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Tal Afar Stormed : Threat of Ethnic Cleansing Grows in Iraq

by Juan Cole (reposted)
Sunday, September 11, 2005

Tal Afar Stormed
Threat of Ethnic Cleansing Grows in Iraq


Iraqi troops took the lead in the ground assault in the northern Turkmen city of Tal Afar, in an attempt by the US to showcase newly trained Iraqi army units. The problem is that they are perceived as mostly Shiite, and the Tal Afar campaign is targeting Sunni Turkmen neighborhoods. So the mayor has resigned in protest of a "sectarian" operation. Al-Hayat reports that a local Turkmen leader said that 152 civilians had been killed by "indiscriminate" fire coming from US helicopter gunships. It also said that (Shiite) Prime Minister Ibrahim Jaafari declare that he had ordered the operation against what he called terrorists, who, he said, had expelled people from their homes. Jaafari should remember what happened to the popularity of Iyad Allawi when he called for more US strikes on Fallujah.

Khalaf Juburi, police chief of Mosul, told al-Hayat that the operation against Tal Afar was aimed at removing a vile disease from Tal Afar.

The Iraqis say that they have closed the border with Syria, but in reality this move just means a couple of regular checkpoints are not longer admitting legal entrants. The long Syrian border with Iraq stretches through desert and other rugged territory and cannot actually be closed by decree. Defense Minister Saadoun Dulaimi turns out to be something of a braggart, since he threatened that after Tal Afar similar operations would be launched against Ramadi, Qaim, and other Sunni Arab cities. In fact, if Dulaimi just openly took a walk in Adhamiyah in West Baghdad, he would be killed on sight. So until he has control of his own capital, he would be advised not to brandish unrealistic threats.

Reuters reports several guerrilla operations on Saturday, including shootings in Baqubah and bombs in Mahawil and Samarra among other places.

Alissa Rubin of the Los Angeles Times draws attention to the pattern of reprisal killings between Sunnis and Shiites in Baghdad. She quotes a US foreign service officer who had been in Bosnia, who says that once minorities begin fleeing territory en masse, a spiral of violence tends to ensue. The implication is that Iraq may not be far from that spiral.

Actually, there are a number of places where there have already been substantial displacements. Thousands of Arabs have left Kirkuk. Shiites have fled Latifiyah. Sunnis Arabs have left the deep, Shiite south.

The Iraqi government agreed to pay the private security firm guarding Baghdad International Airport half the money it is owed, so that the airport has opened again. The spectacle of a private firm holding the Iraqi government ransom with regard to the national airport was not edifying, especially since US troops appear to have intervened in favor of the private company.

It is now often forgotten that colonialism was often spearheaded by private firms. The British East India Company is actually the entity that conquered much of India. The British government only took over directly after the failed 1856-1858 attempted revolution (which the British called a "Mutiny.") Likewise the Netherlands East India Company had a semi-governmental role in what is now Indonesia. The thousands of private security guards in Iraq are not that different from the troops of the old East India Company in India. Many of the latter were also essentially mercenaries.

What is scary is that the privatization of "security" (i.e. the protection of the property of Bush's rich friends at all costs, including substantial loss of human life) is now spreading back to the United States. Blackwater private security men, of the sort who caused so much trouble in Fallujah by acting like cowboys, are now openly toting M16s and other assault weapons in what is left of New Orleans. I'm not aware that the East India Company ever showed up back in London with several platoons to patrol the streets. But then, as the irredentist British neo-imperialists keep reminding us, they did empire better than we do.

posted by Juan @ 9/11/2005 06:24:00 AM   

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by ALJ
More than 5000 Iraqi troops backed by US soldiers swept into Tal Afar, conducting house-to-house searches and battering down stone walls in the narrow, winding streets of the city.

"Operation Restoring Rights is being conducted to remove terrorists and foreign fighters operating in Tal Afar. This operation is in support of the Iraqi governments efforts to bring safety and security to the citizens of the city," Colonel Billy J. Buckner, a military spokesman, said on Sunday.

Buckner said Iraqi and US troops had captured 211 people, killed 141 suspected fighters and confiscated nine weapons caches since 26 August.

Border closed

Late on Saturday, the prime minister ordered the Rabiyah border crossing closed in an attempt to stop the flow of fighters from Syria, which is 96km from Tal Afar.

While several hundred fighters using small arms initially put up stiff resistance in the city's ancient Sarai district, Iraqi forces reported only two men wounded in the day's fighting. The US military issued no casualty report for the 3500 Americans in the operation.

As the day wore on, fighting died down, said Colonel HR McMasters, commander of the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment. He said the joint force found the Sarai neighbourhood nearly deserted once the shooting ended.

"The enemy decided to bail out," he said.

McMasters said the vast majority of fighters captured in that period were "Iraqis and not foreigners".

Foreign fighters

According to a local Iraqi journalist interviewed by Aljazeera, there are very few foreign combatants in the area.

"Every time the US army and the Iraqi government want to destroy a specific city, they claim it hosts Arab fighters and Abu Musab al-Zarqawi," Nasir Ali.

When asked about the presence of Iraqi fighters in Tal Afar, Ali said local fighters were confronting the US army.

Continued battles

With the Tal Afar offensive under way, the Iraqi defence
minister signalled his US-trained forces would not stop
after this operation and vowed to move against fighters opposed to the presence of foreign troops in Iraq everywhere.

"We say to our people ... we are coming," said Defence Minister Sadoun al-Dulaimi.

The offensive in Tal Afar, 418km northwest of Baghdad, is delicate because of the tangle of ethnic sensitivities.

About 90% of the city's 200,000 people - most of whom fled
to the countryside before the fighting - are Sunni Turkmen
who have complained about their treatment from the Shia-dominated government and police force put in place after the US invasion in 2003.

Addressing that complaint, Jabr announced on Saturday that 1000 additional police officers would be hired in Tal Afar after the offensive and that they would be chosen from the Turkmen population.

Turkmen

The Turkmen have a vocal ally in their Turkish brethren to the north, where Turkey's government is a vital US ally and has fought against its own Kurdish insurgency for decades. Tal Afar is next to land controlled by Iraqi Kurds.

Turkey voiced disapproval of US tactics when American forces ran fighters out of Tal Afar a year ago. The Turkmen residents complained that Iraqi Kurds were fighting alongside the Americans.

US and Kurdish officials denied the allegation, but the Turkish government threatened to stop cooperating with the Americans.

The siege was lifted the next day and fighters began returning when the Americans quickly pulled out, leaving behind only a skeleton force of 500 soldiers.

Neighbours blamed

For those reasons, US forces stood back during the new sweep through Tal Afar, allowing Iraqi forces to break down doors in the search for fighters. The Americans followed behind, securing positions while the Iraqis advanced.

Twelve hours after the offensive began, Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari said fighters had been trying to "to isolate Tal Afar from the political process as we are preparing for the referendum on the draft constitution".

Al-Dulaimi, who joined al-Jaafari at the news conference, said he expected the offensive to last three days and complained Iraq's neighbours had not done enough to stop the flow of foreign fighters.

"I regret to say that instead of sending medicines to us, our Arab brothers are sending terrorists," al-Dulaimi said.

The interior minister read al-Jaafari's order closing the border on Iraqi television late Saturday. The decree indefinitely shut the Rabiyah crossing to all transportation, including the railroad, except for vehicles with special permission from the Interior Ministry.

The order did not affect the frontier crossing near the town of Qaim or the major highway into Syria.

British soldier killed

A British soldier was killed and three others were injured in an attack in southern Iraq on Sunday, the Ministry of Defence said.

The attack in Basra province happened at 11.15am (7.15GMT), a spokeswoman for the ministry said. She gave no details of the attack but said an investigation was under way.

Defence Secretary John Reid expressed regret at the death.

"I was greatly saddened to hear this morning of the death of a British soldier on duty in Iraq," Reid said in a statement. "As always my thoughts are with the family and the families of those injured in this appalling act of violence."

The British military has reported at least 96 deaths since the Iraq war began in March 2003. Two British troops died in a roadside bombing in southern Iraq on Monday.

http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/FFFE08A7-D75C-45F5-AB51-206EA2D48668.htm
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