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Iraq Troop Withdrawal: The Harrowing Images Of The War

Iraq War Photos

HADI MIZBAN and KARIM KADIM and KHALID MOHAMMED   12/ 3/11 12:20 PM ET   AP

BAGHDAD — Burned bodies hanging from a bridge. A boy buried under rubble from a bombing. A father gunned down in front of his 7-year-old daughter. These were some of the harrowing images captured by three Iraqi photographers of The Associated Press who have covered the Iraq war since the U.S.-led invasion of 2003.

Now, as the last American troops prepare to leave their country, the three remember the images that have held the most significance for them.

_ Khalid Mohammed:

On a beautiful spring day in 2004, during a ride through Baghdad looking for stories to photograph, my driver and I were changing a flat tire when a phone call came from my office. There had been an attack in Fallujah, 70 kilometers (45 miles) west of the capital. We rushed there.

I had not slept well the night before. My country was engulfed in violence, and I had dreamed of being chased by the ghosts of dead people I had photographed. Now, as we drove into Fallujah, we immediately sensed something was not normal. There were no police in sight. People were closing their shops. Parents were pulling their children out of class early.

I could see a column of smoke coming from the city center, and we drove there. The smell of burning flesh was everywhere. There was blood and black ash where bodies had been dragged on the asphalt. An SUV was on fire. Young people nearby were chanting anti-U.S. slogans.

I asked them what had happened. "They killed them," the kids said. "You can find them hanging at the bridge."

Hanging from the bridge spanning the Euphrates River were the remains of four American private contractors. More young people were gathered there, laughing hysterically and chanting "Death to America!"

"God, I have to document this," I thought, my hands trembling, heart racing.

I used to work in Fallujah all the time, and I recognized many of the faces in the crowd, but this time the atmosphere was different, almost hysterical.

"Come on! Take some photos of this CIA staff! They think they can ride into Fallujah!" someone said to me.

I told my driver to stay in the car with the engine running, and got out to take pictures. But seconds after I started shooting I heard voices – "Who is this photographer? Why is he shooting? Stop!"

Then I heard heavy gunfire from the direction of the bridge as the American troops arrived. I ran back to the car.

It was the first time that I had ever shot pictures of hanging people. I knew this would affect both sides. Even as I was running to the car I heard older people deploring what had happened to the four Americans.

I have been back to Fallujah a few times, and would rather stay away. The smell of burned flesh and the sound of hysterical laughter are still with me.

___

Karim Kadim:

It was 2008 and I was in Sadr City covering clashes between U.S. forces and Mahdi army militiamen when I heard the sounds of loud explosions from American aerial bombardment and headed in their direction. There were gunmen everywhere, U.S. helicopters above, destroyed buildings and people trying to flee.

I heard a man shouting "My son is still trapped!" He told me he had taken his wounded wife to an ambulance and then returned to his house. Firefighters and residents began searching for the 2-year-old boy. I stayed, wanting to help the man and hoping to get a picture of the child being found alive.

After two hours he was found and carried aloft by rescuers who rushed him to a waiting ambulance. I had my shot but I wanted to follow the story to its conclusion, believing, like the others, that the boy had survived. So I jumped into the ambulance and rode with it to the hospital, where a doctor pronounced him dead. The father was shocked. I too started to cry.

Sadr City was never an easy place for a journalist to work. The Shiite militiamen who controlled the district distrusted us. American forces surrounded the area and sometimes shelled the gunmen's hideouts, trapping me in the crossfire.

But I kept coming back to the bereaved family, whose destroyed house stood in the same neighborhood as my own. The father was a simple soul who wanted nothing more than to live peacefully with his family, yet his son's life had not been spared.

I gave him a newspaper that had published my photos of the bombing. I wanted somehow to help him. Then, on one of my visits, I found that his home had been rebuilt, and he told me that U.S. forces and local authorities compensated him. Now, all the destroyed houses have been repaired, and the area is much calmer.

___

Hadi Mizban:

In 2005, while covering parts of western Baghdad and the airport road, I heard a volley of bullets and then saw two police cars speed by. Arriving at the scene, I found a man lying dead in an empty street, and a little girl sitting cross-legged, staring at him, her clothes blood-soaked, crying "They killed my father." Her name was Ahdaf, and she was 7.

When she saw me, she became terrified and started to cry, thinking I was the killer. I thought of my baby daughter, and I imagined she would do the same thing if I was killed, and I started to cry as well.

Then the dead man's wife arrived, weeping and shouting "You killed him!" I tried to calm her down, telling her I was a journalist who had nothing to do with the killing. I had the feeling that we were being watched by the insurgents. Some people were looking at me from a nearby house. After the body was taken by the police, I was stopped by a man asking if I was related to the dead man and wanting to know why I was crying. I sensed that the man was from al-Qaida. He told me to leave.

