Their studies near  an end, the Fulbright students fear going back to their violence-plagued country.
August  18, 2007
Ali Fadhil and his Iraqi medical school classmate promised two  years ago to return home when their Fulbright scholarships in the United States  ended.
That was before sectarian violence worsened last year. And it was  before attention turned to Iraqi medical students in the wake of foiled attacks  in Britain allegedly by a group of Muslim medical professionals, including an  Iraqi doctor.
Fadhil is back in Baghdad, but his classmate has joined a  growing number of Iraqi students applying for asylum in the United States. Many  of them fear their chances have worsened since the thwarted attacks in June in  London and Glasgow, Scotland.
The classmate, who asked that his name not  be used because he might be forced to leave the country, just completed a master's  degree in epidemiology at a university in New York.
As violence in Iraq  escalated this year, the student's family fled to Syria and Jordan. His father  told him to apply for asylum. The student asked Fulbright administrators what  to do.
They told him he had to return to Iraq, he said.
"They  say this is a contract; you signed the contract and you have to be consistent  with your objectives -- irrespective of all the changes that have happened in  these two years," he said.
It's unclear how many Fulbright scholars  have returned to Iraq, since the Institute of International Education, which manages  the program for the U.S. State Department, does not track such data. The Iraqi  Embassy in Washington doesn't track the scholars either, an official said.
"The  expectation is that Fulbrighters will return home to share their experiences with  their fellow citizens and to apply their newly gained expertise and skills,"  said Sharon Witherell, a spokeswoman for the institute. She said institute staff  members do not give advice about asylum applications.
"We are contracted  by the Department of State to run the Fulbright program, and there are terms for  the program, so that's all the advice we can give the students. If there are other  avenues like asylum, then they have to seek them elsewhere," she said.
Several  Fulbright scholars said they had applied for asylum or were considering it. Their  plight highlights contradictions within a U.S. foreign policy that invests in  Iraqi professionals yet cannot protect them.
At least one Iraqi Fulbright  student was granted asylum this spring -- another of Fadhil's classmates, from  Baghdad, who just earned a master's degree in information sciences at the University  of Pittsburgh.
Few accepted
In the last fiscal year,  which ended in June, the United States admitted 133 Iraqi refugees. Since the  invasion of Iraq in 2003, the U.S. has accepted 833 Iraqi refugees, according  to the International Rescue Committee.
The State Department has promised  to admit 3,000 Iraqi refugees by September, but many refugee advocates say the  department's lengthy processing time will allow them to admit only 1,500.
Fadhil,  who is finishing a master's degree in journalism at New York University this fall,  said he understood his friend's dilemma. Fadhil's father is a Sunni Muslim, his  mother, a Shiite. His family still lives in Baghdad, and Fadhil, a married father  of two, felt compelled to return to Iraq.
This summer, Fadhil is filming  an HBO documentary about Baghdad's Yarmouk Hospital and another for ESPN about  corruption in government-sponsored sports. His wife and children have been granted  asylum in the United States, but Fadhil plans to return to Baghdad this winter.
"Iraqi  Fulbrights should be allowed to stay in the U.S. if they want to, but the goal  should be to serve their country," he said.
The Fulbright program was  created in 1946 by Arkansas Sen. J. William Fulbright as a way to increase understanding  between the United States and other countries.
Fulbright scholarships cover  tuition, cost of living and travel expenses for up to two years of study by foreign  students at a U.S. college or university. Separate grants allow U.S. students  to study abroad.
Before foreign Fulbright scholars arrive in the U.S. they  sign a contract promising to return to their homes for at least two years before  pursuing permanent U.S. jobs or residency.
That contract was not changed  after the Iraqi Fulbright program was revived in 2004 with a group of about two  dozen students. More than 80 more have followed them.
Meanwhile, the same  institute that runs the program continues to resettle senior Iraqi academics and  their families with money from the federal government, the Ford Foundation, Wall  Street and financier George Soros. 
The program, called the Scholar Rescue  Fund, has helped resettle 100 academics since 2002, and members of Congress want  to set aside millions in Iraq war funding to aid more.
Fulbright scholars  are ineligible for the program, which is designed for established academics, a  program spokesman said.
'Help better Iraq'
The Iraqi  Minister of Higher Education in 2006 urged U.S. officials to block Fulbright scholars  from extending their U.S. student visas.
"We discourage them to stay  in the U.S." because Fulbright scholars are supposed to "help better  Iraq in the future" by returning, said Dr. Hadi al Khalili, cultural attache  at the Iraqi Embassy in Washington.
Khalili, a former Baghdad surgeon who  fled Iraq after he survived a kidnapping in April 2004, said he recognizes the  danger students face when they return, but that was no excuse to stay in the United  States.
"We have many people who come here for treatments or scholarships  and they go back," Khalili said.
Most Fulbright scholars who have returned  to Iraq are from the less violent Kurdish north; even they say Iraqi scholars  should be allowed to stay in the United States.
Bilal Wahab, 27, returned  to the northern city of Irbil in January, after studying transnational crime and  corruption at American University in Washington. He now trains local government  employees.
But Wahab, a Sunni Kurd, said he would not have returned if he  lived farther south, where students are targeted by militias.
"There's  no point in sending back a young man or woman the country has spent a quarter  of a million dollars on, sending them to their deaths," he said.
Several  Iraqi Fulbright scholars who are considering applying for asylum argue that they  should be allowed to stay because they will be targeted at home because of their  time in America.
Uncertainty
Noor Raheel, 27, said her  father, a contractor who works with Americans in Baghdad's fortified Green Zone,  has received repeated death threats. He told Raheel not to return to Iraq this  month after she completes her master's degree in epidemiology at the University  of Alabama in Birmingham.
Many of Raheel's former co-workers at Yarmouk  Hospital have left the country. Her fiance is in the United Arab Emirates.
"I  always ask my family, where are you going to go? They don't know," she said.  "That's an issue for us Fulbrights here. We all discuss that: What are you  going to do after?"
It's become a more pressing question since the  attempted bombings in London and Glasgow, she said, as public opinion sours on  Iraqi refugees and countries tighten visa restrictions. 
Applying for asylum  could permanently separate Raheel from her family. But she said she's increasingly  sure of one thing: "I must not go back to Iraq. I don't think conditions  will get better. I want to go somewhere I can be like any other person, welcomed."
In  New York, Fadhil's classmate is awaiting the outcome of his asylum case. If he's  allowed to stay in the U.S., he will wait for Iraq's security to improve, he said,  then return to share what he's learned.
"It's a debt on our necks,  an ethical debt to help rebuild," he said.
molly.hennessy-fiske@latimes.com