"One important development over the past few days is that it is
clearly becoming very difficult to use American or British troops to
keep the peace, undermining the argument that they are the only
bulwark against civil war. The occupation forces lack the legitimacy
to play the role of UN peacekeepers; it is almost impossible to have
US soldiers defend a Sunni mosque against a Shia crowd, because if
they open fire they will be seen as having joined one side in a
sectarian struggle.
In Mr Pace's view, the violence in Iraq is being made worse by the
seizing of young Iraqi men by US troops and Iraqi police as they move
from city to city carrying out raids. "The vast majority are
innocent," he said, "but they very often don't get released for
months. You don't eliminate terrorism by what they're doing now.
Military intervention causes serious human rights and humanitarian
problems to large numbers of innocent civilians ... The result is that
such individuals turn into terrorists at the end of their detention."


It becomes clearer why Kristol and Buckley are bailing out.  
Sounds like Tet...

David Bier

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article347806.ece

 Iraq's death squads: On the brink of civil war

Most of the corpses in Baghdad's mortuary show signs of torture and
execution. And the Interior Ministry is being blamed. 

By Andrew Buncombe and Patrick Cockburn

Published: 26 February 2006

Hundreds of Iraqis are being tortured to death or summarily executed
every month in Baghdad alone by death squads working from the Ministry
of the Interior, the United Nations' outgoing human rights chief in
Iraq has revealed.

John Pace, who left Baghdad two weeks ago, told The Independent on
Sunday that up to three-quarters of the corpses stacked in the city's
mortuary show evidence of gunshot wounds to the head or injuries
caused by drill-bits or burning cigarettes. Much of the killing, he
said, was carried out by Shia Muslim groups under the control of the
Ministry of the Interior.

Much of the statistical information provided to Mr Pace and his team
comes from the Baghdad Medico-Legal Institute, which is located next
to the city's mortuary. He said figures show that last July the morgue
alone received 1,100 bodies, about 900 of which bore evidence of
torture or summary execution. The pattern prevailed throughout the
year until December, when the number dropped to 780 bodies, about 400
of which had gunshot or torture wounds.

"It's being done by anyone who wishes to wipe out anybody else for
various reasons," said Mr Pace, who worked for the UN for more than 40
years in countries ranging from Liberia to Chile. "But the bulk are
attributed to the agents of the Ministry of the Interior."

Coupled with the suicide bombings and attacks on Shia holy places
carried out by Sunnis, some of whom are followers of Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi, al-Qa'ida's leader in Iraq, the activities of the death
squads are pushing Iraq ever closer to a sectarian civil war.

Mr Pace said the Ministry of the Interior was "acting as a rogue
element within the government". It is controlled by the main Shia
party, the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq (Sciri); the
Interior Minister, Bayan Jabr, is a former leader of Sciri's Badr
Brigade militia, which is one of the main groups accused of carrying
out sectarian killings. Another is the Mehdi Army of the young cleric
Moqtada al-Sadr, who is part of the Shia coalition seeking to form a
government after winning the mid-December election.

Many of the 110,000 policemen and police commandos under the
ministry's control are suspected of being former members of the Badr
Brigade. Not only counter-insurgency units such as the Wolf Brigade,
the Scorpions and the Tigers, but the commandos and even the highway
patrol police have been accused of acting as death squads.

The paramilitary commandos, dressed in garish camouflage uniforms and
driving around in pick-up trucks, are dreaded in Sunni neighbourhoods.
People whom they have openly arrested have frequently been found dead
several days later, with their bodies bearing obvious marks of torture.

Mr Pace, a Maltese-Australian who has now retired from his UN post to
his home in Sydney, says the constant violence and utter lack of
security in Iraq are creating a vicious circle in which ordinary
citizens are turning to extremist sectarian groups for protection.
Fear of anybody in official uniform inevitably strengthens the
militias and the insurgents. In Sunni areas people will look to their
own defences, and not to the regular army and police.

But ordinary Sunnis are caught between the death squads and the desire
of some of the insurgents on their own side to start a civil war - an
aim they are now not far from achieving. The so-called Salafi, Sunni
fundamentalists, want not only to eject the Americans but also to
build a pure Islamic state. They see Iraqi Shias, even though they are
60 per cent of the population, as heretics allied to the US who should
be slaughtered.

Last week's attack on the Golden Mosque is only the latest in a long
series of outrages against the Shia community. They started in August
2003 when Mohammed Baqr al-Hakim, then leader of Sciri, was killed,
along with more than 100 of his followers by a suicide bomber in a
vehicle outside the Imam Ali shrine in Najaf. There have been repeated
massacres of the Shia ever since - some targeting the security forces,
such as the attacks on queues of young men trying to join the police
or army, but others, such as the slaughter of Shia day labourers
waiting for a day's employment, for no other reason than that they are
Shia.

Despite extending a 24-hour curfew into a second day yesterday in
Baghdad and other major cities, the authorities were unable to prevent
further revenge killings and outrages against holy sites. The current
cycle of violence, which began with the bombing of the Azkariya shrine
in Samarra on Wednesday, has claimed at least 200 lives so far,
including those of 47 factory workers pulled from buses and shot on
the outskirts of Baghdad.

This was the sort of killing that touched off Lebanon's civil war in
1975. Already an exchange of populations is taking place in Baghdad as
members of each community move to districts in which they are in the
majority.

The ability of the US occupiers to influence the situation is not only
limited, but some of their actions are seen as making things worse.
The Americans have been trying to dislodge Mr Jabr as Interior
Minister, accusing him of turning his ministry into a Shia bastion.
But the Shia believe that the US and its allies, the Kurds, simply
want to prevent the majority community from gaining full power over
security despite winning two parliamentary elections in 2005.

One important development over the past few days is that it is clearly
becoming very difficult to use American or British troops to keep the
peace, undermining the argument that they are the only bulwark against
civil war. The occupation forces lack the legitimacy to play the role
of UN peacekeepers; it is almost impossible to have US soldiers defend
a Sunni mosque against a Shia crowd, because if they open fire they
will be seen as having joined one side in a sectarian struggle.

In Mr Pace's view, the violence in Iraq is being made worse by the
seizing of young Iraqi men by US troops and Iraqi police as they move
from city to city carrying out raids. "The vast majority are
innocent," he said, "but they very often don't get released for
months. You don't eliminate terrorism by what they're doing now.
Military intervention causes serious human rights and humanitarian
problems to large numbers of innocent civilians ... The result is that
such individuals turn into terrorists at the end of their detention."

In such circumstances, family members often contacted UN officials
asking for help in getting a young man outside of the country and away
from the influence of insurgents they had met in jail. They were among
many Iraqi citizens fleeing the country as a result of the violence.
"Those with money go to Jordan. The poor go to Syria," he said.

Mr Pace, who first made his comments to The Times of Malta newspaper,
said the situation in Iraq had "definitely, definitely" got worse over
the two years in which he headed the UN human rights team. The interim
government and the international community were trying to restart the
country's crippled economy, but, he said, they would not succeed
"until people are secure".

THE KILLERS

BADR BRIGADE:

Armed wing of the most powerful Shia party. Many police and
paramilitaries 'still wear Badr T-shirts under their uniform,' a US
general said.

MEHDI ARMY:

Loyal to the Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr. Apart from open clashes with
Sunnis, its members in the police are accused of death squad killings.

DEFENDERS OF KHADAMIYA:

Followers of Hussein al-Sadr, Moqtada relative. Among forces set up to
guard Shia shrines, but having more sinister links.

SPECIAL POLICE

COMMANDOS:

Feared by Sunnis, despite having had some Sunni commanders.





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