At
first glance, the northern city of Mosul appears to be calm and tugging along despite violence that has
gripped much of the rest of Iraq. However, when one scratches the surface one finds two factors
at play: The results of and reactions to the US occupation on the one hand, and the diverse nationalistic,
ethnic, and religious influences on the other.
The
question, then, for the city of Mosul is how all these factors
play against one another, or in most cases oppose one another.
During
Saddam Hussein’s reign, Mosul was the bastion of Sunni support and also the source for most of
the Iraqi army’s senior officers. However, during the March
2003 invasion, some blamed the people of Mosul for not firing a
single shot in resistance.
The
resistance in Mosul began on a passive scale. When US soldiers first entered the
city and patrolled its streets and between the ancient roads of
its suqs (marketplace), residents were warned not to interact
with the occupying force. They were warned that they would be
labeled “traitors.”
This
initial period quickly developed into a loss of confidence and
growing distrust between the city’s residents and the
occupying US army. The people of the city began to question why US soldiers
pointed their guns at them in a menacing way—a way that was in
direct opposition to the traditions of the city.
Eventually,
US soldiers began to display very aggressive behavior dealing
with the city’s residents in a bellicose and warlike manner.
Munthir,
a carpet seller in the old quarter of the city, remembers a
night US soldiers surrounded a maqha (cafe) and began screaming
at its patrons, pushing them down to the ground, cuffing them
and treating them very roughly.
“Some
tried to debate the American soldiers asking them why they were
here, but they only received obscenities in return and were
treated very harshly,” Munthir said.
He
says that the US troops finally arrested one of the patrons, uncuffed the rest,
and left without explaining why they were there.
S.
A., aUniversity
of Mosul professor, recalls how he was arrested by US forces at his
family home and then released a week later when no charges were
brought up against him.
“My
wife and I, and our two children were sleeping at 2 a.m. when US
soldiers blew up the door to the house and barged in screaming
at us. They tied us all up, even my nine-year-old daughter,”
he said.
S.
A. refused to give his name for fear of reprisal from US forces
or their Iraqi national guard counterparts.
It
is incidents like these that fuelled a slowly growing resentment
of US occupation troops.
Ahmad
Hussein, a 25-year-old building contractor, says he is saddened
by the situation in Mosul . He says that the city wants to progress and be a member of the
global community but it is riddled by three destructive forces:
Saddam, the US occupiers, and now the violent attacks from some non-Arabs who
have infiltrated the country after the demise of the Iraqi
government 19 months ago.
Many
Mosul residents are planning futures elsewhere. |
|
The
city of Mosul is but one example of what is transpiring all across
Iraq . US forces are facing the same resentment and the same opposition to
their occupation in virtually all parts of Iraq except for the Kurdish areas.
The
people of Mosul are industrious and aspiring but they are quickly losing hope in
a secure future for them and their children. Many are planning
futures elsewhere.
Jamal
Mihsin, a professor of pharmacology, told IslamOnline.net that
he decided to liquidate all his assets and move to Syria after he received threats from unknown sources and heard of
several colleagues being kidnapped.
To
add more fuel to the fire, Mosul is gripped by the instability concerning the future of
Iraq’s north vis-à-vis the Kurdish question. Mosul
is considered predominantly an “Arab” city, but there are
fears that it may become the target of Kurdish
expansionism—whether economic or political.
The
city’s residents are already alarmed by the recent growth of
buildings housing Kurdish political parties. But by the same
token, they are observing with growing distaste the rapid influx
of foreign-influenced Islamic groups, such as Ansar Al-Sunna or
the Islamic Army of Iraq. They adorn the walls of mosques with
their posters and fliers, usually threatening Mosul residents with retribution and death if they work with foreign
forces or the interim Iraqi government.
Despite
what US media may claim, these groups are operating in
Mosul with near impunity.
This
is the Mosul of today, four months after the so-called sovereignty handover,
ruled by lawlessness. At the core is a government weakened by
the presence of US occupation troops. Surrounding that are
various factions—religious and political—who may, or may
not, vow allegiance to a national Iraq.
Abdullah
Ghafar Al-Mosuli is an Iraqi journalist based in Mosul, Iraq.