once been to Baghdad — and then to dismantle the legacy of forced
Arab-Kurd integration initiated by Saddam Hussein.
Part of the doctor’s severity stems from what he
regards as Kurdish complacency in the face of the dangers that lay all
around, and it is further fueled by the tragedy he witnessed in Gunde
Siba on Aug. 3, 2014.
For 22 years after its creation in 1992, the
K.R.G. was a relative oasis of stability and peace in the region, its
ties to Baghdad ever more theoretical. That exempt status was most
nakedly revealed during the American intervention in Iraq, in which the
K.R.G. openly sided with the invaders, providing them with back bases
and airfields from which to carry out the fight; as local officials are
fond of pointing out, not a single coalition soldier was killed in the
K.R.G. during the Iraq war. That calm continued through the steady
disintegration of Iraq after the American withdrawal, as the K.R.G.
became ever more reluctant to pay even lip service to affiliation with
Baghdad. To the good citizens of the K.R.G., it increasingly appeared
that their mountain enclave had somehow found a way to escape the
maelstroms swirling around it, that the days of warrior families like
the Mirkhans might go the way of folklore. That fanciful notion ended
with ISIS’ lightning advance into central Iraq in June 2014.
“I’ve never trusted the Arabs, but as strange as
it sounds, I trusted Daesh,” Azar explained, using a common term for
ISIS. “In the past, the Arabs always lied — ‘Oh, you Kurds have nothing
to fear from us’ — and then they attacked us. But Daesh was absolutely
clear what they were going to do. They wanted to take this part of the
world back to the caliphate. They wanted to eliminate everyone who was
not their kind — the Christians and the Kurds and the Shia — and they
were absolutely open about it. After their June offensive, I had no
doubt they were coming for us next.” The doctor even pinpointed where
they would strike first. “Any fool looking at a map could know. It was
going to be the Yazidis. It was going to be Sinjar.”
The Yazidis are a Kurdish religious minority that
ISIS had long excoriated as “devil worshipers” and vowed to exterminate.
Their Mount Sinjar heartland was in the far northwestern corner of Iraq
and outside official K.R.G. territory, making them especially
vulnerable. What’s more — and this is what a glance at a map made
obvious — with ISIS’ capture of Mosul that June, the land link between
the K.R.G. and the Yazidi Kurds in Sinjar was reduced to a single rutted
farm road.
In the days and weeks after the June offensive,
Azar made use of his family name to compel meetings within his circle of
civilian and military comrades. At each, he warned of the coming ISIS
attack. “No one took it seriously,” he recalled. “They all said, ‘No,
their fight is with the Shia in Baghdad, why would they come here?’ ”
On Aug. 1, 2014, ISIS guerrillas attacked an
isolated pesh merga outpost in the town of Zumar, which lay just 10
miles away from the last road into Sinjar. When still there was no sign
of action by the government, in desperation Azar Mirkhan rustled up five
or six of his pesh merga friends, and together they raced west.
“And this is as far as we got,” Azar said. “Right here.”
We were standing on the shoulder of the road in
Gunde Siba, just a few miles west of the Tigris River and still some 40
miles from the town of Sinjar. “By then, it was night, and right here we
started meeting the pesh merga who had fled from Sinjar and, behind
them, the Yazidi refugees. It was impossible to go on because the road
was just jammed, everyone trying to escape. We set up a defense post
here and rallied some of the pesh merga to stay with us, but this is as
far as we got.” He lit a cigarette and blew smoke into the air. “We were
one day too late.”
In Sinjar that day — Aug. 3 — ISIS began carrying
out mass executions, a slaughter that would ultimately claim the lives
of at least 5,000 Yazidis. They were also rounding up thousands of girls
and women to be used as sex slaves. Tens of thousands more Yazidis were
frantically scaling the flanks of Mount Sinjar in a bid to escape the
killers. Of all this, Azar Mirkhan had only an intimation in the
terror-stricken faces and anguished accounts of those survivors
streaming into Gunde Siba.
But Azar had little time to grasp, let alone
address, the tragedy unfolding in Sinjar. Just two days later, ISIS
began a second offensive, this one aimed directly at the K.R.G. capital
city, Erbil. Turning back from Gunde Siba, the doctor raced south for
the battlefield.
As it happened, Azar’s older brother Araz, 44, was
the deputy commander of pesh merga forces along the very section of the
K.R.G. frontier, Sector 6, that bore the brunt of the new ISIS assault.
Azar immediately went into battle alongside his brother — but not just
Araz. Most of Azar’s other brothers had long since moved abroad as part
of the Kurdish diaspora and had become doctors and engineers in the
United States and Europe, but befitting the Mirkhan family’s
warrior-caste reputation, many of them set aside their businesses and
medical practices to race to the K.R.G. and take up arms. At one point
in that summer, five Mirkhan brothers, along with one of Azar’s nephews,
were fighting shoulder to shoulder at a Sector 6 firebase.
“It was a good thing ISIS didn’t drop a mortar on us right then,” Azar joked. “Our mother would have been upset.”
But something did happen in the battle that
changed Azar. After coming within 15 miles of Erbil, the ISIS advance
stalled and was then thrown back by a furious pesh merga
counteroffensive. During that counterattack on Aug. 20, an ISIS sniper’s
bullet shattered Azar’s right hand. For weeks afterward, there was
concern that he might lose the hand altogether, but surgery and physical
therapy helped restore some function.
“The important thing is that I can shoot a gun
again now,” Azar said, gently curling and uncurling his fingers. “Not as
well as before, but almost.”
25.
Majd Ibrahim
Syria
See Map
For most of 2014, the Ibrahim family
lived in comparative safety in their new home in central Homs. With a
citywide cease-fire forged that May, most new fighting had moved to the
suburbs. As improbable as it might seem, the cease-fire also led to the
reopening of the Safir Hotel, where Majd’s father worked; beginning that
September, Majd took a job serving as the Safir’s receptionist. “With
the cease-fire, everything was better,” Majd recalled. “I wouldn’t say
back to normal, because so much of the city was destroyed by then, but
you could see that life was coming back.”
The sense of growing calm was shattered on the
morning of Oct. 1, 2014. Majd was at work when he received a frantic
phone call from his mother: There had just been an explosion at Akrama
al-Makhzomeh, the school attended by Majd’s 11-year-old younger brother,
Ali, with reports of many casualties.
His mother raced to the scene, but Majd was unable
to leave work for another 90 minutes. The memory of what he saw when he
finally arrived at the school cast the perennially cheerful Majd into a
dark corner within himself, his eyes settling into a sad, distant
stare.
“Never could I have imagined something like that,”
he said. “It was like a nightmare, the worst nightmare. Blood
everywhere, parts of children, and they’re everywhere around you, and
you’re walking through all this — you’re stepping on body parts. ...” He
closed his eyes briefly, struggled to control his breathing. “It’s
something I can just never get out of my mind.”
