Posted on 04/30/2004 3:56:58 AM PDT by The_Victor
FALLUJA, Iraq (Reuters) - U.S. Marines handed control of Falluja to a former general in Saddam Hussein (news - web sites)'s feared Republican Guard on Friday in bid to end a month-long siege that killed hundreds in the city and infuriated Iraqis.
In what appeared to be a reversal of Washington's policy of excluding members of Saddam's Baathist regime from power, Jasim Mohamed Saleh told Reuters his force would help police and other Iraqi security forces bring order to the town.
The commander of the Marines, who were pulling back from siege positions around the city of 300,000, was quoted as saying the former commanding general of Saddam's 38th Infantry Division would lead a force of about 900 mostly former Iraqi soldiers to replace the U.S. forces.
"We have now begun forming a new emergency military force to help the forces of the Iraqi Civil Defense Corps and the Iraqi police in completing the mission of imposing security and stability in Falluja without the need for the American army, which the people of Falluja reject," Saleh said.
Falluja's police chief confirmed the deal to Reuters.
Hundreds of people cheered the former general, who lives in the city, as he made his way into the town center in uniform in the early afternoon.
A relative said he had been chief-of-staff of a brigade of Saddam's Republican Guard, an elite force that put up the main resistance to U.S. invading forces a year ago. Senior officers were all expected to be members of the ruling Baath party.
The top Marine Corps officer in Iraq (news - web sites), Lieutenant General James Conway told the New York Times the new unit would be called the 1st Battalion of the Falluja Brigade.
GUERRILLA FIGHTERS
Marines pulled back from positions along the southern and western edges of the city. But they appeared to hold on to strongpoints dominating the Golan district to the north, where they have fought fierce gunbattles and called in bombers on Thursday evening against Sunni Muslim insurgents.
It was unclear what influence the new Iraqi force in Falluja has over the estimated 2,000 or so guerrillas, some of whom U.S. officials say are diehard Saddam supporters in a city once fiercely loyal to his minority Sunni-dominated regime.
Some 200 foreign Islamic militants have also been active, U.S. commanders and Iraqi officials in Baghdad say.
U.S. Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz spoke of trying to "isolate the killers from the population."
Further details of the accord remained elusive. U.S. demands that Marines launch joint patrols with Iraqi police inside town appeared to have been dropped. There was no word on a call to local people to hand over the killers of four U.S. contractors whose bodies were publicly mutilated, prompting the U.S. siege.
People who had fled homes in Falluja lined up at military checkpoints to return to the town, clearly hopeful that a peaceful resolution might now be in sight.
President Bush (news - web sites) gave his troops a free hand this week to retake control of the city, a symbol of insurgency among Iraq's Sunni Muslim minority against the American occupation, and the Pentagon (news - web sites) has sent dozens more heavy tanks to the area.
A U.S. defense official said efforts to win over hearts and minds before handing over formal sovereignty to an interim Iraqi government on June 30 had to be balanced with a need to show that resistance to U.S. occupation would not be tolerated.
"The Iraqis do respect strength. In their mind, a lot of that strength comes from combat power presence," he said. HUMILIATING PHOTOGRAPHS However, appealing to Iraqi public opinion is vital for U.S. officials trying to restore some stability. The troops are likely to be in Iraq for a considerable time to come. The June 30 deadline for ceding power to an interim Iraqi government would mark only the beginning of the transfer of sovereignty, Vice President Dick Cheney (news - web sites) said on Thursday. "This will be a difficult time, over the next two months, getting to June 30, because the enemy is well aware that their circumstances will become more difficult as soon as we begin to transfer authority back to the people of Iraq," he added. Efforts to calm Iraqi irritation with the occupation were not helped by the wide dissemination of humiliating photographs, first broadcast in the United States, which appear to show U.S. soldiers abusing detainees at Saddam's long notorious Abu Ghraib prison outside Baghdad.
Arab television channels broadcast the pictures on Friday. The military said it might discipline the general in charge. Six soldiers have already been charged over the incidents. In Falluja, doctors say about 600 Iraqis have been killed. April has also been the bloodiest month for American forces in 13 months in Iraq. Ten deaths on Thursday meant nearly a quarter of the 534 U.S. combat deaths have occurred this month. Around the southern holy city of Najaf, U.S. forces are tightening a squeeze on the Mehdi Army militia loyal to rebel cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, who has taken refuge among shrines sacred to Iraq's long oppressed Shi'ite Muslim majority. (Additional reporting by Akram Saleh in Falluja, Ghaith Abdul-Ahad and Gleb Bryanski in Najaf, and Tom Perry, Michael Battye and Joseph Logan in Baghdad)
Of course it is. But to believe that, one would have to believe that perhaps 'spreading democracy' (I think that's the latest excuse) won't work here either...
Of course that's a conservative view
Has he surrendered in Arabic yet ?
It is also true that Patton used MANY ex-Nazis to run things, and don't think for a minute that if Erwin Rommel hadn't died at Hitler's hand, that he wouldn't have been allowed to retain a key post in the "new" German army.
I, for one, have confidence in the administration. There are lots of "hellfire and brimstone" people here who think that in the Arab world the only progress that comes is as a result of a sledgehammer. I think you can achieve your ends surgically.
Moreover, there is NO reliable number of how many of these yahoos we've killed. At one point, we were taking out 100 every two days. Do the math. There aren't a lot of these guys left.
Finally, at some point some Iraqi "leaders" are going to have to exercise control---and the same people who say democracy and liberty won't work in Iraq were the ones who said it wouldn't work in Japan.
Uh I am not the one doing the armchair quaterbacking from 6,000 miles away.
Look you can make your armchair quaterbacking judgements all you want, but don't get mad when someone points out the fact that you are not on the ground in Iraq and do not know everything that is going on.
Check out the Belmont Club for serious, informed analysis of the current situation in Fallujah.
I agree with you and it's vitally important that the punishment of those involved is swift and just. And publicized.
We are killing the terrorists who killed our people. We have been doing a rather effective job of it. Still are.
Unless you are tapped in (and you very may well be) to what is happening on the ground... you really have no idea what is going on. You see the headlines and the sky is falling in. The headlines is surface at best. We certainly haven't turned tail and run. And we certainly aren't losing the war.
What do you know about the General? Is he the terrorists' accomplice or our ally?
Or do you just generalize all Iraqis and all Muslims as terrorists?
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