Informed Comment

Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute

Monday, June 19, 2006

US Embassy Document

A kind reader typed up and corrected some typos in the US Embassy document [pdf] published by the Washington Post on Sunday. Here it is:



"a 121430Z UN 06
PM MEMBASSy BAgHDAD
TO SECSTArE WASXDC 5042

INFO IRAQ COLLECTIVE

UNCLAS BAGXDAD 001992

E.O. 12958: N/A TAGSt P14GM. PRE ,. ASEC. AMGT, IZ
SUBJECTS Snapshots from the Office: Public Affairs Staff Show Strains of Social Discord

SESITIVE

1. (SBU) Beginning in March. and picking up in mid-May, Iraqi staff in the Public Affairs Section have complained that Islamist and/or militia Groups have been negatively affecting their daily routine. Harassment over proper dress and habits has been increasingly pervasive. They also report that power cuts and fuel prices have diminished their quality of life. Conditions vary by neighborhood, but even upscale neighborhoods such as Mansur have visibly deteriorated.

Womens Rights

2. (SBU) The Public Affairs Press Office has 9 local Iraqi employees. Two of our three female employees report stepped up harassment beginning in mid-May. One, a Shiite who favors Western clothing, was advised by an unknown woman in her upscale Shiite/Christian Baghdad neighborhood to wear a veil and not to drive her own car. Indeed, she said, some groups are pushing women to cover even their face, a step not taken in Iran even at its most conservative.

3. (SBU) Another, a Sunni, said that people in her middle-class neighborhood are harassing women and telling t h em to cover up and stop using cell phones (suspected channel to licentious relationships with men). She said that the taxi driver who brings her every day to the green zone checkpoint has told her he cannot let her ride unless she wears a headcover. A female in the PAS cultural section is now wearing a full abaya after receiving direct threats in May. She says her neighborhood, Mhamiya, is no longer permissive if she is not clad so modestly.

4. (SBU) These women say they cannot identify the groups that are pressuring them many times. the cautions come from other women, sometimes from men who they say could be Sunni or Shiite, but appear conservative. They also tell us that some ministries, notably the Sadrist controlled Ministry of Transportation, have been forcing fem1es to wear the hijab at work. Dress Code for All?

5. (SBU) Staff members have reported that it is now dangerous for men to wear shorts in public; they no longer allow their children to play outside tn shorts. People who wear jeans in public have come under attack from what staff members describe as Wahabis and Sadrists.

Evictions

6. (SBU) One colleague beseeched us to weigh in to help a neighbor who was uprooted in May from her home of 30 years, on the pretense of application of some long-disused law that allows owners to evict tenants after 14 years. The woman, a Fayli Kurd, says she has nowhere to go. no other home, but the courts give them no recourse to this new assertion of power. Such uprootings may be a response by new Shiite government authorities to similar actions against Arabs by Kurds in other parts of Iraq. ( MOTE: An Arab newspaper editor told us he is preparing an extensive survey of ethnic cleansing, which he said is taking place in almost every Iraqi province , as political parties and their militias are seemingly engaged in tit-for-tat reprisals all over Iraq. One editor told us that the KDP is now planning to set up tent cities in Irbil, to house Kurds being evicted from Baghdad.)

Power Cuts and Fuel Shortages a Drain on society --

7. Temperatures in Baghdad have already reached 115 degrees. employees all confirm that by the last week of May, they were getting one hour of power for every six hours without. That was only about four hours of power a day for the city. By early June, the situation had improved slightly, In Hai Si Shaab. power has recently improved from one in six to one in three hours. Other staff report similar variances. Central Baghdad neighborhood Bab al Muathama has had no city power for over a month. Areas near hospitals, political party headquarters, and the green zone have the best supply, in some eases reaching 24 hours. One staff member reported that a friend lives in a building that houses a new minister; within 2l hours of his appointment, her building had City power 24 hours a day.

(SBU) All employees supplement City power with service contracted with neighborhood generator hookups that they pay for monthly. ‘ One employee pays 7500 ID per ampere to get 10 amperes per month (75,000 10 = USD 50/month). For this, her family gets 6 hours of power per day, with service ending at 2 am. Another employee pays 9000 ID per ampere to get 10 amperes per month (90.000 USD 60). For this, his family gets 8 hours per day, with service running until 5 am.

9. (SEW Fuel lines have also taxed out- staff, One employee told us May 29 that he had spent 12 hours on his day off (Saturday) waiting to get gas. Another staff member confirmed that shortages were so dire, prices on the black market in much of Baghdad were now above 1,000 Iraqi dinars per liter (the official, subsidized price is 250 ID).

