From the Los Angeles Times
U.S. prods Iraq to act during drop in
violence
Leaders
must use relative calm to advance political reconciliation, increase
basic services and pass laws, officials and experts say.
By Tina Susman
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
November 20, 2007
BAGHDAD —
As Iraq's government on Monday trumpeted a dramatic decline in
violence, describing it as a sign that sectarian warfare is waning,
U.S. officials warned that the gains would be short-lived if the
nation's leaders did not use the relative calm to advance political
reconciliation.
A
day after U.S. military officials proclaimed that bombings and other
attacks had dropped 55% nationwide since June, the Iraqi government
released figures showing steeper declines in the capital and
surrounding areas. According to its figures, there were 323 violent
attacks in the governorate of Baghdad last month, compared with 1,134
in June.
The violence remains high, but the current level is a
vast improvement, one that turned government spokesman Ali Dabbagh
nearly giddy as he spoke on Al Arabiya TV on Monday. Dabbagh said
Baghdad had "defeated the forces of darkness" and returned to its glory
as "the beautiful city of the 'One Thousand and One Arabian Nights.' "
"Certainly
we still have more to do, but no one can deny that we have passed the
difficult stage in Baghdad, the stage that we all had fears of sliding
to a civil war," he said.
Dabbagh echoed U.S. officials who
have cited various factors for decreasing violence: the recruitment of
former insurgents to work alongside U.S. and Iraqi security forces; a
decision by Sunni Arab tribal leaders to turn on insurgents; and the
deployment of an additional 28,500 American troops to Iraq between
February and June of this year as part of a U.S. security plan.
But
military and government officials warned at the start of the clampdown
that it would not have lasting success unless it was matched with
political progress. It is a message being repeated with a new sense of
urgency, now that Iraqi leaders can no longer blame huge bombs, mass
abductions, and street-by-street fighting as an excuse for political
paralysis.
Analysts, as well as officials, say now is the time
that Iraq's Shiite Muslim-led government must step up delivery of
essential services, revive schools and hospitals, and pass laws to end
distrust among Sunni Arabs, Shiites and Kurds.
"It's about
confidence-building measures. You have got to step forward," said the
No. 2 commander of U.S. troops in Iraq, Army Lt. Gen. Raymond T.
Odierno.
Odierno said the government has a window of
opportunity, perhaps until next summer, to act before gains begin
unraveling. "Security is better, so now is the time to reach out to the
other parts of the Iraqi populace," he said. "It's time to really look
at delivering services to all Iraqis in Baghdad and around" the
country.
U.S. government officials agree.
"This is
absolutely the case," said U.S. Embassy spokesman Philip T. Reeker.
"This really is the time when they need to take advantage of the window
that has been given."
Some basic services such as electricity
are showing signs of improvement, with most customers receiving more
power per day than a few months ago. But that could be because demand
for electricity is down now that the end of summer has reduced use of
air conditioners.
The major laws that U.S. and Iraqi leaders
long maintained were crucial to peace have not been passed, and there
is little sign any of them will be soon. None has come before the
parliament for debate.
Chief among them are a law to end the
official shunning of former members of Saddam Hussein's ruling Baath
Party, who were stripped of their jobs and pensions after Hussein's
ouster; a law to manage the country's oil industry so that Sunni Arab,
Shiite and Kurdish regions reap the financial rewards; and a law to
decide the extent of provinces' powers.
Perhaps the most
pressing is the provincial powers law, which is necessary before
provincial elections can be held. A U.S. Embassy official said there
had been no movement on it since July and that different factions were
deadlocked over such things as whether the prime minister should have
the power to sack governors. This has stalled the scheduling of
provincial elections, since no party wants to hold them until they know
the provinces' ultimate powers, said the official, who asked to remain
anonymous.
Odierno said provincial elections were a key
confidence-building measure. "I'm hoping it happens next year. I think
it's essential," he said.
Senior Pentagon officials, including
Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, have frequently expressed
frustration that political reconciliation has lagged behind progress
they say is being made by U.S. forces. At one point, Gates bluntly
warned Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki that U.S. troops were buying
him time with their blood.
But one senior U.S. military official
noted that many Iraqi government leaders had been chosen by their peers
precisely because they did not have a strong political base, leaving
them insecure and not inclined to move quickly and decisively.
"They
weren't the strongest horses around; there was concern about somebody
taking the reins and running away with it," the official said. "Because
of their insecurities and the weakness of their political base, they've
been reluctant to jump off the high board."
Maliki's government
has bristled at the U.S. impatience and accused American lawmakers of
trying to push Iraq's parliament to satisfy Washington's clock. It also
has been slow to embrace the U.S. military's idea of using former Sunni
Arab insurgents as security forces, warning that such recruits could
turn on Shiite forces once American troops leave.
But many
provincial leaders have accepted the idea, and senior U.S. military
commanders, as well as many Iraqis, are hopeful this will turn up
pressure on Baghdad's government to do what it takes to solidify the
gains made.
Many Iraqi politicians agree that they need to act fast.
Dabbagh
tempered his enthusiasm with an acknowledgment that some Baghdad
neighborhoods, such as Dora and Saidiya, remain tense and that threats
from insurgents remain.
Ammar Wajeeh, a Sunni Arab lawmaker in
the national parliament, said legislators were under pressure because
there were few jobs and scant municipal services.
"People are
wondering what will be next," Wajeeh said. "Winter is on the doorstep
and we are wondering if the sewers will stand the rain. The municipal
services provided are, to say the least, minimal."
But Sami
Askari, a Shiite lawmaker allied with Maliki, said he was confident the
reduced violence would usher in changes on the political level and
allow contractors and companies to return to the streets to repair
infrastructure damaged in the war.
"Now is the appropriate time and a chance for them and the government
to proceed," he said.
The
relative calm did not come soon enough for four members of the Iraqi
national soccer team, who disappeared during a visit to Australia and
requested asylum.
The Iraqi team had played Australia's soccer
team Saturday in a qualifying match for the 2008 Beijing Olympics;
Australia won, 2-0. Three Iraqi players and a coach vanished Sunday. An
official of Iraq's sports journalists association, Saif Muhsin, said
the Iraqi Olympic Committee got word Monday that the men were asking
for asylum in Australia.
Also Monday, an Iraqi television
journalist who had been abducted Friday was freed. The kidnappers
called his family and told them to pick up their son in a Baghdad
neighborhood in the predawn darkness today, said the manager of the
independent Baghdadiya TV station.
"They went and found him
standing on the street alone," said the manager, who asked not to be
identified. He said the reporter, Muntathar Zaidi, had minor bruises
but was otherwise unharmed.
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times