Just a year ago, Italian troops in Iraq were
bleeding and dying.
On Nov. 12, 2003, a truck crashed into the Italian headquarters in
the southern city of Nasiriyah. A car bombing swiftly followed. At
least 19 Italian soldiers and eight Iraqi citizens were killed.
Scores more were injured, some critically.
Back at home, Italy had a day of mourning for the victims, but
refused to see itself as a victim. Defense Minister Antonio Martino
met with the families of two of the dead soldiers. "They didn't
shed a tear that day," he says. "They were proud of what their sons
had accomplished in Iraq."
And when Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi came under political
pressure to withdraw Italy's 3,000 troops from Iraq, he steadfastly
refused. "The pain at this time is a feeling shared by the whole
nation, a deep pain for the lives that have been cut short by
terrorism, during a humanitarian mission for freedom," Berlusconi
announced. However, he insisted Italy would stay the course.
Now, a year later, Italian forces have remained on station in Iraq
and rebuilt their headquarters.
They're still there, still fighting terrorism and still making
progress. The soldiers regularly publish a small newspaper in
Arabic and hand out thousands of copies to local citizens. In a
recent edition, they reiterated their commitment to the Iraqis. "A
year after this bloody attack, we are still co-operating, talking
to each other and meeting each other," the soldiers wrote. "We are
still working and building a better future together."
Their work has paid dividends for them, and for the people of Iraq.
Recently, Iraqi civilians told the soldiers about a planned
terrorist bombing, and the Italians were able to disarm the
explosive before it could go off.
And that's exactly the point. In Iraq, the coalition forces are
working with Iraqis to build a better nation. The vast majority of
Iraqis know that and appreciate it. "Even with limited resources,
we've already trained 5,000 policemen and 1,000 soldiers," Martino
told me. "Many have thanked me for what we're doing."
Iraq's leadership sees benefits, too. "Democracy, the rule of law
and liberty will win in Iraq despite the difficulties," Ayad
Allawi, Iraq's interim prime minister, recently told reporters
after a meeting with Berlusconi. "We believe that the
reconstruction in Iraq can help the stability of the region and the
world."
For his part, the Italian leader remains committed to Iraq. "Italy
will stay in Iraq according to the requests that will come from a
legitimate Iraqi government," he announced. He still sees Italy's
mission there as "defending democracy in the world."
This message -- that we have allies in Iraq and that we're all
working to build a better world -- seems to have been lost during
our recent presidential election. In the final week of the
campaign, Sen. John Kerry told NBC that if he'd been president,
"We'd have gone to war with allies in a way that the American
people weren't carrying the burden and the entire world understood
why we were doing it."
But Kerry had it exactly backward. We have allies carrying a large
part of the burden. Italian troops serve under British command. And
they themselves are in charge of Romanian and Portuguese
detachments. The allied mission is popular in Iraq, and it's
passing the electoral test at home, too.
President Bush and Australian Prime Minister John Howard have both
been re-elected after promising to stay the course in Iraq. British
Prime Minister Tony Blair is expected to prevail when his country
holds its next elections.
America's allies know Iraq is an important front in the war on
terrorism. The overwhelming majority of the Iraqi people are
thankful the coalition is there. And we should be thankful for
Italy and all of our allies standing alongside us -- fighting when
necessary and spreading freedom to the Middle East.
Ed Feulner, president of the Heritage Foundation, a
conservative think tank based in Washington.
COMMENTARY Middle East
We're Not in this Alone
Nov 23, 2004 2 min read
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