Iraq |
The unholy alliance |
2015-05-06 |
[ARABNEWS] The Iraqis are gearing up for another war against the self-proclaimed Islamic State ...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... (IS), the second to occur during the rule of Prime Minister Haidar Al-Abadi after he won the battle of Tikrit. Several army forces, security forces and Shiite popular mobilization militias, as well as some Sunni tribes, are gathering to head to Anbar province. There's more to the battle than Anbar and the battle is not limited to the IS, as Abadi's real rival in Baghdad is former Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki who is launching a widely-inciting political and media campaign against him. Abadi seems confused and is sometimes adopting contradictory stances due to apparent pressures exerted on him The Iraqi prime minister stands between two fierce rivals and is in big trouble. If he loses the war in Anbar, his political rivals will pursue him in Baghdad and the IS will expand its influence. Victory will not be easy to achieve with the protests and threats made by his rivals in Baghdad as it requires depending on the Sunni tribes who are most capable of defending their areas. Abadi has retreated from arming the Sunni tribes and has only provided them with simple weapons due to pressures by Lion of Islam Shiite parties. To resolve the problem, the Americans volunteered to perform the task of arming the Anbar tribes who oppose the IS but after his rivals criticized him, Abadi had to object to that and the American government backed down. All this fighting will firstly be at the expense of the Iraqis and the Iraqi state and will be in the interest of the IS and Iran's proxies. Anbar's battle is part of a war that may prolong as the terrorist organization resides in several areas, such as the city of djinn-infested Mosul ... the home of a particularly ferocious and hairy djinn... which is still occupied by the IS and which will be the most difficult to liberate as the Iraqi government may have to seek the help of countries like the US and perhaps ...the only place on the face of the earth that misses the Ottoman Empire.... and Iran to restore it. Even after Mosul is liberated, there are several areas, which will take a long time to liberate. Therefore, the prime minister must think beyond Anbar and must realize that he will lose his battle with political rivals if he loses his war against the IS and that he will emerge victorious over them if triumphs over the terrorist organization. However it's impossible to emerge victorious if he bases his decisions on pleasing sectarian parties and his political rivals, like Al-Maliki. Rejecting to arm the Sunni tribes who are fighting the IS and objecting to America supplying them with arms will only help the murderous Moslems spread and will drive thousands of the Anbar's sons to join the organization as long as they have no other choice. Let's recall the tragedy of the 100,000 people who were displaced from Ramadi as they were forced to leave their city out of fear of the IS and the anticipated fighting, especially after events in Tikrit and the destruction that followed. The neighboring governorates refused to provide refuge for those displaced. They were then left out in the open as Abadi's rivals escalated the situation after Shiite forces of Evil claimed that there were holy warriors living among the displaced. The aim of all this partisan and sectarian escalation is to topple Abadi and push him to make wrong decisions. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Iranian official hails positive Saudi talks |
2014-08-27 |
[ARABNEWS] Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al-Faisal held positive and constructive talks on Tuesday with Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Amir Abdollahian. The two sides discussed major regional developments and agreed to join forces in the fight against terrorist groups that have threatened the region's security and stability. "The meeting with Prince Saud took place in a very positive and constructive atmosphere," said Abdollahian. It was the first visit by a senior Iranian official to the Kingdom since the election of President Hassan Rouhani last summer. Riza Hamid Dahqani, Iran's representative at the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), said that the two sides discussed bilateral relations, regional developments and "the challenges facing the region such, as extremism and Israel's savage aggression" on the Gazoo Strip. They discussed the situation "in Iraq and means to confront extremism and terrorism" in particular, said Dahqani, referring to Islamic State (IS) myrmidons. Mohammed Tayeb, director-general of the Foreign Ministry's branch office in the Makkah region and the Kingdom's representative to the OIC, and Iranian Ambassador Hussein Sadeghi attended the talks, which took place in Jeddah. Soddy Arabia ...a kingdom taking up the bulk of the Arabian peninsula. Its primary economic activity involves exporting oil and soaking Islamic rubes on the annual hajj pilgrimage. The country supports a large number of princes in whatcha might call princely splendor. When the oil runs out the rest of the world is going to kick sand in the Soddy national face... and Iran have welcomed the departure of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki this month. |
