Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

About the Iraqi security force we were training...

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • About the Iraqi security force we were training...

    General: Much of Iraq's Forces Have Quit
    45 minutes ago

    By CONNIE CASS, Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON - About one in every 10 members of Iraq (news - web sites)'s security forces "actually worked against" U.S. troops during the recent militia violence in Iraq, and an additional 40 percent walked off the job because of intimidation, the commander of the 1st Armored Division said Wednesday.


    In an interview beamed by satellite from Baghdad to news executives attending The Associated Press annual meeting, Maj. Gen. Martin Dempsey said the campaign in Iraq was at a critical point.


    "We have to get this latest increase in violence under control," Dempsey said. "We have to take a look at the Iraqi security forces and learn why they walked."


    The militia violence aggravated underlying troubles in Iraq's new military and police forces — the unfulfilled desire for "some Iraqi hierarchy in which to place their trust and confidence" and a reluctance by Iraqis to take up arms against their countrymen, Dempsey said.


    "It's very difficult at times to convince them that Iraqis are killing fellow Iraqis and fellow Muslims, because it's something they shouldn't have to accept," he said. "Over time I think they will probably have to accept it."


    The failure of Iraqi security forces to perform is significant because it could hurt the United States' overall exit strategy from Iraq, which is dependent on moving U.S. troops out of the cities and handing authority to Iraqis. Officials have said the U.S. military would delay its withdrawal from parts of Iraq until Iraqi forces were ready to take control.


    In one example of the problems, on April 5, a newly created Iraqi army battalion of several hundred soldiers refused to join U.S. Marines in their offensive against insurgents in the city of Fallujah.


    Dempsey maintained in the interview that popular support for the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq is still "very solid."


    But he acknowledged "a form of descending consent" for the U.S. military presence occurring among Iraqis as time passes.


    "There is a point where it doesn't matter how well we're doing, it won't be accepted that we have a large military presence here," he said. "We're all working very diligently trying to figure out where that point is."


    Dempsey was asked about the remarks of two other U.S. commanders who questioned the wisdom of banning former Baath Party members from government jobs when their skills are needed in the reconstruction effort.


    "History is going to have to decide whether that was right or not," he said.


    Dempsey recalled receiving a warning from Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Abdullah that the coalition forces would find it tough to bring order to Iraq after dissolving the country's only two powerful institutions — the army and the Baath Party.


    "So part of me says our jobs may have been easier had we just found a way to keep some of the Baath Party in place," Dempsey said, echoing comments by Maj. Gen. John R.S. Batiste and Brig. Gen. Carter F. Ham published in The New York Times on Wednesday.


    But Dempsey added: "On the other hand, the entire part of the population that was disenfranchised during these 35 years, largely the Shiite population, absolutely has no trust in any former member of the Baath Party. So we found ourselves exactly in the middle of this."


    On the security forces, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has said he is sending Maj. Gen. David Petraeus back to Iraq to oversee the training and equipping of all Iraqi security forces, including those who had been the responsibility of the State Department or the Coalition Provisional Authority.


    Dempsey said efforts are under way to ensure Iraqi security forces that there will be Iraqi authorities in place to back them up after U.S. troops leave.





    During the recent militia attacks, "about 50 percent of the security forces that we've built over the past year stood tall and stood firm," he said.

    "About 40 percent walked off the job because they were intimidated. And about 10 percent actually worked against us," said Dempsey, describing that group as infiltrators.

    Dempsey commands the Army division in charge of Baghdad. He has been in Iraq for more than a year, focusing on intelligence gathering and combatting terrorism as he works to help Iraqi security forces take over those tasks.

    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Just get the hell out.

    Screw all the macho bravado of being Americans. That shit is getting our guys killed.

    Here's the deal. We leave their country. All the damn Arabs leave ours.
    Make America Great For Once.

  • #2
    June 30 can't come soon enough.

    Enjoy the stone age, you sorry bastards.

    Comment


    • #3
      Youve been drinking too much "Bush Light", if you expect something good to happen after June 30th?
      Norman Chad, syndicated columnist: “Sports radio, reflecting our sinking culture, spends entire days advising managers and coaches, berating managers and coaches, firing managers and coaches and searching the countryside for better middle relievers. If they just redirected their energy toward, say, crosswalk-signal maintenance, America would be 2 percent more livable.”

      "The best argument against democracy," someone (Churchill?) said, "is a five minute conversation with the average voter."

      Comment


      • #4
        Nick, go lock yourself in a room with dredbird and play tic-tac-toe until one of you croaks.

        Comment


        • #5
          Reggie: Shooting the messanger doesn't work. Call me on it after June 30th, if I'm wrong.

          Let's just wait and see.
          Norman Chad, syndicated columnist: “Sports radio, reflecting our sinking culture, spends entire days advising managers and coaches, berating managers and coaches, firing managers and coaches and searching the countryside for better middle relievers. If they just redirected their energy toward, say, crosswalk-signal maintenance, America would be 2 percent more livable.”

          "The best argument against democracy," someone (Churchill?) said, "is a five minute conversation with the average voter."

