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8-Year-Old Girl’s alertness, quick wits thwart terrorist attack

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BAGHDAD (NGB) - On a sultry summer night at a  popular Baghdad  kebab restaurant, a young girl’s keen intelligence helped save  her  family from certain tragedy.

Fatimah, an 8-year-old Iraqi girl, her 3-year-old sister  and  4-year-old brother were waiting for their father outside a local  restaurant  when another car drove up next to theirs. The passenger’s  door opened, hitting  the car. A teenage boy leaned out, and Fatimah  heard something hit the  underside of the car. The teenager, about 16  years old, pulled back into the  car, shut his door and drove away.

 

Inside the restaurant, Daoud, a colonel in the Iraqi  police force,  collected the family’s take-out dinners and walked the 20 feet  back to  his car. As he got in, Fatimah told her father what happened, describing   the teenager’s actions and the sound she heard. Daoud instantly  recalled the  training he’d received from Iraq Training and Advising  Mission Ministry of  Interior Police and Iraqi Police Transition Team.

 

“I took what my  daughter said seriously,” Daoud said. He opened his  door and lay down to check  the undercarriage. “I saw it right away –  directly under the driver’s seat.”

 

“It” was a magnetically adhesive improvised explosive  device identical to the one “my friend had shown me a few days earlier.”

 

Daoud quietly closed the driver’s door, then opened the  passenger’s  door and took Fatimah out. He reached through the rear window and   gently pulled his younger daughter and son out of the car. He placed the   children in the car of the restaurant owner, and called the operation  center to  report the sticky bomb.

 

Less than three minutes later, the bomb exploded, ripping  through  the driver’s seat and tearing jagged holes in the roof. The blast   severely damaged the back seat, where the two youngest children had been   sitting.

The images he shows visitors of the damaged car are  chilling – it is  clear that the colonel would have been killed, and his  children  severely wounded or killed. More than six weeks have passed, and   Daoud’s worry and exhaustion are obvious – he’s lost more than 30 pounds  in the  weeks since. The attack is always on his mind, and he  constantly analyzes the  events leading up to the attack.

 

“I was test driving a new work vehicle … this was the  first time the  children had seen it and they were eager for a ride,” he said.

 

Also known as sticky bombs, MAIEDs have become  increasingly popular  assassination techniques in Iraq because they are cheaper  and easier to  use then emplaced improvised explosive devices.

 

Following the murder of a senior Iraqi police general’s  driver, IPTT  advisors Peter Griffin, Jim Morill and U.S. Army Capt. Daniel   Rousseau, based at Joint Security Station Shield, briefed senior Iraqi  Police  leadership on MAIEDs.

 

For roughly two weeks, there were attempts on some  half-dozen  ministry officials and their personal security details, which  resulted  in the deaths, or injuries, of several individuals..

 

The training included instruction on types, how the bombs  are  commonly used, and how they are attached to vehicles and other objects.  The  ITAM Iraqi Police Transition Team members distributed these  training materials  to Iraq Police Service affairs directors and showed  them captured MAIEDs,  Rousseau said.

 

“During the string of attacks on MoI personnel in August,  we  discussed the sticky bomb threat with MoI personnel every day,” said   Rousseau. Counter-surveillance, and counter-terrorist lesson plans were   developed with IPS operations for distribution to the IPS anti-crime  and PSD  teams.

 

“This training is vital to force protection and the  protection of  key MoI leaders. Rousseau said. “If a leader gets taken out with  a PSD  team, then what type of message does that send to subordinates and   terrorists?”

 

The training was given to the majority of the Senior IPS  Directorate members and their PSD teams – about 100 people.

 

The ITAM Iraqi Police Transition Team stressed Iraqis  practice the  counter IED techniques, not only while on duty, but off duty as  well.

 

“Half the people we speak with don’t live at home due to  terrorist  threats. I have met Senior police officers that have suffered  multiple  attacks on their lives, and many more had friends who have been   targeted over the years,” said Rousseau, who is a member of the Florida  Army  National Guard.

 

Future plans have the IPTT working with the ITAM Police  General  Counter Explosive Directorate to encourage Iraqi-led training. With   GCED advisors the Iraqis have developed an in-service briefing for  senior  officers on force protection and Counter-IED procedures. The  first in-service  briefing is scheduled for mid-October.

The Iraqis have taken the training provided by ITAM GCED  and applied it to counter MAIED protocol.

 

Another part of the counter-surveillance program actively  looks for  criminal surveillance, uses decoys and uses community policing   techniques and hidden cameras.

Knowing your neighborhood and knowing your neighbors is a  vital part of counter-surveillance.

 

“We keep telling the Iraqis they have to take back their   neighborhoods, but I have those same discussions with neighborhoods in  Chicago,  Boston and Orlando,” Rousseau said. “The reality is, these  people know we’re  not going to be here 24 hours a day, and they can  become victims to the very  people they’re reporting – they’re scared.”

 

Adding to the difficulty is the Iraqi mindset – reactive  rather than  proactive – so teaching intelligence-led policing is a challenge.

 

“We’re trying to show them how to take the next step –  the proactive  step. It goes far beyond force protection to how we’re going to   protect our people,” Rousseau said. “It’s showing them how to avert  rather than  react to crises.”

 

The team is working with their Iraqi counter ITAM Police  GCED  advisors to facilitate an Iraq GCED MoI IPS in-service training class.

 

“We would like the Iraqi GCED to take the initiative, and  have the  MoI direct that this type of training be given to all IPS officers,”   Rousseau said.

 

As for Daoud, he couldn’t be prouder of Fatimah adding,  “she saved our lives. She’s my hero.”


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