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Iraqi informer angered by treatment of POW
Knight Ridder Newspapers ^ | April 3, 2003 | By JUAN O. TAMAYO

Posted on 04/03/2003 7:09:25 PM PST by 68skylark

MARINE COMBAT HEADQUARTERS, Iraq - The Iraqi man who tipped U.S. Marines to the location of American POW Jessica Lynch said Thursday he did so after he saw her Iraqi captor slap her twice as she lay wounded in a hospital.

"A person, no matter his nationality, is a human being," the tipster, a 32-year-old lawyer whose wife was a nurse at the hospital, said in an interview at Marines' headquarters, where he, his wife and daughter are being treated as heroes and guests of honor.

"He is an extremely courageous man who should serve as an inspiration to all of us to do the right thing," said Lt. Col. Rick Long, spokesman for the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force.

After he saw Lynch slapped, the lawyer slipped into her room at the Saddam Hospital in Nasiriyah and told her, "Don't worry." Then he walked six miles to the nearest U.S. Marines and told them where she was.

He later returned to the hospital, at the request of U.S. commanders, to map the facility and count how many Saddam Hussein loyalists were there.

A U.S. commando force whose name remains secret rescued Lynch early Wednesday local time. She was taken Thursday to Germany for treatment of injuries she suffered when she was captured.

The lawyer, whose first name is Mohammed and who asked that his last name not be published, smiled between every sentence as he recounted in broken but expressive English how he helped the Americans. He learned English at Basra University.

Wearing Marine hand-me-downs after fleeing with only the clothes on their backs, Mohammed, his wife Iman, 32, a nurse at Saddam Hospital, and 6-year-old daughter Abir, seemed surprisingly cheerful for a family on the run.

Grateful Leathernecks showered them with Marine unit patches, a commemorative coin and an American flag on their way to a refugee center near the port of Umm Qsar, where they hope to ride out the war.

"I love America. I like America. Why, I don't know," Mohammed said as he recounted the critical role he played in Lynch's rescue.

Iraqi President Saddam Hussein has long repressed Iraq's people with such a brutal grip that even with American troops at the gates to Baghdad many refuse to rise up against him out of fear that he will outlast the Americans.

But Mohammed's tale is one of a man who didn't like what he saw when he walked into the Saddam Hospital last Friday to visit his wife and was told by a doctor friend that an American woman POW was in the emergency ward.

The friend walked him to the ground-floor ward, taken over by the feared Saddam Fedayeen at the start of the war, and past a window where he saw Lynch, an Army private first class captured after her convoy became lost near Nasiriyah in the opening days of the war.

Her head was bandaged, her right arm was in a sling over a white blanket and she had what Mohammed thought was a gunshot wound to a leg. But her real problem then was the black-uniformed Fedayeen commander who everyone addressed as "colonel."

The man slapped her, Mohammed said. "One, two," he added, making single slapping and back slap motions with his right hand. She was very brave, he recalled.

"My heart cut," Mohammed added, meaning stopped, putting his hand over his chest and grimacing. "There, I have decided to go to Americans to give them important information about the woman prisoner."

He walked into her room with his doctor friend. "I said 'Good morning.' She thought I was a doctor. I say, 'Don't worry.' She smiled," he recalled.

Doctors treating Lynch wanted to amputate her leg, Mohammed said, but his doctor friend persuaded them not to. His friend, he said, "hates Saddam Hussein and hates security of Saddam Hussein."

Mohammed said he told his wife to take their daughter to his father's house for safety, and then set off on foot to find the American troops he had heard were occupying the edges of Nasiriyah.

"This was very dangerous for me because American soldiers shoot," he said, throwing up his hands in the air to show how he carefully approached what turned out to be the U.S. Marines.

He told them about the woman prisoner, and about a U.S. military uniform he had also seen, presumably of a U.S. soldier killed in the fighting in and around Nasiriyah, some of the heaviest of the war.

They asked him to return to the six-story, 234-bed hospital to gather information on its layout, its hallways, stairways and doors, its basement and whether a helicopter could land on its roof.

