"They were lying to their people and to the world in both cases as we were never terrorists, nor their friends now," he stressed.
RAMADI, Iraq, Nov 29 (IPS) - Khalifa explained that resistance fighters in al-Anbar did
fight occupation forces, but now they are standing down from launching
new attacks against U.S. forces.
This is due in large part to
U.S. military payments to collaborating tribal sheikhs -- already
totalling over 17 million dollars. The money funds tribal fighters who
are paid 300 dollars per month to patrol their areas, particularly
against foreign fighters.
The military refers to these men as
"Concerned Local Citizens," "Awakening Force," or simply "volunteers,"
even though it is well known that most of them used to carry out
attacks against the occupation forces.
"Those Americans thought
they would decrease the resistance attacks by separating the people of
Iraq into sects and tribes," a 32-year-old man from Ramadi -- speaking
on terms of anonymity -- told IPS, "They know they are going deeper
into the moving sand, but the collaborators are fooling the Americans
right now, and will in the end use this strategy against them."
As
of Wednesday, the U.S. military counts 77,000 of these fighters. It
plans to add another 10,000. Eighty-two percent of the fighters are
Sunni.
In spite of this mass recruitment, sporadic attacks are continuing against U.S. forces in the province.
"It
is true that hundreds of fighters were killed or detained by the
so-called Awakening Forces, but there are thousands who will never quit
fighting until this occupation is ended," Ali Khamees, a former major
of the Iraqi army told IPS in Ramadi.
Khamees believes that the
de-escalation is a "new technique by the resistance to reduce the
suffering of people in al-Anbar and move somewhere else to fight."
Attacks against U.S. forces have increased in other Iraqi provinces -- like Diyala, Saladin and Mosul.
The
U.S. army reported dozens of soldiers killed throughout November while
local reports insisted that the U.S. casualties are much higher than
declared.
A female suicide bomber wounded seven U.S. soldiers
Wednesday in Baquba - - the capital city of the volatile Diyala
province, northeast of Baghdad -- when she detonated her explosive vest
near the troops.
On Tuesday in the same city, another suicide
bomber detonated his explosives-filled vest in front of the police
headquarters -- killing six people and wounding seven, according to
Iraqi police.
Underscoring how tenuous the peace in al-Anbar is,
on Nov. 22 a car bomb exploded in Ramadi, killing at least six people
in what was one of the deadliest attacks there in recent months.
Ramadi
police officials said the bomb exploded near the citys courthouse in
the late morning detonated by a suicide bomber. At least 30 civilians
were injured, Iraqi police officials said.
"I was just leaving
the bank 80 metres away from the explosion the moment it took place,"
Doctor Ahmed Al- Aani told IPS in Ramadi, "I did not notice any car
coming to the spot, so I think it was parked there. The strange thing
was that an American Army convoy passed exactly thirty seconds after
the blast. The thing I found even stranger was that they passed without
any action like closing the area or trying to help the wounded."
Another
two eyewitnesses told the same story with slight differences in details
like the number of casualties and how many seconds later the U.S.
military convoy passed.
Iraqis across the province are
complaining about harsh tactics being meted out by the new "Awakening
Forces" supported by the U.S.
"We will behead anyone who carries
a gun in this province," Wussam Hardan, a senior leader of the
Awakening Forces in Ramadi told sources very close to IPS in the city.
"No court, no lawyers, no nothing. We have our own ways to get those
criminals to confess," Hardan said.
The people of the province fear the recent developments, despite the relative improvement in the security situation.
"It
is quieter because the Americans stopped many of their activities in
al- Anbar," Shakir Mahmood, a human rights activist in Ramadi told IPS
-- on condition that his false name be used. "There were so many
arrests by U.S. forces, police and the Awakening during the past month
and we cannot even talk about it because we feel threatened by all
three of them," he said.
"So many of the detainees are well
known to be innocent people taken into custody according to false
information by others who have a personal feud with them or their
families," Mahmood added, "It is the same old story being repeated and
God knows what is going to happen next."
Arrests are being made
after individuals are accused of being al-Qaeda members or of having
links with Iran. Thousands have been detained for a year or more
without any court procedures, while the police and the Awakening
militias have executed many others.
On Nov. 13 the International
Committee for the Red Cross estimated that there are around 60,000
people detained in U.S. and Iraqi prisons in the country.
Ali al-Fadhily,
our correspondent in Baghdad, works in close collaboration with Dahr
Jamail, our U.S.-based specialist writer on Iraq who travels
extensively in the region.
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