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  • The Next Iraq War

    New Yorker, NY
    Sept 27 2004

    THE NEXT IRAQI WAR
    by GEORGE PACKER

    What Kirkuk's struggle to reverse Saddam's ethnic cleansing signals
    for the future of Iraq.
    Issue of 2004-10-04
    Posted 2004-09-27

    Luna Dawood was twenty-four years old when Saddam Hussein paid a
    surprise visit to her house in Kirkuk, the ethnically mixed city in
    northern Iraq. She admits that she reacted like a teen-ager. It was
    an October afternoon in 1983, and two Presidential helicopters landed
    in an open field; tanks cordoned off the tidy middle-class streets of
    the Arrapha neighborhood, home to employees of the state-owned
    Northern Oil Company; and Saddam, flanked by a large security
    entourage, showed up at the Dawoods' kitchen door. The Baathists'
    long-standing war against Iraqi Kurds was intensifying, and it
    appeared that Saddam wanted to secure the loyalty of those who worked
    in Kirkuk's valuable oil industry. Even today, Dawood, whose father
    was employed by the oil company, recalls Saddam's visit a bit
    giddily: he was handsome in his olive-drab military uniform, and
    paused to admire the house and ask friendly questions. His cologne
    was so overpowering that, for days afterward, Dawood couldn't wash
    the scent off the hand that had shaken the President's, and the
    living-room sofa smelled so strongly that it had to be given away.

    Saddam refused coffee and chocolates, but a painting of a woman
    drawing water from a tree-shaded river caught his eye--Dawood's
    brother, who was serving on the front in the Iran-Iraq war, had
    painted it--and the President claimed it as a gift. The Dawoods are
    Assyrian Christians, not Arabs, and when Saddam addressed Luna's
    mother in Arabic she replied in English, which she'd learned from the
    British managers of the Iraqi Petroleum Company before it was
    nationalized by the Baathists, in 1972. "That time is gone," Saddam
    scolded her. "You must learn Arabic."

    A Presidential trailer was parked in the Dawoods' garden, and
    neighbors lined up to go inside for a private audience with the
    President. Saddam's close adviser and half brother, Barzan
    al-Tikriti, presented each petitioner with three thousand dinars from
    a bag full of money. To her everlasting regret, Dawood was too
    timorous to enter Saddam's trailer. Her younger sister Fula did so,
    and emerged with both the cash and a job at the oil company. One of
    Dawood's cousins entreated Saddam to release his brother, who was
    serving five years in prison for comparing the face of a top Baathist
    official to that of a monkey; Saddam replied that he couldn't
    interfere with the judicial system. Then he came out of the trailer
    to tell the assembled residents that Iraq was at war with Iran to
    protect the purity of Iraqi women from Ayatollah Khomeini's rampaging
    troops. The helicopters took off, and everyone assumed that Saddam
    had left Kirkuk.

    But the trailer remained in the Dawoods' garden; their phone was cut
    off, and security men gathered in the kitchen. Without explanation,
    the family was told to spend the night on the second floor. At two in
    the morning, unable to sleep, Dawood went to the window and looked
    down at the garden. As if in a dream, she saw Saddam step out of the
    trailer wearing a white dishdasha. The next day, he was gone.

    The President visited Kirkuk again in 1990. This time, his helicopter
    landed in the square in front of the municipal building. By then,
    Dawood was working there, as an accountant in the finance department.
    Saddam announced a campaign to beautify Kirkuk: the walled
    citadel--the oldest part of the city, situated on a plateau across the
    dry Khasa River bed from the modern city--was going to be cleaned up,
    beginning with the removal of the eight or nine hundred mostly
    Kurdish and Turkoman families living in its ancient houses. The next
    day, fifty million dinars arrived at Dawood's office from Baghdad.
    She had forty-five days to dig through title deeds, some dating back
    to 1820, and pay compensation to displaced homeowners.

    The process of emptying out the Kirkuk citadel was the climax of a
    forty-year campaign known to Iraqis as Arabization. Beginning in
    1963, and continuing up to the eve of the American invasion last
    year, the Baathist regime in Baghdad deported tens of thousands of
    Kurds--some Kurdish sources put the number at three hundred
    thousand--from Kirkuk and the surrounding region, forced other ethnic
    minorities from their houses, and imported similar numbers of Arabs
    to Kirkuk from the south. Dawood's job in city government, which she
    has held since the mid-nineteen-eighties, required her to distribute
    dinars to families forfeiting their homes, sift through crumbling
    property records, and handle the traffic of deportees at the
    municipal building. She was a bureaucratic expediter of ethnic
    cleansing.

    I met Dawood during a trip to Kirkuk this summer. A slim, energetic
    forty-five-year-old, she is unmarried, and, unlike most Iraqi women,
    she wears Western clothes and carries herself with self-confidence.
    She has wide, startled eyes and the kind of strong nose seen on
    statuary from Nineveh, and when she talks about Kirkuk's history
    under Saddam her anxious smile reveals a row of crooked teeth. "It
    was a tragedy I don't want to remember," she told me when we met in
    her office. She then proceeded to remember everything. "They were
    poor people," she said. "Each one who came to take the money, in his
    eyes you saw the tractor coming to take his house." Crowds awaiting
    deportation filled the hallway outside her office; women fainted. If
    the secret police instructed her to delay paying someone they
    intended to arrest, Dawood would quietly urge the reluctant man to
    leave Kirkuk without his money.

    At the end of one long day, an old Kurdish farmer approached Dawood's
    desk. She presented him with a consent form that granted the
    government ownership of his family's land in exchange for several
    thousand dinars.

    "I would like some water first," the old man said before signing the
    document. Dawood gave him a glass. He drank the water, signed the
    form, and fell dead in her lap.

    "The things I saw," Dawood told me, "nobody saw."

    A few weeks before the American invasion in March, 2003, the
    government in Baghdad sent a secret order to officials in Kirkuk:
    immediately burn all paperwork related to the Central Housing
    Plan--the regime's euphemism for the ethnic-cleansing campaign. The
    Baathists were meticulous record-keepers; outside the municipal
    building, officials torched three large garbage containers filled
    with papers, and the bonfire lasted for almost twenty-four hours.

    Dawood decided to ignore the order. "I can't burn these things," she
    said. "How can we compensate these people if these documents are
    burned?" Her motives were not entirely altruistic. Dawood was a
    Baathist (a requirement of the job), and she wanted to protect
    herself against any accusations of misappropriating funds. She is
    also an admitted busybody. "You know, I put my nose in everything,"
    she said. "I want to know everything." So she lied to her boss, and
    instead of burning the files she secretly transferred them by car to
    the house in Arrapha, which she still shares with Fula and another
    unmarried sister. Most of the documents are now kept on the roof of
    the municipal building, in an airless slant-ceilinged storeroom to
    which only Dawood has the key. A waist-high sea of paper and dust
    inside has yet to attract the interest of either Iraqi or American
    officials, although among the documents that Dawood salvaged are
    secret letters that expose the Baath Party's sustained effort to
    transform Kirkuk from Iraq's most diverse city into a place dominated
    by Arabs loyal to the regime. (The Arabization policy was never
    publicly declared.)

