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Monday, November 20, 2006

An Iraqi City Fights Back Against Al Qaeda

From The Times:


Insurgents on the streets of Ramadi, the city that has been their stronghold for two years. US troops have now moved in to what was a no-go area, with the support of local Iraqi police, whose ranks have swelled from 35 to 1,300 recruits with the backing of tribal chiefs (Reuters)

Fighting back: the city determined not to become al-Qaeda’s capital

A power struggle is taking place in the Sunni triangle, with tribal leaders and coalition forces aligning against a common enemy

A convoy of five US military humvees, each with radios crackling and a machine-gunner poking through its roof, sped The Times to a large compound on the northeastern edge of Ramadi, the capital of Anbar province and most dangerous city in Iraq’s infamous Sunni triangle. The surrounding land had been cleared of trees and brush.A tank stood sentinel beneath the reinforced walls and watchtowers. Inside the heavy steel gates stood a fleet of Iraqi police vehicles bristling with weaponry. It was not your everyday interview.

We halted beside one of the three mini-palaces in the compound, and there on a shaded verandah, dressed in a long black dishdash and white headdress, was the beneficiary of all this protection: Sheikh Abd Sittar Bezea Ftikhan, a Sunni tribal leader on whose unlikely shoulders rest American hopes of reclaiming Ramadi and defeating al-Qaeda in Iraq.

While the world’s attention has been focused on Baghdad’s slide into sectarian warfare, something remarkable has been happening in Ramadi, a city of 400,000 inhabitants that al-Qaeda and its Iraqi allies have controlled since mid-2004 and would like to make the capital of their cherished Islamic caliphate.

A power struggle has erupted: al-Qaeda’s reign of terror is being challenged. Sheikh Sittar and many of his fellow tribal leaders have cast their lot with the once-reviled US military. They are persuading hundreds of their followers to sign up for the previously defunct Iraqi police. American troops are moving into a city that was, until recently, a virtual no-go area. A battle is raging for the allegiance of Ramadi’s battered and terrified citizens and the outcome could have far-reaching consequences.

Ramadi has been the insurgency’s stronghold for the past two years. It is the conduit for weapons and foreign fighters arriving from Syria and Saudi Arabia. To reclaim it would deal a severe blow to the insurgency throughout the Sunni triangle and counter mounting criticism of the war back in America.

Sheikh Sittar and US commanders believe that the tide is turning in their favour. “Most of the people are now convinced that coalition forces are friends, and that the enemy is al-Qaeda,” the 35-year-old Sheikh claimed in his first face-to-face interview with a Western newspaper.

“Al-Qaeda is now on the run,” Colonel Sean MacFarland, commander of the 5,000 US troops in Ramadi, told The Times at his headquarters just outside the city. But the four days The Times spent embedded with US forces in Ramadi last week suggest that al-Qaeda and its Iraqi allies are far from defeated, and that this is a battle with a long way yet to run.


Read the whole thing.

This is just a small fragment of the good news in Iraq, although the MSM in this country ignores it, for the most part. It’s hard for the American public to make an informed decision about the war when they don’t get all the information.

Comments

r108. are you citing socialist newspapers?


Yun Chu said, “You must strictly not express in words what is very significant. Both dragon and snake are killed in one blow.”

Sparkie Arbuckle on November 20, 2006 at 08:43 am

Is that important to you?


Save America; boycott the MSM.

robert108 on November 20, 2006 at 08:52 am

Even a blind squirrel finds a nut every so often.


Save America; boycott the MSM.

robert108 on November 20, 2006 at 08:53 am

so we should only believe the socialists when they say something that jives with your agenda? is that your truth meter?


Yun Chu said, “You must strictly not express in words what is very significant. Both dragon and snake are killed in one blow.”

Sparkie Arbuckle on November 20, 2006 at 08:56 am

Even a socialist can tell the truth; it just doesn’t happen that often.  “Even a blind squirrel finds a nut every so often.” Sorry that went over your head.


Save America; boycott the MSM.

robert108 on November 20, 2006 at 09:01 am

Well, R108, it’s a good article - if only because Sparky has nothing to say about the content of it but really wished it came from a source he could dismiss.


Fileitunder.com

Hoodlumman on November 20, 2006 at 10:01 am
Avatar for Chad

Even a blind squirrel finds a nut every so often.

I thought you were refering to good news in this war.

Chad on November 20, 2006 at 10:05 am
Avatar for HG

Sparkie,

Do you only believe socialists newspapers 90% of the time—when their print only advances your liberal agenda?

HG on November 20, 2006 at 10:06 am

Chad: I was referring to good news in this war.  The “blind squirrel” comment was a reference to the thing about a “socialist newspaper”.  Sorry that went over your head.


Save America; boycott the MSM.

robert108 on November 20, 2006 at 10:29 am
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