Motorcyclist USA — September-October 2017

(Chris Devlin) #1
motorcyclistonline.com | 75

by joking with the soldiers in camouflage uniforms who can keep our newly acquired motorcycle
off the road and threaten our dream.
I tell them through our translator and driver, Sangar, that they better have beds for us in the
small, shabby trailers at the checkpoint along the road connecting Iraq’s war-ravaged city of
Mosul and the relatively gleaming, prosperous Erbil just 35 miles away.
The soldiers laugh, though my comedic stylings aren’t changing their minds.
“How about this,” I say, prefacing a Hail Mary proposal, “I’ll arm wrestle you all. If I beat you
guys, you let us go.” Feats of strengths are popular among soldiers in Iraq, so I figure offering one
as a condition for letting us pass is just crazy enough to work.
They chuckle, shake their heads, and tell me they’ll get the biggest guy they have to take me on.
So with the sun casting its golden, evening light over northern Iraq, rendering this troubled
land breathtaking in its beauty, there sits on a dusty patch the bike we’d just procured from one of
the most dangerous places on earth, going nowhere.
And while Sangar tries to figure out how we’re going to overcome this bureaucratic roadblock,
I plop down on a nearby mound of dirt to watch the sky grow darker as the dream gets dimmer.
We’ve been cultivating this “Mission to Mosul” motorcycle caper for months, ever since my
friend and photographer, Nish Nalbandian, first noticed the particularly unique brand of bike on
the streets of the besieged city.
Nish has been chronicling the fighting in Mosul for almost a year, and, as a fellow moto enthu-
siast, he was practically giddy at the site of a Russian-made Ural, replete with trademark sidecar.
He and I joined forces a handful of times to report on the fighting in Mosul between Iraqi
forces alongside Kurdish troops and Sunni militias against the dreaded Islamic State, which
captured Iraq’s second-largest city in 2014 and subjugated its residents to countless horrors.
It’s been a difficult and dangerous story to cover. The last time Nish and I were in Mosul earlier
this year we linked up with the elite Iraqi Special Operations Forces as they made their big push
into the western half of the city after recapturing the east.
The fighting was fierce; casualties mounted on both sides. The bodies of soldiers, civilians, and
Islamic State fighters were stacking up in Mosul. Extremists killed in the fighting were left in the
streets, some with execution-style bullet wounds in their heads.

My first instinct is


to keep the mood light


MCY1017_MOSUL.indd 75 7/25/17 2:00 PM

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