Forum Views ()
Forum Replies ()
Read more with google mobile :
Insurgent foe's slaying shows cracks near Baghdad
Yahoo!
My Yahoo!
Mail
More Yahoo! Services
Account Options
New User? Sign Up
Sign In
Help
Yahoo! Search
web search
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Africa
Europe
Latin America
Middle East
North America
Insurgent foe's slaying shows cracks near Baghdad
By BRIAN MURPHY,Associated Press Writer -
Tuesday, December 15
Send
IM Story
Print
BAGHDAD – Word began to spread at daybreak in the Sunni districts south of Baghdad: A top anti-insurgent fighter and three family members were slain overnight in their village.
When the news reached the local sheik, he counted the number of men he had left. It was barely enough to fill the small mosque for the funeral.
"We are losing ground," said Sheik Mustafa Kamil Shebib, a leader of an anti-insurgent Sunni militia that was once funded by the U.S. military. "We are becoming scared again."
There is no doubt that overall violence in Iraq is just a fraction of its level several years ago. But there are hints that one of the main forces that helped turn the tide _ the Sunni tribes that joined the U.S.-backed fight _ could be increasingly fraying in critical areas near Baghdad.
It's difficult to measure the pressures on the Sunni groups, sometimes known as Awakening Councils, or Sahwa in Arabic. They have been hit by a steady barrage of revenge attacks since their uprising against insurgents about three years ago. There also is grumbling in the ranks over delayed or missing pay after the U.S. military stopped bankrolling the militias last year and turned over the accounts to Iraq's Shiite-led government.
What happened in the village of Al-Manari before dawn on Thursday is just one snapshot. It touches, however, on some potentially worrisome themes for Iraqi and U.S. authorities: the increasing boldness of the insurgent reprisals and the cries for help from Awakening leaders who are a front-line buffer for Baghdad as U.S. forces withdraw.
"We have no (Awakening) checkpoints in the area anymore," said Sheik Shebib, who leads Awakening militias in the Arab Jabour area just south of Baghdad. "Now, al-Qaida is coming back and we are feeling more and more powerless."
Few places have such a direct connection to Baghdad's security as Arab Jabour _ a collection of industrial zones, villages and palm and citrus groves in the Sunni belt around the city's southern doorstep. It's a gateway to the capital that was used by insurgents before they were crippled with a two-pronged squeeze: the U.S. troop surge in early 2007 and the Sunni militia uprising.
In an airstrike in January 2008, American warplanes dropped 40,000 pounds of bombs in just 10 minutes on an area of Arab Jabour to clear one of the last insurgent strongholds in the area.
The Awakening groups took over. Across Arab Jabour _ like many Sunni areas around Baghdad _ they became de facto security bosses and grass-roots spymasters with a steady American paycheck. They knew the U.S. funding would eventually end, but most expected the Iraqi government to pick up the tab or bring the Awakening tribes into the standing security forces.
Both plans have faltered to some extent. Awakening Council leaders such as Sheik Shebib complain that government pay has been sporadic and the Shiite-led security commanders have been slow to bring aboard the Sunni militiamen.
Iraq's prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, even mentioned the struggles to pay the Sunni fighters as being among the reasons for potential security gaps as he faced an angry parliament after last week's bombings in Baghdad that killed at least 127 people.
"Al-Qaida had the upper hand, then the Sunni groups had the upper hand and now it seems the insurgents are trying to regain their strength around Baghdad," said Hadi Jallu, a political analyst in Baghdad. "This is a fight that is not finished yet."
A U.S. military spokesman, Lt. Col. Philip Smith, declined to comment on whether Awakening groups are under increased pressure. "Sahwa members have been attacked since their beginning because of their efforts to bring security to the Iraqi people," he said.
In his area of Arab Jabour, Sheik Shebib said he oversaw 2,500 Awakening fighters six months ago. Today, he claimed he has just a handful of full-time fighters left.
