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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: RetiredNow who wrote (227573)4/3/2005 9:58:08 AM
From: RetiredNow  Respond to of 1584048
 
More Iraqis tipping off security forces,

MARIAM FAM

Associated Press

BAGHDAD, Iraq - U.S. and Iraqi officials say they have seen an increase in calls tipping off authorities in recent weeks, and officials say it's a sign the country's fledgling security forces are winning the trust of citizens, turning them against the insurgency.

The growing willingness of Iraqis to cooperate with officials is perhaps also a testimony to the insurgency's own mistakes, which have cost it the sympathy of some. Many say they simply are tired of violence that has overshadowed their lives or claimed people they love.

In a sign the phenomenon is gathering momentum, some Iraqis told The Associated Press that when they called in information, they were told others already had reported the same incident.

There were no overall figures available on how many people have offered information. In one case, Iraqi Fatma peeked out the window of her Mosul home and saw masked men lobbing mortars at a nearby army base for the third time. She decided it would be the last, and reported the men.

"How can an Iraqi kill another Iraqi, can a brother kill his brother? I cannot let that be," said Fatma, a 26-year-old housewife who asked that only her first name be used for fear of attacks against informants. "At first, I used to think of them as holy fighters. But after what we've been seeing on television, it became clear they were terrorists."

Like many others, Fatma said she was influenced in part by television broadcasts featuring the confessions of alleged insurgents.

Critics dismiss the shows, claiming some of the confessions are staged or coerced. But officials say the programs, which include people detailing kidnappings and even beheadings, have encouraged people to report information to authorities. Others are angered by the fact that many kidnappings are now for financial instead of political gains.

"The confessions have helped convince the people that the security forces are really working hard to rid the country of terrorism," Interior Ministry spokesman Sabah Kadhim said. "Before, they just didn't believe it."

Omar Mohammed Abdullah, a 30-year-old college student in Samarra, said he'd had enough of the explosions that shattered windows and terrified children in his neighborhood. After the militants refused to take their fight outside of the city, he reported a group planting roadside bombs on his street in Samarra, where security forces broadcast the telephone numbers for hotlines over loudspeakers.

"Before, the people sympathized very much with the resistance. They were helping and encouraging them," Abdullah said. "Now, the people are hurting and are seeing no benefit in this. They started attacking the Iraqi forces because they want chaos to prevail."

In the sprawling, western province of Anbar, U.S. Marines say a tip line set up nearly a year ago was now getting more than 37 calls a week, and the tips have led to the detention of suspected insurgents.

But some of those ready to turn in militants say they have no sympathy for the U.S. forces, either.

"I don't think I would have reported them if they were targeting only Americans," Abdullah said. "After all, this is an occupier."

The Interior Ministry's Kadhim said the elections further motivated people to fight the militants, with many voting in defiance of insurgent threats. Authorities are now capitalizing on that feeling of empowerment.

A billboard on a main road in Mahmoudiya, 20 miles south of Baghdad, shows an Iraqi woman flashing the victory sign, her index finger smeared in ink showing that she had voted Jan. 30.

"The Iraqis have defied terrorism. It's time to wipe it out," read the sign, which provided numbers for calling in information.

There have even been a few reports of Iraqis taking justice into their own hands. Last month in Baghdad, shopkeepers and residents returned fire as gunmen sprayed a street with bullets fired from a car. The clash left three insurgents dead.

But others still support the insurgency or are too afraid to come forward, and some do not fully trust Iraqi security forces once believed to be infiltrated by the insurgency.

In Mahmoudiya and some other violence-plagued areas, those who inform on the militants do so secretly. Others still reject the idea out of fear or sympathy.

In Ramadi, where the tip line is advertised on local radio stations and printed on posters and handbills, militant-produced CDs detailing the confessions and, sometimes, executions of alleged collaborators and informants are widely circulating.

"We are all against the occupation. I cannot even imagine that we can cooperate with the occupation against our own people," said Mohammed Hassan, who owns a computer store in Ramadi.

While he does not support the attacks on Iraqi forces, he complains that some of the Iraqi soldiers and police "are even worse than the Americans.

"They're very immoral," he said.

Kadhim said rebuilding trust between the people and the security forces will take time.

But some - like Fatma in Mosul - are already seeing officials act on their tips, which has helped win their confidence.

"The Iraqi soldiers want to protect the country. We rely only on God and them," she said.

Fatma's street is now quieter, but violence still disrupts her city.

"We're deprived of everything," she said. "We want security and stability. We just want to live in peace."



To: RetiredNow who wrote (227573)4/3/2005 10:01:31 AM
From: steve harris  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1584048
 
good news from Lebanon also not many want to report....

cnn.com

DAMASCUS, Syria (CNN) -- Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has committed to a complete withdrawal of Syrian troops and intelligence services from Lebanon by April 30, according to U.N. envoy Terje Roed-Larsen.



To: RetiredNow who wrote (227573)4/3/2005 12:00:06 PM
From: SilentZ  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1584048
 
Excellent... except, if a pullout results in, as I think is pretty likely, a civil war. Things are unfolding almost exactly like I predicted more than two years ago. Or maybe not. I sure hope not.

-Z



To: RetiredNow who wrote (227573)4/4/2005 1:54:21 AM
From: Elroy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1584048
 
Much of the U.S. military force in Iraq will be withdrawn within a year, says a report published yesterday in Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin.

Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin? Uhmmm, what's dat?



To: RetiredNow who wrote (227573)4/4/2005 1:55:21 AM
From: Elroy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1584048
 
Much of the U.S. military force in Iraq will be withdrawn within a year, says a report published yesterday in Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin.

Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin? Uhmmm, what's dat?

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