This Soldier’s Witness to the Iraq War Lie – The New York Review of Books
Stan Honda/AFP via Getty ImagesUS Army soldiers guarding detainees during a raid on a house in Tikrit, Iraq, July 28, 2003
A few weeks before I deployed to Iraq as a young US military officer, in the spring of 2003, my French-born father implored me to watch The Battle of Algiers, Gillo Pontecorvos dramatic reenactment of the 1950s Algerian insurgency against French colonial rule. There are many political and aesthetic reasons to see this masterpiece of cinma vrit, not least of which is its portrayal of the Algerian capitals evocative old city, or Casbah. One winter morning in 2014, more than a decade after I first saw the film, I took a stroll down the Casbahs rain-washed alleys and into the newer French-built city. Scenes from the black-and-white movielike the landmark Milk Bar caf where a female Algerian guerrilla sets off a bomb that kills French civiliansjumped to life. The ensuing French military response, memorably depicted in the film, included arbitrary arrests, torture, and false flag bombings that only inflamed the Algerian insurrection.
It was these moral perils of counterinsurgency that my father hinted at. Keep your eyes open, he told me. This was a prescient warning, one that served as the backdrop for my deployment, even if the Algerian analogy was imperfect and would become overused. As American soldiers soon faced a guerrilla and civil war in Iraq for which they were woefully ill-equipped, intellectually and militarily, The Battle of Algiers would be screened and discussed at the Pentagon. To this day, it is taught to West Point cadets as a cautionary tale.
Still, the full weight of the films lessons was not apparent to me in Iraq until one morning in the summer of 2003, when I received an urgent phone call about a captured Iraqi intelligence officer. My commander wanted me to go interview him at the Baghdad hospital where he was being treated for unspecified wounds.
I donned my Kevlar vest and grabbed my carbine for the trip to the so-called Green Zone in the city center, which was becoming increasingly dangerous because of bomb attacks and ambushes by a growing insurgency.
My own experience with this militancy was mostly of a distant naturethough my encounters were anything but impersonal. As an intelligence officer, I debriefed Iraqi sources and informants on insurgent groups and foreign fighters, which sometimes yielded detailed information that US soldiers would use to conduct raids, looking for weapons, explosives, insurgents, or wanted ex-regime figures. Since I read the after-action reports of these operations, I learned the names and ages of those who were captured. Sometimes, I even saw photographs of their faces. This established a sort of intimacy, a chain of causality between my actions and their fates.
In collecting the intelligence that drove these raids, I tried to vet and verify what I heard. Ninety percent of the information I discarded after rounds of questions. Much of it was outright fabrication by Iraqis seeking financial reward or favors from the US military. Others were trying lure American soldiers into helping them settle personal scores or eliminating their political, commercial, or sectarian rivals. The remainder of the information sometimes proved valid. And the resulting seizure of militants, weapons, or bomb-making materials did save lives.
On occasion, though, we did not sufficiently corroborate the information before an assault, or we got the location wrong. In the aftermath of such misdirected predawn raids on innocent Iraqi civilians, I remembered Pontecorvos film and would ask myself: How many new insurgents did we just create?
All of this was a departure from the original focus of my deployment, which was to interview former Iraqi officials about Iraqs suspected weapons of mass destruction (WMD). But once the insurgency started attacking American soldiers, Iraqis, and international organizations, US military commanders demanded that more intelligence resources be devoted to penetrating the insurgents networksespecially since the hunt for Saddams nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons was going nowhere.
Even so, I continued to chase down any leads I got on WMD. And that was what I assumed this call about the detained Iraqi spy was about. Instead, when I got to the hospital room in the Green Zone, I found myself seated across from a man who had been at the center of one of the biggest lies behind the US decision to invade Iraq.
When Ahmed Khalil Ibrahim Samir al-Ani was posted to the Iraqi embassy in Prague in the late 1990s under diplomatic cover, he quickly came under surveillance by the Czech security service. One morning in early April of 2001, an Arab informant working for the Czechs reported seeing al-Ani meeting with an Arab student at the Iraqi embassy. This student was identified, according to the report, as an Egyptian named Mohamed Attathe man who, not long after, became the ringleader of the hijackers who carried out al-Qaedas terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001.
The CIA and FBI later punched holes in this story; the Czech president himself subsequently repudiated it. To begin with, the informant had identified Atta as the man from the April 2001 meeting only upon seeing his photo published in the news after September 11. The FBIs records of Atta put him in Virginia and Florida immediately before and after the supposed Prague meeting, and the agency uncovered no evidence of international travel. But none of this stopped the Iraq war hawks in the Bush administration from seizing on the so-called Prague Connection as proof of Saddam Husseins supposed complicity in terrorist attacks on American soiland using it as a casus belli for the 2003 invasion.
