Others gave IPS a similar account. "I was there when the American
captain and his soldiers raided a neighbourhood and started shouting at
women to tell them where some men they wanted were," a resident of
Mosul, speaking on condition of anonymity, told IPS on phone. "The
women told them they did not know, and their men did not do anything
wrong, and started crying in fear."
The witness said the U.S.
captain began to shout at his soldiers and the women, and his men then
started to grab the women and pull them by their hair.
"The
soldier we knew later to be Kaissar shouted at the Americans, 'No, No,'
but the captain shouted back at the Iraqi soldier," the witness told
IPS. "Then the Iraqi soldier shouted, 'Let go of the women you sons of
bitches,' and started shooting at them." The soldier, he said, then ran
off.
The Association of Muslim Scholars, a Sunni organisation,
issued a statement saying the Iraqi soldier had shot the U.S. soldiers
after he saw them beat up a pregnant woman.
"His blood rose and
he asked the occupying soldiers to stop beating the woman," they said
in the statement. "Their answer through the translator was: 'We will do
what we want. So he opened fire on them."
The story was first
reported on al-Rafidain satellite channel. That started Iraqis from all
over the country talking about "the hero" who sacrificed his life for
Iraqi honour.
The U.S. and Iraqi military told a different version of the story.
An Iraqi general told reporters that Kaissar carried out the attack because he had links to "Sunni Arab insurgent groups."
"Soldier
Kaissar Saady worked for insurgent groups who pushed him to learn army
movements and warn his comrades about them," a captain of the second
Iraqi army division told IPS. "There are so many like him in the army
and now within the so-called Awakening forces (militias funded by the
U.S. military)."
One army officer speaking on condition of
anonymity described Kaissar's act as heroic. "Those Americans learned
their lesson once more."
Sheikh Juma' al-Dawar, chief of the
major al-Baggara tribe in Iraq, told IPS in Baghdad that "Kaissar is
from the al-Juboor tribes in Gayara -- tribes with morals that
Americans do not understand."
The tribal chief added, "Juboor
tribes and all other tribes are proud of Kaissar and what he did by
killing the American soldiers. Now he is a hero, with a name that will
never be forgotten."
Many Iraqis speak in similar vein. "It is
another example of Iraqi people's unity despite political conspiracies
by the Americans and their tails (collaborators)," Mohammad Nassir, an
independent politician in Baghdad told IPS. "Kaissar is loved by all
Iraqis who pray for his safety and who are ready to donate anything for
his welfare."
Col. Juboory said Kaissar who had at first
accepted collaboration with the U.S. forces "found the truth too bitter
to put up with." The colonel said: "I worked with the Americans because
being an army officer is my job and also because I was convinced they
would help Iraqis. But 11 months was enough for me to realise that
starving to death is more honourable than serving the occupiers. They
were mean in every way."
Independent sources have since told IPS
that Kaissar was captured by a special joint Iraqi-U.S. force, and he
is now being held and tortured at the al-Ghizlany military camp in
Mosul.
Despite a recent decline in the number of occupation
forces being killed, 2007 was the deadliest year of the occupation for
U.S. troops, with 901 killed, according to the U.S. Department of
Defence.
Ali, a correspondent in Baghdad, works in close
collaboration with Dahr Jamail, our U.S.-based specialist writer on
Iraq who has reported extensively from Iraq and the Middle East