Mother Jones – July-August 2019

(Sean Pound) #1

50 MOTHER JONES |^ JULY / AUGUST 2019


BEHIND THE LINES

isis’s leadership was mostly made up
of foreigners who were concerned less
with replacing the Syrian government
than establishing an ever-expanding
Islamic state. Wael met many of them
at the hospital where he worked as an
mri technician. He remembers a Kazakh
with needle tracks on his arms who said
he had been in the mafia back home.
“Ninety percent of these people had no
value where they were from,” Wael says.
Then they came here and suddenly they
had weapons, money, and power.
We drive to Wael’s neighborhood, a
network of dirt roads and modest
houses surrounded by cement walls.
Wael waves to a neighbor sitting on a
parked motorcycle. “He used to be in
isis,” he tells me. “This neighborhood
used to be full of them.”

Toward the end of the battle of Raqqa,
many residents evacuated the neighbor-
hood. Before isis withdrew, it left some
deadly surprises for the “apostates” who
had abandoned it. When some of Wael’s
neighbors came home, they were blown
to pieces after opening booby-trapped
closets, windows, and refrigerators, or
as they stepped on a mined floor tile or
lifted a rigged tea kettle. Some of the
bombs were triggered by lasers. Some
mines even had mines under them so
they’d kill anyone trying to defuse them.
Men taught themselves how to disable
the explosives and made a living clearing
houses for returning residents.
When we pull up to Wael’s place, I try
to slip into his walled-in yard without
anyone noticing. Inside, chunks of con-
crete are scattered under pomegranate
and orange trees. Last year, the coalition
bombed his neighbor’s house; isis had
turned it into a weapons depot. Under
a grape arbor, there is a rectangular hole
the size of a body. “That was my neigh-
bor,” Wael says. Someone buried him
there during the battle. Afterward, his

family returned to dig him up.
Wael makes tea and we sit in the only
surviving bedroom. I am supposed to leave
soon; the sdf requires all journalists to stay
in Kobanî, a Kurdish city two hours away.
But Wael says I should just stay with him.
“Why aren’t you afraid of having a for-
eigner in your house?” I ask him.
“If you aren’t afraid, should I be?” he
replies.
“I’m a little afraid, to be honest.” It’s hard
to believe there are no remnants of isis
here. Just the other day, an ied exploded
on a nearby street. It doesn’t help that
there is still no cell reception in the city.
I have a satellite phone, but I’m hesitant
to turn it on. Journalist Marie Colvin was
assassinated by the Syrian government
after they tracked her satphone. Thanks
to Wael, I’m not completely cut off. He
has a small solar panel that charges a car
battery, which powers a rig that inter cepts
the wifi signal from a nearby internet café.
With this, we can connect to the outside
world for a few hours a day.
He tells me not to worry about isis.
Any former members who are still
around were low-level fighters who
joined more out of a need for a job than
ideological conviction. isis paid com-
petitive salaries and offered extra sup-
port for dependents. The members who
stayed behind turned themselves in a
while ago, Wael says, and the sdf took
their guns away. “But if it makes you feel
better, we can get guns,” he says.
I chuckle nervously. “If you can get
guns, so can they.”
“Look, protection comes from God,”
he says. “Don’t think you are in more
danger than me.”
He leaves and goes to Friday prayer
at a nearby mosque. I ask him not to
tell anyone that an American is staying
with him.
While he is away, someone knocks on
the gate of his compound. I reflexively
look for an escape route. I could climb
onto the caved-in roof of one of the rooms
collapsed by an airstrike. From there,
I could hop over the wall, but I am not
wearing shoes. There is more knocking. I
go into the tiny bathroom until it stops.

a friend of Wael’s takes us to an empty
school whose hallways are packed to
the ceiling with dirt. A couple of boys

take us out to the back of the build-
ing, where there’s a hole in the ground.
They’ve been inside it, they tell us, and
we follow them in.
isis fighters had dug tunnels through-
out the neighborhood so they could hide
from planes. They dug at night and hid
the dirt in large buildings like this to
avoid drawing the attention of American
drones. The work looks professional, done
with power tools and reinforced by metal
supports. “They could walk comfortably
in here!” Wael’s friend says as we walk
through the corridor. “The devils.”
Other tunnels break off to the side.
One ends in the living room of a house.
There is still a subterranean network
beneath Raqqa. When I ask residents
about the tunnels, some repeat rumors
about hearing voices underground or
seeing bearded men emerge from the
tunnels. It’s hard for some people to
believe that something that had ruled
their lives so thoroughly could just be
gone, that it won’t reemerge one day.
Wael says he thought he was going to
be living with isis for the rest of his life.
As we drive through the city, we pass
a monument painted with the words
“No Border, No Nation.” There is an
anarcho- syndicalist flag painted next
to it, the mark of foreign ypg fighters.
Wael asks what it means, and I try to
explain what anarchism is. He looks be-
wildered. “If they were looking for some-
where without government, they came
to the right place,” he says.
Wael pulls over and asks a man if he
knows whether anyone has been in the
tunnel in the Black Stadium. The man
says he’s not sure, but he says he spent
48 days imprisoned there in 2015. It’s the
same place where Samantha Elhassani
told me she was held and tortured. The
man, whom I’ll call Zayn, joins us. He says
isis accused him of killing one of its men.
He was released two and a half years ago,
but “even when you got out, you still felt
like you were in prison. There was no
way to escape them. You couldn’t trust
anyone, not even your own brother.”
The stadium gates are open and no
one is guarding them, so we drive inside.
sdf flags hanging from the floodlights
flutter in the breeze. Under the stands, a
short flight of stairs leads to a long hall-
way. Bullet casings are strewn across the

Someone knocks on the
gate of the compound.
I reflexively look
for an escape route.
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