iraq update

baghdad’s brave librarian

January 8, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Baghdad’s brave librarian

Loud talkers, lost books … and the occasional sniper fire, rocket attacks, and death threats are what Saad Eskander is up against in rebuilding the National Library and Archive.

By Tom A. Peter | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

“Our building was rocketed a few times,” says Dr. Eskander, in the same level tone he might use to describe a trip to the grocery store. “It was mortared and part of our fence was destroyed…. Stray bullets and sometimes snipers’ bullets smashed some windows as well, including my office.”

Though none of Eskander’s staff have been injured in these attacks, five have been killed in sectarian violence, and death threats have displaced dozens of his 300-plus staffers.

Eskander hardly seemed the Jack Bauer of librarianship as – during a recent tour of the US – he recounted his experiences in the Cambridge apartment of his colleague, an archivist at Harvard University. A slight man, Eskander is soft-spoken and not easily excitable. His wire-rimmed glasses and slick sports coat belie the stereotype of librarians committing 30-year-old fashion faux pas. But then again, Eskander is not your typical librarian.

About 20 years ago, he was hunkered in the mountains of northern Iraq with a band of Kurdish rebels opposed to Saddam Hussein’s regime. After a few years working for their underground newspaper, Eskander, a Kurd, fled to Iran where he spent several years before finally immigrating to England.

When American tanks rolled over the Kuwait-Iraq border in 2003, Eskander had lived in England for nearly 15 years. He’d become a citizen.

If he’d wanted, the quiet librarian could have lived the rest of his life without stepping foot back in Iraq. But in November 2003, he decided to contribute to Iraq’s culture by developing the Iraq National Library and Archive. The new post not only placed him at the center of a violent conflict, but the library had been looted and virtually burned to the ground during the first month of the war. Rebuilding it would prove a massive undertaking.

• • •

“I heard before visiting the National Library and Archive that it was damaged, but I did not know the extent of the damage,” recounts Eskander. “I was astonished when I found it in a total ruinous state.”

Arsonists trying to destroy potentially damning documents about the Baathist party burned the building twice within a three-day period, causing considerable structural damage. Looters absconded with equipment and furniture, and Iraqis whose family members had disappeared during Saddam’s reign carried off documents that could offer any clue about what happened to their loved ones. The library lost approximately 95 percent of its rare books, 60 percent of the archival collections, and 25 percent of the book collection.

Eskander was also confronted by an unraveling security situation. If ever there was a place on the proverbial wrong side of the tracks – even by Iraqi standards – the National Library and Archive was it. It is sandwiched between Baathist militant strongholds, Al Qaeda hotbeds, and an American military base. Eskander has watched US helicopters rain down fire on targets just outside the library.

Even to the south, where the library is flanked by Baghdad’s commercial district, there are regular car bombings.

Aside from obvious safety concerns, the security situation impedes many aspects of daily life. If there wasn’t a war, for example, Eskander’s commute would be less than five minutes. As it is now, it can take over an hour, if he makes it to the office at all. Military checkpoints create delays and car bombings can shut down entire roadways. On his longest commute, Eskander waited at three checkpoints before a car bombing pushed him on to congested side roads. Fortunately, Eskander, who hates driving, has a personal driver – not an uncommon luxury in the Middle East – to navigate the gridlocks.

Security around the library has noticeably improved since late September, says Eskander. Recent community efforts combined with US and Iraqi military campaigns have purged many fighters from the area.

Eskander inadvertently attained international notoriety chronicling daily life in Iraq in a web diary. Several international newspapers even posted links to it on their websites. He updated the journal from November 2006 to July 2007, but after nine months, announced its end.

“For sometime now, I have felt deep-down that I have been exploiting the tragedies and sacrifices of my staff, especially those who lost their lives,” he wrote. “I discovered that by writing the diary I put a very heavy moral burden on my shoulders; as if I have been emotionally blackmailing the readers. I do strongly believe that I have no right to do so. I seize this opportunity to apologize sincerely to everybody.”