There at the Baghdad hospital, I joined an FBI agent in questioning the bedridden al-Ani about his time in the Czech Republic. A diminutive man with a grizzled face creased by bouts of pain, he epitomized the type of drab regime functionary Id come to know in Iraq all too well. He answered our questions straightforwardly. In the end, the hours-long session provided no evidence about the Prague meeting to contradict the debunking that had already appeared in the press. Al-Ani had never met Mohamed Atta or even heard of him until he saw news reports after September 11. Nor was he himself even in Prague on the day of the alleged encounter; he was out of town, seventy miles away.
Even more disturbing than this non-revelation, though, was his account of his capture that summer by US special operations forces and the reason for his hospitalization. Snatching him from his Baghdad home at night, US soldiers had bound his wrists, covered his head, and forced him to lie on the floor of a Humvee for the long trip to a detention facility. Within fifteen minutes of his confinement in the vehicle, he felt an unbearable burning sensation. A Humvees engine is located in the front and conducts heat to the rear bed, where al-Ani was lying facedown on the bare metal. He twisted and writhed from the pain, but his American guards thought he was resisting. One of the soldiers stepped harder on his back with his boot. Jesus, Jesus, please, hed cried, he told me, hoping that this invocation in English would get them to relent.
In front of us in the hospital, he lifted his gown to show us the results: severe burns, in dark-hued patches, covered his stomach, thighs, feet, and palms. As a consequence, al-Ani would endure three months of hospitalization, which involved multiple skin grafts, as well as the amputation of his thumb and the loss of movement of a finger.
After the meeting, I relayed his account of these injuries to my commanding general, who later reported the matter to a Senate inquiry into detainee abuses. The US Department of Justice also included the FBIs account of this same interview in the inspector generals 2008 report on detainee interrogations. And, over several years, the US Army investigated the incident, concluding that al-Anis injuries were consistent with his story and that the offences of Assault and Cruelty and Maltreatment was [sic] substantiated. Despite that finding, the Army dropped the case.
To my knowledge, nobody was ever disciplined or punished for al-Anis mistreatment.
*
It is a cruel irony that this Iraqi man was first used as a prop for an American invasion and then subjected to disfiguring violence by soldiers who had carried out that invasion. But his story weighs on me in other ways. The abuses weve seen in US policing have deep, homegrown roots, but I am convinced that they are also partly a result of the militarization of law enforcement born of the Iraq War and Americas other overseas interventions. The Iraq disaster has rippled across virtually every facet of American life, deepening the inequalities that divide us, stirring a popular contempt for expertise that has opened the door to demagoguery, and contributing to the hollowing-out of our infrastructure and institutions in ways that have left the country dangerously exposed to future shocks.
The Iraq debacle is what the journalist Robert Draper, in his engrossing recent book on the decision to oust Saddam, To Start a War: How the Bush Administration Took America into Iraq, correctly calls the greatest American tragedy of the twenty-first century, alongside the attacks of September 11, 2001. What comes through in his account is the singular focus of certain administration officials to use those attacks as a rationale for the Iraq invasion. The disfigured Iraqi Id debriefed had thus been a crucial, early part of that project to connect the dots.
According to Draper, al-Ani became a preoccupation for two Bush administration officials in particular: Vice President Dick Cheney and Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz. Cheney had a hard-on for the Prague Connection, a CIA analyst told Draper; and Wolfowitz became an obsessive fanatic about it.
Wolfowitz held a special fascination for me. Years before September 11, hed embraced a fabulist theory about Saddams involvement in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. And the smoke had hardly cleared from the September 11 attacks when he was already asking US intelligence agencies for any signs of an Iraqi hand. Those queries grew in frequency and intensity over the months that followed, especially after the Czech intelligence report came to light, even as the defense officials quest left intelligence analysts exhausted and exasperated.
Wolfowitz asked the same question different ways, a CIA analyst related to Draper, partially because we werent giving him the answer he wantedbut also partly to prove that we were idiots.
Reading these pages of Drapers book brought a tightening to my chest. Id seen the human consequences of such single-mindednessnot only in the injuries to this one Iraqi spy, but also in the anguish of countless other Iraqis Id met in 2003. And that harm was only the beginning, before the world would learn of Abu Ghraib, Haditha, and Nisour Square. More abstractly, though, Drapers volume angered me because it showed how Wolfowitz, Cheney, and others had abused the craft of intelligence that had comprised the better part of my military careerin Drapers words, as a drunk uses a lamppost, more for support, rather than illumination.