It was only when Majd learned the details of what
happened, though, that he grasped the full savagery of the attack. Just
as parents and rescuers began swarming into Akrama al-Makhzomeh in
response to the first blast, from a car bomb, a suicide bomber tried to
enter the school’s main courtyard to kill more. Shut out by an alert
guard, the bomber blew himself up at the front gate. When Majd’s mother
reached the bomb site, she found Ali hiding with a group of terrified
classmates at the back of the school.
The double bombing at Akrama al-Makhzomeh killed
at least 45, including 41 schoolchildren. It was another reminder — as
if the people of Homs needed one — that in the new Syria, no haven was
truly safe, no place off-limits to the murderers. In its aftermath, the
Ibrahim family, like almost everyone else in New Akrama, largely stayed
indoors, venturing outside only when necessary.
26.
Azar Mirkhan
Kurdistan
See Map
After our trip to Gunde Siba, in May
2015, Azar Mirkhan took me to the Gwer-Makhmour front, the place where
he had been shot by the ISIS sniper. Venturing out to a pesh merga
firebase on the forward front line, he climbed the parapet to train his
binoculars on a village, perhaps 700 or 800 yards away down the
hillside. All was very still there, save for two of the distinctive ISIS
black-and-white flags curling in the light breeze.
A soldier called out a warning: An ISIS sniper had
been spotted in the village an hour earlier, and, in his current
stance, Azar made for a very easy target. The doctor gave the man an
irritated look, then turned back to his binoculars.
The firebase consisted of a series of hastily
constructed berms and dugouts on a ridge line about three miles from the
Tigris River, with ISIS in control of the lowlands below. In the time
he spent here, Azar had survived several ISIS attacks.
“First, they send in their suicide bombers in
armored Humvees. If you don’t destroy them as they come up the hill —
and you need to make a direct hit — they blast huge holes in the walls,
because these are just massive explosions. Then in the confusion of
that, they send in their infantry and, behind them, the snipers. It all
happens very fast: Everything quiet, and then suddenly they’re
everywhere. The important thing is to stay calm, to pick your targets,
because if you panic, you’re finished. That’s the problem with the Iraqi
Army; they always panic.”
Panic didn’t seem to figure prominently in Azar’s
range of emotions. “I like fighting Daesh,” he said. “They’re actually
quite smart. It’s almost a kind of game.”
Perhaps not surprising in a people so implacably
committed to establishing a homeland, the Kurds of the K.R.G. find it
intolerable that ISIS should maintain dominion over any of their
territory. Much as the United States Army will sustain more casualties
in order to retrieve their battlefield dead, so the pesh merga have been
willing to suffer higher losses to recover Kurdish ground more quickly.
At Black Tiger Camp, the back-base command center
of Sector 6, Sirwan Barzani, the overall sector commander, could point
to the enormous color-coded battlefront map on his office wall and
rattle off statistics remarkable in their specificity. “When I first
arrived here,” he said, “Daesh was just three kilometers down the road.
Now we have cleared them for 23 kilometers to the west and 34 kilometers
to the south. In my sector, we have retaken 1,100 square kilometers,
but we still have about 214 square kilometers to go.”
By May 2015, Barzani said, nearly 120 pesh merga
had died in Sector 6, where the greatest ISIS incursions had occurred.
At the same time, pesh merga commanders make an interesting distinction
between where they are willing to suffer losses to regain land and where
they aren’t. For example, the ISIS-held village that Azar studied with
his binoculars was inhabited by Arabs, not Kurds.
“So even though it is on K.R.G. territory, it’s
not worth losing men for,” he explained. “Not until we’re ready to do a
much bigger offensive.”
But when that offensive might come was a matter
tied up with international geopolitics, and with the outcome of
decisions being made in Washington and Brussels and Baghdad. In light of
the woeful conduct of the Iraqi Army in the past — and absent any will
to place significant numbers of Western troops on the ground — many
American and European politicians and foreign-policy advisers were
calling for deputizing the one fighting force in the region that had
proved its mettle, the pesh merga, to lead the campaign to destroy ISIS.
Less clear was whether anyone had seriously discussed this idea with
the Kurds.
“You know, the Americans come here, and they want
to talk about retaking Mosul,” Sirwan Barzani said. “Are you going to do
it with American troops? No. Are you going to do it with the Iraqi
Army? No, because they’re useless. So let’s have the Kurds do it. But
what do we want with Mosul? It’s not Kurdistan; it’s Iraq, and why
should we lose more men for the sake of Iraq?”
Animating that resistance, beyond the traditional
Kurdish antipathy for the regime in Baghdad, was what the Iraqi Army
collapse in 2014 brought down on the K.R.G. The Iraqis, by abandoning
their American-supplied heavy weaponry and vehicles to ISIS — in most
cases, they didn’t even have the presence of mind to destroy it — had
virtually overnight converted the guerrilla force into one of the
best-equipped armies in the region, and it was the Kurds who paid the
price.
By May 2015, the Americans were still trying to
cobble together a workable arrangement. The response time for airstrikes
against ISIS targets had greatly improved because of the recent
deployment of American aerial spotter teams in the K.R.G., but much
slower going was the effort to forge some kind of rapprochement between
the pesh merga and the Iraqi Army. Directly beside Barzani’s Black Tiger
Camp in Gwer was a smaller base where Iraqi soldiers were receiving
American training. “I pray for the day I don’t have to see that
anymore,” Barzani said, pointing to the Iraqi flag flying from the
adjacent base.
But Black Tiger Camp revealed something else about
the K.R.G., an aspect of the society that most of its officials,
whether civilian or military, try to play down or avoid speaking about
altogether. For the entire time of its existence — and indeed, far
predating that — the K.R.G. has been riven into two feuding camps, a
schism that led to open civil war in the 1990s. On the surface, it has
the trappings of a political duel between its two main parties, the
Kurdistan Democratic Party (K.D.P.) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan
(P.U.K.), but in actuality, it is a contest between two great tribal
groupings, the Barzani and the Talabani. The territory’s north is
thoroughly dominated by the Barzanis and their tribal allies — the
Mirkhans among them — virtually all of whom are K.D.P. Southern K.R.G.,
by contrast, is controlled by the Talabanis and their tribal allies
under the P.U.K. label.
The feudalistic nature of this arrangement was on
display at Black Tiger. All of the pesh merga at the camp, and along the
entire 75-mile front of Sector 6, are “Barzanis,” as denoted by their
red-and-white tribal scarves. In the Talabani sectors of southern
K.R.G., the pesh merga scarves are black and white.