Kidnappings, and Threats of Worse

10. (SBU) One employee informed us in March that his brother in law had been kidnapped. The mean was eventually released, but this caused enormous emotional distress to the entire family. One employee, a Sunni Kurd, received an indirect threat on her life in April. She took extended leave, and by May, relocated abroad with her family. Security Forces 4istrusted

11. (SBU) In April, employees began reporting a change in demeanor of guards at the green zone checkpoints. They seemed to be more militia-like, in some cases seemingly taunting. One employee asked us to explore getting her press credentials because guards had held her embassy badge up and proclaimed loudly to nearby passers-by ‘Embassy’ as she entered Such information is a death sentence if overheard by the wrong people.

Supervising a Staff At High Risk

12. (SBU) employees all share a common tale their lives: of nine employees in March, only four had family members who knew they worked at the embassy. That makes it difficult for them, and for us. Iraqi colleagues called after hours often speak Arabic as an indication they Cannot speak openly in English.

13. (SBLT) We cannot call employees in on weekends or holidays without blowing their cover. Uikewise, they have been unavailable during multiple security closures imposed by the government since February. A Sunni Arab female employee tells us that family pressures and the inability no share details of her employment is very tough; she told her family she was in ’ Jordan .then we sent her on training to the February. Mounting criticisms of the U.S. at home among family members also makes her life difficult. She told us in mid­June that most of her family believes the U.S. ­- which is widely perceived as fully controlling the country and tolerating the malaise ­- is punishing populations as Saddani did (but with Sunnis and very poor Shiitenow at the bottom of the list), Otherwise, she says, the allocation of power and security would not be so arbitrary.

14. CSBU) Some of our staff do not take home their American cell phones , as this makes them a target. Planning for their own possible abduction , they use code names for friends and colleagues and contacts entered into Iraq cell phones. For at least six months, we have not been able to use any local staff members for translation at on-camera press events.

15. (SBU) More recently, we have begun shredding documents printed out that show local staff surnames. In March. a few staff members approached us to ask what provisions would we make for them if we evacuate.

Sectarian Tensions Within Families

16. Ethnic and sectarian fault lines are also becoming part of the daily media fare in the country. One Shiite employee told us in late May that she can no longer watch TI! news with her mother, who is Suruti, because her mother blamed all government failings on the fact that Shiites Are in charge. Many of the employees immediate family members, including her father, one sister, and a brother, left Iraq years ago. This month, another sister is departing for Egypt, as she imagines the future here is too bleak,

Frayed Nerves and Mistrust in the Office

17. (SBU) Against this backdrop of frayed social networks, tension and moodiness have risen. One Shiite made disparaging comments about the Sunni caliph Othman which angered a Kurd. A Sunni Arab female apparently insulted a Shiite female colleague by criticizing her overly liberal dress. One colleague told us he feels “defeated’ by circumstances, citing the example of being unable to help his two year old son who has asthma and cannot sleep in stifling heat. 1$. (SBU) Another employee tells us that life outside the Green Zone has become emotionally draining. He lives in a mostly Shiite area and claims to attend a funeral every evening,’ He, like other local employees, is financially responsible for his immediate and extended families. He revealed that ‘the burden of responsibility; new stress coming from social circles who increasingly disapprove of the coalition presence, and everyday threats weigh very heavily.This employee became extremely agitated in late May at website reports of an abduction of an Iraqi working with MNFI, whose expired Embassy and MNFI badges were posted on the website Staying Straight with Neighborhood Governments and the ‘Alasa

19. (SBU) Staff members say they daily assess how to move safely in public. Often, if they must travel outside their own neighborhoods, they adapt the clothing, language, and traits of the area. In Jadriya, for example, one needs to conform to the SCIRI/Badr ethic; in Yusufiya, a strict Sunni conservative dress code has taken hold Adhawiya and Salihiya, controlled by the secular Ministry of Defense, are not conservative. Moving inconspicuously in Sadr City requires Shiite conservative dress and a particular lingo. Once­upscale Mansur district, near the Green Zone, according to one employee, by early June was an unrecognizable ghost town.

20. (SBU) Since Samarra, Baghdadis have honed these survival skills. Vocabulary has shifted to reflect new behavior. Our staff ­- and our contacts -- have become adept in modifying behavior to avoid A1asae, informants who keep an eye out for outsiders” in neighborhoods. The Alasa mentality is becoming entrenched as Iraqi security forces fail to gain public confidence.

21. (SBU) Our staff, report that security and services are being rerouted through local provider whose affiliations are vague. As noted above, those who are admonishing citizens on their dress are not known to the residents. Neighborhood power providers are not well known either, nor is it clear how they avoid robbery or targeting. Personal safety depends on good relations with the neighborhood governments, who barricade streets and ward of f outsiders. The central government, our staff says, is not relevant; even local mukhtars have been displaced or co-opted by militias. People no longer trust most neighbors.