The obfuscation and denial of ground truths would continue well after the US toppled Saddam.
Have any of you ever had a tapeworm? the French paratroop colonel asks his soldiers in The Battle of Algiers, drawing a metaphor for the insurgency. The tapeworm is a worm that can grow to infinity. Cutting off the head of the enemy, the commander continues, is the only way to stop its regeneration.
Of course, this doesnt happen in the film, in which the French eventually hunt down the leaders of the Algerian resistance, any more than it happened when US soldiers captured Saddam Hussein, on December 13, 2003, which happened to be the day I left Iraq. The deposed dictator, though an object of nostalgia and veneration for some Sunnis, was never the main figurehead of an increasingly diffuse insurgencywhat then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld famously derided as dead-enders and Wolfowitz later called an unholy alliance of old terrorists and new terrorists. We struggled in those early days to define who exactly we were fighting, especially with the influx of foreign Sunni militants, a confusion epitomized by the farrago of politicized and unhelpful acronyms, like Former Regime Elements (FRE) or Anti-Iraqi Forces (AIF), that were handed down for us to use in our reports.
All the while, another foreign power was exploiting our disarray. By the summer and fall of 2003, I was getting flickers from my Iraqi sources on the movement of Iranian intelligence operatives, Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps forces, and even Hezbollah militia members in Iraq. This widening Iranian influence in Iraq was one more unforeseen consequence of the 2003 invasion. Five years later, when I returned to Baghdad as a civilian adviser, I faced near-weekly salvos of Iranian-supplied rockets.
In the meantime, I tried to forget about Ahmed al-Ani and the countless other Iraqi contacts, informants, and sources Id encountered. They were the sonar devices that the US occupation used in an attempt to sound out a country and a society we only vaguely understood. Among them were, to be sure, snitches, hustlers, inveterate liars, embittered Baathists, likely Iranian double agents, and soon-to-be insurgents, but they also included physicists, religious scholars, students, tribal elders, mothers, and artists, whose lives had been upended by our invasion but who nevertheless sometimes gave us tip-offs, leads, intelligence, and, occasionally, the insights we lacked. Nearly two decades later, their forms are still clear to me in outline, but their features and the details of their lives remain blurry and distorted, like divers in the depths glimpsed from the surface above.
The affliction of memory persists, along with the moral injuries borne by the innumerable American soldiers who followed me in Iraq, often experiencing far worse bloodshed and trauma. These are an inevitable outcome of war; so, too, is the moral corruption of an open-ended occupation.
Should France remain inAlgeria? the French commander in Pontecorvos film asks a pool of journalists inclined to question his brutal methods. If you answer yes, then you mustacceptall the necessary consequences. Likewise, no one should be surprised when a foreign military presence engenders nationalist resentment and an armed insurrection, especially when the occupation systematically dismantles governance institutions and disenfranchises swathes of the populace. There is a scene Robert Draper describes of President Bush watching TV footage as coalition troops liberated Basra in April 2003 and asking an aide, of the Iraqis, Why arent they cheering?
Most members of the US military will shoulder the psychological and physical risks of being sent to war, and most will accept accountability for their actions as moral agents in war. What they expect in return, though, is some assurance from their leaders that they were used wisely, and that they were called to the awful task of inflicting violence only after other means had been exhausted, and only for a cause deemed vital to the good of the nation. The absence of any such justification for the Iraq invasionembodied in the spurious pretexts of WMD and linkages to al-Qaeda and undergirded by a hubristic ambition to reorder the Middle Eastis what makes it perhaps the most consequential tragedy of our times and an essential lesson for the future.
I hope it is one that our citizens and leaders will never tire of learning, from accounts like Drapers, from histories yet to be written, and from the testimonies of veterans and Iraqis alike, to avoid another ruinous adventure.
I am not terribly optimistic.