Further, Sirwan Barzani is the “commander” of
Sector 6 less through any military acumen on his part — before the war,
he was the extremely wealthy owner of a cellphone-service provider —
than through the fact that he is the nephew of the K.R.G.’s president,
Massoud Barzani, who in turn is the son of the legendary Kurdish warlord
Mustafa Barzani. This also explains Sirwan’s impolitic frankness with a
foreign journalist; as a full-fledged Barzani, he is quite beyond the
reach of more temperate but lesser-named K.R.G. politicians to muzzle.
This enduring schism has had tragic consequences.
In the first days of the ISIS advance into the K.R.G., the pesh merga’s
performance was extremely shaky, and as much as they wish to fix blame
for that on the collapse of the Iraqi Army, an enormous contributing
factor was that there were actually two pesh mergas, with little in the
way of coordination between them. ISIS took advantage of that to nearly
capture the K.R.G. capital, Erbil, and to start their extermination
campaign against the Yazidis.
Time and again in the K.R.G., I detected a sense
of guilt, even of shame, when conversation turned to the fate of the
Yazidis. With no one, though, did I sense it more than with Azar
Mirkhan. Part of that may have stemmed from his having tried to aid them
at their critical hour, only to discover that the hour had come and
gone. But on a philosophical level, he also felt the Kurds had betrayed
their history.
“You could say that, in many ways, the Yazidis are
the pure Kurds,” he explained. “Their religion is what all Kurds
believed at one time, not all this Shia-Sunni business. Everyone else
changed, but they stayed true to the faith.”
Along with his touring of the battlefronts, Azar
has spent a great deal of time at the Yazidi displaced-persons camps in
northern K.R.G., often working with a Kurdish-Swedish doctor named Nemam
Ghafouri. These camps — some run by small independent charities, some
by large international relief organizations — are home to tens of
thousands of the Yazidis who outran the ISIS advance of August 2014, but
when I visited in May 2015, they were being joined by a handful of
others who had recently either escaped or been ransomed out from ISIS
control. Despite having interviewed countless war and atrocity survivors
across the world over the years, I found something uniquely horrifying
about these returnees’ stories. It took me some time to realize this was
because of what was left unsaid, the need to puzzle out the depravity
to which they were subjected.
ISIS had used rape and sexual slavery as a weapon
of war to destroy the fabric of Yazidi society, and now that some of
these girls and women were returning, the conservative Yazidi honor code
didn’t permit them to speak of what happened to them. In the company of
Ghafouri, I met a 10-year-old girl whose extended family had raised
$1,500 — the savings of several lifetimes — to buy her freedom the week
before. She said her ISIS owners had only made her clean and wash their
clothes, that they never touched her, and this was a story the family
was determined to believe. I met two teenage girls who had escaped from
ISIS after one month, along with a relative whom I took to be their
mother — she looked perhaps 45 years old, but a very hard 45: sunken
cheeks, missing teeth, graying hair — who had been held for eight
months. Except this woman wasn’t their mother; she was their older
sister, and she was only 24. By her account, she had feigned deafness,
which is seen by ISIS as a sign of mental illness, and in this way she,
too, avoided being molested. As Ghafouri explained, her mission now was
to come up with some pretext to see the 10-year-old girl and the
24-year-old woman alone. After winning their trust, she would conduct a
physical examination. If they had, in fact, been raped, she would inform
their families that they had some sort of infection and needed to be
placed in a special hospital — no visitors — for a week.
“So then they are taken to Erbil,” she explained.
“They have the reconstruction — it’s actually a simple operation — and
they come back as virgins. Then they can be accepted back; they can
marry someday. Of course it means they can never talk about what
happened. They must keep it inside forever. But this is what passes for a
happy ending now.”
Hearing such testimonials has further hardened
Azar Mirkhan’s beliefs about what needs to be done if the Kurds are ever
to find safety. In his view, ISIS was only the latest in a long line of
implacable Arab enemies. “If this was the first time, then maybe you
could say, ‘Oh, it’s this horrible group of terrorists.’ But this has
been going on for our entire history. I can promise you that when we
retake Sinjar, we will go there and we will find that the Arabs stayed
with ISIS,” Azar said. “O.K., some are here in the camps, but many more
stayed. So that is why I say our enemy is not just ISIS; it’s all
Arabs.”
27.
Wakaz Hassan
Iraq
See Map
At the beginning of June 2015, his
one-year tour of duty with ISIS drawing to a close, Wakaz reappraised
his life. Since completing his training at the ISIS compound near Mosul
the previous summer, he had spent some six months back in his hometown,
Dawr — his main duty there, he said, was manning an ISIS checkpoint —
before being sent to fight a resurgent Iraqi Army at the oil-refinery
complex in Baiji. With that battle still raging, Wakaz certainly had the
option of reupping with ISIS, but he decided instead to return to the
civilian world.
Part of his reason may have involved economics;
with ISIS’ salad days clearly over, Wakaz’s pay packet often arrived
late. But it most likely was rooted even more in self-preservation.
Because, slowly but surely, the tide appeared to be turning against
ISIS.
This was made evident to Wakaz as he contemplated
just where he might go to start over. In April, the Iraqi Army,
supported by American airstrikes, had recaptured Tikrit, and by that
June they were closing ever tighter around Baiji. That still left Mosul
and the ISIS-controlled towns in Anbar Province, but life in any of
those places for an ex-ISIS fighter was sure to be grim: He would be
resented by his former comrades, and a dead man should the Iraqi Army
take control.
Wakaz finally settled on a very different destination: the Kurdish-controlled Iraqi city of Kirkuk.
Just as in Mosul and Baiji and Tikrit, the Iraqi
Army garrisoned in Kirkuk broke and fled before the ISIS offensive a
year earlier. But there the similarities ended. Racing to fill the void
left by the Iraqis, thousands of pesh merga soldiers had poured into
Kirkuk just ahead of ISIS and managed to throw back their advance. Ever
since, Kirkuk has effectively been under Kurdish control, but the
melting-pot city was also teeming with both Sunni and Shiite refugees,
making it a natural hide-out for both active and former Islamist
fighters. Although Kirkuk was a mere 60 miles from Baiji, the two cities
were now separated by the heavily fortified line of the pesh merga
army. It meant that, to reach his sanctuary city, Wakaz would have to
travel the ISIS “ratline.”
28.
Majd Ibrahim
Syria • Greece
See Map
In the same month that Wakaz decided
to leave ISIS, Majd finally obtained his bachelor’s degree in hotel
management from Al-Baath University. The achievement was a mixed
blessing: Now he was eligible for conscription. Before the war, a male
student normally received his call-up letter four or five months after
graduation, but by 2015 the Syrian Army was so depleted from defections
and battlefield casualties that the call-up time had shortened to a
month or two, or even just a few weeks, and there was no longer any
gaming the system. When the call-up notice went out, the army might
simply come to your house and haul you away. “So that was it,” Majd
said. “I knew that in a very short time, the army would come for me.”