In Cambridge, Eskander says there was more to his decision to stop writing. “I was exhausted mentally and psychologically. It’s not easy to write about the suffering of the people you know,” he says. “I felt as if I was waiting for bad things to happen in order to write about them, so this is awful. I felt guilty, as if I was selling them.”

As a librarian, he acknowledges the importance of diarists documenting history, but feels he’s done his part. “This is the diary of someone who works in the government. We need the views of ordinary citizens who work on the street,” says Eskander.

In March 2006, Eskander sent his most promising employee, a young web designer named Ali Salih, to Florence, Italy for training. Eight months after he returned, a group of four gunmen stopped Mr. Salih’s car, forced him out, and shot him repeatedly in front of his younger sister.

In his diary, Eskander later described the shooting based on an account by one of Salih’s brothers. “The street, the scene of the crime, was very busy that morning. But no one dare [sic] to intervene,” wrote Eskander.

Face to face, Eskander characteristically reveals little emotion recounting the incident, but smiles warmly when he says, “[Ali] was the symbol of the new National Library and Archive. He represented modernity and modernization.”

When he first started working at the library, Eskander says, “[the staff] thought I would leave Baghdad after one or two months, because they thought the security situation and the extent of the damage [to the library] would demoralize me.”

Nearly four and a half years later, he’s still there. Thanks to donations from several non-government organizations and the Czech Republic, much of the national library has been restored.

Still, there’s always the threat of violence erupting at the library again. At a speech at the Boston Public Library, someone asked if Eskander is worried about another attack. He explained patiently that he budgets for extra guards and ammunition, but it’s clear that for Eskander, the value of a national library far outweighs the risk of losing it again.

“Culture is important, especially secular culture and especially an institution that documents the cultural and scientific achievements of a nation,” says Eskander. “The country was on the verge of dismemberment and institutions like us and like the Iraqi Museum could play a role in the fact that they provide common symbols to all Iraqis. We are not a sectarian institution; we are a national institution.”

Categories: Iraq · baghdad · civilian losses · culture · leadership · life · news · resources · terror · war

iraqi pm meets with vatican ambassador, promises to make iraq safe for christians

January 8, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Iraqi PM meets with Vatican ambassador, assures him Christians are safe in the nation

BAGHDAD: Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki on Tuesday told the Vatican’s ambassador to Iraq that his government is working to ensure the safety of Christians in the country, a day after the pope condemned recent attacks targeting churches and a convent. In his meeting with Monsignor Francis Assisi Chullikatt, al-Maliki stressed what he called strong links between Muslims and Christians in Iraq and said people of both faiths want to live together in peace, according to a statement released by his office.

Christians have been frequent targets of attacks by militants in Iraq since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion.

On Sunday, a series of three apparently coordinated bombings targeted Christians in Mosul, 360 kilometers (225 miles) northwest of Baghdad.

The attacks began when a parked car bomb exploded near a Chaldean Catholic Church, causing damage but wounding no one.

About 30 minutes later, another parked car bomb exploded in the eastern part of the city near an Assyrian Christian Church, damaging the building and wounding four passers-by. Nearly simultaneously, a bomb planted near a Chaldean convent in western Mosul exploded, damaging the structure and a few nearby houses. No one was hurt.photophoto

On Monday in an annual speech to Vatican-based diplomats outlining the Holy See’s foreign policy priorities, the pope condemned the frequent attacks suffered by Iraq’s Christian community and said the country needs to undertake a constitutional reform that will safeguard the rights of minorities.

On Tuesday, Al-Maliki again condemned the attacks and told Chullikatt that those responsible would be captured.

Categories: Iraq · al-maliki · civilian losses · pope · war

cia officer lied to get job; worked in baghdad

January 8, 2008 · 1 Comment

How big a role did disgraced CIA officer have?

