War splits Iraqi emigres - Los Angeles Times

Latimes

War splits Iraqi emigres - Los Angeles Times"


Play all audios:

Loading...

The worsening conflict in Iraq is far more than a distant news story to Imam Moustafa Al-Qazwini, a Rowland Heights religious leader, and Muhannad Eshaiker, an Irvine construction executive.


Al-Qazwini’s father, an ayatollah in the holy city of Karbala, was shot in June in a botched assassination attempt. Eshaiker said his business partner was kidnapped in Baghdad and forced to


pay a $50,000 ransom for his release; both men have left the country amid the uncontrolled violence. “It is total anarchy,” said Al-Qazwini, who heads the Islamic Educational Center of


Orange County. “We need a miracle to solve the problems.” As U.S. officials intensify debate on whether to change course on Iraq, the two men and other Iraqi Americans -- who number about


50,000 in Southern California -- paint a portrait of mounting chaos, fear and hardship facing their families back home. But, reflecting the nation’s own disparate views, those interviewed


were strongly divided on the best way forward for their native land. Some favored a phased withdrawal of U.S. troops, saying insurgents are using their presence to rally their forces and


justify their violence. Others call for a massive increase in troops to crush the insurgency and patrol the borders with Iran and Syria to keep out other troublemakers. Many believe


federalism can work in Iraq, keeping the country united with a degree of autonomy for the various regions controlled respectively by Kurds, Shiite Muslims and Sunnis. But Tahsin Atrushi,


president of the Kurdish Community Center in San Diego, said partitioning Iraq would be best because of what he sees as unbridgeable divides among the three groups. “I don’t think these


wounds can be healed,” he said. One point of agreement among all those interviewed: With the exception of the Kurdish north, Iraq is sliding into almost uncontrollable chaos and desperately


needs a new approach. Al-Qazwini said his relatives in Baghdad -- one an engineer and another a businessman -- have fallen into grim financial straits because the violence has virtually


prevented them from going to work. They have reason to worry: The family patriarch, the Ayatollah Sayed Mortada Al-Qazwini, was shot in the thigh and hand while being driven home from his


mosque. Three months ago, Al-Qazwini’s mother and brother barely missed being blown up by a suicide bomber in the holy city of Najaf. They safely passed the mosque gate just minutes before


the bomber unleashed his blast but were deeply traumatized by the carnage, Al-Qazwini said. He thinks U.S. troops should begin a phased withdrawal to remove the basis of the insurgents’


claim of moral high ground: that they are only trying to oust Western occupiers of Muslim land. Though some fear that a withdrawal would prompt a bloodbath, he said, “I can’t imagine a worse


scenario than what we’re experiencing now.” “The American occupation has been more of a burden,” he said. “Talk of a pullout will give Iraqis some hope.” Al-Qazwini also said many Shiite


Muslims such as him -- who constitute Iraq’s majority -- think Sunni Muslims have too much influence on U.S. policy and on leaders in Jordan and Saudi Arabia and the U.S. ambassador to Iraq,


Zalmay Khalilzad. Eshaiker said he was shocked by the isolation he found on his return to Iraq in 2003 for the first time in 25 years after the U.S.-led “liberation,” as he calls it. An


experienced engineer he hired didn’t even know how to turn on a computer, much less use it, said Eshaiker, who left Iraq for England in 1977 to study urban planning and settled in Southern


California in 1986. Initially, he said, things improved. Rising salaries allowed many people to buy microwave ovens and other consumer luxuries for the first time. Then came the Internet and


satellite TV, and soon he saw children in the streets imitating Western music. But within a year, he said, petty crime had given way to what Eshaiker now sees as a highly professional and


organized insurgency. He said a recent incident in his Baghdad neighborhood illustrated the havoc that anarchy has wreaked on the Iraqi psyche. According to Eshaiker, a man left his car in


the street, saying he had to buy gas. When he didn’t return within an hour, neighbors became alarmed that he had booby-trapped the car to explode. They called the local police, who said they


were too afraid to show up. So the entire neighborhood evacuated itself, shutting down businesses and leaving homes. Six hours later, the man returned with his gas, apologizing for his


delay. “Because of the lack of government, an honest guy who ran out of gas created havoc and paralyzed a neighborhood for an entire day,” Eshaiker said. “So how do we expect the country to


move forward?” Eshaiker says U.S. troops should pull out of the cities, heavily reduce their visibility and sufficiently arm Iraqi forces to manage their own defense. But Hasan Alkhatib, a


