http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/news/articles/0326war-jordan26.html
Iraqi expatriates return to battle U.S.
Margaret Coker
Cox News Service
Mar. 26, 2003 12:00 AM
AMMAN, Jordan - Clothes stuffed into carry-on suitcases, furry synthetic blankets rolled like sleeping bags, packages of cookies and stout hearts. They are the motley supplies of hundreds of Iraqi expatriates leaving Jordan on buses bound for Iraq.
The men are returning as volunteers to defend their homeland against the U.S.-led invasion.
Jordan, Iraq's neighbor to the west, has served as a haven for at least 300,000 Iraqis who over the past 15 years have fled their country's wars, repression and economic hardships. Now, with a military conflict intensifying, many feel a patriotic urge to go home.
"I called my father last night in Baghdad. He told me come home right away. He said I am needed to fight the aggressor," said Ali Latoush, a 21-year-old tailor who has worked in Jordan for 15 months. "I'm ready to become a martyr to keep the Americans out."
Jordan has kept its borders open for civilians who have wanted to leave Iraq. As of Tuesday, few refugees had appeared on the border.
The stream in the other direction, however, is strong. From March 16 to 24, 4,330 Iraqis have returned to Iraq from Jordan, according to the Jordanian Foreign Ministry.
Bus drivers who have traveled the road from Amman to the border town of Ruashiyeh since the start of war report an increase of traffic, saying about eight buses leave Amman for the Iraqi border each day. The vast majority of their passengers are men of fighting age who have traveled with only a few personal items, they said.
The U.S. military warned Iraqi civilians Tuesday against using roads. A U.S. warplane intending to destroy a bridge dropped a bomb Monday that also hit a bus filled with Syrians evacuating Iraq. The Pentagon expressed regret.
The 50 males aboard a packed Greyhound-size bus Tuesday that left downtown Amman, the fifth departure of the day, expressed more bravado than fear.
Several men interviewed in the drizzling rain as they waited for the driver to load their blankets and small bags said they are experienced soldiers and want to take up guns against U.S. troops.
"Whether we are Shiites or Sunnis, we are prepared to fight. The invaders made a big miscalculation if they thought otherwise," said Hussein Sharif, an accountant who said his older brother is fighting the allied forces at An Nasiriyah.
In the Iraqi community in Jordan, pressure to return and fight is strong, with honor and dignity at stake.
"How can I be happy when our country is under bombardment?" asked Zeid Ismail, 26. "If we (my family) are going to die, we are going to die together. If we are going to be saved, then I am going to be needed to help protect them. We don't want America or Britain to control our lives."