"It's a sign of a growing security vacuum," he said.
He lost one of his top aides sometime before dawn Thursday. Whoever killed Ali Mahmoud Dhidan _ along with his brother, cousin and elderly mother _ managed to slip silently into the village, a cluster of about 100 mud-brick homes along a canal about six miles (10 kilometers) south of central Baghdad.
The shots woke up neighbors, but not soon enough to see anyone flee the house.
At their funeral, mourners carried Dhidan's body past groves and war-shattered homes where he and other Awakening fighters fought insurgents. Dhidan was among the first to join the uprising against insurgents in late 2006. At the time, the area was known as the "Triangle of Death" for its near daily bloodshed.
He became a leading Awakening figure as violence subsided, but he refused to leave his village for bigger roles elsewhere, said Sheik Shebib.
And as the Awakening ranks dwindled, he began to stand out. The first threats were easy to dismiss: a shout or a menacing gesture from a passing car, said village residents, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of fears of attack. The warnings became more direct in recent weeks: phone calls and small notes with the chilling words "you are dead."
Still, he did not post guards around his house at night. There weren't enough Awakening allies left, said Sheik Shebib.
"His house was undefended," he said. "The killers knew this and knew they could strike."
Another Awakening fighter was more lucky the following day.
About 12 suspected members of Al-Qaida in Iraq broke in the house of Wathiq Al-Jubori in the Arab Jabour area, but he wasn't home, said a police official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not allowed to speak to media.
They raiders left a message.
"They told Al-Jubori's family that they are looking for Wathiq to kill him because he fought them and forced them to flee the area two years ago," said the police official.
The imam held special prayers for Dhidan and his slain relatives that Friday in a mosque about a mile and half (three kilometers) from Sheik Shebib's house.
He didn't attend. He was too frightened to make the short trip.
___
Associated Press Writer Sameer N. Yacoub contributed to this report.
Recommend
Send
IM Story
Print
Related Articles
Al-Qaida No. 2 blasts Obama, honors 9/11 suspect AP - 1 hour 8 minutes ago
Land mine kills 6 Somali children in same family AP - 1 hour 10 minutes ago
3 bodies found shot to death in Texas mobile home AP - 1 hour 12 minutes ago
Guinea's No. 2 to visit wounded leader in Morocco AP - 1 hour 14 minutes ago
Sky-mapping spacecraft lifts off from Cal coast AP - 1 hour 15 minutes ago
News Search
Top Stories
Citi to repay $20 bln in plan to exit bailout
Dubai to pay debt with $10 bln Abu Dhabi handout
Koalas, penguins at risk of extinction: study
Jackson, Boyle and Tiger transfix in 2009
Cadbury says rejects 'inadequate' Kraft takeover bid
More Top Stories »
ADVERTISEMENT
Most Popular
Most Viewed
Most Recommended
Top British banker admits 'mistakes' on bonuses
Dubai to pay debt with $10 billion Abu Dhabi fund
Tiger Woods' girlfriend apologizes in TV interview
Fed likely to dampen speculation on early exit
US jobless rate 'could rise further'
More Most Viewed »
Global stocks mixed amid Dubai debt crisis
Tiny magnetic discs could kill cancer cells: study
Virgin unveils spaceship to offer space tourism
Tiger Woods' girlfriend apologizes in TV interview
Dubai blackout over debt plans to hit Gulf markets
More Most Recommended »
Elsewhere on Yahoo!
Financial news on Yahoo! Finance
Stars and latest movies
Best travel destinations
More on Yahoo! News
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Subscribe to our news feeds
Top StoriesMy Yahoo!RSS
» More news feeds | What are news feeds?
Also on Yahoo
Answers
Groups
Mail
Messenger
Mobile
Travel
Finance
Movies
Sports
Games
» All Yahoo! Services
Site Highlights
Singapore
Full Coverage
Most Popular
Asia Entertainment
Photos
Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Southeast Asia Pte. Ltd. (Co. Reg. No. 199700735D). All Rights Reserved.
