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    December 22, 2006

    It’s Not A “Civil War” In Iraq, It’s The Wrap-Up Of The Same War We Initiated When We Toppled Saddam

    In Iraq, the suicide bombers and IED bombs, are used by Sunnis; the death squads are Shia. This helps one to follow the news from Iraq. Via StrategyPage:

    While 68 percent of the attacks are against American and other foreign troops, the most casualties are caused by attacks  (19 percent of them) on Iraqi security forces, and Iraqi civilians (18 percent). The attacks on Iraqis result in 96 percent of the deaths. The larger number of attacks on foreign troops is largely driven by the Sunni Arab belief that all their problems are due to the presence of foreign troops. But the Sunni Arabs have long since discovered that attacks on foreign troops, particularly Americans, is suicidal. So most of those attacks are remote control ones, using roadside bombs. This satisfies "honor," so to speak, but is expensive (all those bomb builders and placers have to get paid). It's much easier to launch suicide bomb attacks against Iraqi civilians, and this is what accounts for the largest number of dead. But it also results in a lot of retaliation attacks on Sunni Arab civilians by Shia Arab death squads.

    As noted here previously:

    While everybody is fretting that Sunni-on-Shia violence means we aren't winning in Iraq, the contrary point of view is perfectly reasonable. The Shia are wiping out the Sunni leaders of sectarian violence. Per StategyPage (same link as above), it appears to be working:

    A major source of loss for the Sunni Arabs is migration to foreign countries. About 100,000 are fleeing each month, joining nearly two million already in exile. Many Kurds and Shia Arabs make no secret of their desire to drive all Sunni Arabs from Iraq. They are well on their way to achieving this goal, with over a third of the Sunni Arabs gone already. At the current rate of migration, all Sunni Arabs will be gone from Iraq within four years. 

    The Sunni Arabs see no other viable alternative to their terror campaign. Negotiations with the Shia dominated government have not resulted in the degree of amnesty  desired. Several hundred thousand Sunni Arabs were directly responsible for the killing and terrorizing of Kurds and Shia Arabs during the decades of Saddams rule. These men are at the core of the Sunni Arab terror campaign, and demand amnesty. If they can't get amnesty, and can't, or won't, flee the country, they will fight to the death.

    The point is, it's not a "civil war", it's the wrap-up of the same war we initiated when we toppled Saddam and threw out his Sunni government. The Sunnis wouldn't go along with the new Democratic government. They decided to keep fighting via suicide bombing of civilians and IEDs used against U.S. troops. And now they're getting clobbered. And Iraqis who back the Shia-led government are doing most of the clobbering, which is what the U.S. wants - i.e. to turn control of the country and responsibility for security over to Iraqi forces.

    The mantra of the MSM - that Iraq is involved in a "civil war," both sides of which are against a Democratic government - is nonsense.

    I'll conclude with the sentence StrategyPage leads off with:

    For all the reports of violence in Iraq, most Iraqis feel safe.

    12:52 PM • Blogroll The Big Picture!Email This to a Friend

    Categories: Counter-Terrorism, Iraq Bookmark and Share
    Most recent comments by: Shahid KinnareVik RubenfeldSgtStewartJanet

    Replies: 4 comments

    Your comments are welcome. Abusive remarks and trolls may be deleted. Opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of The Big Picture.

    Janet   on  12/24/06  at  09:45 PM   United States  #1

    You are absolutely correct. John Xenakis, the brilliant generational analyst, has been saying this since 2003.

    Check his work at http://www.GenerationalDynamics.com

    thanks,

    Janet



    .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)   on  12/25/06  at  12:39 AM   United States  #2

    You have hit the nail squarely on the head.

    Excellent post!!!



    .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)   on  12/25/06  at  01:23 PM   United States  #3

    Janet and Sgt. Stewart, thanks for the good words!



    .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)   on  12/25/06  at  01:33 PM   United States  #4

    PM Aziz visits Saint Patrick's Cathedral in Karachi KARACHI, Dec 25 (APP) Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz on Monday visited the Saint Patrick's Cathedral in Karachi and wished the Christian community of Pakistan a merry Christmas. "Our Government is very diligently working on promoting harmony for all faiths in Pakistan as the Father of the Nation had advocated,” he said in his address. "We must remember that inter-faith harmony is the need of the hour…We are all Pakistanis above everything else and we want all our citizens to freely practice their faith and live happily", he added. (Posted @ 19:38 PST)





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