Just days after his graduation, Majd’s parents
handed their son $3,000 — all the savings they had left — and told him
to leave the country.
“To them it was no longer about patriotism or
defending the country,” he said, “but about my staying alive.” He gave a
faint smile. “Plus, I would have made a terrible soldier.”
On June 21, Majd’s father escorted him to
Damascus, where two days later he caught a flight for Turkey. Besides
the $3,000, all Majd carried was whatever could fit into his small
knapsack.
Hoping to stay at least somewhat near home, Majd
began looking for work in Turkey. When that proved futile, he saw no
choice but to join the migrant trail being negotiated by hundreds of
thousands of his countrymen that summer, and so he headed west for
Turkey’s Aegean coast, where he might seek passage to Europe. Along the
way, he serendipitously met up with an old friend from Homs whom he
hadn’t seen in years, Amjad, who was traveling with Ammar, another
refugee from Homs. The three became a traveling team. Consequently, they
shared the same overcrowded inflatable raft that, on the night of July
27, made the passage from a smuggler’s beach near Bodrum, a Turkish
resort town, to Kos, a Greek island several miles away.
There, Majd and his two friends endured an
agonizing wait. With Kos overwhelmed by tens of thousands of would-be
migrants, Greek authorities were taking up to 10 days simply to issue
the registry papers that would allow their onward travel. That summer,
the migrant route through Eastern Europe was becoming increasingly
inhospitable, with several governments threatening to shut it down
completely. Finally, Majd and his friends received their papers late on
the afternoon of Aug. 4. That left them just enough time to catch the
nightly ferry for the Greek mainland, the beginning of their search for
refuge somewhere in Europe.
PART V: EXODUS
29.
Wakaz Hassan
Iraq • Syria • Turkey
See Map
On June 18, 2015, the first day of
Ramadan, Wakaz bid farewell to his ISIS comrades and set off on the ISIS
ratline for his return to civilian life. To reach Kirkuk, just 60 miles
northeast of Baiji, Wakaz first had to travel west across
ISIS-controlled Iraq and Syria, then north into Turkey, before slipping
back across into Kurdish-controlled territory in Iraq — an almost
complete circle of more than 500 miles. The biggest potential obstacle
on this well-known route was the heavily militarized Turkish frontier.
Ever since ISIS gained strength in eastern Syria
in early 2014, there have been accusations that their success relied on
Turkey’s keeping its border deliberately porous so that Islamist
fighters from around the world might pass back and forth. That charge
was made most explicitly by the Russian government in late 2015. While
the Turkish administration of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan vehemently
denied the charge, evidence supports the Russian account. Eleven of
nearly two dozen captured ISIS fighters that I interviewed for this
report claimed to have transited through Turkey at some point during
their ISIS service. Nearly all of those 11 told me they encountered
Turkish soldiers or police while crossing the Turkish-Syrian frontier
and were simply waved through. That was certainly the experience of
Wakaz.
“The man who was leading us, he went up to the
Turkish checkpoint and talked to the guards for a few minutes,” Wakaz
said. “Maybe he gave them some money, I don’t know, but then we just
passed on.”
As to whether there was any chance the Turkish
border guards didn’t grasp the affiliation of those they were letting
through, Wakaz briskly shook his head. “Of course they knew. We were all
young guys, and the man taking us across was Daesh. He went across
there all the time. They knew.”
From Turkey, Wakaz made another clandestine
crossing into K.R.G. territory, and by the beginning of July 2015, two
weeks after he left ISIS, he was in Kirkuk and ready for a fresh start.
He was soon joined there by another ISIS retiree, his brother Mohammed.
At least initially, it seemed the Hassan brothers
had chosen well. In Kirkuk, they moved into a small apartment in a
neighborhood favored by other ex-ISIS fighters trying to escape notice,
and within a week, both brothers found work on a nearby construction
site. At that point, if Wakaz had a dream for the future, it was simply
to lie low in Kirkuk, save as much money as possible, return home when
the situation permitted and open his own small shop.
As modest and heavily conditional as that dream
was, it ended on the afternoon of Sept. 7, 2015, when a black car pulled
alongside Wakaz on a Kirkuk street. Rolling down his window, the man in
the front passenger seat, an undercover policeman, asked the young man
with the piercing eyes for his identification card.
30.
Majd Ibrahim
Germany
See Map
On the afternoon of Nov. 23, 2015, I
visited Majd Ibrahim at his attic apartment on the outskirts of Dresden.
Provided by the local social-welfare agency, the apartment was shared
by Majd and his friend from Homs, Amjad, along with six other asylum
seekers, as they waited for their petitions for resident status to wend
their way through the German legal system. Meals had become a new
preoccupation, and two of the roommates, from India, had installed
themselves as lords of the kitchen. “Their food is much better than
ours,” Majd explained. “They give us a list of what to buy, and we go to
the market for them, but they do almost all of the cooking.”
From Greece, the Syrian friends had traveled the
migrant trail through Eastern Europe and reached southern Germany by
mid-August. Majd had intended to continue on alone to Sweden, where he’d
heard winning asylum was easiest, but those plans were dashed when the
friends were pulled off a northbound train by the police. After being
shunted between migrant holding facilities, they were taken to Dresden
in mid-September.
For refugees from Homs to find themselves in
Dresden held a certain paradox. The city, known for having been largely
destroyed by Allied bombing in World War II, was also the center of the
growing anti-immigration movement that had spread across Germany over
the previous year. Right-wing nationalists were staging mass
demonstrations in the city every Monday night. When I visited Majd, it
had been just a week since terrorist attacks in Paris killed 130, and
anger against migrants — and especially any from Muslim countries — was
reaching a fever pitch.
“There have been quite a few incidents here just
this past week,” Majd told me. “A lot of the guys won’t go to the city
center at all right now.”
Certainly they wouldn’t be heading downtown that
evening, a Monday, when the anti-immigrant speeches in Dresden’s
Theaterplatz would kick off promptly at 7.
Majd spoke frequently of his intention to return
to Syria; an intention that partly explained why he asked for his face
not to be shown in his portrait. That afternoon I asked if he could
foresee a time when such a return would be possible. He thought for a
long time. “Minimum, 10 years from now,” he said. “We have a saying in
Syria: ‘Blood brings blood.’ Now everyone will want to take revenge for
what has been done to them these past years, so it will just go on and
on. Blood brings blood. I don’t think it will end until everyone who has
taken up a gun in this war is dead. Even if the killing speeds up, that
will still take at least 10 years.”
By coincidence, I was with Majd the following day,
when, returning to his communal apartment, he found a letter awaiting
him. It was from the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees, and it
informed Majd that a background check had been completed and that no
problems were found; it was the last major hurdle in his petition for
residency, making it all but certain that he would now be allowed to
stay in Germany for the next three years. Setting the letter aside, Majd
crossed to one of the attic’s dormer windows and sat, staring out at
the street, for a long time.