Silicon Valley software entrepreneur, said a U.S. pullback would be a “disaster of untold proportions.” In a country where hand grenades sell at roadside stands for $7 each and AK-47 assault


rifles are easily available, “the insurgents will be empowered by our withdrawal,” he said. Alkhatib said U.S. forces need to smash the insurgents with a doubling of troops, martial law and


the installation of a strong but fair leader. “Today Iraq has reached a point where the chaos is almost uncontrollable,” said Alkhatib, who came to the United States for graduate school in


1976. “Somebody has to take charge. We can’t afford to waffle.” He added that more than 5 million Iraqis have fled the country, producing a brain drain that has worsened the economy. And


many Iraqi Americans who went there after the invasion for business opportunities have bailed out -- including his brother-in-law. Alkhatib’s brother-in-law left San Jose for Iraq six months


after Saddam Hussein’s ouster to rebuild electrical and cable networks. “But every time he built something, the insurgents blew it up,” Alkhatib said. “It was a futile endeavor.” Then,


about a year ago, his brother-in-law’s partner was kidnapped and forced to pay a $1-million ransom for his release. The partner took his family and fled to Jordan, and his brother-in-law


gave up too. Atrushi, the Kurdish community leader, also advocated a harder line against the insurgents. U.S. troops are too “soft” and should let Iraqi security forces handle terrorists


with torture if needed, he said. “They butcher people and cut their heads off. They kill fathers and mothers in front of their children,” he said. “Whatever you do to them, they deserve it.”


Noori Barka, president of the Chaldean American Foundation in San Diego, said Iraq’s Christian population has been devastated by the violence. Priests have stopped saying Masses, people are


virtual prisoners in their homes and 30 Chaldean Christian women have been kidnapped in the last month in what he sees as a new trend toward targeting females. Nearly half of Iraq’s 1.2


million Christians have fled the country, he said. The Southern California Chaldean Christian community plans a rally at St. Peter Chaldean Catholic Church in El Cajon on Nov. 30 to draw


attention to the plight of Iraqi Christians, he said. Several Southern California relatives of the kidnapping victims are scheduled to speak. Barka said the only way to end the violence is


to let it get worse. He supports a U.S. phased withdrawal, despite the bloodshed between Shiite and Sunni Muslims that probably would follow. “Let them fight it out between them,” he said.


“I feel if we don’t let it get worse, it won’t get better.” [email protected] MORE TO READ


Trending News

The best women’s suits for summer

FASHIONThe best women’s suits for summerBack to the office calls for a return to ‘real’ clothes. Dress up to feel good, ...

Seven illnesses you can now see a pharmacist for instead of your gp

From today, patients can walk into pharmacies and be treated for a number of common illnesses instead of having to wait ...

Don't blame american drug users for violence in latin america

During the 2006-2012 presidency of Felipe Calderón, the Mexican murder rate tripled. During roughly the same time in Hon...

A place in the sun's laura hamilton shows off bikini body with lucy verasamy

A Place In The Sun's Laura Hamilton left fans wondering if her next project would be called A Place In The Snow aft...

Tape's rolling! | er: not the tv series | season 2

Tape's Rolling! 12/1/1995 | 27m 3sVideo has Closed Captions | CC A half-hour documentary series featuring interesti...

Latests News

War splits Iraqi emigres - Los Angeles Times

The worsening conflict in Iraq is far more than a distant news story to Imam Moustafa Al-Qazwini, a Rowland Heights reli...

Fifa 23: check release date, price, how to buy and everything you need to know

There are a lot of exciting new additions to the game, including the HyperMotion2 Technology that makes player motions m...

Gold eyes $1,300 again as weaker dollar, fund inflows support

Gold will continue to shine amid a weak dollar, says author and gold pro Jim Rickards. Simon Dawson | Bloomberg | Getty ...

Despite sikh pm no justice for 1984 sikh riot victims: ramdev

He appealed to the people to teach Congress a "lesson" in the forthcoming assembly elections for its alleged f...

Waugh advises aussies to `fire up` kohli only when he starts scoring

Former Australian skipper Steve Smith has called on the Steve Smith-led side to be cautious while indulging in verbal ba...

Top