    Since the American invasion, Kirkuk has become the stage of an ethnic
    power struggle. Some observers say that the city could be a model for
    national unity or could trigger a civil war; Kirkuk is compared to
    New York and, more often, to Sarajevo. How the new Iraq corrects the
    historical injustices recorded in Dawood's files will reveal much
    about the kind of country that Iraqis choose to live in--or if it will
    remain a country at all.

    Inside the storeroom, Dawood waded through the files and stooped to
    inspect them with a kind of wit's-end affection, like a mother with
    too many unruly children. "Look--look--how many people?" she cried.
    "How could I work this all? Do you know how much I have in my mind?
    All this! All this! I must get it out!"



    Kirkuk sits near the foothills of the Zagros Mountains, not far from
    the southern border of Kurdistan, an autonomous region that broke
    free of Baathist control in 1991. The vast oil fields outside the
    city constitute around seven per cent of Iraq's total reserves. In
    part, the Arabization program was aimed at securing Baghdad's
    authority over this valuable resource, but primarily Saddam's regime
    was motivated by ideology. The history and demography of Kirkuk were
    an affront to the fascist dreams of the Baath Arab Socialist Party.
    Kirkuk is a dense, cosmopolitan city along a trade route between
    Constantinople and Persia, and its layers of successive civilizations
    had nothing to do with Arab glory. Around the city's markets and the
    citadel, residents still live and move in close quarters, and a
    visitor finds the variety of faces, tolerant manners, public female
    presence, and polyglot street life of a mixed city. Kirkuk feels
    closer to Istanbul than to Baghdad.

    One local historian, an elderly Arab named Yasin Ali al-Hussein, told
    me that Kirkuk was built by Jewish slaves of the Babylonian
    captivity; although scholars doubt this version, until the creation
    of Israel, in 1948, several thousand Jews lived in the city's twisted
    back streets, many of them near the old souk at the foot of the
    citadel. An Armenian church dates from the first millennium.
    (Christians make up roughly five per cent of the population.) In the
    fourth century B.C., Xenophon noted the presence of an ethnic group
    that might have been Kurdish. Turkomans from Central Asia, ethnically
    distinct from Turks, migrated to the region about a thousand years
    ago. During Ottoman rule, which was established at the citadel in the
    sixteenth century and lasted until the arrival of British troops,
    during the First World War, many educated Turkomans became imperial
    officeholders. More than a century ago, Arab immigrants began
    settling around Kirkuk, mostly in the farmland west and south of the
    city; these "original Arabs" are distinct in almost every way from
    those imported by the Baathist regime. E. B. Soane, a British
    intelligence officer who travelled through Mesopotamia in the years
    before the First World War, observed, "Kirkuk is thus a collection of
    all the races of eastern Turkey--Jew, Arab, Syrian, Armenian,
    Chaldean, Turk, Turkoman, and Kurd--and consequently enjoys
    considerable freedom from fanaticism."

    Fanaticism is the legacy of Saddam's Arabization policy. Every aspect
    of Kirkuk's history is now violently contested. Kurds, Arabs, and
    Turkomans all make claims of ethnic primacy in a city where there are
    only pluralities. (According to the 1957 census, conducted before
    Arabization began, the city was forty per cent Turkoman and
    thirty-five per cent Kurdish.) Ali Bayatli, a Turkoman lawyer,
    insisted that his people were direct descendants of the Sumerians and
    therefore the first residents of Kirkuk, with unspecified rights.
    Kurdish politicians have two slogans designed to end any argument:
    "Kirkuk is the heart of Kurdistan" and "Kirkuk is the Jerusalem of
    the Kurds." Arabs, meanwhile, are angry about the sudden loss of
    power that followed the removal of Saddam. Luna Dawood's view of her
    city's future is grim. "It will be war till the end," she said.
    "Everyone says Kirkuk belongs to us: Arabs, Kurds, Turkomans. To whom
    will it belong? We want America to stay here and change minds--to
    teach what's freedom, what's human. That's what our people don't
    know. They are animals."

    Fifteen miles outside the city, on a road heading northwest, I met
    Muhammad Khader, a Kurdish farmer who was hoeing a vegetable garden
    next to a cluster of ruined-looking houses. Khader had recently
    returned to the area from Erbil, a city in Kurdistan, where he worked
    as a butcher. After the American invasion, he and his two wives,
    their ten children, and twenty-five other families followed American
    and Kurdish soldiers south into Iraq, with the goal of reclaiming
    Amshaw, their ancestral village, from Arab settlers. Khader, who wore
    traditional Kurdish pants, which are drawn tight at the waist and
    ankles but hang loose around the legs, took me up into the
    surrounding hills. It was spring, and the vivid green grass was
    studded with yellow wildflowers and blood-red roses, which are tragic
    emblems in Kurdish poetry.

    "This was the village," Khader said, pointing at a pattern of grassy
    humps on the hillside. Shards of terra-cotta pottery lay in the dirt.
    "That was our house," he went on. "Exactly here." Farther up the
    hill, a field of jagged headstones marked the village cemetery.

    In 1961, the first phase of a long war between Iraq's central
    government and Kurdish guerrillas, known as peshmerga, began. The
    rebel Kurds demanded linguistic and cultural rights, control over
    regional security and financial affairs, and authority over Kirkuk
    and its oil. In 1963, following the coup that first brought Baathists
    to power, Iraqi soldiers attacked Amshaw and other villages. Khader
    was three years old. "I remember it like a dream, a bad dream, with
    children crying and people fighting and dying," he said. The
    villagers fled north, and were forced to retreat all the way to
    Erbil. Amshaw was razed. In the ensuing years, the lands around
    Amshaw were distributed to Arab tribes from the south, and new houses
    were built for Arab settlers.

    I asked Khader if his family was ever compensated for their loss.

    "Are you making fun of me?" he said, staring in disbelief. "They took
    everything. You see how I am now? That's just how we left--no
    blankets, nothing."



    Sabiha Hamood and her husband are Arabs who moved their family to
    Kirkuk from Baghdad in the late nineteen-eighties, lured by a free
    house and ten thousand dinars. "Arabs like us are known as the
    benefitters," Hamood said. "We came here just to live in a house. My
    husband used to work in the Ministry of Housing, but it wasn't enough
    money to buy a house." Like Hamood, the overwhelming majority of the
    benefitters are Shia, and many were employed in the military, the
    state security apparatus, or the civil service. The house offered to
    Hamood's family was in a middle-class Turkoman neighborhood called
    Taseen, across the road from the Kirkuk airbase. Hamood convinced
    herself that the former owner of her house had been handsomely
    compensated and bore no grudge.

    Several doors down is a two-story house that once belonged to the
    family of Fakheraldin Akbar, a Turkoman woman who works with Luna
    Dawood in the finance department. One day in 1988, the family
    received a government letter declaring that a railroad was going to
    be built through the neighborhood. "They gave us three days," Akbar
    recalled. "On the second day, policemen were standing outside the
    door. We took our furniture and went to stay with an aunt who lived
    along the road to Baghdad." The family was awarded a sum that
    represented less than a quarter of the value of the house. The
    railroad was never built. Four or five years ago, attending a funeral
    in her old neighborhood, Akbar decided to go and look at the house
    for the first time since the family's eviction. "I said to myself,
    'Let me just walk past the door. I won't speak to them--why should I?
    I don't know them, they don't know me.'" The benefitters who were
    given the house had painted over its beautiful wooden front door.

