Bad start to the day
Baghdad, Iraq - Last night, I worked till 3 a.m., and I've been running short on sleep for
several nights. So early this morning, when an explosion rattled the glass
doors to my hotel room balcony, I came only about two-thirds awake. I stared,
stupid with sleep, at my watch, imploring it to make sense.
Whenever an explosion rattles Baghdad, people check their watches. That's
because U.S. troops who are blowing up captured ammunition or other unwanted
ordinance generally do it on the hour. That helps everyone know it was a
controlled explosion instead of a catastrophe.
Now my befuddled brain told me it was almost exactly 7:00 -- so the
explosion was no big deal and I should go back to sleep.
But maybe I wasn't sure, because an hour later, I was stumbling out of bed
to the shortwave to snap on the BBC. The explosion had been a car bomb, the
radio said, at the southern entrance to the Green Zone, the U.S. occupation
headquarters in Baghdad.
My hotel, on the east bank of the Tigris, offers a fine view of the river
and the Green Zone (which is centered on Saddam Hussein's former presidential
palace). Across the river, I now noticed, a few helicopters were buzzing like
wasps amid a pall of smoke hanging over the Green Zone. I dug out my
binoculars and hesitantly stepped onto the balcony for a look.
Hesitantly because, for journalists, binoculars can be a double-edged
sword in a war zone. Given that our purpose here is to witness and report what's
going on, a compact pair of binoculars seems entirely to the point: it lets us
see further, especially when movement is difficult. (I first got the habit 20
years ago, covering the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.)
But in a conflict in which you cross the lines between the fighting
forces, or in which you can be suspected as a spy by men with guns, binoculars can
be a problem. And Iraq can be a high-suspicion environment, notably for a
journalist with an American passport. So I've kept the binox stowed away.
Even from the relative safety of my hotel-room balcony, I was a little
nervous using the binoculars. The American soldiers who guard the street below in
a Bradley Fighting Vehicle are more likely to understand that a journalist
isn't a spy. But you never know. Wars turn ordinary things fearful, for them as
well as us.
Smoke was still rising from behind the thick growth of date palms around
the palace where Paul Bremer administers Iraq. As I watched, the calm voice of
the BBC floated out of the open door behind me. Five Iraqis were reported
dead and three soldiers badly injured. All signs were that it was a suicide bomb.
We haven't had suicide bombs in Baghdad these past weeks, since a spate of
them earlier in the spring. Some U.S. officials say they think the U.S.
blockade around Fallujah has cut off the bombings here, because Fallujah was where
the bombs were coming from. We don't know, of course. But maybe now, I've
got to be quicker to jump when there's an explosion -- even if it comes on the
hour.
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