From the Los Angeles Times
U.S. shifts Sunni strategy in Iraq
Focus
moves from neighborhoods to the parliament in an effort to get
government jobs for thousands of men now working in local security
programs.
By Peter Spiegel
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
January 14, 2008
BAGHDAD —
Eager to cement the security gains of last year's troop buildup, the
U.S. military has shifted its strategy from the streets to the
corridors of power in a high-stakes effort to persuade Iraq's wary
Shiite leaders to put thousands of predominantly Sunni men, many of
them former insurgents, on the government payroll.
More than 70,000 members of mostly Sunni Arab groups now work for
American forces in neighborhood security programs. Transferring them to
the control of the Shiite Muslim-dominated government, as policemen and
members of public works crews, has taken on a new urgency as American
troops begin to withdraw, officials indicated in recent interviews,
meetings and briefings.
The day-to-day commander in Iraq, Army Lt. Gen. Raymond T. Odierno,
believes that the Iraqi government's reconciliation with onetime Sunni
fighters represents the "primary driver of enhanced security" over the
next six months, according to internal military planning documents seen
by The Times.
"It's a big change," said a top Odierno aide, who spoke on condition of
anonymity because such plans have yet to be made public. "It's a shift
in the commander's intent."
So far, however, progress has been limited. Officials of Prime Minister
Nouri Maliki's government, fearing the creation of a potential rival
army, are resisting the move. U.S. military officials fear that
opposition could send the former insurgents among the Sunni guard
corps, known as concerned local citizens, or CLCs, back into the
battlefield.
"We've got a lull at the moment, an absolute lull in violence, but it
could go anywhere next year, depending on how the current government
reacts to it," Odierno's aide said. "One of our biggest risks are CLCs
and which way they'll go."
The aide, like other U.S. officials, warned that the window of
opportunity is narrow, and is dependent on the Iraqi government making
the Sunni security groups, sometimes called Awakening Councils, part of
the official government structure.
"If it doesn't embrace it, you could have the different Sunni
Awakenings coming together as a Sunni army that tries to overthrow the
government, pushing the country into civil war," the aide said. "It's
possible."
The concerned citizens groups now serve as guards in areas where
traditional security forces, such as the Iraqi army and police, are not
present or are not trusted because of past sectarian abuses.
Not all are Sunnis. But experts on the staff of Army Gen. David H.
Petraeus, the overall commander in Iraq, estimated at the end of
November that about 80% then under U.S. contracts were Sunni. Each gets
paid about $300 a month.
U.S. officials believe the concerned citizens groups have helped reduce
violence by fighting extremists linked to the group Al Qaeda in Iraq
and by redirecting insurgents.
Those officials, wary of creating parallel constabulary units that
would rival government-controlled forces, have ramped up efforts to
persuade the Baghdad government to attach the concerned citizens groups
to the Iraqi police or civilian work corps.
The move marks an important shift in U.S. efforts to bring rival Shiite
and Sunni factions together. Since the start of the U.S. troop buildup,
Pentagon officials have tried to get Sunni and Shiite officials to
reconcile, a process that U.S. officials acknowledge has largely failed.
The Shiite-led Iraqi parliament approved a bill Saturday that
would allow many members of Saddam Hussein's party, most of whom are
Sunnis, to regain government jobs, but the measure was not related
directly to the citizens groups. The law was approved only after months
of debate, and other key reconciliation measures sought by the U.S.
have languished.
Although not abandoning their efforts at the central government level,
U.S. officials have made the hiring of Sunni guards the centerpiece of
their new reconciliation strategy.
Last year, the Iraqi government cautiously supported a move to bring
Sunnis who participated in the Awakening movement in Anbar province
into the police force. But government resistance has stiffened as
groups closer to Baghdad begin making the same transition.
So far, 1,730 members of the concerned citizens groups in the Baghdad
suburb of Abu Ghraib have been allowed to become police officers. An
additional 2,000 in the capital were accepted as members of the police
force during the fall.
But even those limited numbers have been difficult for U.S. officials
to clear through the Iraqi government.
"It's still an obstacle," said Army Col. Martin Stanton, the officer on
Petraeus' staff who is in charge of the effort. "They're deeply
suspicious of any organized group of Sunnis, especially ones that were
former insurgents."
Stanton said he would like to see most of the guards transferred to
Iraqi control within the next eight months.
The move to set up concerned citizens groups sprang from the unexpected
uprising of Sunni sheiks in Anbar against Al Qaeda in Iraq in 2006,
when they approached U.S. military commanders to request permission to
band together to protect their own neighborhoods.
Since then, Anbar has gone from the most violent province in Iraq to
one of the quietest, and U.S. military officials have tried to
replicate the model elsewhere. Local commanders used funds provided
under a long-standing "emergency-response program" to pay the local
groups.
Officials targeted cities and regions where Iraqi security forces did
not exist, such as Arab Jabour, a largely Sunni rural area south of
Baghdad, or were unwilling to actively patrol, like Baqubah, the
war-torn capital of Diyala province to the north.
Mid-level U.S. officers acknowledge that many of the men being drafted
into the CLC groups are former insurgents; one officer in east Baghdad
marveled that he recently met over tea with CLC leaders who had been on
his unit's insurgent target list just weeks earlier.
"Our 'concerned local citizens' -- people say it without any hint of
irony," said one official. "One day, we remove the Al Qaeda patch and
put on a CLC patch. Now they're the good guys."
But advocates of the program argue that such steps are inevitable, and
in some cases desirable. They represent an acknowledgment that many
Iraqis who were fighting U.S.-led forces were not hardened militants,
but angry men looking to protect their neighborhoods from foreigners.
By becoming guards in previously unpatrolled areas in northern and
central Iraq, the citizens groups have become a key stopgap, filling in
security holes where U.S. forces have lacked the numbers to impose
stability.
"The CLCs are bridging the gap, but unfortunately that can't last
forever," said Army Brig. Gen. Joseph Anderson, Odierno's chief of
staff. "The government of Iraq [must] embrace it, and that's a big
battle right now: Are they going to embrace these under their own
contracts?"
U.S. officials have acknowledged that the Iraqi police forces are not
large enough to absorb all 70,000 of the men.
Odierno said last month that fewer than a quarter will become
government security personnel. As a result, U.S. officials have begun a
pilot program to develop a civil service corps to employ the men.
"We'll teach them skills, like repairing pipes, electricity, sewage,"
Odierno said. Still, officials aren't certain such programs can absorb
the huge numbers of the concerned local citizens.
Approval from the central government represents a larger hurdle.
Odierno has had a series of lengthy and intense meetings with
Iraqi officials to sell them on the idea and said last month that the
two sides have agreed to a series of "very strict" requirements to
temper Iraqi concerns.
Among them are restrictions on the citizens groups operating outside
the control of the U.S. military or Iraqi government and a limitation
on the number of group members who will be moved into the formal
security forces.
Iraqi officials have raised concerns that citizens groups have been
infiltrated by hard-core insurgents, a possibility U.S. officials have
openly acknowledged.
"Are there people trying to infiltrate them? Yes," Odierno said. "But
we can sort through that. The majority of them just want to be part of
the government of Iraq. Before, there was no avenue for them to become
part of the government of Iraq."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times