On the trail of stolen Iraqi art
By Dan Vergano, USA TODAY
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If truth is war's first casualty, the Iraq Museum in
Baghdad has the scars to prove it.
History destroyed: Iraqi Museum deputy director Muhsin Hasan
sits in dismay on April 13, 2003, in Baghdad, surrounded by ruined
artifacts.
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Getty Images
More than two years after the museum, home to the remains
of mankind's most ancient cities, was pillaged by an army of
looters, thousands of the stolen objects have yet to be recovered.
And it appears that civilian and military experts may never
agree on exactly what happened at one of the world's most prized
museums or on who should have protected these treasures.
Matthew Bogdanos, a Marine Reserve colonel and the U.S. military's
lead investigator into the thefts, details the assault on the
museum and its aftermath in his new book, Thieves of Baghdad
(Bloomsbury, $29.95), written with thriller author William Patrick.
The book, released last week, is the civilian world's most
detailed look at how the thefts unfolded and the behind-the-scenes
efforts to recover the priceless antiquities.
The classics scholar-turned-attorney who has just returned
to civilian life also describes the events in a report published
in the current American Journal of Archaeology
In the book, Bogdanos, 48, tells the more personal story of
the path he took to Baghdad from his family's lower Manhattan
apartment after the World Trade Center fell on Sept. 11, 2001.
A prosecutor in the Manhattan District Attorney's office - nicknamed
"Pit Bull" because of his tenacity - he was best known
for prosecuting Sean "Diddy" Combs on weapons charges
stemming from a nightclub shooting. Combs was acquitted in March
2001.
All changed with 9/11. The four-year journey that followed
took Bogdanos into active duty, through a stint tracking down
Taliban records in Afghanistan and finally to his role as leader
of the team investigating the museum thefts.
"We didn't have any expectations when we arrived at the
museum. We just knew there was a problem to be fixed," he
says.
Cradle of civilization
Iraq is one vast archaeological site, resting on the remains
of some of the earliest human civilizations, says archaeologist
Elizabeth Stone of Stony Brook University in New York. Empire-ruling
cities such as Ur, Nineveh and Babylon lie beneath its soil.
The museum holds the fruits of a century of archaeological
investigation into the uniquely preserved ancient cultures, captured
in cuneiform tablets and seals, along with statuary, pottery
and city walls, Stone says.
Exploring these civilizations only had scratched the surface
when the war opened the door to thieves at the museum and at
archaeological sites across the country, she says.
Following is Bogdanos' account of what happened, as set forth
in his journal report and book:
U.S.-led forces entered Baghdad on April 5, 2003. At the museum,
top officials, including research director Donny George Youkahanna,
stayed until April 8, when Iraqi soldiers moved onto the grounds.
Lost and found
Looting at the Iraq Museum after the fall of Baghdad in April
2003 led to a "Who"s Who" list of missing artifacts.
Many are still missing, but there have been some notable recoveries.
Recovered
Ninhursag bull: Copper relief of a bull from Ninhursag
temple at al-Ubaid from 2500 B.C., returned in amnesty program.
Assyrian headboard: A 900 B.C. ivory headboard; nabbed
by Jordanian customs officials
Bassetki statue: Seated nude male figure dating to
2300 B.C. from Akkadian empire; found in grease pit.
Sacred Vase of Warka: Dating back to Sumeria from 3200
B.C.; returned in the trunk of a car by three Iraqis.
Mask of Warka: The "Sumerian Mona Lisa" from
3100 B.C.; nabbed by Iraqi and U.S. investigators.
Still missing
Lagash statue: Headless inscribed limestone statue
of Eanatum, ruler of Lagash, dating to 2450 B.C.
Nimrud lioness: Ivory piece depicting a lioness and
Nubian from the city of Nimrud from about 800 B.C.
Cuneiform bricks: Nine royal inscription bricks missing
from Sumerian, Akkadian and Babylonian empires.
Hatra heads: Five statue heads from a fortified city
that flourished in the first century A.D.
Hatrene temple statue head: Sawed from statue by thieves,
may depict the wife of Hercules from a temple in Hatra.
According to the dictates of the Hague Convention, it is a
war crime to use a cultural site as a fighting position. There
was evidence, however, that forces loyal to Saddam Hussein had
long been preparing to use the museum, located across the street
from an Iraqi Special Republican Guard compound and commanding
a view of a Tigris bridge, as a stronghold. The 11-acre compound
had extensive sandbagged pits, walls and bunkers
The fighters fled as Baghdad fell on April 11, leaving behind
uniforms, weapons, Baath Party cards and a bloodstained tank-shell
hole next to a sniper position on the second floor of the Children's
Museum.
