TIME: High Noon on Haifa
Street
Monday, August 30, 2004
By MICHAEL WARE
The booby-trapped artillery shell detonated shortly
before midnight. In the roar and smoke, bodies ripped
apart. Suddenly the nine-man foot patrol from Task
Force 1/9, composed of infantrymen and cavalry
troopers, was down to five, alone, in a darkened
Baghdad alley and cut off from help. One soldier was
dead. Three others lay bleeding but still alive as fire
from AK-47s rained down on the scrambling troopers.
Company commander Captain Thomas Foley hollered orders
above the din, desperately trying to stave off the
attack while getting some kind of aid to his wounded
men. One had lost a leg in the massive blast; two
others were critically wounded. Grenades were lobbed
down from houses and apartments above. Foley banded the
survivors together to cover their fallen comrades. A
minute elapsed, then another and another. The onslaught
didn't cease, but they held on. Forty more minutes
would pass before rescuers could fight their way to
them. It felt like a lifetime.
Moments like these have become harrowingly familiar for
the men of Task Force 1/9 since their arrival in
Baghdad in April. Their area of operations lies in the
heart of the Iraqi capital, with one stretch less than
two miles from the office of the new Iraqi government
and the U.S. embassy inside the fortified Green Zone.
It centers on Haifa Street, a once busy thoroughfare
that has become the most feared stretch of Baghdad: a
vicious insurgent sanctuary where U.S. and Iraqi
government forces cannot tread except to shoot their
way in and out. The battle for Haifa Street is
illustrative of the wider challenges facing U.S. forces
across Iraq, which will remain even if the U.S. manages
to quell the uprising in Najaf led by Muqtada al-Sadr.
After 17 months in Iraq, U.S. forces still often find
themselves operating in enemy territory--even in the
heart of Baghdad. For many, the dangers are mounting.
Despite their efforts to stand up Iraqi forces and
lower the profile of foreign troops, U.S. commanders
have yet to stem the death toll: this month U.S.
personnel are dying at three times the rate they were
in February.
Like other frontline soldiers in Iraq, the men of Task
Force 1/9--of which Charlie Company, of the National
Guard's 1st Battalion, 153rd Infantry Regiment, is a
part--face the risk of almost perpetual combat. Among
the company's 119 men, dozens of Purple Hearts have
been awarded for injuries suffered in battle.
"Exceptional things are happening out there, bits and
pieces of extraordinary bravery," says Foley. At the
same time, Foley sees these streets stripping his young
charges of their youth. "People outside have no idea of
the overall effect of this. Eighteen-year-old kids are
having to go through this. I'm watching some of them in
my company and how quickly they're being made to grow
up. It's chilling."
The midnight fire fight on May 19, which killed one
member of Task Force 1/9 and wounded three, was a
foreshadowing of even more bold insurgent attacks. On
the morning of July 7, a 100-person company of Iraqi
National Guardsmen ventured onto Haifa Street to set up
checkpoints. Almost immediately, they came under fire
from the concrete forest of towering Soviet-style
apartment blocks that line the wide, four-lane
boulevard. After 50 minutes, Task Force 1/9 headed
toward Haifa Street to evacuate the Iraqi troops. As a
platoon moved toward a former palace of Saddam
Hussein's at one end of Haifa Street, another entered
the narrow winding laneways of Old Baghdad, dubbed the
Maze, and took up positions atop the guardhouses at
Sheik Marouf Cemetery. Within a minute,
rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs) burst around them, and
7.62-mm bullets buzzed past in swarms. At the other end
of Haifa Street, insurgents stepped out from buildings
and let loose their RPGs. Women hurled potatoes onto
the street like grenades, duping the Iraqi soldiers
into diving to the ground, while male insurgents
unloaded machine-gun fire or threw real grenades.
During three hours of fighting, U.S. forces finally
unleashed high-explosive rounds from a 25-mm cannon,
obliterating the two-man RPG teams, to quiet the
boulevard. Two Iraqi guardsmen were killed, and U.S.
commanders say their troops killed dozens of insurgents
in the fire fight. But the attacks haven't subsided.
"[The insurgents are] not intimidated," says Staff
Sergeant Wilbert Tynes. "You've actually got to wipe
them out to get rid of them."
Senior officers in Task Force 1/9 concede they do not
know whom they're up against. They see boys, some as
young as 10, hurling grenades. But they also encounter
deftly executed ambushes bearing the mark of
professional soldiers and sophisticated terrorist
groups. "I really don't know who it is. I really don't
know what they want. That's the problem," says Foley.
Local militants say operations around Haifa Street have
been led by Abu Musa'ab, a former senior Iraqi military
officer who's now a commander for Battalions of Islamic
Holy War, a group tied to Abu Mousab al-Zarqawi--the
most wanted terrorist in Iraq--and funded by wealthy
Wahhabi donors in gulf states. The insurgents say they
are fighting for an Islamic state in Iraq. A veteran of
the Iran-Iraq war, Abu Musa'ab exploits the military's
reluctance to inflict damage on residential areas. His
men barrage Task Force 1/9's base with rockets and
mortars every two or three days, knowing that the
Americans will rarely fire back. "I can fire from
anywhere I like. Go on, pick a spot. I'll show you,"
Abu Musa'ab told TIME. "They can't chase us in here."
The G.I.s of Task Force 1/9 admit to a growing dread
about the persistence of the insurgency. "My initial
feeling when I'm told we're going back in there is
'damn.' You sit and shake your head," says Staff
Sergeant Bryan Keeping. Tynes tells his crew to pray,
"'cause you never know what's going to happen. We could
have a good day, and they could have a bad day. Or
maybe not." Or maybe both. Late last month, after a
joint U.S.-Iraqi sweep of Haifa Street, the Iraqi
government announced that 263 had been detained in a
sweep for "insurgents"--a suspect figure, given that
most of the detainees were Shi'ites and the bulk of the
hard-core insurgents in this neighborhood are Sunnis.
What wasn't reported is that Task Force 1/9 was
ambushed three minutes into the operation and hit by 26
RPGs, eight roadside bombs and relentless small-arms
fire during the gun battles that followed. One grenade
landed just 3 ft. from Captain Foley; a concrete fence
and the quick reactions of the specialist who pushed
Foley out of the way are all that saved him. "We handed
them their arses, but we were lucky," says Foley. "Each
morning I thank God we got outta there that day." No
one knows about the next time.