海角大神

US reports 20 percent drop in Iraq violence

US military commanders in Baghdad today said that Iraqi forces are making security gains as the US prepares to withdraw all its troops by year's end.

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Mohammed Ameen/Reuters
Lt. Gen. Robert Cone, the deputy commander of US forces in Iraq, holds a news conference as he handed authority on Tuesday to the last general likely to hold that post, Lt. Gen. Frank Helmick (not pictured), at Al-Faw Palace in Baghdad's Camp Victory on Feb. 8.

US military commanders in Iraq on Tuesday praised the lowest levels of violence in Iraq since 2003, saying that Iraqi forces were making security gains while American forces prepare for final departure at the end of the year.

Overall security incidents fell by one-fifth, despite a host of security incidents in recent months that have plagued Iraqi 海角大神s, the assassinations of dozens of officials, and spectacular Al Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) attacks such as the 16-bomb day in November that left 70 dead in Baghdad.

鈥淭here are many indicators of violence: attack trends [and] casualty trends, but certainly by all measures we believe there was about a 20 percent decrease in 2010 from 2009,鈥 said Lt. Gen. Robert Cone, the deputy commander of US forces in Iraq, as he handed authority on Tuesday to the last general likely to hold that post, Lt. Gen. Frank Helmick. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 not to say we are happy with the security environment, that鈥檚 not to say there isn鈥檛 room for improvement.鈥

Whatever the US tabulation, many Iraqis are not yet convinced that security has improved, after eight years of violence that peaked in 2006-2007 with a death toll of 3,000 each month. Since then, according to official US figures, the overall rate of violence today has dropped by 90 percent, but Iraqis still face deadly disruptions to their daily lives 鈥 and blame the government for lack of accountability.

鈥淚t is clear, and it needs no analysis, that the security situation is out of control,鈥 wrote Salam al-Yasiri, in a comment on the well-known Kitabat website. 鈥淒espite big funds that have been thrown in this direction 鈥 explosions are still continuous, innocent victims are still falling, and government statements haven鈥檛 changed 鈥 they are still pointing the finger of blame at Al Qaeda [in Iraq] or the orphans of the Baath [Party], without once admitting the possibility of failure.鈥

Iraqis taking greater role

Lt. Gen. Cone, however, credited Iraqis for taking a greater role in controlling the security situation. The drop in violence, he pointed out, took place despite a steep cut in American troop strength during the year from 100,000 to less than 50,000 in Iraq today, and despite an Iraqi election last March that resulted in nine months of political wrangling before a government was formed.

鈥淭hat decrease [in violence] took place with the Iraqis playing the predominant role,鈥 said Lt. Gen. Cone. 鈥淭he Iraqis clearly shouldered a much greater share of the load鈥 during the political transition.

Key posts remain vacant, however. The ministers of defense, interior, and national security, as well as Iraq鈥檚 intelligence chief, have yet to be named.

Continued Iraqi ambivalence is reflected in an online poll of 500 respondents, published Monday on the Iraqi website Babnews.

鈥淭he majority does not believe that the government will achieve a good level of security in the near future,鈥 Babnews reported. One-third of respondents said there was 鈥渉ope鈥 there could be security 鈥渋n the near future.鈥

Concern about Iraqi readiness as US troops withdraw

While noting security improvements, the latest quarterly report to Congress of the US government watchdog agency, known as the Special Investigator General for Iraq Reconstruction (SIGIR), was marked by concerns about Iraqi readiness to take full control when American forces leave.

鈥淒espite this statistical good news, insurgents continued to wage a campaign of intimidation and assassination,鈥 especially against government officials and police, the Jan. 30 report stated.

As US troops prepare to leave, 鈥渙ne of the main responsibilities of Iraq鈥檚 security forces will be suppressing such violence,鈥 the report said. 鈥淭his quarter, several US observers noted real or potential gaps in Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) capabilities that could affect its ability to lock in hard-won security gains.鈥

鈥淭hese are not new revelations; they are issues we work fairly constantly,鈥 said Cone about the SIGIR report. 鈥淭he problem at hand today has to do with the counterinsurgency and counterterrorism operations, and the Iraqis are functioning, we think, at a competent level. They are doing this on their own.鈥
Cone said US and Iraqi forces had also degraded the abilities of AQI and other militants, despite continued attacks.

鈥淎l Qaeda [in Iraq] and many of these groups are still capable of conducting violent acts, but I think the difference between now and 鈥 a year ago is that they really have to harbor their resources and focus for limited periods of time, and they can鈥檛 sustain these violence levels for a long period of time,鈥 said Cone.

Plea from residents

Those improvements had not been felt by one group of tribal sheikhs from the Tarmiyah district of northwest Baghdad, however, who took their complaints to Parliament in mid-January. They met with speaker Usama al-Nujaifi, and told him of a 鈥渄ecline in security鈥 and demanded 鈥渢hat their neighborhoods be secured鈥 from targeted assassinations 鈥渂y men in Iraqi military uniforms.鈥

The government 鈥渕ust protect the people,鈥 Mr. Nujaifi told the group, according to the parliament website. 鈥淸It] must control security and stop the criminal terrorist attacks so that the [Iraqi] citizen will not feel that his government is unable to protect him.鈥

--- With reporting from Sahar Issa in Baghdad.

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