More:
This Soldier's Witness to the Iraq War Lie - The New York Review of Books
- Vital Khor Mor gas field attacked in Kurdistan Region of northern Iraq - The Long War Journal - November 30th, 2025 [November 30th, 2025]
- Art exhibition "Iraqi icons" held in Iraq - Xinhua - November 30th, 2025 [November 30th, 2025]
- Redefining the Just Energy Transition for Iraq - Arab Reform Initiative - November 30th, 2025 [November 30th, 2025]
- Iraq Weather Authority forecasts rainfall and temperature changes in the coming days - Iraqi News - November 30th, 2025 [November 30th, 2025]
- Iraq recovers 15 million cubic feet of flared gas per day from East Baghdad field - Iraqi News - November 30th, 2025 [November 30th, 2025]
- Iraq faces severe agricultural and livestock crisis amid water shortage - Poultry World - November 30th, 2025 [November 30th, 2025]
- Exclusive: Iraq steps in to pay salaries to maintain Lukoil's output, sources say - Reuters - November 28th, 2025 [November 28th, 2025]
- Asiacell Partners with Google Cloud to Boost AI and Productivity Tools in Iraq - TechAfrica News - November 28th, 2025 [November 28th, 2025]
- Asiacell Partners with Cisco to Bring AI-Driven Network Intelligence to Iraq - The Fast Mode - November 28th, 2025 [November 28th, 2025]
- Security forces open fire on drone near major Iraq gas field, officials say - Reuters - November 28th, 2025 [November 28th, 2025]
- Asiacell Partners with Google Cloud to Bring AI-Powered Productivity Solutions to Iraq - The Fast Mode - November 28th, 2025 [November 28th, 2025]
- Iraq investigates claims of $1.9bn missing from welfare fund - The New Arab - November 28th, 2025 [November 28th, 2025]
- UN in Iraq Calls for Collective Action to End Digital Violence Against Women and Girls [EN/AR] - ReliefWeb - November 28th, 2025 [November 28th, 2025]
- Energy Transition Challenges in Iraq and the Kurdistan Region - Arab Reform Initiative - November 28th, 2025 [November 28th, 2025]
- Iraq Braces for Another Turbulent Government Formation Process - Stratfor Worldview - November 28th, 2025 [November 28th, 2025]
- UK, France Join Condemnation of Khor Mor Attack, Calling it a Threat to Iraq's Stability - kurdistan24.net - November 28th, 2025 [November 28th, 2025]
- The next Hadi Karim Tournament will be held for the schoolboys and juniors in Iraq - asbcnews - November 28th, 2025 [November 28th, 2025]
- Deputy Secretary for Management and Resources Rigas Travels to Trkiye, Iraq, and Israel - The National Herald - November 28th, 2025 [November 28th, 2025]
- Catholic U. in Iraq aims to rebuild countrys fragmented social fabric after ISIS terror - The College Fix - November 28th, 2025 [November 28th, 2025]
- Iraq's fast-growing youth have nowhere to work, ex-minister warns - Shafaq News - - November 28th, 2025 [November 28th, 2025]
- 2026 World Cup: Coach Arnold feels Iraq's passion to pass final playoff test after 40-year wait - the-independent.com - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- Tears and solemnity at Cheney funeral but no memorial for those killed in Iraq - The Guardian - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- Greece to operate direct flights to Iraq within weeks - Iraqi News - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- Haditha: Two US marines implicated in killing family in notorious Iraq war shooting, expert tells BBC - BBC - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- Iraq between the quest to end US military presence and fear of Iran-backed militia dominance - The New Region - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- Cheney, Bush, and the crime against Iraq - Middle East Monitor - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- I voted against the Iraq War. My fellow Republicans must do the same on Venezuela | Opinion - Miami Herald - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- Iraq, DR Congo and their unsung heroes earn World Cup shot at play-off tournament - thenationalnews.com - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- Iraq beat UAE to keep qualification hopes alive - AFC website - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- Past Kurdish kingmakers in Iraq face dual government formation contests - Amwaj.media - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- Iraq votes, but who governs? The post-election bargaining begins - The New Arab - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- MN Man Who Pretended To Be Iraq War Vet And Purple Heart Recipient Convicted Of Stolen Valor - Patch - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- Iraq score in 17th minute of stoppage time to keep World Cup qualifying hopes alive - The Independent - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- Iraq launches Glass Room initiative in Tahrir Square to fund 1,000 electric wheelchairs - Iraqi News - November 23rd, 2025 [November 23rd, 2025]
- An Unusual Election in Iraq Offers the U.S. an Unusual Opportunity - Foreign Policy - November 18th, 2025 [November 18th, 2025]
- Is Venezuela a redux of the lead-up to the Iraq war? Not exactly - CNN - November 18th, 2025 [November 18th, 2025]
- Irans Grip on Iraq Tested as Election Math Threatens Its Allies - The Media Line - November 18th, 2025 [November 18th, 2025]
- Iraqi PM-led coalition tops Iraq election with 46 seats, commission says - Reuters - November 18th, 2025 [November 18th, 2025]
- What happens if Iraq win, tie or lose vs United Arab Emirates today in AFC 2026 World Cup Qualifiers? - Bolavip - November 18th, 2025 [November 18th, 2025]
- Soldiers from 2nd Battalion, 218th return after year in Jordan, Iraq, Syria - KMTR - November 18th, 2025 [November 18th, 2025]
