Iraq Has Becom e A Land Of Warlords
Conn Hallinon
But according to the Sunday Times, many of these Sunnis were formerly al-Qaeda members, and the current "truce" with the Americans is little more than a tactical maneuver to buy time. "Of course the coming war is with the [Shi'ite] militias," Baghdad Brigade intelligence officer Abu Omar told the Times. "God willing, we will defeat them and get rid of them just as we did with al-Qaeda." The flashpoint may come if the Shi'ite-Kurdish government of Prime Minster Nouri al-Maliki drags its feet in integrating the Sunni militias into the security forces. "If the government continues to reject them [the Sunni militias]," says Baghdad Brigade commander Abu Maroff in the Sunday Times, "let it be clear this brigade will eventually take its revenge." Baghdad is calmer because the city has gone from one of mostly mixed neighborhoods to a city of rigid ethnic enclaves guarded by sectarian militias. While this has reduced the level of violence in the short run, it hardly bodes well for the future. In short, the "surge" has very little to do with the reduction of violence in Baghdad and virtually nothing to do with the relative peace in Western Iraq. Both are the quiet that follows in the wake of ethnic cleansing.
By Conn Hallinon
But according to the Sunday Times, many of these Sunnis were formerly al-Qaeda members, and the current "truce" with the Americans is little more than a tactical maneuver to buy time. "Of course the coming war is with the [Shi'ite] militias," Baghdad Brigade intelligence officer Abu Omar told the Times. "God willing, we will defeat them and get rid of them just as we did with al-Qaeda." The flashpoint may come if the Shi'ite-Kurdish government of Prime Minster Nouri al-Maliki drags its feet in integrating the Sunni militias into the security forces. "If the government continues to reject them [the Sunni militias]," says Baghdad Brigade commander Abu Maroff in the Sunday Times, "let it be clear this brigade will eventually take its revenge." Baghdad is calmer because the city has gone from one of mostly mixed neighborhoods to a city of rigid ethnic enclaves guarded by sectarian militias. While this has reduced the level of violence in the short run, it hardly bodes well for the future. In short, the "surge" has very little to do with the reduction of violence in Baghdad and virtually nothing to do with the relative peace in Western Iraq. Both are the quiet that follows in the wake of ethnic cleansing.
By Conn Hallinon