    Ethnic cleansing in Kirkuk proceeded in piecemeal fashion, but the
    Baathists were following a master plan. Their goal was to make Kirkuk
    a predominantly Arab city, with a security belt of Arab neighborhoods
    encircling it, especially along the vulnerable northern and eastern
    edges, which faced Kurdistan. Accordingly, Kurds were forbidden by
    law to build, buy, or improve houses in Kirkuk. Any Kurdish family
    that couldn't prove residence in Kirkuk from the 1957 census had no
    legal right to live there, which meant that thousands of Kurds were
    displaced to refugee camps in Kurdistan or to southern Iraq. Some
    were given a choice: leave the city or become an Arab. This was
    called "correcting" one's nationality, and thousands of Kurds and
    Turkomans agreed to undergo the humiliation in order to stay in
    Kirkuk or hold on to a job or obtain a business license. Meanwhile,
    one Kurdish neighborhood after another was torn down--allegedly, to
    widen a road, build a munitions factory, expand a base. After 1980,
    the teaching of languages other than Arabic was forbidden in city
    schools. Kurds and other non-Arabs were frozen out of government
    jobs; before the war, according to one Kurdish official, the oil
    company had eleven thousand employees, of whom eighteen were Kurds.

    Development in Kirkuk was allowed in only one direction: south,
    toward Baghdad. The Arabization neighborhoods that arose have the
    lethargic feel of an overgrown village, where women are shrouded in
    black body-covering abayas; the new buildings were thrown up in
    graceless concrete along wide, empty streets. The few Kurdish and
    Turkoman neighborhoods in the center of town that survived demolition
    became choked with traffic and were deprived of parks, sewers, and
    public transportation. Over the years, ten or twelve families packed
    into dilapidated compounds that had been built for two or three
    families. The dried-up riverbed filled with garbage.

    The climax of the regime's persecution of Kurds came in 1988, when
    the decimation of Kurdish villages in Iraq's northern mountains
    reached genocidal proportions and chemical weapons were used against
    civilians in Halabja. Toward the end of that year, the governor of
    Kirkuk wrote a letter to the Baathist official in charge of
    Arabization, Taha Yasin Ramadan, who, in addition to being a lifelong
    friend of Saddam's, is a Kurd. (Iraqis know him simply as "the
    Butcher.") This letter, which was among the documents that Luna
    Dawood salvaged, offers a report on an intensive phase of the
    ethnic-cleansing campaign in Kirkuk, from June 1, 1985, to October
    31, 1988. "We would like to inform you that we have followed the
    strict orders and instructions that you made for our work, which
    pushed us to work harder to serve the citizens, the sons of the
    courageous leader of victory and peace, Mr. President the Patriot
    Saddam Hussein (may God save him)," the governor wrote. What follows
    is a detailed statistical account: 19,146 people removed from
    villages "forbidden for security reasons"; registration documents of
    96,533 people transferred from Kirkuk to Erbil province in
    preparation for removal; 2,405 families removed from villages lying
    near oil facilities; 10,918 Arab families, including 53,834 people,
    transferred to Kirkuk from other provinces; 8,250 pieces of
    residential land and 1,112 houses distributed to Arab families
    transferred from other provinces. The letter noted that these
    removals, transfers, and distributions created a net gain of 51,862
    Arabs in the province and a net loss of 18,096 Kurds during this
    period, making Arabs the largest group in Kirkuk for the first time.
    The final phase of Arabization was beginning, the governor reported
    in conclusion: "The displacement process from the city center is now
    taking its course."

    Two years later, just before the invasion of Kuwait, Saddam made his
    announcement outside Kirkuk's municipal building that all human life
    be removed from the citadel. According to Gha'ab Fadhel, the director
    of Kirkuk's archeological museum, who oversaw the bulldozing of
    dwellings, the purpose of the citadel project was simply to excavate
    and restore ancient monuments. The eight hundred and fifty
    Ottoman-era houses on the site were ill kept, unhygienically crowded,
    and mostly occupied by poor renters. "Their removal had nothing to do
    with politics," he insisted. But the citadel was the heart of the
    city. On the Muslim holiday of Eid, Christians joined Muslims to
    celebrate at the Tomb of the Prophets, an ancient shrine where Daniel
    and Ezra are apocryphally said to be buried. On Christian holidays,
    the Muslims reciprocated.

    At the souk near the citadel, the Turkoman owner of a women's dress
    shop recalled that, years ago, the citadel was the site of many
    feasts. In the quiet of summer evenings, he said, the scent of
    grilled meat would drift down into the market. "From what I hear,
    Turkomans were living there," he said.

    "Why do you say that?" a Kurdish customer asked. "We were living
    there, too."

    Across the alley from the shop, a Turkoman woman selling shoes and
    purses told me, "We were the last family to leave the citadel." Her
    father, a wealthy trader in seeds, had a large house by the western
    gate that overlooked the river. He built houses on the citadel for
    Jews whom he employed as scribes. "We had relations with so many
    people on the citadel," she said. "Like family, not neighbors." One
    day, Baathists knocked at the door: the family had a month in which
    to vacate their house. "The citadel was the most beautiful place,"
    she said. "My childhood was there. I see it every day." She pointed
    to the remains of a stone wall, overgrown with yellow grass, just
    visible above the shops across the alley.

    The last houses inside the citadel were destroyed in 1998. By then,
    nobody had lived there for eight years, and no one was allowed there
    except members of a Republican Guard unit, who were positioned on the
    citadel to suppress an uprising or attack. Last year, when a wave of
    Kurdish peshmerga and American Special Forces soldiers swept down
    from the north, the dream of Arab Kirkuk collapsed overnight.



    A few weeks after the liberation of Kirkuk, in April, 2003, Jordan
    Becker, a twenty-four-year-old lieutenant with the 173rd Airborne
    Brigade, was told by his company commander to sort out a problem in
    Arrapha, the neighborhood where Luna Dawood lives. Among the
    thousands of Kurdish deportees who had come back to Kirkuk to reclaim
    houses and land--in some cases chasing Arab occupants out, in others
    finding that the residents had fled--sixty-seven families were
    squatting in the fine houses that had been abandoned by top Baathist
    officials. These Kurds had been living for years in refugee camps in
    the hills around Suleimaniya, one of the regional capitals of
    Kurdistan. Becker, who had a shelf full of books on Kurdish language
    and Middle Eastern history in his tent at the American base, was
    given the mission to tell the Kurds that they had to vacate. At the
    first house that he visited, the wife swore that if the Americans
    made her leave she would set herself on fire.

    Becker returned to the base and conferred with his captain. They
    decided that he should try again, but this time Becker, a blue-eyed
    Southern Californian who's built like a cornerback, left his body
    armor behind; in this less threatening guise, he sat down with the
    family for two hours. "What I learned about these people is that they
    have a sense of history, and historic patience," he said. "They have
    a sense of what's best for their community, and when you convinced
    them that they were going to drive a wedge between their community
    and the Arabs, and between their community and the Americans, they
    realized they didn't want to do that." Becker's argument to the Kurds
    was an abstract one: "If you have a house in a country that's
    unstable and violent, then all you have is a house. But if you have a
    house in a country that's stable and ruled by law, then you have a
    lot more than a house." Then he made his approach in more concrete
    terms, telling the family, "Just because you won a war doesn't mean
    you'll get shit for free. If you support law over victor's justice,
    though, you'll be investing in the future of Iraq." Becker smiled.
    "And they said, 'That's cool.'"