He walked back, with no taxis in sight, even as U.S. jets bombed parts of the city of more than 500,000 people. "Boom, boom. I walked under bombs. Fire, Fire," Mohammed recalled.

He did the same thing the next day to report back to the Marines.

There were 41 Fedayeen based at the hospital, with four guarding Lynch's room in civilian clothes but armed with AK-47 assault rifles and carrying radios.

"I drew them a map. I drew them five maps," he said, plainly relishing his cloak-and-dagger missions into the heart of Saddam's terror network.

Fedayeen raided his house the next day, he said, taking away all his possessions and even his car, a Russian-made Muscovitch Brazilia 680. He said a neighbor was shot and her body dragged through the streets just for waving at a U.S. helicopter.

"Very bad people," he said. "There is no kindness in my heart for them."

He got his family out of Nasiriyah on Tuesday night, hours before a task force of U.S. commandos rescued Lynch in a raid so noteworthy that the U.S. Central Command in Qatar called a 4:30 a.m. news conference to announce it.

Four American journalists who have had regular access to the Marines' combat operations center in southern Iraq were asked to stay away from the COC as the rescue operation was getting underway.

Mohammed and his family are now officially "temporary refugees."

After showers, Mohammed put on an oversized green Marine pullover, his wife put on one of the gray T-shirts that MTV donated to the Leathernecks and his daughter was covered to her knees in a green T-shirt from a Marine chemical warfare unit.

But Mohammed did not appear despondent, as his wife smiled and stayed shyly in the background and daughter Abir played with a neon-green illumination stick given to her by a Marine.

"I am very happy," he said, adding that his wife wants to work in a hospital helping Americans and that he is eager to help the Marines any way he can until he can return home to Nasiriyah and resume his normal life.

"In future, when Saddam Hussein down, I will go back to Nasiriyah because my house and office are there," he said. As for the Fedayeen, he said, "when Saddam Hussein down, I sure they go away."

"Believe me, not only I, all the people of Iraq, not the people in the government, like Americans," Mohammed said. "They want to help the Americans, but they are all afraid."


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: 507th; army; injuries; iraq; jessica; jessicalynch; lynch; pfclynch; pow; pows; wva
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To: Fester Chugabrew
Good point.
21 posted on 04/03/2003 7:35:37 PM PST by Calpernia (http://www.politicsandprotest.org/attack.swf)
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To: Steve0113
Exactly. No doubt the Special Ops had questions re all the exit doors, mechanical room locations, etc etc one would never consider otherwise.
22 posted on 04/03/2003 7:37:28 PM PST by freedomlover
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To: Calpernia
He told them about the woman prisoner, and about a U.S. military uniform he had also seen, presumably of a U.S. soldier killed in the fighting in and around Nasiriyah, some of the heaviest of the war.

Is this what you are referring to?

"and about a U.S. military uniform he had also seen, presumably of a U.S. soldier killed in the fighting"

These were probably the men that they buried outside the hospital.

23 posted on 04/03/2003 7:39:10 PM PST by B4Ranch (Keep America safe! Thank the troops for our freedom. No slack for Iraq!)
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To: 68skylark

This isn't the first account I've read wherein an Iraqi talks in such a guileless way about Saddam's henchmen, or implies that these killer gangs in their neighborhoods are other than their government.

24 posted on 04/03/2003 7:40:20 PM PST by Cultural Jihad
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To: freedomlover
Hopefully that "colonel" took a few slaps from the special ops right before he had his heart shown to him.
25 posted on 04/03/2003 7:40:56 PM PST by freedomlover
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To: skr
no kidding! This guy deserves US citizenship more than many of the people here in the US
26 posted on 04/03/2003 7:41:07 PM PST by Enemy Of The State
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To: 68skylark
Clearly this man & family should be rewarded with permanent residency in the US should they desire along with sufficient funds to start over. Just like the reward for Osama & friends his intelligence information was invaluable and led to the recovery of one fine US soldier. These type of deed need to be rewarded so others will take the initiative and risk to help the USA. The government routinely rewards drug informants very well and this IMO is certainly more important that snitching out some dope pusher.
27 posted on 04/03/2003 7:42:03 PM PST by rolling_stone
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To: Calpernia
"I LOVE this story. But a few things jumped out at me. If his wife worked normally at this hospital and he normally went there; why did he need to walk back to scout it to draw the maps? Why wouldn't he have been able to do this onsite rather than return and come back? "

