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Iraqi troops condemned, threatened for fighting; at least 200 desert

by KRT repost
BAGHDAD, Iraq - (KRT) - U.S. military officials said Monday that at least 200 Iraqi troops had deserted their posts in the American-led offensive on Fallujah, illustrating the predicament faced by men who are torn between orders from commanders and outrage from their countrymen.
Prominent Iraqi clerics, including influential Sunni Muslims and top aides to rebel Shiite Muslim cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, condemned the Iraqi troops who were serving alongside Americans in Fallujah, the Sunni stronghold 40 miles west of Baghdad. The insurgent council that's controlled Fallujah for the past six months threatened to behead Iraqi troops who entered the city to "fight their own people."

The U.S. military and Iraqi commanders estimated that up to 200 Iraqi troops had resigned, with another 200 "on leave."

"Some people were afraid because they received threats," said Sgt. Abdul Raheem, an Iraqi soldier. "They were afraid of death."

Clerics in Fallujah blasted the Iraqi troops in a statement, calling them "the occupiers' lash on their fellow countrymen."

"We swear by God that we will stand against you in the streets, we will enter your houses and we will slaughter you just like sheep," the statement said.

Prime Minister Iyad Allawi made a surprise visit Monday to bolster the morale of Iraqi troops at the Camp Fallujah base. The men gathered around him and sang and danced to show their allegiance to Iraq and to him. In a rousing speech punctuated by their cheers, Allawi told the young men they were making history.

"The people of Fallujah have been taken hostage just like the people of Samarra, and you need to free them," Allawi said. "Your job is to arrest the killers, but if you kill them, let it be."

"May they go to hell!" the soldiers cried.

"To hell they will go," Allawi answered.

The Association of Muslim Scholars, a Sunni umbrella group said to include 3,000 mosques, issued a religious edict calling for all Iraqi soldiers, national guardsmen and police officers to quit immediately or become legitimate targets for the rebels. The fatwa included a warning to the forces not to repeat the experience of Najaf, where Iraqis joined an American-led effort to crush al-Sadr's uprising in the southern Shiite holy city in August.

Hundreds of Iraqi troops are playing a support role in Fallujah, mainly providing security for areas that American forces already have cleared.

Fallujah isn't the first battle to elicit mass desertions by Iraqi troops. Hundreds were reported in the August standoff over Najaf, and many troops reportedly deserted the last time U.S. troops entered Fallujah, in April.

"Those who kill Iraqis are not Iraqis," said Sheik Mohammed Bashar al Faidhi of the scholars' association. "We told them: You made a terrible mistake in Najaf. Be careful not to repeat this experience because the occupier will leave one day, but the people will stay."

Sheik Abdulhadi al Darraji, the head of an al-Sadr office in Baghdad, said militant Shiites also condemned the incursion into Sunni territory.

"They shouldn't be tools in the hands of the occupiers," he said. "An assault against Fallujah is an assault against all Iraqis."

Despite the desertions, Iraq's nascent security forces celebrated two apparent victories Monday. In the flash-point town of Iskandariyah, a deadly zone south of Baghdad, Iraqi police disguised as civilians ambushed a rebel checkpoint and killed 25 insurgents, according to Iraqi government officials.

A Babylon province intelligence officer who wouldn't give his name for security reasons told Knight Ridder that 60 officers stormed the checkpoints and sustained no casualties. The all-Iraqi operation came after a string of large-scale attacks on Iraqi security personnel throughout the country.

"They were criminal, armed terrorists and we destroyed them all," the officer said.

The second success was part of the initial push into Fallujah late Sunday night. Men described as elite Iraqi commandos backed by U.S. troops stormed across a bridge and took over Fallujah's main hospital amid enemy fire, according to a news release from the Iraqi government. Four suspected foreign fighters, including two Moroccans, were seized in the operation just outside the city on the western bank of the Euphrates River.

The Iraqi forces blasted open doors and handcuffed patients as they searched the building for gunmen, American military spokesmen said.