    The Kurdish squatters left Arrapha. That was in the early weeks, when
    the Kurds regarded the Americans as saviors and were willing to
    postpone rectification a little longer. During my visit to Kirkuk
    this summer, the historic patience of the Kurds was running out. In
    his speech to the family in Arrapha, Lieutenant Becker had
    articulated the policy of the occupation authority better than any
    high officials had: old grievances must be settled with laws, not by
    force; until new laws are in place, the status quo has to be
    maintained. Yet, more than a year after the removal of Saddam, a
    legal mechanism for resolving individual property disputes has barely
    begun to function. As for a larger political solution to the status
    of Kirkuk, the occupation authority avoided the issue entirely, and
    the interim constitution signed in March by the former Governing
    Council declared that Kirkuk's future will not be resolved until
    there is a permanent constitution. Meanwhile, the American forces in
    the city function, as one soldier told me, "like a bouncer in the
    middle of a nasty bar fight." Kirkuk remains dangerously stalled,
    while facts that could force the most extreme outcome steadily
    accumulate on the ground.

    Since the invasion, more and more Arabs have been uprooted from their
    homes. A report by the refugee organization Global I.D.P. puts the
    total number of Arabs displaced in the north at a hundred thousand,
    although the absence of international organizations in Iraq makes it
    impossible to reach an accurate count. Inside the bombed barracks and
    helicopter hangars of an Iraqi Air Force base northwest of Kirkuk,
    near the American base, I found a group of Arab squatters. Two old
    men who spoke for the fifty-two families there said that Kurdish
    fighters had chased them out of Amshaw, the small village that I had
    just visited.

    "We have young men who believe Amshaw belongs to them," one of the
    Arab men, Ali Aday, said. "I tell them, 'My son, they say it belongs
    to the Kurds.' They say, 'How can it? We were born and raised in
    those houses.'" The old man pointed out that the number of Kurdish
    families who had taken over Amshaw was just half the number of Arabs
    who had fled--there were enough houses in Amshaw for twenty-five Arab
    families to return and live together with the Kurds. "We just want to
    know who will give us our rights," Ali Aday said. American soldiers
    in the area had given the Arab refugees blankets and food, and told
    them to stay put until the problem could be sorted out by law. "Where
    is the government that will give us our rights? Is it from America?
    >>From the Iraqi government? We don't know. It isn't possible to just
    leave us here without our rights."

    A mile away, a forlorn camp of seventeen tents stood in a field next
    to a military pillbox. A ragged turquoise flag with a white crescent
    moon and star--the symbol of the militant Iraqi Turkoman Front--hung
    limply in the heat. The camp is also symbolic--the tents were
    empty--but a handful of men were standing watch. They were Turkomans
    who had been expelled in 1980 from Bilawa, a nearby settlement. They
    showed me copies of property deeds from 1938, black negative images
    of British documents; they also had Ottoman-era deeds, they said.
    Part of their property had been taken over by the Air Force base, and
    another part was occupied by a wealthy Arab, who refused to leave.
    The Turkomans also claimed the land where the Arab refugees were
    squatting in helicopter hangars. It was hard to imagine how all this
    could be worked out.

    "The solution is for people to go back to where they're from," one
    Turkoman said. "Before Saddam, where were these Arabs? This is the
    solution, exactly. We want it just like before Saddam."

    On the other side of the city, hundreds of Kurdish families had taken
    up residence in the tunnels and under the grandstands of Kirkuk's
    soccer stadium, which was built in a razed Kurdish neighborhood. On a
    dusty field beside the stadium, hundreds more families are living in
    tents. The director of a Kurdish refugee organization estimated that
    nine thousand families have returned to Kirkuk. Most of them were
    expelled from Kirkuk a decade or more ago--taken by government truck
    to the provincial border and dumped alongside the road--and have lived
    in refugee camps ever since. More of them are returning to Kirkuk
    every day--in August, by one account, five hundred people a day--even
    though living conditions are squalid and almost no help has been
    offered by the Americans, international aid groups, or the city
    government. A Kurdish man named Farhad Muhammad echoed what the
    displaced Arabs had told me. "I really don't know who will give us a
    house, because there are many, many governments in Iraq," he said.
    "We hope the new government won't be like Saddam's."

    Despite the lack of housing in Kirkuk, the Kurdish political parties
    have begun to accelerate the return of Kurds in advance of an Iraqi
    census and elections. Kurdish government employees in Suleimaniya
    have been told to return to Kirkuk, and have been promised that their
    salaries will be sustained until they find new positions. In Erbil
    this June, forty Kurdish families originally from Kirkuk were ordered
    to vacate the building in which they had lived for years as refugees
    and which a politically connected businessman plans to turn into a
    supermarket; they were given three thousand dollars apiece and sent
    back to their home town. In July, I found a number of them in Kirkuk,
    building simple houses illegally in the old Kurdish neighborhoods of
    Azadi and Rahimawa. Some Arab leaders claim that Kurds, including
    some who had never lived in Kirkuk, are moving to the city in an
    attempt to tip the ethnic scale. One of them called the effort
    "Kurdification."

    Meanwhile, Arab benefitters are leaving. Sabiha Hamood, the woman who
    moved with her family from Baghdad in the nineteen-eighties, sold her
    house this past spring, taking advantage of the inflated prices that
    wealthy Kurds are willing to pay for nice homes. In Qadisiya, a
    neighborhood in the south of the city that was built during
    Arabization, I met a group of Arab men attending a funeral. They took
    me back to a dingy cinder-block house, into which three families who
    had been forced from their homes were squeezed. In the immediate
    neighborhood, they said, a hundred Arab families had sold their
    houses to Kurds and left the city. The men were Shia, former
    policemen and soldiers, now unemployed and filled with grievances.
    Riyadh Shayoob, who came to Kirkuk from Basra in 1986, when he was
    five, had been driven from his house in a Kurdish area and been
    refused employment by the new Iraqi police force. He was making a
    meagre living selling trinkets in the souk, where he suffered
    contempt and threats from Kurds. Some of them, he said, mockingly
    sell CDs with images of Arab prisoners being tortured in Abu Ghraib.
    "They told me, 'Go back where you came from. Don't stay in Kirkuk,'"
    Shayoob said with a melancholy smile. "Before, I had Kurdish friends,
    but now they don't support me. They've turned against us."

    Government jobs, I was told, now go almost exclusively to Kurds. The
    new governor and the police chief are Kurds, and all the television
    networks are in Kurdish; the Arabs are being driven out of the city,
    and they have no one powerful to back them--the long list of Arab
    complaints bore a striking resemblance to the predicament of the
    Kurds in Kirkuk under Saddam. To these men, the Kurds were now the
    benefitters. "There's more injustice now than under Saddam," a
    bearded, tough-looking man named Ethir Muhammad insisted. "Even if
    Saddam did these things, what's our guilt? We did nothing to them."