I have been back a half-dozen times to visit the family, trying to help put them in touch with a humanitarian organization which saw my photos and wanted to help resettle the family in a safe area. The wife said she would rather use the aid to buy sheep and cattle to earn money for food. On my last visit, in September 2005, a woman told me that I was being watched by al-Qaida people, and I should leave immediately because they would come and kill me. She was very worried.

Each time I visited this family, I used to kiss my sleeping children before leaving the house, knowing that this could be the last time I see them, and my children could be in the same situation as the girl I photographed.

My impression at that time was that the dead man represented Iraq which was dying and the little girl represented a generation that would be haunted by memories of killing and blood. I hope the coming generation will show tolerance and love to each other. It is only with tolerance and love that Iraq can be revived again; with hatred, Iraq can't move one step forward.

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BAGHDAD — Burned bodies hanging from a bridge. A boy buried under rubble from a bombing. A father gunned down in front of his 7-year-old daughter. These were some of the harrowing images capture...
BAGHDAD — Burned bodies hanging from a bridge. A boy buried under rubble from a bombing. A father gunned down in front of his 7-year-old daughter. These were some of the harrowing images capture...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joseph LeCompte
The USA isnt broke.It was robbed.
08:26 AM on 12/09/2011
Washington Post . For five years, as the wars in Iraq took the lives of thousands of U.S. troops, officials at the Dover Air Force Base mortuary took the remains of some of the dead soldiers, cremated them and unceremoniously tossed them in a Virginia landfill. 2003-2008.
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ussuri
ask questions, question answers
01:59 AM on 12/05/2011
US # 1 in selling death on the planet.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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01:04 AM on 12/05/2011
Exxon Mobil has signed oil and gas exploration deals with Iraq's Kurdistan, an adviser to the Kurdish government said on Friday, despite warnings from Baghdad that the move could jeopardise a major oilfield project.

A senior Iraqi oil official said the central government had been aware that Exxon was in talks to explore in the Kurdish region and had warned that any deal with the KRG could result in the termination of its deal to develop the giant West Qurna field.

Baghdad and the government of the semi-autonomous northern Kurdish region have longstanding disputes over northern oilfields. Baghdad deems contracts between the KRG and foreign oil companies to be illegal.

"The KRG has for the last few months been in discussions with a number of major oil companies. This resulted in the recent signing by Exxon Mobil of contracts to explore in six blocks," KRG adviser Michael Howard said.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TStringfellow
Wobbly, politically and literally
03:26 PM on 12/04/2011
My God. What a crime. When will we stop allowing these things to happen?

Any of us who were adults at the time of the invasion and didn't participate in the mobilizations against it are as guilty as the men at the top.
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Richard Aron
Be the change you wish to see in the world. Gandhi
01:13 PM on 12/04/2011
We invaded their country illegally and we ruined their lives. We better leave ASAP.
01:06 PM on 12/04/2011
We did this for no good reason! Unless you consider oil and corporate profit a good reason to kill and die for!
April22
Some experiences in life are ineffable
10:56 AM on 12/04/2011
44 minutes and counting!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jbaindreamer
10:55 AM on 12/04/2011
Our madman (Baby Bush) killed their madman (saddam). It's now time for intelligent people to end this war.
April22
Some experiences in life are ineffable
10:49 AM on 12/04/2011
Now comments are 37 minutes behind.
April22
Some experiences in life are ineffable
10:44 AM on 12/04/2011
The last comment here was sent 28 minutes ago!

Difficult to have a conversation with such a lag of time between each comment posted!
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IfIonlyknew
Politics is Hollywood for ugly people.
11:41 PM on 12/04/2011
They seem to stifle a lot since AoL has taken over.
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Aikaterina
A Greek-American living in California
10:43 AM on 12/04/2011
We here in the US can congratulate ourselves for "Mission Accomplished," and a withdrawal of troops at long last.

We don't know WHY we went there in the first place:
WMD's
mushroom clouds
violating UN resolutions
to bring democracy
to stabilize and bring peace to the region
to get rid of a tyrant and oppressive regime

Do we know yet what we've accomplished there?
-- nearly 110,000 "official" US & UK estimates dead, although independent studies (Johns Hopkins and other epidemiologists) puts the toll at 655,000, including those directly related to war, violence, disease, non-treated injuries, starvation, and other factors.
-- 2,7 million Iraqis injured, maimed or suffering war-related trauma
-- 4.5 million Iraqis displaced (most live in Syrian or Jordanian refugee camps)
-- centuries' old ethnic, sectarian rivalries erupted into daily-deadly violence
-- the only central "leadership" is a US-puppet, whom most deem illegitimate or irrelevant
-- after disbanding existing security (military-police), there's no effective means to contain violence
-- lack of basic services (running water, electricity)
-- 44% - 60% unemployment and dire economic issues

It's certain we've won "the hearts and minds" of the people over there.
April22
Some experiences in life are ineffable
10:36 AM on 12/04/2011
Don't be fooled, Americans are facing a "war" of which there is no end in sight!