31.
Khulood al-Zaidi
Jordan • Greece • Germany
See Map
By the end of 2015, Khulood had come
up with a desperate plan. Her years of petitioning for resettlement
having gone nowhere, she now saw absolutely no future for her family in
Jordan. All that summer and autumn, she followed the story of the
hundreds of thousands of prospective migrants making for Europe from
Turkey — and, far more perilously, from Libya — aboard flimsy inflatable
rafts. By December, however, it was a rapidly changing story; more and
more restrictions were being placed on the migrants by European
governments and, with winter coming on, the sea passage was becoming
increasingly risky. As Khulood explained to her father and sisters, if
ever they were to change their situation, they had to act immediately.
With Ali al-Zaidi’s health too precarious to
withstand the rigors of a hard journey, it was decided that Sahar would
remain with him in Amman while Khulood and Teamim made for Europe. On
Dec. 4, they took a flight to Istanbul and from there followed the
by-now well-worn migrant trail down the Turkish coast to Izmir. After
arranging to pay a smuggler 2,000 euros for spots aboard a boat, the
sisters waited. The summons finally came on the night of Dec. 11.
They were driven an hour and a half down the
coast. Slipping to the shoreline in the darkness, Khulood and Teamim
clambered aboard a severely overloaded rubber raft — Khulood counted at
least 30 other passengers, rather than the eight or 10 it was designed
to hold — which then pushed off for the Greek island of Samos, a
three-hour journey.
The overburdened raft lay so low in the water that
twice the outboard motor died when waves broke over it. But the
greatest danger came when they nearly reached safety. On the murky
sliver-moon night, the pilot misgauged his approach to the Samos beach
and smashed the raft against a rock outcropping; instantly, one of the
air-filled pontoons began to collapse. Ready to join the other
passengers tumbling into the water from the sinking boat — fortunately,
all wore life preservers — Khulood thought to glance over at Teamim. Her
oldest sister sat stock-still, too paralyzed with fear to react.
“I yelled at her to jump,” Khulood recalled,
“because the waves were very high and they were going to smash us
against the rocks, but she just couldn’t move. I saw that she was going
to die, but I thought, We’ve come too far together, we must now share
our fate.”
Clambering over to her sister, Khulood grabbed
Teamim and somehow managed to get them both clear of the sinking vessel
and onto the rocks. There they were promptly knocked down by another
wave, with Teamim badly hurting her leg in the fall, but at least they
were now on land. In the dark, Khulood helped her limping sister up the
hillside to join the rest of the migrants as they set out in search of
shelter.
The following two weeks became a blur of travel
and waiting and tension for the two sisters from Iraq, an object lesson
in both the callous indifference of officialdom and in the life-altering
kindness of strangers. After registering with Greek authorities in
Samos, the sisters were allowed to board a ferryboat for the Greek
mainland and Athens, where they were sheltered by a friend of a friend.
With the situation at the Eastern European frontiers changing constantly
— and not in any way that augured well for the thousands of migrants
still streaming north — the sisters quickly moved on. By Dec. 22,
through a combination of bus, train and foot travel, Khulood and Teamim
had crossed five European borders to finally reach southern Germany.
There, their luck appeared to run out. Arrested
shortly after crossing the German frontier, the sisters were held in
jail until dark, then sent back into Austria and instructed to make for a
refugee holding center in Klagenfurt. That camp was overflowing,
however, and they were denied entry. With nowhere else to go, Khulood
and Teamim simply huddled together outside the camp’s gates — and then
it began to snow.
Their salvation was arranged through social media.
After Khulood posted notice of her situation on Facebook, a small
international band of activists mobilized in search of someone in the
Klagenfurt area who might help the sisters. That aid soon arrived in the
form of a local Green member of Parliament, who took Khulood and Teamim
to a cafe to eat and warm up. At the cafe, the politician also sent out
an urgent message seeking a local family who might temporarily take in
the sisters; within an hour, he had received eight offers. From the
cafe, the Zaidi sisters were taken to the home of Elisabeth and Erich
Edelsbrunner.
“Today is the first day we feel comfortable and
relaxed,” Khulood emailed a friend in England the following day,
Christmas Eve. “The family is very nice. They have given us our own
room. They have a very lovely dog. I love him.”
32.
Wakaz Hassan
Iraq
See Map
In December 2015, Wakaz Hassan was
being held on suspicion of terrorism in a small former police station at
the edge of a village about 10 miles from Kirkuk. Along with
approximately 40 other suspected terrorists, Wakaz, now 21, spent almost
all his waking hours kneeling in a small and fetid room of the secret
prison run by the K.R.G.’s security service, Asayish. On those rare
occasions when he was taken from the communal room, he was handcuffed
and blindfolded. Three months after being picked up on the streets of
Kirkuk, he still had no idea where he was.
After his arrest, Wakaz quickly confessed to
having been an ISIS fighter. He provided details of his service,
including the six executions he carried out in Mosul. Whether this
confession was coerced through torture was impossible to know — in
conversation with me in the prison, Wakaz insisted that the Asayish
interrogators hadn’t mistreated him in any way, but even tortured
prisoners tend to say that when their captors are standing over them.
Over the course of our two long interviews, the young man sometimes
contradicted himself, perhaps a result of trying to gauge what his
questioner and captors might want to hear. That said, there seemed a
core candor to his words that perhaps was at least partly because of a
stricken conscience.
“I did bad things,” he told me, “and I need to confess to them before God.”
Shortly after his arrest, Wakaz also informed on
his brother Mohammed. It took Asayish a month to track down the older
Hassan sibling, and he was being held in a different prison near Kirkuk.
There had been no contact between the brothers since their arrests, but
Wakaz hoped Mohammed was also making a clean slate of things. His main
goal now, he said, was to atone for his crimes by helping the
authorities identify whichever of his former ISIS colleagues were still
alive. “If I had a chance to do it over again,” he said, “I never would
have joined Daesh. I saw the evil things they did, and I know now that
they aren’t true Muslims.”
Despite this professed change of heart, the
21-year-old is cleareyed about his future. “I have no illusions, and I
have no hope,” he told me. “I believe I will spend the rest of my life
in prison.”
But Wakaz was basing that belief on the fact that
he had been captured by K.R.G. investigators and remained in Kurdish
custody. In reality, a grimmer future was being planned for Wakaz, one
plainly laid out to me by a senior Asayish officer at the secret prison.
Since the events of June 2014 — when the Iraqi
Army in Kirkuk melted away before the ISIS assault, and the Kurds rushed
unto the breach — the city has technically been under the joint control
of the Iraqis and the Kurds. But this collaboration exists largely on
paper. In practice, the Kurdish authorities have little faith in their
Iraqi counterparts and see even less reason to cooperate with them on
security matters. Nowhere is this separation more evident than on issues
relating to ISIS.