    In Kirkuk, the Arab-Kurdish conflict has been intensified by the
    insurgency against the Iraqi government, which has recently grown
    worse: in the past few weeks, two car bombings in Kirkuk have killed
    at least forty people. The Kurds are often considered collaborators
    of the Americans, while many of the imported Arabs sympathize with
    the Sunni or Shiite resistance forces. Moqtada al-Sadr, the radical
    Shiite cleric, has claimed that the Kurds are Muslim apostates and
    face damnation; over the summer, several hundred Kurds fled to Kirkuk
    from Samarra and other Arab cities after being denounced in Sunni
    mosques as traitors. The Arab men in the cinder-block house were
    followers of Sadr's representative in Kirkuk, whose mosque was raided
    in May by American soldiers. (They discovered a cache of weapons and
    arrested around thirty people.) All vowed to stay in the city.
    "Kirkuk has turned into a jungle," Ethir Muhammad said. "If someone
    comes to force me to leave, then either I'll kill him or he'll kill
    me. This is the law of the jungle."

    Among imported Arabs, I heard various conspiracy stories--that mass
    graves dug by Saddam's regime are in fact archeological sites
    thousands of years old, that the chemical weapons dropped on Halabja
    were actually sacks of plaster dust. (This theory was offered by a
    fireman employed by the oil company, whose house in Arrapha looks
    directly across a field at the former mansion of Ali Hassan
    al-Majid--known, ever since he directed the gassing of the Kurds, as
    Chemical Ali.) An Arab woman who is a retired teacher from the
    southern city of Kut said, "Iraq is part of the Arab nation, not the
    Kurdish nation. The Kurds are guests in Iraq--and they want to kick
    the Arabs out?" I seldom heard any acknowledgment of the crimes that
    Arabs had committed against Kurds in Kirkuk, or any shame at having
    been the benefitters. This only deepens the sense among Kurds,
    especially among the deportees who have returned, that it is not
    possible for them to live alongside imported Arabs in Kirkuk.



    The Kurdish plan for Kirkuk is absolutely clear. All the imported
    Arabs must leave--even those who were born in the city. The government
    should compensate them, and perhaps find them land and jobs in their
    provinces of origin, but to allow them to stay in Kirkuk would be to
    endorse the injustice of Arabization. After Kurdish deportees have
    been resettled, and the province's earlier demographic balance has
    been restored, the Kirkuk region will hold a census. (The 1957 census
    showed that the population was almost fifty per cent Kurdish.) The
    result of this upcoming census is a foregone conclusion to the Kurds:
    they will be the majority group in the province. Equally predictable
    is the result of the referendum that will follow: the province of
    Kirkuk will vote to join the autonomous region of Kurdistan, and the
    city will go with it.

    None of this is stated in Iraq's interim constitution. Article 58,
    which delineates "Steps to Remedy Injustice," is purposefully vague
    about the future of Kirkuk. It calls for "the injustice caused by the
    previous regime's practices in altering the demographic character of
    certain regions, including Kirkuk," to be redressed. It states that
    "individuals newly introduced to specific regions and territories . .
    . may be resettled, may receive compensation from the state, may
    receive new land from the state near their residence in the
    governorate from which they came, or may receive compensation for the
    cost of moving to such areas." (Not "must.") The status of contested
    cities like Kirkuk will be deferred until after the census and a
    permanent constitution, "consistent with the principle of justice,
    taking into account the will of the people of those territories."
    This bland language raises more questions than it answers. Does
    justice require only the restoration of confiscated property, or does
    it also require the restoration of Kirkuk's demography to the period
    before Arabization? Wouldn't forcing Arabs to return to the towns
    "from which they came" create new injustices and perpetuate the cycle
    of revenge?

    Although there has been nothing like the apocalyptic communal
    bloodshed that some predicted, several demonstrations in Kirkuk have
    turned violent, and Kirkuk's leaders have fallen victim to a campaign
    of assassination. Most of the murdered officials have been Kurds,
    though one was an Arab provincial councilman; a week ago, an Arab
    sheikh who occupied disputed lands around the village of Amshaw was
    ambushed and killed. Arrests are seldom made in these cases. Kurds in
    Kirkuk cast suspicion on Turkish intelligence agents; the Turkish
    government has repeatedly asserted that a Kurdish power grab in
    Kirkuk would be regarded as a prelude to an independent state and
    therefore a threat to Turkey, which has its own minority population
    of rebellious Kurds. In July, the Turkish foreign minister, Abdullah
    Gul, compared Kirkuk to Bosnia and issued a veiled warning: "Everyone
    is aware that this is the issue that could end up being the greatest
    headache for Iraq."

    Hasib Rozbayani is the Kurdish deputy governor for resettlement and
    compensation, the official responsible for the returning refugees.
    Rozbayani is a leading spokesman for the emerging policy of reverse
    ethnic cleansing. He spent years teaching social studies and
    statistics in exile in Sweden, and, with an unruly head of curly
    hair, spectacles, and a habit of mumbling questions to himself as he
    talks, he has a mild professorial air. When we spoke in his living
    room, he was barefoot and wearing sweatpants and an untucked shirt,
    and he kept absently picking up the automatic pistol that lay on the
    sofa beside him, then startling himself and setting it down again.
    Propped against his stereo system was a Kalashnikov.

    Rozbayani left no doubt about the future of the imported Arabs. Their
    departure from Kirkuk is necessary for a variety of reasons, he said,
    including psychosocial ones: the Arabs suffer from guilty
    consciences, since most of them are criminals and former Baathists,
    which would make them uneasy about staying; they know they don't
    belong in the city and have no friends among the other groups; their
    continued presence would be a provocation to Kurds, inciting social
    conflict. Moreover, unemployment is already too high in Kirkuk.

    Those benefitters who haven't left Kirkuk before the census and the
    referendum will not be allowed to vote there, Rozbayani said. He does
    not expect many Arabs to be living in Kirkuk by then. "They have to
    leave," he said. Imported Arabs have to leave even if no one contests
    their house or land, because their fault is a collective one. After
    the census and the referendum on the status of Kirkuk, he told me,
    Arabs could return to the region--for a visit.

    I told Rozbayani about a couple I'd met: the husband came from
    central Iraq in the nineteen-sixties; the wife is an "original Arab"
    whose family has lived in Kirkuk for generations. Their children have
    grown up with playmates from a mixed Kurdish-Turkoman family next
    door. What should happen to this couple?

    "They have to return," he said.

    "The wife is a native of Kirkuk."

    "She can follow him."

    My questions struck Rozbayani as misplaced humanitarianism, and he
    threw them back at me. "Of course, I accept the idea of brothership
    and friendship," he assured me. "But we know openly that the Arabs
    have taken lands, occupied lands, they have gone to every house to
    investigate people, execute people, take their sons, their girls--and
    you would say, 'Welcome, Iraq is for all people'? It's funny, I say."

    Much of Rozbayani's and other Kurds' unhappiness is directed at the
    American-led coalition. They expected something more than studied
    evenhandedness from the United States. A peshmerga now living in an
    abandoned house in Amshaw asked me, "Why, when the Kurds are your
    friends, do you now treat us just the way you treat other Iraqis,
    including the Republican Guard?"