Terms of Service |
Privacy Policy |
Community |
Intellectual Property Rights Policy |
Help
Other News on Monday, 14 December 2009 Israel funnels millions of dollars to settlements
Catalans vote in symbolic independence referendum
Campaign mocks treatment of Iran student leader
Leaders strike deal on Sudan democratic reforms
Berlusconi bloodied by hit to face, says he's fine
|
Supreme leader says Iran's opposition violates law
US jobless rate 'could rise further'
Greek economy minister urges immediate reforms
With Gaza cease-fire, south Israel blossoms
Israel expels Jewish seminary from army deal
|
Houston is first major US city to elect gay mayor
Iran's Khamenei issues stern warning to opposition
Iran's president pledges support to Hamas leader
PLO set to extend Abbas term as Palestinian leader
300 stuck temporarily on Disney World monorail
Turkmenistan-China pipeline to start Monday
`Princess and the Frog' hops to No. 1 with $25M
Nobel-winning economist dead at 94
NKorean weapons seizure could affect nuke talks
S Philippines grapples with crisis after crisis
Politics dominate Calif education reform effort
Turkmenistan-China gas pipeline to open Monday
Authorities: Rottweiler mauls, kills Fla. toddler
Thaksin back in Cambodia as Thai "spy" to be freed
Senator says opposition grows to Medicare buy-in
Taiwan fishermen 'fall victim to climate change'
Houston biggest US city to elect openly gay mayor
Senate to vote on $1.1 trillion spending bill
US-ENTERTAINMENT Summary
Disney's Princess charms weekend moviegoers
|
Disney's "Princess" charms weekend moviegoers
Reggae star Buju Banton facing drug charge in Fla.
`Princess and the Frog' hops to No. 1 with $25M
Gunmen storm Afghan police post, kill 8: governor
Italian protester breaks Berlusconi's nose
|
Italy's Berlusconi in hospital after attack
2009: the Year of Twitter and Facebook
Afghan war decision toughest of presidency: Obama
Fed likely to dampen speculation on early exit
Russia cuts gas to Armenia after bomb found: report
|
Greece waits for its financial medicine
Accenture ends relationship with Tiger Woods
Afghan air strike wreaks more havoc in Germany
Nanomaterial used in cancer tests, medicine delivery
Conservative favored in Chile presidential run-off
|
Mobile phone English lessons a hit in Bangladesh
Timeline of Iranian, North Korean nuclear programs
Decades-old dioxins pollute river, divide US community
Israel votes new funding for settlements
Democracy referendum plan heats up Hong Kong politics
|
Kurds, Turkish nationalists clash in Istanbul
Low turnout in Catalan independence referendum
|
Myanmar rebels grow more opium to buy arms: report
|
Brown in Afghanistan vows new push to defeat Taliban
Iraq: No time to act after US tip before blasts
Kurds, Turkish nationalists clash in Istanbul
|
Saudi opposition petitions for vote after floods
China blocks Sun TV signal in content crackdown
|
Israel okays millions of dollars in aid to settlements
Highlights of UN resolution against NKorea
Thais extend North Korean arms cargo crew's detention
AP INVESTIGATION: Monsanto seed biz role revealed
Google to produce, sell own Nexus One phones: report
|
US mulls Predator strikes in Pakistani cities: report
Kidney donor's night-before-surgery poem
Accenture ends relationship with Tiger Woods
|
Nurses are key to matchmaking in kidney swap
Hardline Pakistani schools a draw for foreigners
Apple fires back at Nokia in patents battle
|
Avalanche fears, clouds hamper search for climbers
Cambodia frees convicted Thai spy
Lieberman resists Medicare buy-in plan
Crew of NKorean weapons plane in Thai court
Venezuela's Chavez sees U.S. 'threat' over Iran ties
Plane crew held for 12 more days over weapons haul
Obamas join stars for Christmas benefit concert
Obama: Expect no more White House gate-crashers
Woman executed in China over child prostitution
China might not take climate change funding: FT
UN: 2 UN hostages freed from Darfur
Weather forecast for the Asia-Pacific region
46 injured in pileup of about 50 cars in Conn.
