The Real Iraq: A Moment of Truth
Review by Michael J. Totten -
May 28, 2008
19 ratings from readers
To most of us, Iraq is an abstraction that, at best, vaguely resembles reality on the ground. A new book by Michael Yon, however, reveals the real Iraq — and why we face a moment of truth of historic proportions.
Iraq is where ideologies go to die.
Arab nationalism, Baathism,
anti-Americanism, al-Qaidism, Donald Rumsfeldism, and Moqtada
al-Sadrism have either died there or are dying.
Conventional liberal
opinion, more or less correct about the foundering American war effort
from 2004 to 2006, has been severely bloodied — along with Iraq’s worst
insurgent groups and militias — by General David Petraeus’s leadership of
the American troop surge.
Even post-9/11 fear of Islam has proven
unsustainable for those who regularly interact with ordinary Iraqis.
Independent journalist Michael Yon, who has spent more time embedded
with combat soldiers in Iraq than any other reporter, is a refreshingly
unideological analyst of the war.
His self-published dispatches have
earned him a loyal following around the world, and he has set out to
reach even more people with the publication of a terrific new book,
Moment of Truth in Iraq.
Yon begins his story in medias res. “We are in trouble, but
we have a great general,” he writes on the eve of Arrowhead Ripper, the
major battle last summer against al-Qaida’s terrorist army in Baqubah,
just north of Baghdad.
Iraq was all but lost before the battle, when
American forces under Petraeus surged into the capital and beyond.
Yon
then takes us back in time and to the northern city of Mosul, where
Petraeus first proved that he knew how to counter an insurgency by
working with the local population and protecting it from killers.
Yon
spent many months in Mosul embedded with the 1-24th Infantry Regiment,
or “Deuce Four,” and his first-person narrative of firefights in the
city’s streets and alleys is relentless and gripping.
Despite Petraeus’s early successes in Mosul, the city is now perhaps
Iraq’s most violent. It slid back into chaos when the general’s
strategy was discontinued after he completed his tour there and before
he was appointed the commander of American forces in Iraq.
There are no
final battles in counterinsurgency warfare, as Yon makes clear, but if
there were to be one in Iraq, it most likely would take place in Mosul.
Much of Iraq has now been pacified — most famously and astonishingly in
the formerly convulsive cities of Fallujah and Ramadi, as well as in Baqubah, most of Baghdad, and regions further south.
Moment of Truth in Iraq isn’t the journalistic equivalent of
a war movie, but parts of it could surely be used as the starting point
for a screenplay. (Such a film might easily perform better at the box office than Hollywood’s string of gloomy, axe-grinding Iraq
flicks have).
Still, Yon’s book isn’t just about explosions and
carnage. It’s also about the new counterinsurgency strategy and, more
important, the Americans and Iraqis who risk their lives to make it
work.
When Iraq was degenerating into its worst levels of violence,
American soldiers spent too much time behind their bases’ walls, hoping
to keep casualties to a minimum and to avoid being seen as occupiers by
the Iraqis.
Today, they live and work inside Iraq’s cities and
neighborhoods, where they tend to be welcomed, if not as liberators
then as protectors. Counterinsurgency is as much about nation building
and community policing as it is about war making.
Independent journalist Michael Yon
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“The American soldier is the most dangerous man in the world,” Yon
writes, “and the Iraqis had to learn that before they would trust or
respect us. But it was when they understood that these great-hearted
warriors, who so enjoyed killing the enemy, are even happier helping to
build a school or to make a neighborhood safe that we really got their
attention.”
Images of the despicable abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib
have become iconic for many around the world. But anyone who has spent
significant time with American troops in Iraq, as I have, will
recognize the truth in Yon’s descriptions of U.S. soldiers as usually
decent and caring.
“There are lots of kitchen accidents in Iraq,” he
points out. “Kids get burned. American soldiers can’t take it when they
see a kid get burned. If they are in the neighborhood on a mission and
they see a burned kid, they will cancel the mission to get the kid to
an American aid station, which, technically they shouldn’t be doing.”
Yon is a former Special Forces soldier, and his affection for the
grunts in the field is palpable. He takes their honor, courage, duty,
and sacrifice seriously in a way that most journalists don’t — and
perhaps can’t.
At heart, he is as much a soldier as a reporter, but he
is neither a propagandist for the U.S. military nor a mouthpiece for
its public affairs officers. He nearly got himself thrown out of Iraq
for an article in The Weekly Standard challenging some
top-level brass for trying to censor media coverage.
And he calls out
both officers in the field and pundits back home who refuse to admit
that all has not always gone according to plan. “Combat soldiers have
little patience for less than unvarnished truth,” he writes.
“That’s
why I spend so much time with infantry.” Nothing makes a mockery of
party lines and spin from air-conditioned offices quite like facing
snipers, ambushes, and improvised explosive devices in 135-degree heat.
Reality is more real in Iraq than almost anywhere else.
But in distant places like Washington, eight time zones away, Iraq
is more of an abstraction. There is a left-wing Iraq and a right-wing
Iraq, and they only vaguely and occasionally resemble the actual place.
Yon will have none of either, which may be why no reporter who has
covered the conflict — from any country or for any newspaper or
magazine — has managed to convey the truth with such blistering accuracy.
“Happy news for the Left was that U.S. soldiers were demoralized and
the war was being lost,” he writes. “Happy news for the Right was that
there was no insurgency, then no civil war; we always had enough
troops, and we were winning hands-down, except for the left-wing
lunatics who were trying to unravel it all. They say heroin addicts are
happy, too, when they are out of touch with reality.”
Iraq is a tragic, unhappy, and often disturbing place, but it’s less
sinister and frightening up close than it is from a distance. That’s
because it’s a country striving for normality, whose normal aspects
rarely make their way into media reports that highlight violence,
mayhem, and failure.
On TV, Iraq looks like a nation of masked,
gun-toting fanatics, but in person, one finds friendliness, solidarity,
and reasonableness amid the chaos. “Just because Iraqis have ‘Allahu
Akbar’ on their flag,” Yon writes, “doesn’t mean they’re going to blow
up the World Trade Center any more than ‘In God We Trust’ means we’re
going to attack Communist China.”
“Iraq does not hate America,” he
insists. “If they hated us, I’d be urging an immediate troop
withdrawal, because there would be no hope of winning this war. If the
Iraqis hated us, we would be fighting the Iraqi Police and the Iraqi
Army. Instead, we’re fighting alongside them.”
Yon convincingly argues that the U.S. is winning in Iraq, at least
for the moment. “The enemy learned that our people and the Iraqi forces
would close in and kill them if they dared stand their ground.
“This is
important: an enemy forced to choose between dying or hiding inevitably
loses legitimacy. Legitimacy is essential. Men who must always either
run or die are no longer an army and are not going to found a
caliphate.”
The outcome, though, is still in doubt. If Petraeus’s surge
strategy fails or is prematurely short-circuited by Congress, the
American and Iraqi forces will almost certainly lose.
“Maybe creating a
powerful democracy in the Middle East was a foolish reason to go to
war,” Yon concludes. “Maybe it was never the reason we went to war. But
it is within our grasp now and nearly all the hardest work has been
done.” Which makes the present moment the moment of truth in Iraq.
Moment of Truth in Iraq is currently available at a 34% discount from Amazon.com. This review originally appeared in The City Journal and is reprinted here with their kind permission.
Michael J. Totten is a blogger (www.MichaelTotten.com) and independent journalist who has made five trips to Iraq. His work has appeared in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and numerous other publications. The Week named him Blogger of the Year in 2007 for his dispatches from the Middle East.