[NYTr] Having Lost Its War, US Tries to Buy Off the Resistance
All the News That Doesn't Fit
nytr at blythe-systems.com
Fri Aug 24 20:25:31 EDT 2007
Reuters via Info Clearing House - Aug 22, 2007
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article18233.htm
At Iraq's front line, U.S. puts ex-foes on payroll
By Peter Graff
08/22/07 JURF AS-SAKHR, Iraq (Reuters) - Under a tree by a battlefield
road in Iraq's "Triangle of Death," Lieutenant- Colonel Robert
Balcavage meets his new recruits.
The men are Iraqi Sunni Arabs who are about to join the U.S. military's
payroll as a local militia. They want guns.
"I am not giving out guns and ammo," the U.S. commander says. The men
listen carefully as the interpreter translates.
"I've been shot at up here enough times to know that there's plenty of
guns and ammo. Me personally. Some of you guys have probably taken some
pretty good shots at me."
Slowly but deliberately, U.S. forces are enlisting groups of armed men
-- many probably former insurgents -- and paying cash, a strategy they
say has dramatically reduced violence in some of Iraq's most dangerous
areas in just weeks.
It is a rare piece of good news in four years of war, and successes
like this are likely to play a prominent part when U.S. commander
General David Petraeus makes an eagerly anticipated report to congress
in mid-September.
"People say: 'But you're paying the enemy'. I say: 'You got a better
idea?'," says Balcavage. "It's a lot easier to recruit them than to
detain or kill them."
But U.S. forces also say the militia -- dubbed the Concerned Citizens
Programme, or CCP, -- is only a temporary measure. If the comparative
peace is to hold, the mainly Shi'ite government must offer the fighters
real jobs in its army and police force.
TRIANGLE OF DEATH
U.S. forces have launched an offensive against Sunni Arab militants and
Shi'ite militias following a build-up of U.S. troops to 160,000 aimed
at quelling sectarian violence.
They have partially succeeded, although hundreds of people are still
being killed every month.
Balcavage's territory in the Euphrates River valley south of Baghdad
covers the sectarian fault line dividing Sunni Arab western Iraq from
the Shi'ite south.
The lush date-palm groves in the irrigated river valley were a
heartland of the Sunni Arab insurgency, while the steaming towns of
Iskandariya and Musayyib became a cauldron of sectarian violence and
power base of Shi'ite militia.
Since last October, 23 members of Balcavage's battalion of 800
paratroopers have been killed in the area U.S. troops call the
"Triangle of Death."
But the unit's charts show sudden, unexpected improvements in security
in the past few weeks. At one point the battalion was hitting 16
roadside bombs a day but that fell to four last week. Mortar barrages,
once constant, have almost ceased.
The CCP effort is focused on the road leading from the town centre
north. A potentially strategic artery linking the region to Baghdad and
to the Euphrates valley of Anbar province to the west, it has been
sealed off for nearly a year.
The last time Balcavage's troops went up this road in January, they hit
six roadside bombs, had three armored Humvees destroyed and had to
fight their way out.
But as they started moving up the road this week, they were met by a
local chieftain, Sheikh Sabah al-Janabi, in white robes with a shiny,
chrome-plated pistol holstered at his waist.
"We are glad to see you," the sheikh told the U.S. colonel, greeting
him warmly with a broad smile. "Our men will guard the road. If we
receive any shots, please let us answer, not you. We give you our word
as we promised."
ROOTS OF INSURGENCY
The valley's inhabitants are from the Janabi tribe, a Sunni Arab group
once favored by Saddam Hussein, who recruited and stationed his feared
Medina Division of shock troops here to protect the capital from
restive Shi'ites to the south.
When U.S. occupation authorities dissolved the Iraqi army in 2003, many
Janabi returned home -- armed, jobless, angry and fearful, and joined
the insurgency.
But in recent weeks, Janabi leaders have approached the Americans
offering to make peace. Balcavage's troops took fingerprint and retina
data of nearly 1,000 men in the area.
Each militia member will earn $370 a month, about 70 percent of the
salary of an Iraqi policeman or soldier. Contracts are signed with
sheikhs in villages, and each is given authority to hire 150-200 men.
A chart Balcavage first drew on a napkin and then added to his regular
briefing shows the scheme ending by early 2008 with militiamen being
incorporated into the Iraqi army and police.
He stopped to talk to some of the militia as his column of U.S.
infantry and mainly Shi'ite Iraqi soldiers made their way into what had
been enemy territory. He took the names of two Janabi men who had been
officers before the U.S. invasion and promised to try to secure them
jobs in the army or police.
"You should have done this a long time ago," said Abdul Razzaq Homayid,
in a frayed robe and sandals, with a beat-up AK-47 on a knotted cord
over his shoulder.
"Your invasion of Iraq brought hardship. Everything was destroyed and
we had no salaries. All of these men are unemployed."
He asks about opening the town centre, rebuilding the health clinic,
fixing schools.
The colonel nods: "We'll get it done. We've got to keep talking and not
fighting."
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