Then 300 to 400 looters and thieves moved in, until they were
chased away by returning museum workers. The sight that greeted
the staff was grim:
· In the public galleries, 40 prominent objects were
stolen by organized thieves. Only 15 have been recovered, including
the 5,000-year-old limestone Sacred Vase of Warka, among the
world's oldest carved-stone ritual vessels.
· Crowds looted two storage rooms, which were open
with no signs of forced entry. The staff estimates 3,138 jars,
pottery and other pieces were stolen. Many were returned by repentant
looters; 101 items are still missing.
· In the basement, evidence "strongly suggests"
an inside job. Thieves broke through a hidden back entrance whose
metal door showed no signs of forced entry. Incredibly, the theft
of the museum's most valuable coins and cylinder seals, whose
impressions served as a signature on ancient cuneiform tablets,
was botched. The thieves lost a set of keys to the container
lockers in the choking darkness of the torch-lit basement.
Still, 5,144 cylinder seals, more than one-third of the museum's
collection, and 5,542 decorative pins, beads, pendants and necklaces
were stolen. About 2,300 of these objects have been recovered,
1,395 of which were in customs seizures outside Iraq.
In all, more than 13,864 objects were stolen, and at least
5,359 were recovered, say investigators.
The detective work
Moving into the museum's library on April 21, Bogdanos' team
got to work. Investigating the basement robbery required a military
crime scene team's help, a "CSI: Baghdad" moment that
led museum director Nawala al-Mutwalli to shriek with joy when
they discovered the thieves had missed more than 100,000 gold
and silver coins.
The investigators began an amnesty program for returned objects,
recorded losses, interviewed witnesses and chatted up informants
over tea. A friendship with Youkahanna and al-Mutwalli blossomed,
and the team made spectacular recoveries, most notably securing
the Treasure of Nimrud.
The treasure - more than 1,000 pieces of golden jewelry from
800 B.C. uncovered in Assyrian royal tombs - had been stashed
in a vault in Baghdad's Central Bank in 1990 before the Gulf
War. U.S. forces discovered that the bank was flooded below ground
level.
Bogdanos gave the National Geographic Channel permission to
pump out the vault, which took three weeks. The treasure was
unharmed, although the remains of a would-be looter were a few
feet away from a vault door, apparently killed by the ricochet
of a rocket-propelled grenade fired at the door.
"I don't see this as the final word on the Iraq museum,"
says Columbia University archaeologist Zainab Bahrani, who believes
a final analysis will find that more than 20,000 items were stolen.
"The report is the perspective of Col. Bogdanos, who
is a representative of the U.S. military, and that's important
to consider," Bahrani adds, because of the negative public
reaction to the looting and, by extension, to the war itself.
That reaction was triggered by early accounts that 170,000
items had been looted, reported in newspapers worldwide, including
USA TODAY. A former museum employee supplied the excessively
high number that "adversely impacted our investigation on
a daily basis," Bogdanos' report says.
"Frankly, those who have argued that U.S. forces should
have done more to protect the museum present a compelling argument,"
he acknowledges.
"The more pointed question, however, is why no unit before
the battle had been given the specific mission of protecting
the museum," Bogdanos says in the journal.
Could take decades
The answer in part is that the military did not expect that
Iraqis would see the museum as part of the Saddam regime, he
says. "Thus, despite the prior warnings, planners simply
did not believe that the museum ... would be looted."
In World War II, by contrast, the U.S. Military's Monuments,
Fine Arts and Archives section worked with art historians to
preserve cultural treasures.
Archaeologists agree it will take decades to recover all the
stolen treasures, and some of them may never be seen again.
Experts led by Bahrani and colleagues claimed a victory this
month when the Iraqi constitution was amended to include protections
for antiquities.
Bogdanos plans to start a task force to explore blocking trade
in stolen Iraqi antiquities when he returns to the Manhattan
District Attorney's office in December. "The cash crop now
in Iraq is antiquities," he says. "That stolen items
are funding the insurgency is clear, nor should it surprise anyone."
Says Bahrani: "It's a global market. I don't think it's
going to be easy." But she believes a task force is needed.
"It is all of our history, not just Iraqis but everyone.
So that is the tragedy."
Says Bogdanos: "I want to take my children to the Iraq
Museum someday and not have them look at empty pedestals."
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