“That’s why we haven’t told the Iraqis about the
guys in here,” explained the Asayish official. “If we did, they would
demand we hand them over, since most of their crimes were committed on
Iraqi territory. Then they would either kill these guys outright or, if
some of them are high enough up in the Daesh leadership to arrange a
bribe, let them go. We just can’t trust the Iraqis at all.” In light of
that, the Asayish plan is to keep Wakaz under wraps and to use him to
identify other ISIS fighters they capture and with whom he might have
served in the field. Once his usefulness to Asayish comes to an end —
and that may not be until after the retaking of Mosul and the trove of
ISIS fighters expected to surrender there — Wakaz will be handed over to
the Iraqi authorities. At that point, his future will be short and
preordained.
“He thinks his life will be saved because we have
him, and he knows we don’t execute,” the Asayish officer said. “But Iraq
does. The Iraqis will try him in their courts, and they will give him a
death sentence. Then they will transfer him to a prison in Iraq to be
hanged.”
When I asked if there was any chance that, because
of Wakaz’s assistance in unmasking other ISIS fighters, a judge might
show leniency in his case, the Asayish officer quickly shook his head.
Or that he could somehow cut a deal to spare his life? The officer
pondered briefly, then shook his head even more forcefully.
“If he was senior Daesh, maybe,” he said. “But he is a nobody and poor. So no. No chance.”
33.
Laila Soueif
Egypt
See Map
In January 2016, Laila’s son, Alaa,
managed to smuggle an open letter to The Guardian from his Egyptian
prison cell. “It has been months since I wrote a letter and more than a
year since I’ve written an article. I have nothing to say: no hopes, no
dreams, no fears, no warnings, no insights; nothing, absolutely
nothing,” he wrote. “I try to remember what it was like when tomorrow
seemed so full of possibility and my words seemed to have the power to
influence (if only slightly) what that tomorrow would look like. I can’t
really remember that.”
By then, Alaa was approaching the one-year mark of
a five-year prison sentence, just as his father, now deceased, had
predicted. It was a high price for speaking out, and one of the awful
paradoxes Alaa faced — along with thousands of other political prisoners
in Egypt today — was that the old way of appealing to Cairo on human
rights issues no longer worked. In the Mubarak era, if enough pressure
was brought to bear by the American government and Western activist
groups, an Egyptian political prisoner was likely to be quietly
released. If General Sisi took away any lesson from Mubarak’s downfall,
though, it was to never be viewed as the West’s lap dog. Western
pressure applied today has little effect and might even be
counterproductive.
“But of course, you also can’t stay quiet about
it,” Laila said, “because this is exactly what they want. You have to
keep trying, even if it seems futile.”
The obduracy of the Sisi regime on human rights
has undoubtedly been compounded by a new economic reality. Today, the
annual American subsidy to Egypt is less than $1.3 billion, down from
more than $2 billion in Mubarak’s heyday. At the same time, Saudi Arabia
and other gulf states have subsidized the Egyptian government with an
estimated $30 billion since Sisi took power, and given the Saudis’ own
record on such matters, they seem unlikely to pester their client state
over issues like political prisoners or freedom of expression. The
simple fact is that the West in general, and the United States in
particular, now has less influence over the Egyptian state than at any
time since the early 1970s.
Laila derives some perverse hope from the recent
economic deterioration of Egypt, a decline so rapid and deep that it
might, she believes, finally erode all remaining confidence in the
present regime. “Sisi still has pools of support,” she said, “but it’s
getting smaller all the time. The situation is really unsustainable
now.” But in March 2016, there were scant signs in Cairo or elsewhere in
Egypt that any serious dissident movement was in the offing. “No, it
won’t happen today, and it won’t be like Tahrir,” Laila said. “I give it
18 months. In 18 months, either there will be a kind of palace coup —
the generals put Sisi to one side and bring in someone more moderate —
or we will come to a new wave of widespread protest. If that happens, it
won’t be like 2011. This time, it will be far more violent.”
The Sisi regime shows few signs of being worried. A
second case against Alaa, for criticizing the justice system on his
Facebook page, is currently in court. He faces the possibility of
another sentence of six months to three years. Even if prosecutors drop
that case, Laila will be 64 when her son is released.
34.
Azar Mirkhan
Kurdistan
See Map
At the sight of the Arab village on
the road just ahead, Azar Mirkhan brought the car to a quick stop and
swore under his breath in Kurdish. It was a poor and tattered place: off
to the left, a compact cluster of earthen homes and walls and, to the
right, four or five farmhouses climbing the hillside. It was the latter
grouping that drew the doctor’s attention.
“They’re on the high ground? How was that
allowed?” Azar stared darkly at the farmhouses for a moment, seething at
the Arab encroachment, then slowly turned his gaze to the village
center. No residents were visible, but here and there old cars were
parked in the shadow of walls.
“You see? Until two weeks ago, Daesh controlled
this village, and the people living here had no problem with them, they
stayed throughout. We lost four pesh merga here.” Azar turned to me with
his lopsided, grim smile. “You know what I would do? I would go to an
Arab and ask to borrow his bulldozer. Then I’d bring in an Israeli
adviser — they’re very good at this sort of thing — and in two or three
days, I would erase this place.”
Azar has a flair for the outrageous statement, and
I sometimes found it hard to know how serious he really was in such
moments. But on that morning, I suspected he was quite sincere. It was
Nov. 27, 2015, six months after my first visit with Azar, and we were on
a back road to Sinjar, the Yazidi town that ISIS had so thoroughly
savaged in the summer of 2014. In the intervening months, Azar had
occasionally driven out to the pesh merga front-line trench above Sinjar
to try his hand at shooting ISIS fighters — occupying an opposing
trench just 40 yards away — but the pesh merga, with the help of massive
American airstrikes, had recently recaptured the town itself. Azar had
participated in the battle, and this return trip put him in a dark mood.
His ill temper only deepened when we reached
Sinjar. Much of the town, home to perhaps 100,000 before the war, had
been reduced to rubble. While still checking for booby-traps, the pesh
merga had cleared a narrow path through the ruins, and here and there
lay the putrefying remains of a few ISIS fighters. So great was the
damage to Sinjar that it was initially difficult to differentiate
between what had been destroyed by the marauding ISIS warriors during
their occupation and what had been leveled in the battle two weeks
earlier, but a pattern emerged. In the small traffic circle at the
center of town, ISIS had destroyed the minaret that stood there for more
than 800 years. They also razed every Yazidi temple in Sinjar, along
with its one Christian church. The hospital in the center of town still
stood, but only because ISIS converted it into a sniper’s nest and
barracks, knowing that American warplanes wouldn’t bomb it. Even so,
they had taken the time to destroy all the medical equipment, even
stomping on thermometers and glass ampuls.