- What Does Iraq Need To Qualify for the 2026 World Cup? - beIN SPORTS - November 18th, 2025 [November 18th, 2025]
- PM Sudani-led alliance wins majority of seats in Iraq general elections - PressTV - November 18th, 2025 [November 18th, 2025]
- Al-Sudani: There are no political issues between Iraq and the Kurdistan Region - ANF | Articles - November 18th, 2025 [November 18th, 2025]
- Power Deals in Iraq - PressTV - November 18th, 2025 [November 18th, 2025]
- Purple Heart Iraq veteran deported to unknown location - Herald/Review Media - November 18th, 2025 [November 18th, 2025]
- Iraq v UAE: Kick-off time, TV coverage and all you need to know about World Cup play-off second leg - thenationalnews.com - November 18th, 2025 [November 18th, 2025]
- Rebuilding After War And Why Iraq Cant Keep The Lights On - Forbes - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Congratulations to the brotherly people and government of Iraq for successful management of peaceful parliamentary elections. The election was a... - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Turkey to navigate enduring Iranian influence in Iraq following elections - AL-Monitor - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Sugar Land man found guilty of smuggling firearms to Iraq - Click2Houston - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- With voting in Iraq complete, government formation begins - Long War Journal - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Exclusive: Lukoil declares force majeure in Iraq over US sanctions, sources say - Reuters - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Watch Iraq v UAE on OneFootball as Asian WC qualifying comes to an end - Yahoo Sports - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Highlights and goals of UAE 1-1 Iraq in World Cup qualifying playoffs - VAVEL.com - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Panorama of Week: Al-Sharaa in Washington, and Setbacks for the Sadrists and Maliki Bloc in Iraq - hawarnews.com - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Iraq security sweep: Party office closure, extortion arrests, and drug-smuggling foiled - Shafaq News - - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- What Do the United Arab Emirates and Iraq Need To Reach the 2026 World Cup Playoff in Monterrey and Guadalajara? - beIN SPORTS - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Egypt, Iraq discuss ways to exchange expertise on healthcare - Egypt Independent - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Feb. 3, 1991: Iraq launches Scud missile at Israel, West Bank residents from Chicago area react - CBS News - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- What lies ahead in Iraq: the hard task of forming a government - Yahoo - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- Hoping for second term, Iraq PM Sudani claims election win taking advantage of high voter turnout - The Arab Weekly - November 16th, 2025 [November 16th, 2025]
- The Last 600 Meters Review: The Iraq Wars Realities on PBS - The Wall Street Journal - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- News - 5,000-Year-Old Monumental Building Excavated in Iraq - Archaeology Magazine - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Iraq can only disarm militias once US troops leave the country, PM says - Middle East Eye - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Twelve questions (and expert answers) on the Iraq elections - Atlantic Council - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Tensions soar as Pentagon chief issues final warning to Iraq over armed groups - Amwaj.media - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Iraq PM on Putting His Nation First Amid US-Iran Feud and Elections - Newsweek - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Iraq can disarm factions only when the US withdraws, prime minister says - Reuters - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Iraqi FM: U.S. Stance on Armed Factions in Iraq is Clear and Consistent - kurdistan24.net - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Iraq worries about rising tensions with US following Hegseth call - Yahoo - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- President Barzani: Partnership, Balance, and Harmony Key to Saving Iraq from 'Central Tyranny'" - kurdistan24.net - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Iraq and U.S. officials reaffirm commitment to a new phase of security cooperation - Iraqi News - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Iraq seeks to benefit from IRCS's expertise, services - Tehran Times - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- 5,000-year-old monumental building in Iraq reveals ties to the worlds first cities - Archaeology News Online Magazine - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- The Politics of Personal Status Law in Egypt and Iraq - Carnegie Endowment for International Peace - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Iraq awards $764 million Baghdad airport project to CAAP and Amwaj - Reuters - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- See photos of Iraq War Veteran who has published a book of poetry - Greensboro News and Record - November 7th, 2025 [November 7th, 2025]
- Dick Cheney, Iraq and the Making of Halliburton - CounterPunch.org - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- 'I was right about Iraq.' It was Dick Cheney's war, and he owned it until the very end. - USA Today - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]
- Local Iraq veterans share unfiltered stories of service and sacrifice - Madras Pioneer - November 5th, 2025 [November 5th, 2025]