          Comment


          • #6
            My problem with this whole deal has been the seeming disorganization with an exit plan by the current administration...

            That being said...June 30....August 30...September 30...

            It doesn't matter. These folks don't know how to democratize themselves....and it isn't their culture.....

            Regardless of the pullout date...this country will see a civil war as soon as we leave....

            The Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds all want control. One party is going to get it.

            Unless you put another oppressive leader in the leadership seat, they'll all start fighting for it as soon as we're gone.

            When do we learn that what's best for us isn't always best for the world????
            " Look, forget the myths the media's created about the White House--the truth is, these are not very bright guys, and things got out of hand."

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Reggie Cleveland@Apr 21 2004, 06:14 PM
              Nick, go lock yourself in a room with dredbird and play tic-tac-toe until one of you croaks.
              It sucks to be wrong, doesnt it?
              “I’ve always stated, ‘I’m a Missouri Tiger,’” Anderson said March 13 after Arkansas fired John Pelphrey, adding, “I’m excited about what’s taking place here.”

              Asked then if he would talk to his players about the situation, he said, “They know me, and that’s where the trust comes in.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by _STLfan_in_DFW@Apr 21 2004, 06:50 PM
                Unless you put another oppressive leader in the leadership seat, they'll all start fighting for it as soon as we're gone.

                Hey, I have a solution to both problems.

                Bush can become the new oppressive leader of the Iraqis, and we can elect a new president. One that is sane and doesnt think that he is God.

                Hell, give him some tanks and a small army and let him move into Saddam's old palace.

                And take all of his other assclown cronies like Rumsfeld, Cheney, etc, with him
                “I’ve always stated, ‘I’m a Missouri Tiger,’” Anderson said March 13 after Arkansas fired John Pelphrey, adding, “I’m excited about what’s taking place here.”

                Asked then if he would talk to his players about the situation, he said, “They know me, and that’s where the trust comes in.

                Comment


                • #9
                  You oughta know, limpdick.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Reg,

                    I'm going to refrain from the useless name calling.

                    My concern had to do with the loss of American lives, and the purpose they're being sacrificed for.

                    We're dealing with a culture that does not want, nor do they appreciate a true democracy. These folks have been raging terror from the start of time. Why did we feel that we could make a difference?

                    I love America, let's get that out front. But, I find no shame in admitting we were wrong. Let's just get the heck out of there, and let the peices fall where they may.
                    Make America Great For Once.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Why did we feel that we could make a difference?
                      We didn't go there to make a difference; we went there to remove Saddam and his WMD. Making a show of making a difference in government now is all we're presently left with, as Saddam is gone and there were no WMDs.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Reggie,

                        It wasnt possible for us to go get Saddam out of there and to avoid "making a difference". Giving the Iraqi people "freedom" and "liberating" them was part of the deal, as stated by Bush before we even invaded.
                        “I’ve always stated, ‘I’m a Missouri Tiger,’” Anderson said March 13 after Arkansas fired John Pelphrey, adding, “I’m excited about what’s taking place here.”

                        Asked then if he would talk to his players about the situation, he said, “They know me, and that’s where the trust comes in.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          The U.S. will be in there for years propping up Diem's - I mean Chalabi's - regime. June 30 means nothing.

                          Democracy means nothing to them anyway. Hell, they don't regard the U.S. as a legitimate democracy. The paranoia of "The Street" knows no bounds.
                          I let my hair air dry thereby getting more hair pie
                          I want to fire blanks in Tyra Banks
                          I like shorn quim lasses in horn-rimmed glasses
                          but Cindy Crawford ...offered
                          I would keep a tidy room for Heidi Klum
                          I'm immersed in Kirstie Alley's thirsty valley

                          I want a smelly slice of Kelly Price
                          Plus get with the hairy scar of Teri Garr
                          I would jizz early inside Liz Hurley
                          Sigourney Weaver has a thrashing horny beaver
                          Winona Ryder? Going inside her!
                          I want to get on the whole width of Anna Nicole Smith

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by The Kev@Apr 21 2004, 07:02 PM
                            Reg,

                            I'm going to refrain from the useless name calling.

                            My concern had to do with the loss of American lives, and the purpose they're being sacrificed for.

                            We're dealing with a culture that does not want, nor do they appreciate a true democracy. These folks have been raging terror from the start of time. Why did we feel that we could make a difference?

                            I love America, let's get that out front. But, I find no shame in admitting we were wrong. Let's just get the heck out of there, and let the peices fall where they may.
                            Kev, these folks get their information from religious people and uneducated folks - that's all they know. It's a shame but not sure what can be done now. Before-hand, a coalition with maybe some Egyptians would have helped.

                            I don't favor cutting and running at all but there comes a point where we've given enough.
                            Dude. Can. Fly.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              If we leave now, will that not continue the precedent of "kill a few Americans and they'll run away"?

                              Vietnam... Somalia... Iraq...

                              If we leave now, then what have all of the US troops that have already been killed died for? Capturing Saddam and starting a civil war in Iraq?
                              You can't kill terror
                              So let's declare war
                              There's so many dead that we can't keep score

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X