Mosul’s IED hunter wounded in attack

Fahkir%20with%20Car-bomb%20discovery.JPG

Click to view images of Major Fakhir and IEDs in Mosul. Photos by Bill Murray and Bill Roggio.

MOSUL, IRAQ: More than once, the cell phone rang in Iraqi Army Major Fakhir Ibrahim Mohammad’s hand seconds after he’d pulled wires away from the phone’s battery, disarming the remote-controlled Improvised Explosive Device that insurgents had buried in a street in the hopes of killing Iraqi police, Army or Coalition forces.

“Hello, this is your IED, come save me,” he would usually answer. Insurgents at the other end of the phone line were always speechless; bombs don’t normally talk back. Other times he would add a little taunt before getting hung up upon. “Come save me if you’re man enough to come out of hiding and fight me the open.”

It’s estimated by his superiors that Fahkir personally discovered and defused more than 100 IED and Vehicle Borne explosives in Mosul during a two-year period through June. No one else in the Iraqi Army’s Mosul-based 2nd Division, the Iraqi Army itself, or the Coalition for that matter, has a reputation for discovering and disabling as many planned insurgent attacks as Fakhir.

Because the Iraqi Army is still being reformed, there is no awards system, so the embedded US Army Military Transition Team, with the 8th Brigade is sending an application to the Pentagon for Fahkir to receive an US Army Commendation Medal with “V” Device for Valor.

It is no accident that US personnel working with Iraqi troops in Mosul began calling the Major “Crazy Fakhir” as a term of head-shaking endearment.

“The U.S. Army doesn’t like to give out medals to foreign nationals much,” said Lt. Colonel Eric Price, the commander of the 8th Military Transition Team located at Command Outpost Lion in northern Mosul. “But when you consider everything he’s done for the Coalition, his relentless pursuit of these explosives, it’s pretty incredible.”

The methods the Major used to fight the insurgents were considered both unusual and highly dangerous, both for the Coalition and the Iraqi Army. Typically, when an IED is discovered, an engineering unit is call to the scene, the area cordoned off and the explosive destroyed from a distance using more explosives.

Despite warnings from his superiors, Fakhir wouldn’t pull back from his dangerous behavior, and on June 23, after four or five planned assassination attempts, insurgents in Mosul’s Al Arabiya neighborhood finally got the Major, exploding a second, buried bomb under him as he defused a newly discovered IED. The explosion caused the amputation of his right leg below the knee and put a piece of metal shrapnel as long as a hand into the back of his right shoulder, partially destroying his shoulder joint.

The explosion knocked Fakhir unconscious. He woke up in an ambulance taking him to an emergency hospital in the Kurdish-majority dominated province of Duhok, about 50 miles north of Mosul.

“My leg is not the problem. I’m still waiting for my shoulder to heal,” said Fakhir as he recuperated at his home in Duhok, the capital of the province. “The enemy was very happy with my injury so I want to go back.”

Fakhir’s exploits became so well known that Arabic language media reported his death throughout the day before Kurdish language media reported his survival.

The US Army Commendation award application says Fakhir personally disarmed more than 40 IEDs, one Vehicle-Borne IED and on two occasions saved Coalition lives by directing them away from an IED. In addition, Fakhir was instrumental in the discovery of dozens of weapons caches, some hidden under abandoned cars and sheep pens, confiscating hundreds of RGP rounds, motors and tons of homemade explosives.

“After 2005, he had a great impact on us in terms of motivation,” said Brigadier General Noor Aldeen, commander of Iraq’s 2nd Army Division’s 8th Brigade. “Fakhir was always motivated.”

Fakhir’s activity and that of his brigade tells part of the story of the Iraqi Army’s struggle against Al-Qaeda and other insurgencies during the past three years. Throughout 2006 and 2007, the 2nd Division, which is led mostly by Kurdish officers, fought pitched battles with Sunni-led insurgents. At its peak, about 120 insurgents a month from places like Saudi Arabia, Yemen and Algeria were crossing the nearby border with Syria to participate in suicide bombings and other terrorist activity.