It was in Sinjar’s residential neighborhoods,
however, that ISIS’s policy of ethnic cleansing took on an Old Testament
air. On street after street, some houses remained perfectly intact,
alongside others reduced to piles of broken masonry and twisted rebar.
What most of the surviving houses had in common were spray-painted
messages on their exterior walls, each something to the effect of “An
Arab family lives here.” Azar insisted that these were written not by
the ISIS invaders but by the families themselves.
“This was their message to Daesh,” he said. “
‘Spare us, we are with you, we aren’t Kurds.’ And just like in that
village, the Arabs stayed here throughout.”
Those Arab residents were now gone, having fled
when American airstrikes signaled the coming battle. On several of the
residential streets, some of the few Yazidis who had returned were
picking their way through the Arab homes, loading looted bedding and
furniture into pickup trucks.
“And why not?” Azar said. “They have lost everything.”
It all became far more visceral and ghastly when
two pesh merga fighters led us to a barren field a short distance out of
town, near the new front lines. At the far end of the field, pesh merga
engineers were cutting a tank trench — ISIS remained just a few miles
to the south — but farther up, three irregular mounds flanked a seasonal
water runoff. From these mounds protruded the telltale evidence of a
killing field: human bones and skulls, dirt-encrusted shoes, loops of
tied cloth that had been blindfolds. In the rains over the previous 15
months, some of the remains of the mass graves had leached out, so that
the dry streambed was littered with women’s clothes, more shoes, teeth.
None of the graves had been excavated yet — the authorities were waiting
for a criminal forensics team — but by best estimates, this had been
the execution ground for about 300 Yazidis, most of them women too
elderly to be of sex-slave interest to ISIS or children too young to be
put to any use.
For a half-hour, Azar walked among the graves in
silence, but I noticed he was becoming increasingly agitated and then
that he was crying. I drew alongside to ask if he was O.K., if he wanted
to leave. He abruptly wheeled to point a finger at the steeply rising
flank of Mount Sinjar, maybe four miles to the north.
“The pesh merga were right up there,” the doctor
said, his voice ragged with rage. “Daesh brought them out here to kill
so that we could watch. They thought about it. They did it deliberately,
to humiliate us.”
Returning to the center of Sinjar, Azar strode
briskly into the town hall, one of the few downtown structures still
habitable, and motioned for a senior official to follow him out to the
terrace. For the next hour, the two men huddled in deep conversation,
waving away any pesh merga underlings who thought to approach.
Afterward, Azar apologized to me for having taken so long.
“I told him that he needed to destroy all the Arab
homes here,” he recounted, “but he was hesitant. He thinks it’s better
to give them to the Yazidis who return, but I said, ‘No; eventually some
of those Arabs will come back with their titles and deeds and try to
reclaim the houses, so better to just destroy them, leave nothing for
them to come back to and start over again.’ He understands that now.”
When I asked if he thought the official would
actually follow through with the plan, Azar nodded. “He promised me. I
made him promise.”
That afternoon, we climbed the hairpin road that
led out of town and up Mount Sinjar, the same path that tens of
thousands of terrorized Yazidis had taken in their panicked flight of
August 2014. All along the shoulders of the road were clumps of the
clothes, faded and torn, that they cast aside as they ran.
“There used to be a lot more,” Azar muttered as he looked at the detritus. “It used to be everywhere.”
Cresting the mountain, we entered a broad valley
plateau that extended for the next 25 miles. Scattered over the land
were the tent encampments of thousands of Yazidi families that still had
no homes to return to. The historic heart of Yazidi society wasn’t the
lowlands these people had so recently fled, but rather the very mountain
on which they were now camped, and on the hillsides all around their
tent cities were the remnants of their ancestral villages, old abandoned
crop terraces and crumbling earthen homes. Some of these settlements
had been inhabited for nearly a thousand years, but in the 1970s Saddam
Hussein sent his soldiers in to destroy them as part of his anti-Kurd
campaign. The mountain Yazidis had then been herded down to the lowlands
where they could be more easily watched — and, of course, more easily
slaughtered when ISIS rolled in four decades later.
Until a short time ago, Azar might have been
derided as a xenophobe, even a fascist, for his radical separatist
views. In seeing the results of ISIS’s barbarism, however, and in
contemplating the hatreds that have been unleashed across the Middle
East in the past few years, some observers have begun to believe that
his hard way of thinking might offer the best — or, more accurately,
only — path out of the morass. The despair over how impossible it seems
to reassemble the shattered nations of the region has caused an
ever-increasing number of diplomats and generals and statesmen to
consider just the sort of ethnic and sectarian separation that Azar
advocates, albeit in less brutal form. Coincidentally, the model they
most often look to for how it can be done right is the Kurdistan
Regional Government.
For 25 years, the K.R.G. has existed as a stable
quasidemocracy, part of Iraq in name only. Perhaps the answer is to
replicate that model for the rest of Iraq, to create a trifurcated
nation rather than the currently bifurcated one. Give the Sunnis their
own “Sunni Regional Government,” with all the accouterments the Kurds
already enjoy: a head of state, internal borders, an autonomous military
and civil government. Iraq could still exist on paper and a mechanism
could be instituted to ensure that oil revenue is equitably divided
between the three — and if it works in Iraq, perhaps this is a future
solution for a Balkanized Libya or a disintegrated Syria.
Even proponents acknowledge that such separations
would not be easy. What to do with the thoroughly “mixed” populations of
cities like Baghdad or Aleppo? In Iraq, many tribes are divided into
Shia and Sunni subgroups, and in Libya by geographic dispersions going
back centuries. Do these people choose to go with tribe or sect or
homeland? In fact, parallels in history suggest that such a course would
be both wrenching and murderous — witness the postwar
“de-Germanization” policy in Eastern Europe and the 1947 partition of
the Indian subcontinent — but despite the misery and potential body
count entailed in getting there, maybe this is the last, best option
available to prevent the failed states of the Middle East from devolving
into even more brutal slaughter.
The problem, though, is that once such subdividing
begins, it’s hard to see where it would end. Just beneath the ethnic
and religious divisions that the Iraq invasion and the Arab Spring tore
open are those of tribe and clan and subclan — and in this respect, the
Kurdistan Regional Government appears not so much a model but a warning.
Because of its two feuding tribes, the K.R.G. — a
statelet the size of West Virginia — now has essentially two of
everything: two leaders, two governments, two armies. For the moment
this schism has been masked by the threat from ISIS and the desire to
present a unified front to the outside world. But it remains an
undercurrent to everything. It also goes a long way toward explaining
the sad fate of the Yazidis. As Azar pointed out, any fool could see
exactly where ISIS was headed in August 2014, but because the Yazidis
existed outside the K.R.G. power structure, because they had no
traditional alliance with either rival faction, they were left to
largely fend for themselves. For all the excuses offered up by K.R.G.
politicians and generals, the undeniable fact is that Sinjar simply
wouldn’t have happened if its residents had been named Barzani or
Talabani.