    The first representative of the Coalition Provisional Authority in
    Kirkuk, and the most influential advocate for the city with Paul
    Bremer, the head of the C.P.A., was Emma Sky, a slim, brown-eyed,
    thirty-six-year-old Englishwoman. Sky speaks some Arabic and once
    worked with Palestinians in the West Bank; though she opposed the
    invasion of Iraq, she volunteered to join the occupation authority.
    Upon arriving in Kirkuk, she saw that the most urgent task was to
    reassure alienated Arabs and Turkomans that the triumphant attitude
    of their Kurdish neighbors did not mean there was no future for them
    here. As Sky travelled around the province, her prestige among Arabs
    soared. Ismail Hadidi, the deputy governor and an original Arab, gave
    her his highest praise: "We deal with her as if she's a man, not a
    woman."

    Sky believes passionately that Kirkuk can be a model for an
    ethnically diverse Iraq. "People have to move away from this zero-sum
    thinking," she told me in Baghdad. "Kirkuk is where it all meets. It
    all comes together there. Yes, you can have a country of separate
    regions, where people don't have to deal with other groups. But can
    you have a country where people are happy with each other, where
    people are at ease with each other? I think Kirkuk is going to tell
    you what kind of country Iraq is going to be." Compared with the
    problems in Israel and Palestine, Sky said, Kirkuk's can be solved
    relatively easily. "Kirkuk you can win. Kirkuk doesn't have
    irreconcilable differences--yet."

    Over time, many Kurds began to regard Emma Sky and the C.P.A. as
    biased toward Arabs. When she met the Kurdish leader Jalal Talabani
    in Suleimaniya, he snapped, "They call you Emma Bell." The reference
    was to Gertrude Bell, the British colonial official who lived and, it
    is said, took her life in Baghdad. Fluent in Arabic and in love with
    the culture, Bell was admired by large numbers of Arabs. After the
    First World War, she drew up the boundaries of the modern state of
    Iraq, in which Sunni Arabs became the holders of power and Kurds saw
    their dream of nationhood dissolved.

    Nor did it help the Coalition's cause that its scheme for untangling
    and redressing grievances in Kirkuk--the Iraq Property Claims
    Commission, which Sky was instrumental in setting up--didn't begin to
    hear claims until April and still hasn't issued its first decision.
    Azad Shekhany, a Kurd who once directed the commission, concluded
    that the whole thing was an elaborate stall to keep the peace, and he
    put the blame on the Coalition. "I understand they don't want to send
    the Arabs back to their original places, but they don't want the
    Kurds to be unhappy as well--so they just delay everything by
    bureaucracy," Shekhany said.

    The commission has received far fewer claims than anticipated--exactly
    1,658 as of the July morning when I visited its offices, which were
    well-equipped and nearly empty. Two Kurdish women in billowing black
    robes--Jamila Safar and her mother, Khadija Namikh--were seated at a
    desk making a claim. In March, 1991, during the uprising in Kirkuk
    and the north that followed the Gulf War, Safar told me, her father
    died. On the day of his burial, March 13th, she and her mother
    returned from the cemetery to find their house surrounded by
    soldiers, Baath Party members, and men with masked faces who worked
    for Chemical Ali. "Are you Kurds or Arabs?" the men demanded.
    Everyone in the neighborhood was out on the street--Kurds, Arabs, and
    Turkomans, grouped by ethnicity. Tanks blocked the streets and
    helicopters circled overhead as the Kurdish men, including Safar's
    older brother, were bound and taken away in buses. Safar and Namikh,
    along with other Kurdish women and children, were loaded onto a
    different set of buses and driven into the mountains, where they were
    dropped off and told to walk north. As the two women walked, they
    were bombed by aircraft overhead; several neighbors died in front of
    them. Safar and her mother stayed at the Iranian border for three
    months. When they ventured back to Kirkuk, their house--along with two
    thousand others in their neighborhood--had been destroyed.

    "Thank God, all I found was dust," Safar said. "Thank God for our
    safety."

    A staff lawyer was filling out a lengthy form for them. "Was the
    house brick or clay?"

    "Brick," Safar's mother said. "Finish, please. I'm sick, I can't
    wait."

    "Do you want to take the land, or do you want compensation?" the
    lawyer asked.

    "We want the land," Safar said.

    The lawyer wrote this down, and the fact that they needed money to
    build a new house. "Why didn't you go to the commission for people
    with damaged houses in 1991?"

    "I did," the mother said. "I gave them an application, but they
    didn't give us anything."

    Ayob Shaker, an Arab man in his late thirties, came over and said
    hello to the two women with a shy reserve. He had once been their
    neighbor. On the day of the deportation, he had helped other Kurds in
    the area load furniture on the buses. He was also a soldier in the
    Republican Guard, and when he came back to Kirkuk from Baghdad after
    the Americans had deposed Saddam he found a group of peshmerga,
    including another former neighbor, occupying his house. Though
    Kirkuk's property-claims statute was amended recently to allow Arabs
    displaced after the war to make claims as well, Shaker said that his
    children had been threatened by the peshmerga, and he was afraid to
    file for compensation.

    "Believe me, nobody knows for sure, but mostly it's the Kurds who are
    running the city," he said. "For me as an Arab, if I want a job I
    have to get a paper from a Kurdish party saying I'm not a criminal."
    Chance had brought him to this office on the same day as the two
    women he used to greet every morning on his way to work. He felt that
    the very injustice he had once seen done to them was now befalling
    him. "The same thing," he said. "The government did it to them. The
    peshmerga did it to us."

    The women agreed, and there was a moment of good feeling between the
    old neighbors.

    "Only God, and America, can solve the problem," the Arab said.

    What about the new Iraqi government? I asked.

    "I don't know," the mother said. "Is there a government right now or
    not?"

    The staff lawyer finished filling out the form. The daughter smiled
    and said, "I think there will be justice and our case will be
    finished."

    I asked the Arab if there would be justice in Kirkuk. He hesitated.
    "I don't think so," he said. "It's very difficult. Those who are now
    in the city don't understand each other. I am a son of Kirkuk"--an
    original Arab--"and for thirty-five years nobody could hurt us. Now
    I'm feeling upset, because of my house."

    I asked the women if Kurds would ever do to Arabs what Arabs had done
    to Kurds. "No, they won't do that," the daughter said. "Believe me, I
    swear to God they won't do that."

    "They've done more than the Arabs," Shaker said.

    The daughter stiffened and eyed her former neighbor coldly. "How is
    that?" she asked.

    "I know one person who made half a tribe run away from their houses
    in the city," he responded.

    The warm feeling was gone. The daughter pointed out that Shaker had
    already forgotten what had happened to the Kurds in Kirkuk. Abruptly,
    she excused herself and helped her mother out of the Iraq Property
    Claims Commission.



    Because Kirkuk isn't yet the scene of open combat, the city remains a
    hidden flaw in the broken Iraqi landscape. But what is now a local
    dispute between neighbors will soon become one of the greatest
    obstacles to making Iraq democratic and keeping it whole. In the
    summer of 2003, I had a conversation with Barham Salih, who was then
    the prime minister of the regional government in Suleimaniya. A
    strong supporter of the American invasion and of Kurdish
    participation in a democratic and federal Iraq, he was also mindful
    of his constituents' ingrained suspicion of Baghdad and their longing
    for independence. For twelve years, Suleimaniya was one of the two
    capitals of Iraqi Kurdistan, a de-facto independent state under the
    protection of the Allied no-fly zone. A generation of Kurds grew up
    speaking no Arabic and feeling no connection to Iraq--and the idea of
    rejoining a country that not long ago visited genocide and ethnic
    cleansing on Kurds is, understandably, a hard sell.

