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Iraq
Iraqi tribesmen preparing for life without U.S. aid
2008-06-30
RADWANIYAH, Iraq — Capt. David N. Simms wanted the tribal sheiks to have no doubts — the $500,000 his unit spends every month to pay and equip local tribesmen to keep peace here will soon run out and they had better be ready when it's gone. Simms handed the sheiks 600 applications for a vocational school in nearby Baghdad. It's one option, he said, to prepare the men for life after he stops giving them salaries.

The 'Sons of Iraq” are the estimated 80,000 fighters recruited and paid by the U.S. military to help fight al-Qaida and maintain security in neighborhoods.
@ $300 each that's $300 mil a year, cheaper than trying to kill all these buggers.
The program has been a remarkable success, helping reduce violence across the country by 80 percent since early 2007 at the cost of $216 million to date. Nearly two years into the program, however, the U.S. is gradually handing over responsibility for the Sons of Iraq to the Shiite-led government.

The government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has been reluctant to absorb large numbers of armed Sunnis into the Shiite-dominated security forces. American officials fear that many of the U.S.-backed fighters may turn their guns on the government unless jobs can be found for them. 'If we don't find work for the men, it will work against us,” said Asaad Nawar al-Ameen, a retired general in Saddam's army who heads the Sons of Iraq in Radwaniyah. 'Al-Qaida can get them.”

The government already has accepted nearly 20 percent of Sons in Iraq members in the security forces and is pledging to find civilian jobs for most of the rest. Meanwhile, it has introduced 'support councils” made up of trusted tribal chiefs and their followers to support the security forces.

But that move is seen by leaders of the Sons of Iraq as an attempt to sideline them at a time when some of them are complaining that the Americans are abandoning them to a government they don't trust.

In Radwaniyah, the government recently named a wealthy businessman, Ayad Abdul-Jabar al-Jaborui, to head the new support council.

Kamal al-Saadi, a lawmaker from al-Maliki's Dawa party, said the leadership had worried about al-Qaida infiltration into the Sons of Iraq but now believed that 'the government has become too strong for the Sons of Iraq to be a threat.”
Posted by:GolfBravoUSMC

#1  They really have to open up a jobs program with both barrels. Nothing establishes order faster than so much money being made that nobody has the time to be troublesome.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2008-06-30 14:17  

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