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Phantom
03-28-2008, 07:24 PM
Iraqi police in Basra shed their uniforms, kept their rifles and switched sides


http://www.uruknet.info/pic.php?f=news-mahdi385_309319a.jpg

March 28, 2008

Abu Iman barely flinched when the Iraqi Government ordered his unit of special police to move against al-Mahdi Army fighters in Basra.

His response, while swift, was not what British and US military trainers who have spent the past five years schooling the Iraqi security forces would have hoped for. He and 15 of his comrades took off their uniforms, kept their government-issued rifles and went over to the other side without a second thought.

Such turncoats are the thread that could unravel the British Army’s policy in southern Iraq. The military hoped that local forces would be able to combat extremists and allow the Army to withdraw gradually from the battle-scarred and untamed oil city that has fallen under the sway of Islamic fundamentalists, oil smugglers and petty tribal warlords. But if the British taught the police to shoot straight, they failed to instil a sense of unwavering loyalty to the State.

"We know the outcome of the fighting in advance because we already defeated the British in the streets of Basra and forced them to withdraw to their base," Abu Iman told The Times.

"If we go back a bit, everyone remembers the fight with the US in Najaf and the damage and defeat we inflicted on them. Do you think the Iraqi Army is better than those armies? We are right and the Government is wrong. [Nouri al] Maliki [the Iraqi Prime Minister] is driving his Government into the ground."

The reason for his apparent switch of sides was simple: the 36-year-old was already a member of the al-Mahdi Army which, like other militias, has massively infiltrated the British-trained police force in the southern oil city. He claimed that hundreds of others from the 16,000-strong force have also defected to the rebels’ ranks.Abu Iman joined the new Iraqi police force after the invasion, joining the Mugawil, a special police unit infamous for brutality, kidnapping and sectarian murders.

"We already heard two weeks ago that we were going to attack the Mahdi Army, so we were ready," he said. "I decided to take off my uniform and join my brothers and friends in the Mahdi Army. All these years, we were like a scream in the face of the dictator and the occupation." He said: "I joined the police because I believed we have to protect Basra and save it with our own hands. You can see we were the first fighters to take on Sadd-am and his regime, the best example being the Shabaniya uprising."

Abu Iman said that the fighting raging in Basra yesterday was intense because the al-Mahdi Army was operating on its own turf. He was confident that the Shia militia would prevail because its cause was just.

"The Iraqi Army is already defeated from within. They come to Basra with fear in their hearts, knowing they have to fight their brothers, the sons of Iraq, because of an order from Bush and his friends in the Iraq Government. For this reason, all of the battles are going in the Mahdi Army’s favour."

Major-General Abdelaziz Moham-med Jassim, the director of operations at the Ministry of Defence, played down reports of defections in the Basra police force. "The problem of one policeman doesn’t make up for the whole of the force," he said.

In recent months Major-General Abdul Jalil Khalaf, Basra’s police chief, has tried to shake up the force and drive out militia infiltrators, who have wrought havoc in the past, often turning police stations into torture cells in which factions settled vendettas and power struggles with murder and abuse. But he only narrowly escaped an assassination attempt yesterday when a suicide car bomb attack in Basra killed three of his policemen. A local tribal leader said the police directorate building was later gutted by fire.

Link (http://www.uruknet.info/?p=m42528&hd=&size=1&l=e)

forsmant
03-28-2008, 07:26 PM
At least they are giving the peace sign. Joke

Phantom
03-28-2008, 07:28 PM
Peace!

http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/IMAGES/FightForBasra/Basra1.jpg

New Governor Of Alaska
03-28-2008, 07:31 PM
There is nothing unusual here.....

These sort of things happen during every war.
Iraqi soldiers understand that eventually American and British occupiers will get out of Iraq, so they (Iraqi collaborators) don't want to be lynched by their countrymen later on.

kirkblitz
03-28-2008, 07:43 PM
well at least we made them into effective fighters

Phantom
03-28-2008, 07:44 PM
Analysis: Iraqis' Basra fight not going well (http://www.cnn.com/2008/POLITICS/03/28/bush.basra/index.html)

A closely held U.S. military intelligence analysis of the fighting in Basra shows that Iraqi security forces control less than a quarter of the city, according to officials in both the United States and Iraq, and Basra's police units are deeply infiltrated by members of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr's Mehdi Army.

"This is going to go on for a while," one U.S. military official said.

Phantom
03-28-2008, 07:50 PM
British warplanes fire on Basra as civil war looms with Shia militia (http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/iraq/article3642863.ece)

The intense fighting means that Des Browne, the Defence Secretary, is likely to tell the Commons next week that British troop levels will remain at about 4,100 for the next few months, abandoning plans to reduce numbers to 2,500 from the spring.

The Mahdi militiamen are holding government troops at bay, and parading US-supplied armoured vehicles they had captured in front of television cameras.

Anti Federalist
03-28-2008, 07:53 PM
Mission Accomplished.

Gadsden Flag
03-29-2008, 03:15 PM
Why did we have to start this war in the first place?

ItsTime
03-29-2008, 03:18 PM
so they could have their revolution?


Why did we have to start this war in the first place?