    "I want to assure my kids and the new generations to come that the
    new Iraq will be fundamentally different," Salih said. "If the Arabs
    of Iraq do not have the courage to come to terms with the terrible
    past that we have had and make right those terrible injustices that
    befell my people, I would have extreme difficulty convincing the
    doubters in Suleimaniya's bazaar that Iraq is our future."

    I went to see Salih again this past June in Baghdad, on his first day
    as deputy prime minister of the newly sovereign Iraqi interim
    government. After a year of occupation and insurgency, his mood was
    darker, and his interpretation of the interim constitution on Kirkuk
    was uncompromising. "The indigenous people of Kirkuk, the original
    communities of Kirkuk, should be the ones who decide the fate of
    Kirkuk--not those who were brought by Saddam or any outside power," he
    said. The imported Arabs were victims, too, "tools for a vile policy,
    for Saddam wanted to create the environment for a permanent civil war
    between Kurds and Arabs." But, Salih added, "Kirkuk is not Bosnia,
    and in fact the Kurdish leadership has demonstrated the utmost
    restraint in the way that it has handled Kirkuk. In Bosnia, you'd
    have seen civil war."

    I asked Rowsch Shaways, a Kurd and one of two vice-presidents in the
    interim government, what would happen if the imported Arabs refused
    to leave Kirkuk. Would they be loaded into trucks and driven south to
    Basra and Kut?

    "Well, there should be a continuous campaign to persuade them," he
    said.

    Wouldn't the attempt to force Arabs out of Kirkuk lead to reprisals
    against Kurds living in Arab regions of Iraq? "No, it's a different
    situation," he said. "Kurds who are living in the south, they were
    coming here very normally, not through a campaign of changing
    ethnicity." After the effects of Saddam's ethnic cleansing have been
    reversed, "everybody can live where he wants," Shaways said. "But
    before that you have to reverse the unjust policy that was done to
    strengthen the Baath Party and to change the ethnic composition of
    some regions." The Americans have waited too long to resolve the
    problem of Kirkuk, he said, adding, "This is my opinion: Kirkuk is a
    part of Kurdistan."

    Of the top Kurdish officials, I imagined that the person who would
    find the question of Kirkuk most vexing was Bakhtiar Amin. He grew up
    in Imam Qasim, a once beautiful Kurdish neighborhood near the
    citadel, where homes with spiralled Ottoman columns have been allowed
    to decay to the point of collapse. Amin and his family were expelled
    from Kirkuk during Arabization; his relatives were jailed and
    tortured. Amin, who is forty-six, lived in exile for years, working
    as a human-rights activist in Europe and founding the International
    Alliance for Justice. Now he is the first human-rights minister of a
    sovereign Iraqi government. But, when we sat down in his spacious
    Baghdad office to talk about justice in Kirkuk, Amin made it clear
    that he was speaking as a Kurd.

    After recounting the history of Kurdish oppression in great detail,
    the minister warned me that the situation in Kirkuk was becoming
    explosive. The Americans, who were overburdened by the daily chaos in
    Baghdad, Falluja, and Najaf, "want to keep the calm there--the calm of
    a cemetery." Amin added, "It's important not to be naïve with your
    foes and Machiavellian with your friends. Patience has its limits for
    victims as well." The only solution, he insisted, was to return the
    demography of Kirkuk to what it was before Arabization, and help
    Arabs to resettle in the south.

    I asked how he would answer an Arab youth who said, "Mr. Human Rights
    Minister, Kirkuk is my home. I don't have another. Why must I leave?"
    Amin replied that he would introduce the young Arab to a young Kurd
    who had lost his house and grown up in a tent, and whose brother or
    sister had died of starvation or cold. He said that he would tell the
    young Arab, "Your father, your mom, they are from a different area
    and they came here and they took these people's house, and this is
    what they did to those children. And I will help you to have a decent
    life where your parents came from."



    Earlier this year, Kurdish leaders had considerable success in
    shaping the language of Iraq's interim constitution, which enshrined
    the rights of minority groups and envisioned a federalist republic
    with significant regional autonomy. Over the past few months,
    however, many Kurds have lost confidence in the effort to create a
    unified Iraq. They are increasingly alienated from their American
    allies, who always seem more ready to soothe the recalcitrant Arabs
    than the dependable Kurds. Several Kurdish politicians told me that a
    repetition of 1975, when the U.S. withdrew its support for the Kurds
    and abandoned them to the Baathist regime, now seems entirely
    possible. In May, the U.S. fuelled such suspicions when it yielded to
    a demand of Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani and left out any mention
    of the interim constitution in the U.N. Security Council resolution
    that blessed Iraq's restored sovereignty. When it became clear that
    Kurds would get neither the Presidency nor the Prime Ministership,
    Kurdish politicians, including Barham Salih, were so incensed that
    they briefly withdrew from Baghdad to the north. On June 1st, the two
    Kurdish leaders, Masoud Barzani and Jalal Talabani, sent a cri de
    coeur to President Bush that was subsequently made public. "Ever
    since liberation, we have detected a bias against Kurdistan from the
    American authorities for reasons that we cannot comprehend," they
    wrote, and warned that if the interim constitution "is abrogated, the
    Kurdistan Regional Government will have no choice but to refrain from
    participating in the central government and its institutions, not to
    take part in the national elections, and to bar representatives of
    the central government from Kurdistan."

    The episode had the feel of an extreme reaction born of extreme
    experience, a kind of historical neurosis in which Iraq's Kurds and
    Arabs both are trapped. Samir Shakir Sumaidaie, a former Governing
    Council member who was recently appointed Iraq's Ambassador to the
    U.N., said that he understood why the Kurds had reacted so strongly.
    "I cannot blame a Kurd for feeling anger," he said. "But I can plead
    with him to contain his anger, because angry people often do stupid
    things, and they end up hurting themselves. Arabs, on the other hand,
    must acknowledge the injustice that has been done to the Kurds. By
    acknowledging the injustice, you take the poison out of the system.
    I've told this to Arabs in Kirkuk: we must admit what was done in the
    name of Arab nationalism to the Kurds, and of which you were perhaps
    the unwitting instrument." The Kurds' anger, he said, will cool only
    when they begin to see justice done--"especially for the families that
    suffered most in Kirkuk." When Sumaidaie makes these arguments to his
    fellow Iraqi Arabs, he told me, the response is grudging.
    "Nationalism ignites nationalism," Sumaidaie said. "I think we should
    get away from nationalism and move toward humanism."

    On September 9th, Masoud Barzani escalated his rhetoric again,
    saying, "Kirkuk is the heart of Kurdistan, and we are ready to wage a
    war in order to preserve its identity." A self-described Iraqi
    liberal who is an official of the interim government told me that
    more and more leaders are reacting to Kurdish threats with an
    attitude of "good riddance." Keeping the Kurds happy, they think,
    might not be worth the cost. "The truth of the matter is, the Arabs
    of this country--eighty per cent of the population--are getting tired
    of these threats of secession," he said. "And one day their answer
    will be: 'Secede.'"



    Nevertheless, during several visits to Kirkuk, I kept meeting
    citizens of every ethnicity who still wanted to live together and
    were willing to surrender part of their own historical claim to the
    city in order to coexist peacefully with other groups. The idea of a
    multi-ethnic city, I realized, is not just a desperate piece of
    cheerful public relations from American and British officials.

