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Iraq
Shiites Push for British Troops to Leave
2006-10-14
Many Shiites in Iraq City Say They Want British Soldiers to Leave Despite Persistent Killings
And with that subheadline, we see that AP / ABC are just too stupid to be allowed out without a chaperone.
BASRA, Iraq Oct 13, 2006 (AP)— Many Shiites in this southern port city say they want British troops to leave, though the region is still bloodied by a persistent grind of killings, including Sunni insurgent bombings and Shiite-on-Shiite slayings amid a competition for political control.

Several prominent Basra leaders on Friday agreed with an assessment by Britain's army chief that the British presence only worsens the violence and the soldiers should withdraw soon. Gen. Richard Dannatt backpedaled Friday from the comments he made in an interview a day earlier, saying he meant troops should leave within years, but the statements caused a political storm in Britain.

In Basra, Shiites insist the British presence only provides a target for attackers seeking to end the "occupation" and some said the troops are doing nothing to rein in party-backed Shiite militias that have risen to prominence.

"To tell the truth, (the British) have caused the chaos and the security decline in southern Iraq, especially Basra, by their leniency with the militias and their parties," said Ghali Nijm, head of the Shiite Wifaq party in Basra.

Added Aqil Talib, a member of the Basra provincial council from the Shiite Fadila party: "The British presence is no longer desired, as is that of the Americans and others, even though the British are kinder than the Americans."

It's a change in attitude from early in the Iraqi conflict, when Shiites across the country welcomed U.S.-led coalition troops that toppled Saddam Hussein, who had persecuted the Shiite majority. British troops in Basra were even praised for taking a gentler approach to policing the region than American troops further north, who were seen as heavy-handed.

But with the violence wearing on, anti-U.S. sentiment has been growing among Shiites across Iraq, and with it the feeling that international troops should go. The militia of Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, which deeply opposes the U.S.-British presence, has been growing in power.

The central government in Baghdad underlined on Friday that it wants U.S. and British troops to remain, saying they are needed to contain the violence and train Iraqi forces.

In early October, British and Iraqi forces began a neighborhood-by-neighborhood sweep of Basra code-named "Operation Sinbad" similar to one launched in August by U.S. troops in Baghdad. The sweep has gone through three districts including two with a heavy militia presence clearing out weapons, arresting about 100 people and launching reconstruction projects.

"The presence of these forces is necessary so that they can participate in establishing stability in Iraq," government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said.

The predominantly Shiite south has long been less violent than Baghdad and the Sunni regions of central and western Iraq, where the anti-U.S. insurgency has been based.

But there has still been steady bloodshed, and it has increased this year with the swelling of sectarian killings across the country. Basra province home to about 3 million people, where most of the 7,000 British troops are based sees a constant toll of bombings, shootings and kidnappings.

They come in part from Sunni insurgent attacks against British troops and Iraqi civilians with bombings, mortars and rocket fire. But increasingly the area has seen killings between Shiites as party-backed militias vie for influence.

On Thursday, a prominent al-Sadr cleric, Sheik Radhi al-Assadi, was gunned down near his home. His slaying came days after another cleric also named Radhi al-Assadi, a distant relative, but connected to the rival Badr Brigade militia was killed by gunmen.

Shiite militias also intimidate residents, enforcing strict Islamic laws in some districts, such as banning haircuts seen as Western, forcing women to wear the veil and closing video and music shops.

The desire to see foreign troops leave is also fueled in part by Shiite insistence they can run their own affairs.

"The British forces entered Iraq and liberated it from the Saddam regime," said one Basra resident, Essam Mohammed. "Since they have fully accomplished their mission, they should now leave Iraq Â… because they are creating some obstacles and problems for the Iraqi people."
Posted by:.com

#1  Divide and conquer?

I understand that at one point a bunch of elders in some major city complained that marines should not use snipers because they were so "indiscriminate" or some such crap like that. Hell, why not ask. The worst that can happen is that the marines say "No"!
Posted by: gorb   2006-10-14 05:42  

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