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Iraq |
Iraq air force to back Kurds fighting Islamists |
2014-08-06 |
![]() Iraq's military spokesman Lt. Gen. Qassim Al Moussawi said Monday that Al Maliki has commanded the air force to provide aerial support to the Kurds in the first sign of cooperation between the two militaries since Iraq's second largest city, Mosul, was captured by the militants on June 10. The Islamic State captured the northern towns of Sinjar and Zumar on Saturday, prompting an estimated 40,000 from the minority Yazidi sect to flee, said Jawhar Ali Begg, a spokesman for the community. "Their towns are now controlled by (Islamic State) and their shrine has been blown up," Begg told The Associated Press. The militant group gave the Yazidis, who follow an ancient religion with links to Zoroastrianism, an ultimatum to convert to Islam, pay a tax or face death, Begg added. Kurdish forces have been battling with the militants for control of several towns stretching between the province of Nineveh and the Kurdish Iraqi province of Dahuk. At least 25 Kurdish fighters were killed in clashes with the militants on Sunday, and another 120 were wounded, according to Muhssin Mohamed, a Dahuk-based doctor. Relations between Iraq's Kurdish autonomous region, which has its own military, and the central government, have long been strained and the announcement about the air force could indicate a degree of rapprochement in the face of the Islamic State attack. A statement Monday by the Islamic State said it had captured dozens of Kurdish prisoners during the clashes and seized "large number" of weapons. The authenticity of the statement could not be verified, but it was posted on a website used by the group. |
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Iraq |
Is the Partition of Iraq Inevitable? |
2014-07-13 |
[VOA News] As Sunni jihadists continue to make gains in Iraq, Kurds have taken control of two oil fields in northern Iraq and have pulled out of the Shi'ite government of Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki. Experts say that that the country's future may have already unfolded. "We are seeing the disintegration of the state of Iraq into three nations; the Shi'ites in the south and east, the Kurds in the north and a Sunni Caliphate under the control of ISIL from western Iraq to Syria," RAND Corporation political scientist and former U.S. military adviser Rick Brennan said. He warns that the Shi'ite-led government would be acquiescent to Iran and argues that any amount of U.S. involvement now is not likely to make much of a difference. |
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Iraq |
Iraq parliament session to agree new government delayed |
2014-07-08 |
[Gulf News] A crucial parliament session kickstarting the government formation process was delayed and an Iraqi general was killed on Monday as solutions to the country's worst crisis in years appeared increasingly distant. The developments highlighted bickering among politicians despite calls for unity to see off an offensive by murderous Moslems that has overrun swathes of territory and which the security forces have struggled to repel. The swift advance has displaced hundreds of thousands, alarmed the international community and heaped pressure on incumbent Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki as he bids for a third term in office. But the government formation process, which international leaders and top holy mans have urged be expedited, was dealt a blow when a parliament session scheduled for Tuesday was postponed due to persistent disunity. Multiple officials and a politician, all speaking on condition of anonymity ... for fear of being murdered... , said the meeting had been rescheduled for August 12 because MPs could not agree on a new speaker. More than two months after elections in which Al Maliki's camp won the most seats, though not a majority, parliament has yet to begin the process of choosing the country's top three positions, which according to an unofficial deal are split between the Shiite Arab, Sunni Arab and Kurdish communities. A session last week ended in chaos, with MPs trading heckles and threats before some of them eventually walked out, forcing an adjournment, with the UN's special envoy warning that further delays risked plunging the country into "Syria-like chaos". Despite telling AFP in a 2011 interview he would not seek a third term, Al Maliki vowed last week he would not bow to mounting international and domestic pressure to step aside and allow a broader consensus. Iraqi forces have largely regrouped after the debacle that saw soldiers abandon their positions and, in some cases, even weapons and uniforms as murderous Moslems led by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant ... the current version of al-Qaeda in Iraq, just as blood-thirsty and well-beloved as the original... (Isil) group conquered second city djinn-infested Mosul ... the home of a particularly ferocious and hairy djinn... and advanced to within about 80km of Baghdad. But while Iraq has received equipment, intelligence and ground help from the United States, Russia, Iran