The major came to the attention of his superiors after a complex insurgent raid on his battalion in April 2007, caused all but 12 men to abandon their posts. The attack used two dump-trucks filled with explosives to nearly destroy an Iraqi-manned command outpost in the center of the city, injuring 39 Iraqi soldiers.

Tags:

12 Comments

  • Neo says:

    Now there is a dedicated man!

  • Keith Lambert says:

    Sure wish the MSM would cover more stories like this. This is inspirational, and shows that there’s hope for the Iraqi people. Could use someone like the Major in Afghanistan.

  • C. Jordan says:

    Thank you Bill Murry for bringing us this story.
    Major Fakhir is a Hero, and stories like his are what
    AQI fear most.

  • pjh says:

    That is one serious fellow. Give him the medal.

  • Dave says:

    I sure hope the award gets upgraded.

  • Alex says:

    How is the overall progress in Mosul going? Do we have any estimates on how much has been cleared?

  • anand says:

    Thank you Major Fakhir.

  • David M says:

    The Thunder Run has linked to this post in the blog post From the Front: 07/21/2008 News and Personal dispatches from the front and the home front.

  • Rosario says:

    We should all take some time to write to the secretary of defense, our congressional representatives, and senators to make sure this man gets the commendation he so rightly deserves.

  • @thepointyend says:

    Bill –
    I’d like to thank you and Bill Murray for getting Major Fahkir’s story to the American people. We’ve been here working closely with Brigadier General Noor Aldeen, Major Fahkir, and countless other brave souls who, much like our founding fathers, have mutually pledged to each other their lives, fortunes, and sacred honor. There are still, of course, many things that need to be improved in order for the Iraqi Army to stand alone against Al Qaeda, but courageousness is not one of them.

    Of the many things that need improvement, or in many cases implementation, the lack of a system to recognize the sacrifices of these men and to help them recuperate, are at times the most troubling. Noor Aldeen speaks to Major Fahkir daily and it is clear that he continues to heal at a steady pace. But unfortunately, the future of his recovery – and ultimately his ability to return to the profession he loves – will rest largely on his ability to fund his own treatment and rehabilitation. The Iraqi Army has no system in place to cover the medical expenses of those wounded, and no system in place to provide Major Fahkir the prosthetics and therapy that will be needed to make him whole again. General Noor Aldeen has expressed a willingness to send him to Europe to have a prosthesis made. The challenge is that just to begin that journey will take thousands of dollars, in just the right hands, to secure a visa.

    I have racked my brain trying to think of what other solutions might be out there. Cost at this point is not the deciding factor, other than to the extent that funds are diverted from Major Fahkir’s treatment. My belief is that if I can find a person or organization in the U.S. that wants to take on this case, either for a fee or pro bono, then convincing the State Department to allow him to come, and the military to transport him, would be fairly easy. If anyone knows of organizations or agencies in the U.S. through which I might be able to coordinate to find someone in the States willing to take on this case, I would truly be in your debt.

    If posing such a question violates the rules, Bill, go easy on me. ‘Tis been a tough few weeks.

    Eric Price

  • Rob Mauro says:

    Great story Bill.
    Needless to say, not one word about this man back in the states. Thanks for documenting this stuff so people in the future will know the real story of courage and sacrifice that is going on there.

  • Bryant Tom Edwards says:

    Great report Bill. The US should honor and help this courageous man in his rehabilitation. Bring him back here and petition the VA for medical help? How many American lives and limbs has he saved? Sounds like more than enough to offset the costs of his medical expenses.
    Once recovered he could train other soldiers to defuse these IED’s too.
    While in the US, he could write a book about his life, do some interviews and possibly rebuild his life.
    Stay safe. I will look for your future reports. Oh yeah, your mom clued me in.

Iraq

Islamic state

Syria

Aqap

Al shabaab

Boko Haram

Isis