Medical staff at the scene offered a different version: An overzealous, thuggish band of Iraqi troops stormed a place where there were no rebels and terrified ill and injured patients.

"They looted from us, they hurt us and they didn't respect the jobs we were trying to do," said Khaled Hindi, 38, an ambulance driver, who said Iraqi forces stole his cell phone and money. "There were fighters outside the hospital, but there were none inside."

Just before the battle began, Iraqi Defense Minister Hazem Shaalan addressed the Iraqi troops at Camp Fallujah.

"I swear by God we will fight until the last drop of our blood," he said. "When we came to Iraq with the coalition forces, our decision was to build Iraq through its sons. Today is your day, and jihad is for you - not for those rats."

---

(Allam reported from Baghdad, Lasseter from Fallujah. Knight Ridder Newspapers special correspondents Qassim Mohammed in Najaf and Shatha al Awsy in Baghdad contributed to this report.)

http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/ledgerenquirer/news/world/10130991.htm
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by Iraqi Troops Desert US Offensive on Fallujah


FALLUJAH, November 9 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Some 200 Iraqi soldiers have already deserted their US-trained army unit shortly before the massive US offensive on Fallujah, US and Iraqi military officials have said.

According to Iraqi and US estimates, 200 others are vacationing to avoid taking part in the widely-censured US onslaught, CNN reported Tuesday, November9 .

“Some soldiers are afraid because they have received death threats,” an Iraqi soldier said, speaking only on condition of anonymity.

Interim Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi had made a surprise visit on Monday, November8 , to the Iraqi forces stationing around the western Iraqi city.

Thousands of US Marine and Army forces, backed by hellish air strikes, ground fire and tanks, began Monday, November8 , a massive assault on Fallujah, west of Baghdad, after the US-handpicked premier gave the go-ahead for an all-out assault.

Latest Desertion

A senior Iraqi officer is the latest to desert his army unit hours after he had been briefed on the US-led massive offensive on the resistance bastion of Fallujah.

"This man has no known ties with Fallujah and they [the US military] don't believe in the first instance that he is headed for Fallujah. They believe that since the captain is a Kurd, he is more likely headed up north and going home," CNN quoted US officers as saying.

"It is significant that he disappeared after he had a full and detailed brief on the full battle plan for the assault on Fallujah."

The deserted captain was in command of 160 Iraqi soldiers training with US marines at a base on the outskirts of the restive Fallujah.

It was reported in April that the US occupation military was detaining some 200 Iraqi civil defense soldiers, who refused to take part in a massive US offensive against Fallujah.

Ali Al-Shamari, who managed to make escape, told Reuters at that time that his36 th Security Brigade refused en masse to fight against their own people.

“Major Sin”

Sunni and Shiite religious parties had urged the Iraqi forces not to join the US incursion.

The Association of Muslim Scholars, Iraq’s highest Sunni body, has warned the Iraqi troops that they would be committing a “major sin” if they helped the US forces storm Fallujah.

The Association has further decided not to participate in the anticipated January election, urged other Iraqi factions and political powers to boycott election and held Allawi responsible for the bloodshed, saying that history would not forgive him.

The Fallujah Shura Council had also urged the Iraqi guardsmen to not join the fighting against the Iraqi resistance men in the flashpoint city.

The same message was expressed by the anti-occupation firebrand Shiite leader Muqtada Al-Sadr.

“The Iraqis should not be used as a tool in the hands of the occupation forces,” said Abdul Hadi Al-Darraji, head of the Martyr Sadr Office in Baghdad.

“Offensive on Fallujah targets the whole Iraq.”

The successive raids on Fallujah have, in effect, left thousands of Iraqis dead and homeless.

In April alone, at least 700 Iraqis, mostly women and children , were killed and1 , 500others injured when US occupation forces imposed a tight siege on the town and intensified air strikes on its densely-populated areas.

http://www.islam-online.net/English/News/2004-11/09/article05.shtml
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