and even Shiite militias it once shunned, languishing government efforts to push back the turbans were dealt a blow by the killing of a senior general on Monday. Major General Najm Abdullah Al Sudani, the commander of the army's 6th division, "was killed by hostile shelling in Ebrahim Bin Ali," Lieutenant General Qasim Atta told AFP by text message. Ebrahim Bin Ali is in the Abu Ghraib area, just west of Baghdad, near where security forces have been locked in a months-long standoff with murderous Moslems who have seized control of the city of Fallujah. Security forces have for more than a week also attempted to wrest back the Sunni stronghold of Tikrit from a loose alliance of Isil fighters, other holy warrior groups and former Saddam Hussain loyalists but have so far failed to achieve a breakthrough. Iraqi forces have been hamstrung by a lack of combat experience and dearth of intelligence in Sunni areas, due largely to distrust of the Shiite-led authorities among minority Sunni Arabs, analysts say. "The army and the police are seen as sectarian... and therefore the Sunni community doesn't provide support or, crucially, intelligence to the security forces," said John Drake of the AKE Group security company. "If you don't have good intelligence on the ground, your strikes are not precise, they involve collateral damage and casualties ... making everything worse." While most observers have argued Baghdad was not about to fall, violence and suicide kabooms have continued. The latest struck a cafe in a predominantly Shiite neighbourhood in western Baghdad Sunday, killing at least four people and wounding 12, officials said. An Isil-linked Twitter account posted on Monday a picture purported to be of the jacket wallah, apparently a Lebanese national, posing in front of the black flag of the turbans before his operation, holding a sword and surrounded by assault rifles and rocket launchers. The authenticity of the image could not immediately be verified. And while government forces were still looking for a major victory, Isil jihadists appeared to be brimming with confidence. |
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Iraq |
Attacks kill 26 in Iraq during UN chief's visit |
2014-01-14 |
Fresh violence killed at least 26 people Monday in Iraq, where the UN chief was on a visit urging leaders to tackle the issues driving fighting in a western province where the army is in a standoff with Al Qaeda-linked fighters. Police officials said the deadliest of the attacks took place at night when a car bomb exploded near a market in Baghdad's northeastern district of Shaab, killing 10 people, including three policemen, and wounding 13 others. A car bomb also exploded in a commercial street in northwestern Baghdad, police said, killing five people and wounding 14. ![]() Earlier, another car bomb exploded in a commercial street in northern Baghdad, killing three people and wounding 13 others. Near the city of Fallujah, army artillery shelled a village overnight, killing four civilians, hospital officials said. Medics in nearby hospital confirmed the death toll for all attacks. Meanwhile, the UN chief Ban Ki-moon arrived in Baghdad on a visit aimed at discussing regional issues, especially the crisis in Syria. Ban expressed deep concern over the violence hitting Iraq's Sunni-dominated Anbar province. "The situation in Anbar Governorate, particularly in Fallujah and Ramadi, is a source of grave concern. The security situation in Iraq is undoubtedly a source of great concern," he told reporters during a joint Press conference with the Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki. |
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Iraq | |
Iraqi general: Forces will retake western cities | |
2014-01-06 | |
A senior Iraqi military commander said Sunday that it will take a few days to fully dislodge Al-Qaeda-linked fighters from two key western cities. Lieutenant General Rasheed Fleih, who leads the Anbar Military Command, told the state television Sunday that two to three days are needed to push the militants out of Fallujah and parts of Ramadi. Fleih added that pro-government tribes are leading the operations while the army only is offering aerial cover and logistics on the ground. He didnt elaborate on the operations. The quiet and safe life that is sought by the Anbaris will not be completely restored before few hours or two to three days, God willing, Fleih said. Residents say it has been quiet since Saturday night in Fallujah, where militants still control the centre of the city. Sporadic clashes took place on Sunday in and around Ramadi. The residents spoke on condition of anonymity for their safety. Tensions in Anbar have run high since December 28, when Iraqi security forces arrested a lawmaker sought for terrorism charges. Two days later, the government dismantled a months-old, anti-government protest camp, sparking clashes with militants. To ease the tension, the government withdrew army forces from the cities. The opposition see the army as a tool of Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki to target his rivals and consolidate power. US Secretary of State John Kerry said that America would support Iraq in its combat with Al Qaeda, but without sending troop on ground.