    This summer, I met Muhammad Abbas, an Arab in his twenties, whose
    family had moved to Kirkuk when he was six; his father had been sent
    to the city to fulfill his military service. Abbas described the hurt
    of losing Kurdish friends after the war. "I don't want to leave,
    because I've gotten used to this place, to the way of living here,"
    he said. He had recently been detained overnight by Kurdish police
    officials for having no ID card. "Maybe if this had happened during
    Saddam's time I would have been locked up for days," he said. "And a
    Kurd might have been tortured." Abbas said he thought that Arabs and
    Kurds could live together in Kirkuk if the politicians allowed them
    to do so. "We're human beings and they're human beings," he said. "In
    my opinion, the city of Kirkuk--the Kurds have every right to it. They
    have more rights in Kirkuk and they deserve Kirkuk. But still, we
    can't just go anywhere and leave the house. Where would we live?"

    On the other side of town, in the neighborhood of Imam Qasim, I met a
    young Kurdish engineer named Sardar Muhammad. He and his wife and
    children share a small house with his two brothers and their
    families. "If there had been no war, in fifteen years you would have
    found no Kurds at all in Kirkuk," he said. When the American invasion
    seemed imminent, Muhammad went down into his basement and cut a
    square out of the plaster wall, behind which there was a concealed
    room. He planned to hide there if the Baathists started rounding up
    young Kurdish men, as they had done in 1991. Instead, the Baathists
    fled the city. Since the removal of Saddam, Muhammad's family has
    built a new outhouse and extended the kitchen, and they filled it
    with new appliances. "It wasn't that I didn't have the money,"
    Muhammad said. "But I wasn't sure I would keep this house. I didn't
    know if I'd need the money in the future for food." A few years ago,
    his wife dropped out of school, because there was no chance for a
    Kurdish woman who didn't correct her nationality to find a job. After
    the liberation, she reënrolled and obtained her degree. "Before, we
    didn't know when we'd be arrested or expelled," Muhammad said. "Now
    we have hopes for the future."

    As for the Arabs who had once enjoyed rights and privileges that were
    denied his family, Muhammad was of two minds. It would be easier for
    everyone if they left. "But their kids, when they're born here,
    there's a kind of relationship to the land, and it's not those kids'
    fault that they're in love with the place where they were born," he
    said. "It's unfair for them to have to leave." The only reason for
    Kirkuk to join Kurdistan, he said, was that Arabs didn't treat Kurds
    fairly. If the new government in Baghdad could insure that all Iraqi
    citizens would be treated equally, he would gladly live under its
    flag instead of in Kurdistan.

    Kirkuk has suffered inordinately from bad ideas, and the old ones
    have engendered some that are new: the idea that the historical clock
    can be turned back forty years, or that Iraq can be carved up among
    its Sunni, Shia, and Kurds without enormous bloodshed and countless
    individual tragedies. The weakest idea in Iraq may be the idea of
    Iraq itself. As Barham Salih told me, "There is no Iraqi identity
    that I can push my people to today. I want to have an Iraqi identity,
    but it does not exist." Samir Shakir Sumaidaie said, "To get away
    from what Saddam did, where ethnic identity is what mattered most, to
    a society where citizenship is what matters--that transition is not an
    easy transition. We have to make it, though."

    The obsession with ethnic identity may be the ultimate legacy of
    Saddam's rule, his diabolical revenge on his countrymen. Nowhere can
    this be more strongly felt than in Kirkuk. "Saddam is gone, but we're
    not through with him," an Arab there said. "Even if he's not here,
    it's like he planted problems for the future."



    On my last evening in Kirkuk, I went to see the citadel with Luna
    Dawood. She wore high-heeled sandals; although her hair was
    uncovered, she had pinned it up as a gesture of respect. She had
    visited the citadel only once, in 1988; after the residents were
    removed and the houses destroyed, she developed an aversion to the
    place.

    At sunset, we made our way through the souk, past little Kurdish
    shops that sold bread, yogurt, and ancient-looking tools, and then we
    followed an alley that led us to the top of the plateau. The citadel
    spread out before us, a vast and nearly empty field of dirt and dead
    grass and broken stones and scattered monuments. A pack of wild dogs
    roamed menacingly, and the sole human inhabitants were an old
    Turkoman and his family. They were squatting in the marble dwelling
    of a long-departed imam. The Turkoman told us that he had once lived
    in a house a few yards away. He brought his family back after the
    liberation of Iraq, and somehow he had been allowed to stay. "This is
    my original place," he said. "I'm a poor man; I have nowhere to go.
    Where should the poor man go?"

    We crossed the field, toward an octagonal gold-and-blue tower that an
    Ottoman pasha had built for his dead daughter, and the ancient clay
    minaret of the Tomb of the Prophets. Dawood, who had been walking in
    stunned silence, suddenly said of her fellow-Kirkukis, "They are
    stupid. They destroyed their history." At the far end of the citadel,
    perched above the dead riverbed, was the abandoned house of the
    Turkoman woman who sold shoes and purses in the souk. Behind it, the
    orange ball of the sun was sinking. On one of the house's walls,
    someone had painted, "Long live the Turkomans--they are crowns on the
    heads of the Kurds." There was graffiti on other walls, too: "Kirkuk
    is the heart of Kurdistan," "The citadel of Kirkuk is the sign of the
    Kurds," and "The citadel of Kirkuk is a witness of its Turkomanness,
    whatever the conditions." On the courtyard wall of another
    half-ruined house, someone had painted, "The Turkoman people are
    brothers with the Kurdish people," but someone else had painted over
    "Kurdish people."

    "Ghosts are here," Dawood murmured. "I can hear them in the night.
    Under the ground, my mother said when we were children, there's a
    road from Kirkuk to Baghdad. Underground, there's a door
    somewhere--for people who wanted to escape Kirkuk."

    Her disquiet grew as we approached the Tomb of the Prophets. "This
    isn't the citadel I know. I told you, I came once before. But there
    was a road, and people. I don't even know where that road was." She
    said that she had come with three friends, one of them a Muslim,
    after she had a dream about the prophet Daniel.

    We stood before the entrance to the alleged tomb of Daniel and Ezra.
    Down below, in the city, muezzins were beginning the evening call. I
    went inside the bare chamber and waited for Dawood to follow, but at
    the doorway she recoiled with a muted cry. I followed her out.

    "It was gold!" she exclaimed. When she visited the shrine after her
    dream, the tombs and walls had been covered in gold leaf; all of it
    had been scraped off. "Now I'm feeling depressed," Dawood said. "I
    can see the difference between that time and this visit. I can't feel
    the holy mystery of the place. I'm even afraid to go inside."

    It was getting dark, and we started back. Dawood was silent again.
    Just before the opening to a path that descended to the souk, there
    was a square hole in the ground. She stopped. "I remember the well we
    just saw. I remember there were trees. Now I'm remembering--I visited
    this place as a child."

    Dusk had settled over the souk. The market stalls were closing up
    amid the last calls of prices, and the sweepers were cleaning up the
    day's trash. Dawood spoke so quietly that she might have been a ghost
    herself. "What is a human being worth, if they steal such a place?
    Right now, being human means nothing to me. I'm very sorry you
    brought me to this place. I shouldn't have come."
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