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Checkpoint Baghdad

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Posted Monday, December 10, 2007 10:51 AM

Key U.S. Ally Killed in Iraq

Larry Kaplow

America lost one of its most effective and colorful Iraqi allies in a roadside bomb blast Sunday. Gen. Qais Hamza Aboud, police chief for the Babil province, was killed in the midday attack on his convoy. Qais, who American officers sometimes called "The Godfather," was a Shiite Muslim known for cracking down on Shiite militias and criminal gangs as well as going after Sunni insurgents. His brash charisma--including his salty language and affinity for Jack Daniels whiskey--was recently described in a story about Iraqi warlords by NEWSWEEK's Kevin Peraino.

Qais had consolidated control of the security services in the province, a key crossroads region south of Baghdad. The former car salesman had used American backing to build his 800-man Scorpion force and assassins had already targeted him several times. He also faced down powerful figures in the central government as he took on militias with powerful friends.

His death shakes the region and the American forces' strategy there. The area is known as a transit point for Al Qaida militants into Baghdad and a breeding ground for Shiite militias. Sunday evening, a curfew was placed on the city of Hilla, the provincial capital near where the attack took place. Just hours before the attack, U.S. officers cited Qais as a symbol of progress. "Right now I see amazing momentum at the local level. Let's just focus in on Gen. Qais and the Babil police," said Maj. Gen. Rick Lynch, who praised him for going after insurgents no matter their sect. Gen. Qais will be a hard man to replace.

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Member Comments

Posted By: thankfultobefree (December 13, 2007 at 9:06 PM)

Even as U.S. Army General David Petraeus is celebrating the decline of violence in Iraq, we’re seeing an increase in terrorist attacks in both Afghanistan and northwestern Africa.  Why?

The recent Hoover Institution article, “Jihadism: The Middle East and Beyond” (http://www.hoover.org/research/focusonissues/focus/12410446.html), examines the current trends of jihadist groups such as al-Qaeda.  It also answers questions such as:

-         What are the jihadists’ goals?

-         Why are they so mad at the West?

-         Why do they think violence is the best solution? and

-         Why has it been so hard to defeat the jihadists?

However, there is hope, according to Hoover’s Michael McFaul:

“The battle against communism took more than a century. This new battle against a new ‘ism’ could take longer. Yet the West eventually did win the war against communism, an outcome few predicted just a few decades ago. The strong support for democracy among Russians today—more than two-thirds of the population in most polls—suggests that no culture, regime, or ‘ism’ is immune from change.”


Posted By: robertb689 (December 11, 2007 at 12:22 AM)

When a hero falls, a hundred will rise to honor him. Perhaps Babylon's citizens will awake that Shia or Sunni they are responsible for the new Iraq and like the dog Baathists being chased down in Tikrit by outraged Iraqis, here also they will chase down the gangsters and Sadrist militia thugs doing Iran's bidding.


 
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