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Iraq seeks to expel Iranian exile group | |||
2013-02-20 | |||
BAGHDAD An Iranian exile group attacked in Iraq this month has moved from terrorism lists to international good graces, but Baghdad wants it out over its opposition to Irans rulers and ties to Saddam Hussein. On February 9, mortar rounds and rockets slammed into Camp Liberty, a former US military base near Baghdad that now houses some 3,000 members of the Peoples Mujahedeen Organisation of Iran (PMOI), killing five people, according to Iraqi security officials. The attack triggered condemnation from the United States and United Nations, but in Iraq officials are eager to see the group depart.
Iraqi political analyst Ihsan Al Shammari said the nature of the relationship between the (Iraqi) political powers and Iran, Baghdads neighbour to the east with which it has close ties, is a key factor in Iraqs insistence on the PMOIs ouster. Saddam allowed the PMOI to establish a base called Camp Ashraf northeast of Baghdad after he launched the 1980-88 war with Iran, in which the group fought alongside his forces. According to the US State Department, Saddam armed the group with heavy military equipment and deployed thousands of (PMOI) fighters in suicidal, mass wave attacks against Iranian forces near the end of the war. Following the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq, the PMOI turned over 2,000 tanks, armoured personnel carriers, and heavy artillery, the State Department said. The group was also allegedly involved in Saddams violent suppression of 1991 Shia and Kurdish uprisings in Iraq.
But after this months attack, the PMOI complained about the slow pace of the process, which has dragged on as few countries have come forward with concrete offers of resettlement.
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Iraq |
Two Iraqi protesters wounded by gunfire |
2012-12-31 |
BAGHDAD - Bodyguards for a senior Iraqi politician opened fire to disperse angry anti-government demonstrators and two people were wounded in the countrys west, an official said. The shooting happened near the city of Ramadi during a visit by Iraqs Deputy Prime Minister Saleh Al Mutlaq, according to Anbar provincial council member Talib Hamadi Al Dulaimi. It was unclear if the gunshot wounds were caused by intentional fire or happened accidentally. It is often difficult to assign blame for gunfire injuries in Iraq, where weapons ownership is common. Al Mutlaq is one of the governments most senior politicians, and despite his post he has been a frequent critic of the Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki. Although his visit was not announced in advance, he likely would have expected to find a sympathetic crowd in Anbar. At one point during his visit, a dispute broke out and shots were fired after demonstrators insisted the official show support for their protest by submitting his resignation from the government. |
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Iraq |
Iraq carrying out mass arrests, torture in Camp Honor: HRW |
2012-05-16 |
[Al Ahram] Human Rights Watch ... dedicated to bitching about human rights violations around the world... (HRW) published a report Monday claiming that a detention facility previously declared to have been shut down by Iraqi authorities is still running in secret. The report is titled "Iraq: Mass Arrests, Incommunicado Detentions - Notorious Prison in Use a Year After Government Said It Was Shut Down." The government closed Camp Honor prison after an HRW investigation exposed rampant violations in the prison. The HRW report cited testimonies and acknowledgments by former prisoners, lawyers, parliamentarians, family members, government and security officials. Based on the interviews, HRW concluded that the Iraqi government carries out mass arrests, illegally detaining hundreds of citizens, dozens of them transferred to Camp Honor. Two particular waves of mass arrests were mentioned in HRW's account. The first occurred in October and November 2011 when officials and officers were targeted. Those were allegedly Baath Party and Saddam Hussein loyalists and were ordered jugged Don't shoot, coppers! I'm comin' out! directly through Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki's military office. The "Baathist arrests" were supposedly to round up plotters against Iraq's regime. Testimonies said those released were forced to sign pledges against public criticism of the government as well as false confessions. Threats of torture (or further torture), family member raping and prolonging imprisonment preceded the signings. The second wave of arrests was prior to the March 2012 Arab summit in Storied Baghdad ...located along the Tigris River, founded in the 8th century, home of the Abbasid Caliphate... . This wave was preemptive, an effort to secure the summit not hosted in Storied Baghdad for decades because of insecurity, claimed now to be secure by Iraq's government. HRW said witnesses were told by interrogators that the reasons behind their arrest was "to curb criminal activity during the summit and any 'embarrassing' public protests." An interior ministry official quoted in the report said that "security forces, in the interest of keeping security incidents to a minimum during the summit, while the world was watching, sometimes decided it was easier to just round up people who had been imprisoned years before, regardless of what crime they may have committed." HRW said that all detainees interviewed claimed no arrest warrant was presented to them to see despite claims by the government that the arrests were legal. The HRW report further describes Camp Honor, providing accounts of torture by prison guards. |
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Iraq | ||
Iraqis prepare as US leaves | ||
2011-12-15 | ||
BAGHDAD: After billions of dollars and nearly nine years of training, American troops are leaving behind an Iraqi security force arguably capable of providing internal security but unprepared to defend the nation against foreign threats at a time of rising tensions throughout the Middle East. Building up an Iraqi military and police able to protect the country became a key goal of the United States and its allies after they defeated and then disbanded the Saddam Hussein-era force in 2003. As Americas role in Iraq fades, the results appear at best incomplete.
More than 10,000 Iraqi soldiers and police have been killed since the new force was established more than double the number of American military deaths. Few if any military forces in the Arab world have as much combat experience within the ranks. They can kick a door in and knock out a networks leadership as good as anybody Ive seen, said US Lt. Gen. Robert Caslen, commander of the NATO training mission, which will soon be disbanded. I would say that they have the discipline and the tenacity to fight as well as anybody Ive ever seen. Nevertheless, Iraqi forces have their work cut out for them. They will be operating in a country which, although quieter than a few years ago, saw more people killed, wounded and kidnapped last year than in Afghanistan, according to US figures. The departure of American forces this month also leaves Iraq vulnerable to threats from its neighbors Iran to the east, Turkey to the north and Syria to the west. A major Arab country of about 30 million people with some of the worlds largest proven petroleum reserves is incapable of defending its borders in one of the most unstable parts of the world. The Iraqi military chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Babaker Zebari, has said it would take until at least 2020 for Iraq to defend its airspace. Without a well-trained and equipped air force, Iraqi ground forces would be hard-pressed to defend against incursions across borders with few natural barriers and little cover from vegetation. An army without an air force is exposed, Zebari was quoted as saying in a report last October by the US agency responsible for overseeing Iraqi reconstruction. Even though a full-scale ground invasion from its neighbors may seem remote, the possibility of incursions from Turkey against Kurdish rebels, or Iranians along disputed border stretches or even from a Syria facing an internal revolt cannot be ruled out, especially at a time when the Arab Spring and the looming showdown between the West and Iran are raising tensions throughout the region.
Soon, Iraqi commanders were giving Powerpoint briefings, and their generals were handing out specially made coins emblazoned with their names and units as souvenirs. Iraqi soldiers at street checkpoints were wearing kneepads slouched down around their ankles, again just like their American counterparts. But there wasnt enough time to develop the full package logistics, intelligence, medical services and a fully integrated command structure for the Iraqis to operate as effectively without US support. A budget crisis in 2009 and a lengthy political stalemate the following year crippled both the qualitative development of Iraqs forces and its ability to implement its own development plan, wrote analyst Anthony Cordesman of the Center for Strategic and International Studies. The head of Iraqi military intelligence, Hatem Al-Magsousi, said it takes the Iraqis a week to plan and carry out a military operation that they could execute in a day with American help. Such delays could be costly if Al-Qaeda as expected takes advantage of a security vacuum to reconstitute itself following major defeats on the battlefield in the final years of the war. Unless the Iraqi security forces continue to put pressure on Al-Qaeda, they could regenerate capability and come back in an even worse way than they have in the past, said a US military spokesman, Maj. Gen. Jeffrey Buchanan. Another key concern is keeping the security forces free of any political pressure or sectarian interference. For over a year now, Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki has effectively controlled the Ministries of Interior and Defense while conflicts between political blocs have delayed the appointments of permanent ministers. That leaves both key ministries leaderless and without direction at a crucial time. It also has allowed Al-Maliki to pack some units with members of his tribe and appoint political favorites to command positions with no effective checks and balances. That means Maliki is making all these senior officer decisions, and thats not a healthy modus operandi for a vibrant democracy, said retired Lt. Gen. James Dubik, who was in charge of training Iraqi forces in 2007 and 2008. The role of Al-Maliki, who spent years abroad as a leader of the underground resistance to Saddams regime, also threatens to worsen sectarian tensions in the ranks. Those tensions nearly tore the country apart in the dark days of intense communal fighting in 2006 and 2007. Public trust is further undermined by corruption, including selling fuel for military vehicles on the black market or pocketing the salaries of nonexistent soldiers. The widespread practice of buying command appointments is particularly destructive because it places corrupt officers at the head of divisions, brigades