22. (SBtJ) A resident of upscale Shiit/ Christian Karrada district told us that outsiders” have moved in and now control the local mukhtars, one of whom now has cows and goats grazing in the streets. When she expressed her concern at the dereliction, he told her to butt out.

Comment 23. (SBtJ) Although our staff retain a professional demeanor , strains are apparent. We see that their personal fears are reinforcing divisive sectarian or ethnic channels, despite talk of reconciliation by officials. Employees are apprehensive enough that we fear they my exaggerate developments or steer us towards news that comports with their own worldview. Objectivity, civility, and logic that make for a functional workplace may falter if Social pressures outside the Green Zone don’t abate. "

11 Comments:

At 2:38 PM, Blogger JHM said...

A fascinating document that I was just going to point out myself. Almost every paragraph begs for extended remarks, but to stick to generalities and try to be brief, both the original Washington Post story that went with it and what Mr. Umansky says about it this morning as "Today's Papers" for Slate misinterpret it a little by taking it mostly as proof that the Crawford people know very well how bad their mess really is, no matter what they say for TV. No doubt they do, but we understood that point already, didn't we?

What's both new and striking is

(1) that Ambassador Khalilzad seems to have only the foggiest ideas about Baghdad outside the Green Zone (that he should have to collect anecdotes about daily life from his hired hands), and

(2) that there seem to amazing gaps in his HUMINT even inside the G.Z. (that he should not have more direct and authoritative ways to learn about the dress code at the "ministry" of transportation, for instance, in Item #4, or about the electricity and gasoline and barricade situations in the capital (#7-8, #9, #22 respectively), and

(3) that the ambassadorial anecdotes, once collected, should agree exactly with what the Post or the New York Times tell us in their interviews with so-called "middle-class" Baghdadis.

It's not so much that Z. Kh. turns out to know all the things we all know already even if he usually covers them up and talks like Dr. Pangloss instead, it is that he doesn't seem to know anything different than, or additional to, what we know. (Perhaps he could fire a lot of that bloated staff at the embassy and just rely on the newspapers? Not bloody likely!)

(Mr. Umansky is not entirely sure that the leaked cable is genuine, and neither was I when I read it yesterday unheralded. Take the final item, #23, the supposed Khalilzadian comment: is that so besotted with GOP/AEI ideology that no sarcastic unbeliever could ever hope to make it up, or is it perhaps a bit too good to be true?)

 
At 4:00 PM, Blogger Cervantes said...

A couple of points about this. First of all, assuming it's genuine (and I'm more inclined to believe that about this document than I am about the supposed al Qaeda memo released right after the killing of Zarqawi or whoever he was) it's doubtful that Khalilzad actually wrote this. His name at the bottom probably just indicates his approval.

The total isolation of the embassy staff from the Red Zone (i.e., Iraq) is not news and I don't find it implausible that they have to rely on their interactions with Iraqi employees for any real sense of what's going on. And those interactions are not friendships or discussions among equals. The Iraqi employees work as clerks and translators, they are low-level people with no policy or management responsibilities. So as we see, the anecdotes emerge from what amount to formal requests to Human Resources or supervisory interactions.

Whatever informants they have more broadly all have their own agendas and are trying to influence them on behalf of one or another faction or desired course of behavior. Indeed, I wouldn't be at all surprised if they have no better sources of information than the same journalists that we are able to access over the Internet. Of course they have a lot more detail on military operations and what is seen from the gunner's seat on top of the hummer, but the military has no real understanding of the socio-political situation in Iraq either -- as should be obvious to anyone.

Finally, the corporate media has so far mounted a highly successful Operation Ignore on this one. As far as I can tell, the WaPo scoop hasn't been picked up by any of the networks. We'll see if they mention it on the newscasts, or if it makes it into the newspapers tomorrow. I'm betting mostly no.

 
At 4:29 PM, Blogger nbm said...

I foolishly visited Phoenix AZ in July once and experienced 104 degrees daily, not cooling off much at night. Can't imagine 115 even with electricity. It must have been a couple of years ago that Riverbend told that all laundry had to be done by hand. If the electricity came on, the water didn't, and one couldn't know how long either might last.

I live in a country which was occupied by the Nazis for 5 years. I wasn't here then and wouldn't remember it if I had been, but still it is part of my learned memory. Everyone "remembers" the occupation. Everyone knows old people who still have shock reactions if they happen to hear the German language spoken, especially by men.

Things are, of course, much worse in many parts of Iraq. The Nazis did, after all, have a lot of respect for these northern arians. And England, and after a while the USA, were fighting on "our" side. Even without increasing sectarianism and all the violence, it must be terribly stressful to live in Baghdad.

I promise you that Iraqis will remember the occupation for generations.

 
At 5:53 PM, Blogger Allan said...

This post has been removed by a blog administrator.

 
At 6:06 PM, Blogger Keith M said...

