US hands back security of Anbar province to the Iraqis

Little-Acorn

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After years of fighting, with the lowest casualty rate of any major conflict the US has fought in our history, the war in Iraq is going well. More and more of the country is being turned back over to the Iraqis as their military increases it capability, bringing nearer the date when the U.S. can start bringing its troops home.

Count on local leftists to ignore developments like this, as studiously as possible. And/or, once the country is mostly peaceful and the troops finally start going home, get ready to hear "It's about time Geroge W. Bush decided we were right and started ending the war as we have demanded!"

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http://iht.com/articles/2008/09/01/mideast/iraq.php

U.S. hands back security of Anbar Province

by Dexter Filkins
Published: September 1, 2008

RAMADI, Iraq: Two years ago, Anbar Province was the most lethal place for American forces in Iraq. A U.S. marine or soldier died in the province nearly every day, and the provincial capital, Ramadi, was a moonscape of rubble and ruins. Islamic extremists controlled large pieces of territory, with some so ferocious in their views that they did not even allow the baking of bread.

On Monday, U.S. commanders formally returned responsibility for keeping order in Anbar Province, once the heartland of the Sunni insurgency, to the Iraqi Army and police. The ceremony, including a parade on a freshly paved street, capped one of the most significant turnabouts in the country since the war began five and a half years ago.

Over the past two years, the number of insurgent attacks against Iraqis and Americans has dropped by more than 90 percent. Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia has been severely degraded, if not crushed altogether, in large part because many local Sunnis, including former insurgents, have taken up arms against it.

Since February, as the security situation improved, U.S. commanders have cut the number of marines and soldiers operating in the province by 40 percent.

The transfer of authority codified a situation that Iraqi and American officers say has been in effect since April: The Iraqi Army and police operate independently and retain primary responsibility for battling the insurgency and crime in Anbar. The United States, which had long done the bulk of the fighting, has stepped into a backup role, going into the streets only when accompanied by Iraqi forces.

But the dynamic that has brought such calm to Anbar, welcome as it is, seems fragile. Many former insurgents now man the local police forces, or remain on the U.S. payroll as loosely supervised gunmen working for the so-called Sunni Awakening Councils.

But with most of the Sunni population having abstained from voting in 2005, many are now claiming that the present arrangement leaves them unrepresented. Local Sunni leaders have warned that provincial elections must go forward if violence is to be averted.

Still, as the parade marched along Ramadi's Main Street on Monday, the signs were mostly good. The ceremony was a primarily Iraqi affair, with the U.S. marines wearing neither helmets nor body armor, nor carrying guns. The festive scene became an occasion for celebration by Iraqis and Americans, who at several moments wondered aloud in the sweltering heat how things had gone from so grim to so much better, so fast.

"Not in our wildest dreams could we have imagined this," said Mowaffak al-Rubaie, the Iraqi national security adviser, who flew in from Baghdad. "Two or three years ago, had we suggested that the Iraqis could take responsibility, we would have been ridiculed, we would have been laughed at. This was the cradle of the Sunni insurgency."

Indeed it was. Anbar Province became the most intractable region after the toppling of Saddam Hussein in April 2003. More than 1,000 American marines and soldiers have died in the province, a quarter of the total U.S. toll.

Anbar's second city, Falluja, was the scene of the biggest battle of the war, in which nearly 100 Americans died and more than 500 were wounded.

Bordering on three countries, Anbar was also considered the primary transit point for foreigners entering Iraq.

The fighting devastated much of Anbar. Falluja, a city of 250,000, was razed, and large parts of Ramadi, a city of 500,000, were reduced to ruins.

By the summer of 2006, insurgents had tried to kill Anbar's governor, Mamoon Sami al-Rashid, 29 times. They failed with Rashid, but that was an exception. Rashid's immediate predecessor, Raja Nawaf, was kidnapped and murdered. His deputy, Talib al-Dulaimi, was shot and killed. The chairman of the Anbar provincial council was also murdered. Rashid's personal secretary was beheaded and most of his ministers went into hiding.

What finally broke the stalemate, according to former insurgents and local leaders, was a local revolt against Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, the radical insurgent group believed to be led primarily by foreigners. As the group began to expand its goals beyond killing Americans to include sectarian assassinations and imposing a fundamentalist Islam, local tribal leaders struck back and reached out for help to U.S. forces. The "Sunni Awakening" was born, and it soon spread across the Sunni areas of Iraq.
 
Well duhh, based on facts we never should have been there in the first place.
This war was based on either lies or stupid assumptions.

But really it was lies since it is and always has been about oil.
 
Well duhh, based on facts we never should have been there in the first place.
This war was based on either lies or stupid assumptions.

But really it was lies since it is and always has been about oil.

Wow, good news coming out of Iraq and all he has to say is "BUSH LIED" and "WAR FOR OIL"... I thought you guys wanted the troops to come home? Isn't this a step in that direction. Please dont admit that we are actually making any progress.

The war for oil argument still amazes me, I have not seen any credible evidence to support that anybody is actually benefiting from the oil in that country, other than the Iraqis.
 
Wow, good news coming out of Iraq and all he has to say is "BUSH LIED" and "WAR FOR OIL"... I thought you guys wanted the troops to come home? Isn't this a step in that direction. Please dont admit that we are actually making any progress.

The war for oil argument still amazes me, I have not seen any credible evidence to support that anybody is actually benefiting from the oil in that country, other than the Iraqis.

I never thought it was about oil. But I also never thought we should have been there. The evidence of serious WMDs was suspect in the beginning.
 
It always was about securing a supply of oil for Americas future.
Without a large supply of oil we go down the tubes.

The oil concept just could not be sold to the US people who still think of ourselves as the bastion of humanity and democracy for the world.

As times get harder more people will say we "deserve" the middle east oil, but not yet.

And yes Wilton, I want to see the troops to come home, but I never wanted them to go in the first place. Unlike the majority of sheeple in the USA.
 
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Getting our soldiers home would be a definite step forward.
 
It always was about securing a supply of oil for Americas future.
Without a large supply of oil we go down the tubes.

The oil concept just could not be sold to the US people who still think of ourselves as the bastion of humanity and democracy for the world.


And yes Wilton, I want to see the troops to come home, but I never wanted them to go in the first place. Unlike the majority of sheeple in the USA.


We don't control that oil, Iraq does, and to a larger extent OPEC.
 
Sorry, I would just mess up on a detail or two, and get picked on for it.
The major oil companies are getting oil contracts for Iraqs oil is what it boils down to. And I don't think OPEC has any say in Iraq's oil since we invaded iraq.
 
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