I use to work at a hospital and my husband visited me several times there.. he still can't get around the place without asking me which way to go :) Of course this is a large hospital here. I saw in the rescue video they went down a couple flights of stairs so it could be a large hospital in a town of 500,000 people. (i think that's the number of people I read were there.. i could be wrong though) And as to the other POW, I'm afraid it was likely one of those 11 bodies they also found. 2 of them were supposedly in the hospital morgue.
28 posted on 04/03/2003 7:43:17 PM PST by honeygrl
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To: Enemy Of The State
Good grief... there's enough info in there for a simple google search to lay in artillery coordinates!
29 posted on 04/03/2003 7:46:04 PM PST by ALS
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To: big ern
"He may not know why but I do. Under Saddam he only knows fear. Fear can be a great motivator but after you've lived with fear Hope can be an even greater motivator. America provides Hope for Mohammed and that is why he loves America and he really knows nothing about America, except he knows what is most important about America. America provides Hope."

Bingo. America will always remember and honor our war heroes. The people of Iraq, OTOH, will forevermore curse the name of Saddam Hussein and those who enabled his schiziod, satanic reign of terror.

30 posted on 04/03/2003 7:46:23 PM PST by Prince Charles
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To: big ern
America provides Hope.

Ugh... remember Slick Willie, "The Man From Hope"...

31 posted on 04/03/2003 7:48:11 PM PST by ambrose
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To: rolling_stone
We don't want them to come here... we need people like them to stay and help rebuild a Free Iraq.
32 posted on 04/03/2003 7:49:20 PM PST by ambrose
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To: big ern
Your response should be made a QUOTE! Matter of fact, I may use your statement on the Iraqi Refugee site I'm making, hold do I credit you?
33 posted on 04/03/2003 7:51:08 PM PST by Calpernia (http://www.politicsandprotest.org/attack.swf)
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To: 68skylark
This is such a beautiful story that it needs to be told over and over again.
34 posted on 04/03/2003 7:52:30 PM PST by tessalu
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To: B4Ranch
I unfortunately caught that after I read a 2nd time. I wish it wasn't true.
35 posted on 04/03/2003 7:52:39 PM PST by Calpernia (http://www.politicsandprotest.org/attack.swf)
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To: 68skylark
WOW!
36 posted on 04/03/2003 7:53:20 PM PST by Incorrigible
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To: freedomlover
Hopefully that "colonel" took a few slaps from the special ops right before he had his heart shown to him.

I don't know if that happened.

But I think it's a cheerful thing to hope for!

37 posted on 04/03/2003 7:53:29 PM PST by 68skylark
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To: honeygrl; Steve0113
Yes, I now get the picture. I admit, I was suspicious. But, being familiar with a place is not the same as being able to 'map' it. Thanks.
38 posted on 04/03/2003 7:55:07 PM PST by Calpernia (http://www.politicsandprotest.org/attack.swf)
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To: Calpernia; big ern
I have a bad habit of working with multiple browser windows open. Hence typos in message posts. The: "hold do I credit you?" should have been "how do I credit you". But I'm sure you figured that out.
39 posted on 04/03/2003 7:57:56 PM PST by Calpernia (http://www.politicsandprotest.org/attack.swf)
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To: 68skylark
Thank you Lord for blessing this man and his family in ways too numerous to count.
40 posted on 04/03/2003 7:59:58 PM PST by ApesForEvolution (Yes, let us allow the economies of gerdung, frunk, mexiztlan, chirushcom and canadastan to wither...)
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