So the Good Guys are the ones with the lights on. I'll bet the Bad Guys have figured that out by now.

 
At 7:38 PM, Blogger Allan said...

I theorize this context for the memo:??June 12?"... President Bush today opened a two-day meeting on Iraq with top advisers at the Camp David presidential retreat... Bush spent three and a half hours in a teleconference this morning with top U.S. officials in Baghdad's heavily fortified "Green Zone," notably Gen. Casey, U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad and Gen. John P. Abizaid, chief of the U.S. Central Command."
http://tinyurl.com/pu6aq??June 12?This is evidently Khalilzad's dismal briefing memo message for the teleconference of the same date – probably a good indication of what he was saying verbally:
http://tinyurl.com/muecj??In the memo, among other things, Khalilzad says the Iraqi embassy workers fear the US will pull out and abandon them. ??The Camp David agenda was to have the advisor meeting on June 12, and then a teleconference with Baghdad on June 13. After hearing from Khalilzad, Bush perhaps decided that the situation was so desperate that a personal visit was needed:??June 13?"... During an unannounced visit to Baghdad aimed at buttressing the newly formed government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, Bush pledged his support for the country's new leader... Maliki, who had arrived expecting a videoconference with Bush speaking from Camp David and learned the president was in Baghdad only minutes before he entered the room."
http://tinyurl.com/oosd8??Incidentally, some have said the date of the memo is June 6. I believe the date is June 12. The message header says “121430Z Jun 06”. From my Navy days, I believe that means 1430 (2:30 PM) Zulu time on June 12, 2006. The Zulu is the designation for the Greenwich Mean Time zone.

 
At 8:58 PM, Blogger John Bennett said...

As a long retired foreign service officer who has some personal experience with "dissent" (truth telling) in an embassy in both Vietnam and Korea, its existence may carry no weight even though it is expressed in a message signed by Ambassador Khalilzad--all messages from embassy are so signed.
However, for me it is persuasive since some people in the embassy and in Washington know some of what is going on.
Consider that few Americans in the Green Zone are getting out and not many Iraqis who might tell the story are getting in.
Finally, ask yourself how many Iraqi government officials are inside the Green Zone and dare not venture out. What authority with the Iraqi public do they have?

 
At 11:46 PM, Blogger james_speaks said...

Neighborhood watch groups unfamiliar to the inhabitants of the neighborhood, strangers issuing dress code alerts, that special guy you have to pay to get the lights on.....

It looks as though the wunderkinds at AEP have turned Baghdad into an Islamist version of old Chicago. I wonder how much of the violence is based on the realities of life in a lawless metropolis rather than the race-baiting explanations offered by Rumsfeld and Cheney.

 
At 1:50 AM, Blogger Sam Fenster said...

Juan, the text you posted looks like the uncorrected result of an OCR, and still has lots of typos. I cleaned it up for my own records; the result is here.

 
At 3:48 AM, Blogger sod said...

the document is genuine!

the white house press secretary tells you so:


BLITZER: The Washington Post published a fascinating cable today, a report written by the U.S. embassy in Baghdad to the State Department -- it was signed by Ambassador Khalilzad -- in which it painted a very, very grim -- you read this cable...

SNOW: Yes.

BLITZER: ... a picture of what's going on in Iraq right now. I know that many have complained that the news media is only focusing in on the negative, but here the U.S. embassy in Baghdad paints a pretty stark picture of what's going on right now.

Let me just read a line for you. "Beginning in March and picking up in mid-May, Iraqi staff in the public affairs section have complained that Islamists and/or militia groups have been negatively affecting their daily routine," and it goes on to the harassment and the threats and the killings that have been going on. It's a pretty damning indictment of the current situation.

SNOW: No, it's actually a reflection of the realities there. And...

BLITZER: And the reality is gloomy.

SNOW: Well, that's taken in mid-May. Here we are, we are a month later, and I just told you, you've got 50,000 Iraqi troops that are now focusing on those problem areas in Baghdad.

http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0606/18/le.01.html

 
At 5:17 PM, Blogger John Koch said...

How good is Khalilzad's Arabic? Can he address the public in the Prophet's tongue fluently? or did his two years at AUB give him only a halting spoken and perhaps even less proficient written ability?

Point: maybe Zal can't know what's going on, save for what locals tell him. Note how he says that an editor planed to publish stories on violence, but not that Zal ever perused the local press himself. Is this because he follows W's cue to ignore the press? Or is he simply unable to understand?

Perhaps Zal depends mainly on DoD briefings and the official Fox network. Maybe the local "Company" reps bypass him or he prefers not to rely on them.

Whoever wrote the cable, it probably went unnoticed until after the leak. Then Rice probably made Zal pay hell for the indiscretions. W motto: all news must be good news.

 

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