Nir Rosen has been hailed by the New York Review of Books as the reporter who managed to get inside Fallujah “at a time when it was a death trap for Western reporters,” and as one of the few Western reporters able to report the truth from Iraq. Still in his twenties, a freelancer who has written for the New York Times Magazine, the Atlantic Monthly, and Harper’s Magazine, Rosen speaks Iraqi-accented Arabic and has managed to report from some of the country’s most dangerous locales. Even the Weekly Standard notes that “he probably has more sources in the insurgency than any other American reporter.”
Ever since the fall of Saddam’s regime, Rosen has been in and out of Iraq, from north to south, listening to Friday sermons in mosques, breaking bread with dangerous men, interviewing political henchmen, joining Shia pilgrims, and listening to ordinary Iraqis who face American soldiers on raids in the Sunni triangle. He has had to plead for his life at times, and he has received more than one death threat. He has been present when bombs were detonated, and he has sat in meetings of insurgent leaders as they made policy decisions about the territory they controlled. He has heard the double messages of Iraqi leaders—the careful English messages for Westen ears and the unvarnished hostility in Arabic—and he has interviewed politicians and imams and seen how the insurgents and gang leaders create militias, private courts, prisons, security services, and more. In the Belly of the Green Bird is a searing report unlike any other book about the American experience in Iraq.