And what happens in the K.R.G. when the current
danger subsides? If history is a guide, the Barzani-Talabani schism will
worsen and may even lead to another civil war, for part of the hidden
history of this place is the series of internecine battles the tribes
have waged ever since they first came into contact, a legacy of mutual
bloodletting dating back at least half a century and extending to as
recently as the mid-1990s. It’s a hidden history that the Mirkhan family
knows from personal experience.
Over the course of many conversations with the
various Mirkhan brothers, I heard a great deal about the exploits and
personalities of the two family members who lost their lives as pesh
merga and who have now entered the pantheon of Kurdish martyrs: their
father, Heso, and their brother, Ali. What I heard little about — and
the brothers’ reticence on this topic became increasingly striking —
were the actual circumstances of their deaths. It was only after
repeated prodding that Azar finally divulged what I’d already
ascertained independently: rather than by the Kurds’ myriad external
enemies, Heso and Ali Mirkhan were actually killed by rival Kurdish pesh
merga.
“It’s a disgrace that Kurds should kill each
other,” Azar offered when I asked why he’d been so reluctant to share
the information. “With all the other enemies we have, how can we ever
turn on each other?”
An excellent question, but it is one likely to be
asked again all across a partitioned Middle East, no matter how far down
those divisions and subdivisions are made.
At about the midpoint on the Sinjar plateau, a
bend in the road suddenly revealed an exquisite village on the far side
of the river: a series of houses climbing the rocky hillside and, just
below them, a number of ancient stone terraces. Some of the terrace
walls were more than 20 feet high, the inhabitants determined to carve
out any little piece of workable land from the mountain and, built in an
age before machines, must have taken years — decades, perhaps — to
erect. The homes were deserted now, their roofs caved in by Saddam
Hussein’s soldiers, but they had left the terraces alone.
“It must have been so beautiful here then,” Azar said, gazing up at the village, “a kind of garden.”
But for Azar, the past was most useful for what it
said about the future, and putting Sinjar behind us had set him in a
happier, anticipatory mood. As we continued across Sinjar mountain, he
drummed his fingers on the steering wheel.
“This is our time now,” he said. “Iraq is gone. Syria is gone. Now it is our time.”
Epilogue
After 16 months of traveling in the
Middle East, I find it impossible to predict what might happen next, let
alone sum up what it all means. In most every place Paolo Pellegrin and
I went, the situation today looks worse than it did when we set out:
The repression of the Sisi regime in Egypt has deepened; the war in
Syria has taken tens of thousands more lives; to add to its other
problems, Libya is now hurtling toward insolvency. If there is one
bright spot on the map, it is the apparently solid and committed
international coalition that is now working toward the final destruction
of ISIS.
That said, I am reminded of something Majd Ibrahim
told me: “ISIS isn’t just an organization, it’s an idea.” It is also a
kind of tribe, of course, and if this incarnation is destroyed, the
conditions that created ISIS will remain in the form of a generation of
disaffected and futureless young men, like Wakaz Hassan, who find
purpose and power and belonging by picking up a gun. In short, nothing
gets better anytime soon.
On a more philosophical level, this journey has
served to remind me again of how terribly delicate is the fabric of
civilization, of the vigilance required to protect it and of the slow
and painstaking work of mending it once it has been torn. This is hardly
an original thought; it is a lesson we were supposed to have learned
after Nazi Germany, after Bosnia and Rwanda. Perhaps it is a lesson we
need to constantly relearn.
Against this, I find solace in the extraordinary
power of the individual to bring change, and no person that I met more
exemplified this than Khulood al-Zaidi. Through sheer force of will,
Khulood — the youngest daughter of a traditional family in a provincial
city in Iraq — became an unlikely yet remarkable leader and in the
process saved what she could of her family. Here, too, though, is a
paradox: It is people like Khulood who must see to the mending of these
fractured lands. Yet, it is those very people, the best their nations
have to offer, who are leaving in search of a better life elsewhere.
Today, Austria’s gain is Iraq’s loss.
As I write this, the Iraqis are slowly retaking
cities from ISIS across the country’s central plains: Ramadi was
recaptured in February, Falluja in June. Planning for a joint offensive
of Iraqi and Kurdish forces against Mosul is in its advanced stages, and
the strike could come as early as October. One who will most certainly
play a role in that offensive is Dr. Azar Mirkhan. For Azar, however,
the true struggle, of fully separating his Kurdish homeland from the
Arab world, will continue in the battle’s aftermath. That aftermath will
also mark the end of Wakaz Hassan’s usefulness to his captors; as
bluntly explained by the Kurdish security officer, he will then almost
surely be handed over to Iraqi authorities for execution.
In Libya, Majdi el-Mangoush is continuing his
engineering studies, but in contemplating the chaos engulfing his
homeland, he has turned to a novel idea: a restoration of the monarchy
that Qaddafi overthrew in 1969. “Not that it will solve all our
problems,” Majdi told me, “but at least with the king, we were a
nation.” Whatever happens in Libya, he is committed to staying and
working for its improvement. “I am ready for a new kind of uncertainty,”
he said.
In Dresden, Majd Ibrahim has been granted refugee
status, which will enable him to remain in Germany for at least the next
three years. Now learning German, he hopes to return to college this
fall for a master’s degree in hotel management.
In Egypt, Laila Soueif’s son, Alaa, is in the
second year of his five-year prison sentence. Her daughter, Sanaa, was
released in September 2015 under a presidential pardon, after having
served 15 months. In May, though, she was found guilty of “insulting the
judiciary” for failing to answer a prosecutor’s request for an
interview. Given a six-month sentence, Sanaa is currently being held at a
women’s prison in Cairo.
In Austria, Khulood and her sister Teamim continue
to live with the Edelsbrunner family and were recently awarded
scholarships to study intercultural management at a local university
beginning in September. Not long ago, their mother, Aziza, who had never
left Iraq, and whom Kuhlood had seen only once since she fled 11 years
ago, died in Kut. Kuhlood’s response to the news was typical of this
dauntless young woman. She redoubled her efforts to rescue her remaining
family, the father and sister still stranded in Jordan, and bring them
to Austria. “To bring them here, to have a family again,” she said.
“That is my greatest dream.”
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Correction: August 15, 2016
An earlier version of this article misstated the year that Iraq invaded Kuwait. It was 1990, not 1991.
An earlier version of this article misstated the year that Iraq invaded Kuwait. It was 1990, not 1991.
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