"What is unfolding is the face of President Obama's scaled-down, rebranded mini-occupation of Iraq. Under the terms of the Status of Forces agreement, all US forces are supposed to be out of Iraq by the end of 2011. Using private forces is a backdoor way of continuing a substantial US presence under the cover of "diplomatic security." The kind of paramilitary force that Obama and Clinton are trying to build in Iraq is, in large part, a byproduct of the monstrous colonial fortress the United States calls its embassy in Baghdad and other facilities the US will maintain throughout Iraq after the "withdrawal." The State Department plans to operate five "Enduring Presence Posts" at current US military bases in Basrah, Diyala, Erbil, Kirkuk and Ninewa. The State Department has indicated that more sites may be created in the future, which would increase the demand for private forces. The US embassy in Baghdad is the size of Vatican City, comprised of twenty-one buildings on a 104-acres of land on the Tigris River."

And no money to be found for Americans who go hungry, jobless and homeless!

http://www.thenation.com/blog/37877/iraq-withdrawal-obama-and-clinton-expanding-us-paramilitary-force-iraq
April22
Some experiences in life are ineffable
10:31 AM on 12/04/2011
Even as the number of troops in Iraq are reduced, the "CIA will continue to have a major presence in the country, as will security contractors working for the State Department."

The Obama administration under the State Department's diplomatic security division will be deploying more contractors to Iraq and many of the them will be from so-called third country nationals.

"'After the departure of U.S. Forces [from Iraq], we will continue to have a critical need for logistical and life support of a magnitude and scale of complexity that is unprecedented in the history of the Department of State,'" wrote Patrick Kennedy, under secretary of state for management, in an April letter to the Pentagon. "'And to keep our people secure, Diplomatic Security requires certain items of equipment that are only available from the military.'"

http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/iraq/index.html

http://www.thenation.com/blog/37877/iraq-withdrawal-obama-and-clinton-expanding-us-paramilitary-force-iraq
10:11 AM on 12/04/2011
It's funny that people say no WMD's were discovered.Last I checked Sarin, and VX were weapons of mass destruction that Sadam used to end over 189,000 of his own peoples lives.101st and elements of 82nd Airborne found cache's containing both chemicals in powder form that were being used in their mortar rounds,RPG's and artillery rounds.Many soldiers have breathing and respiratory system ailments from being exposed to it, I'm one of them.You people believe everything you read in the media without questioning. that is a perfect example of "Mindless drones"
April22
Some experiences in life are ineffable
10:42 AM on 12/04/2011
There exists a US involvement in this story, if you do some research, wherein the US promised to assist those who aided the US military during Desert Storm and then never followed through - the same people Sadam gassed!
07:25 PM on 12/05/2011
Desert storm took place in Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia in 1991. Saddam Hussein gassed the Kurds in 1989 because supposedly they plotted an asassination attempt on him and most importantly to him, they were a different sect of Muslim faith that had "inferior beliefs" to his own faith.What you are talking about is Afghanistan where the American CIA was promising the Afghan people assistance in their war against the russians, and then the goverment (ours) had a change in heart and pulled our people out leaving the afghans to fight for themselves with weapons that we provided to them. Which are ironically being used against us at this point in time.And no, Rumsfield did not give the chemical weapons to them, it was a production facility that we raided, and we disabled the machines that were manufacturing it. An enemy prisoner of war told us a convoy had been there a couple days prior and took an unknown amount of it to an undisclosed location, but they were heading north when they took off, which ironically was Into Bagdad
07:24 PM on 12/04/2011
also wasnt sadam himself a wmd to his own people??
April22
Some experiences in life are ineffable
10:05 AM on 12/04/2011
There is a long list of reasons why there is so much anti-American sentiment among the Iraqis and why they want the US out of their country asap.

The US has destroyed cities, killed innocent Iraqis, displaced millions of Iraqis who left the country to save the lives of themselves and their families, special operations' night raids, American contractors who answered to no one for their crimes, Abu Ghraib prison and torture, the US military's use of electromagnetic beam weapons known as "poppers" and "domes" microwaving Iraqis, the use of depleted uranium in ammunition leaving radioactive dust and spreading cancers to Iraqis and deformities in Iraqi babies and the list goes on!

Our federal government and the military have only spread death, destruction and hatred towards America under the pretense of waging a war on terror.

In many ways, we are now the terrorists and America has become the axis of evil in its quest to dominate the Middle East for the special interests of the privileged few.
11:24 AM on 12/04/2011
Well said, April22, we should have all been in the streets protesting this horrific so called "freedom" effort in Iraq when there was first mention of an invasion!!