Prouty was assigned a sensitive post in Baghdad, NBC News has learned

Video

By Andrea Mitchell and Robert Windrem
NBC News
updated 6:21 p.m. ET, Thurs., Nov. 15, 2007

There’s new information about the young Lebanese woman who pleaded guilty Tuesday to charges she lied about her background to get jobs at the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Central Intelligence Agency.

Current and former intelligence officials tell NBC News that Nada Nadim Prouty had a much bigger role than officials at the FBI and CIA first acknowledged. In fact, Prouty was assigned to the CIA’s most sensitive post, Baghdad, and participated in the debriefings of high-ranking al-Qaida detainees.

A former colleague called Prouty “among the best and the brightest” CIA officers at the government’s most sensitive post – Baghdad. A second colleague added she was “quite highly thought of: and had received some prime assignments.

Among them: the investigation of the USS Cole bombing in Yemen and the investigation of war crimes in Rwanda, the East African nation racked by genocide.

So exceptional was her work, agree officials of both agencies, the CIA recruited her from the FBI to work for the agency’s clandestine service at Langley, Va., in June 2003. She then went to Iraq for the agency to work with the U.S. military on the debriefings.

“Early on, she was an active agent in the debriefings,” said one former intelligence official. “It was more than translation.”

On Tuesday, she pleaded guilty to conspiracy to illegally search FBI computers for classified information about Hezbollah and to naturalization fraud — a sham marriage to a former husband just to become a U.S. citizen. As the Justice Department noted, she needed to be a U.S. citizen to join the CIA and thus had defrauded the agency. (Prouty first came to the United States on a student visa in 1989 and after overstaying her visa paid an acquaintance in Detroit to marry her so she could get U.S. citizenship. She later divorced the man.)

Although no one claims Prouty worked for Hezbollah, her computer searches led U.S. officials to question her. She looked up files on her sister, Elfat El Aouar,  and brother-in-law, Talal Khalil Chahine, both of whom attended a Hezbollah fundraiser in Lebanon — alongside Hezbollah spiritual leader Sheikh Muhammad Hussein Fadlallah, designated by the United States as a terrorist.  

Chahine is currently a fugitive believed to be in Lebanon. He, along with Prouty’s sister and others, was charged in 2006 by the U.S. attorney in Detroit with tax evasion in connection with a scheme to conceal more than $20 million in cash received by La Shish restaurants in suburban Detroit and to route funds to persons in Lebanon with links to Hezbollah.

Moreover, as she was moving between agencies in 2003, Prouty accessed the FBI’s Automated Case Support system and obtained information on investigations into Hezbollah being conducted by the FBI’s Detroit Field Office.

National security experts say the combination of her being at one of the CIA’s most sensitive stations, working on some of the agencies’ most sensitive cases, and having her relatives under investigation put her in a vulnerable position — and make the potential damage she could have caused far greater than either the FBI or CIA has admitted.

Roger Cressey, an NBC News analyst and former deputy director of counterterrorism at the National Security Council, says it never should have happened.

“The issue is that she had access to very sensitive information regardless of where she was in the hierarchy,” said Cressey. “Because she was able to interview high-value targets, that put her in a very unique position. So if she therefore shared that information, it could have cost major damage to our nation’s security.”

Officials tell NBC News that the time she fell under investigation in 2006, she was studying Farsi, the national language of Iran.

A senior U.S. official familiar with the case says there is no evidence she was a spy and noted that the CIA and FBI have a good record in prosecuting spies, particularly in their own agencies. He says her role was limited.

“This is not John Dillinger or Reilly Ace of Spies,” said the official. “She took an illegal shortcut to the American dream, then she made some inappropriate computer searches.  At this point, there is no reason to treat this as a counterintelligence case.  There is NO allegation she had ever ties to Hezbollah.  You can’t let suspicions get ahead of the facts.”

Prouty has agreed to submit to lie detector tests as the CIA assesses the damage. 

© 2007 MSNBC Interactive

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