Johnny Depp can't get used to winning awards
Seoul shares turn up on Dubai news; builders rise
Toyota to start selling plug-in hybrids in 2011
Mercedes-Benz sees China sales up 15 pct in 2010
Korea Hot Stocks
Confidence up at Japanese manufacturers
Obama's brother turns down film role
Pakistan
Johnny Depp can't get used to winning awards
Japan's business confidence grows: central bank
Seoul shares turn lower; KOPEC jumps on debut
History miniseries takes on the Kennedys
|
Taiwan dollar near flat in thin trade, eyes stocks
`Precious,' `Up,' `Hangover' make AFI top-10 list
Downey's Sherlock Holmes an action hero
|
S.Korea Nov ind power demand growth at 8-yr high
L.A. critics honor Iraq war movie Hurt Locker
|
Luxury travel business bounces back
NBC launching Chuck game
|
`Hurt Locker' wins LA Critics' best-picture prize
Hundreds of Indian languages struggle to survive
Big US box office kiss for Disney's 'Frog Princess'
US-TECH Summary
EU warms to Oracle-Sun deal
Detained Americans to be tried in Iran: minister
|
Insurgent foe's slaying shows cracks near Baghdad
Koalas, penguins at risk of extinction: study
Hi-tech, eco-friendly dream home takes shape in Japan
U.S. forces chief warns of Afghanistan fight
|
Gunmen kill 16 police in Afghan ambushes
Jackson, Boyle and Tiger transfix in 2009
Cadbury says rejects 'inadequate' Kraft takeover bid
Bin Laden: symbolic icon in impenetrable fortress
Dubai to pay debt with $10 billion Abu Dhabi fund
Turk PM calls for unity after Kurdish party ban
|
Pakistan seeks clues on jailed Americans
|
Iran says makes arrests over torn Khomeini picture
|
Will Ecuador drought dry up Correa's popularity?
|
Motorized bar stool from DUI case fetches $1,125
DNA map shows pandas may lack meat taste buds
Katrina recovery was test of ability to adapt
Beijing cuts broadcaster's signal amid media crackdown
EU warms to Oracle-Sun deal
|
Iran to put three US hikers on trial
Accenture ends relationship with Tiger Woods
|
Democracy "referendum" plan heats up HK politics
Boxer's opponents capitalize on 'ma'am' exchange
U.S. envoy says no timetable yet for North Korea talks
Gaps in DNA databanks have led to tragedy
NBA launches Web, mobile sites for fans in India
|
Pakistan police probe Americans in terror case
NATO: Top US defense official visits Afghanistan
Accenture marks 1st sponsor to cut ties with Woods
Protest widens against creation of new Indian state
Clinics help people represent themselves in court
Philippine troops kill one militant after jailbreak
Obama to meet with bankers, then Lebanon's leader
Cambodia frees Thai 'spy' after pardon by king
26 operations, 13 kidneys: hope to few with little
16 policemen killed in 2 attacks in Afghanistan
Korean derivative funds rebound sharply; risks eyed
Toyota aims to roll out plug-in Prius in two years
`Avatar' joins tradition of the Hollywood colossus
China unveils landmark Turkmenistan pipeline
Coal still king in China, despite climate pledge
India inflation hit 4.8 percent in November
S.Lanka set for record current account surplus
Confidence grows at Japanese manufacturers
Golden Globes nominations launch Oscars race
India's gold retailers jump on the 'brandwagon'
History miniseries takes on the Kennedys
Downey's "Sherlock Holmes" an action hero
NBC launching "Chuck" game
Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
AMD to Start Production of piledriver
Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights