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« Comments are November 24, 2006
Anbar Updates
Posted by Bill The Times' Martin Fletcher on Ramadi: While the world's attention has been focused on Baghdad's slide into sectarian warfare, something remarkable has been happening in Ramadi, a city of 400,000 inhabitants that al-Qaeda and its Iraqi allies have controlled since mid-2004 and would like to make the capital of their cherished Islamic caliphate. Excerpt and link via Bill Roggio, who continues his analytical series on "The Anbar Tribes vs. al-Qaeda:" Lost in the current debate over Iraq - civil war or sectarian violence, success or failure, increasing troops or strategic redeployment, victory or defeat - is the sea-change occurring in western Iraq. The U.S. military has coaxed a large majority of the Sunnis of Anbar province, perhaps one of the most sympathetic groups to al-Qaeda in the Middle East, to turn on al-Qaeda. The choice wasn't difficult after the tribes saw what al-Qaeda had to offer - death, torture, Taliban like sharia, humiliation, destruction of commerce. The relationship and intelligence gained form operating in western Iraq will benefit the west during the Long War - if the U.S. doesn't withdrawal precipitously and leave the Anbar tribes to the predations of al-Qaeda in Iraq. Read the rest. UPDATE: More from Mudville. Posted by Bill at November 24, 2006 11:05 AM | TrackBack (0) Trackback PingsTrackBack URL for this entry: Comments |
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