and battalions. Such commanders then commit theft and fraud to recoup their investment in the job, wrote Iraq analyst Michael Knights in a report this summer for The Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Despite the US military withdrawal, Iraq and the United States will still maintain a security relationship. Gen. Caslen is in charge of a $10 billion weapons sales program that will be run out of the US Embassy next year with nearly 160 military personnel. Hundreds of civilian contractors will train Iraqi troops on equipment theyve bought from American companies, including 18 F-16 fighter jets which Baghdad ordered this year. That will give Washington some leverage with the Iraqis but hardly to the degree it enjoyed when there were nearly 170,000 US troops on Iraqi soil. What remains unclear is whether without the Americans, the Iraqi military will continue the transition to a well-oiled professional force, free of political influence and capable of integrating their various weapons systems and units into an effective machine capable of defending the nation. Left to their own devices, the transition does not occur, Dubik said. Lt. Gen. Frank Helmick, deputy commander of US Forces-Iraq, told reporters last week that there is a question mark right now for external security, but for the internal security weve done all we can do. We really dont know whats going to happen, Helmick said. | ||
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Iraq | ||
615 detained in anti-Baathist sweep | ||
2011-10-30 | ||
BAGHDAD: Iraqs prime minister said Saturday that 615 people have been detained in a security sweep targeting members of the former ruling Baath party. Arrests on this scale are likely to alarm Sunni Arabs, who consider use of the term Baathists by Iraqs Shiite-dominated government to be a coded way to refer to Sunni politicians, army officers, and other prominent members of their community.
Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki revealed the size of the sweep in comments released Saturday by the state-run Iraqiya TV channel during which he defended the detentions. He said officials had reason to believe the people arrested were a threat to security but he gave no further details. He did not say when the sweep took place, but a Ministry of Interior statement Thursday said about 500 people had been arrested in recent days. The recent arrests, which were carried out by the security forces and were based on information and evidence, were aimed at those who threaten the state security and the state stability. There were 615 detained people, Al-Maliki said. The Baath Party is prohibited by the Constitution, because it is a criminal party that led to the fall of the national sovereignty and it targeted the Iraqi people through the mass graves, chemical weapons, he said. A leading Sunni lawmaker, Hamid Al-Mutlaq, said the arrests would heighten tensions in Iraq and called the allegations of undermining security science fiction. He called on the government to move forward instead of arresting people for their past connections to the Baath Party. Such acts by the government will anger a lot of people in Anbar, Salahuddin and other Iraqi provinces and this might even threaten the unity of the country and might revive the calls for dividing Iraq, he said, referring to Sunni-majority provinces in western and central Iraq. It is the worst time to make these arrests ahead of the US withdrawal, he said. All American forces are to leave Iraq by the end of this year. Many Sunnis are worried that they will come under increased pressure from the Shiite-led government once the Americans, who they feel have often played a moderating influence, are gone. De-Baathification, a concept started under the US-led Coalition Provisional Authority which ruled Iraq after the invasion, is an Iraqi government policy of trying to purge important government jobs and positions of former mid- and high-ranking members of the Baath Party. Sunnis have criticized the policy as a way to sideline them from policy decisions and prevent them from ever regaining power.
Provincial officials Thursday voted to start the process of creating an autonomous region in Salahuddin, akin to the Kurdish autonomous region in northern Iraq. Provincial officials and residents have complained that their needs arent being met by the Shiite-led government in Baghdad and that they could do a better job providing for their own security. The Iraqi constitution allows provinces to establish autonomous regions but it requires numerous procedural hoops making it unlikely the Salahuddin vote would be anything more than a ceremonial protest. Al-Maliki said the Baath Party is trying to use Salahuddin province as a safe haven. | ||
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