IRAQ WAR

After Al Qaeda

The residents of small towns in Iraq's bread basket are cautiously venturing back into the streets—and normal life.

Staff Sgt. Russell Bassett / U.S. Army
Progress: Citizens of Taiha, a former Al Qaeda in Iraq stronghold, wait in line to receive kerosene from Iraqi Army soldiers on Jan. 21
 
 
 

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This time the sound of Stryker personnel carriers rolling into the town of Himbus had a triumphal rumble to it. Two weeks after launching an offensive to drive Al Qaeda in Iraq from its stronghold in Diyala province, American soldiers were back, arriving in broad daylight in a trio of provincial towns to see townsfolk cautiously venturing into streets they had once avoided and interacting openly with Iraqi security forces.

Platoons watched as residents lined up for fleece jackets and rice being distributed by Iraqi soldiers in the hamlet of Abu Musa. Soldiers mingled with people receiving medical care for the first time in weeks at a clinic in Himbus. And they stood guard while men, women and children filled jugs of kerosene from a tanker truck in Taiha.

"Iraq forces now have control of the bread basket, announced Lt. Col. Rod Coffey, commander of the 3rd Squadron of the 2nd Stryker Cavalry Regiment. "The facts on the ground are we have freedom of movement and the insurgents do not."

The bread basket, an area of 45 square miles in northeastern Iraq, had been one of Al Qaeda in Iraq's few remaining "centers of gravity," as U.S. military commanders termed it—a place the group had fled to once it was forced from Anbar province. When American and Iraqi forces launched their campaign on Jan. 7-8, they estimated there were 200 Qaeda operatives holed up in the area, where much of the country's produce is grown. So far in the continuing operation, the coalition has captured 72 insurgents and killed at least four. The rest either have fled, again, or are hiding out in Diyala.

"We are cleaning up these towns," Iraqi 5th Division commander Gen. Salim al Mandalawi said in Abu Musa. "The next step is we're coordinating with residents now to set up Concerned Local Citizens groups." Setting up CLCs is the tactic coalition leaders now use once they have evicted Al Qaeda, to make sure the terrorists do not return. The CLCs are armed and typically man checkpoints and handle security.

Through much of Diyala, mounds of rubble and pocked buildings testify to the toughness of the battle to roust Al Qaeda in Iraq. Baqubah, the provincial capital and long a Qaeda headquarters, is now under Iraqi Army control but is not completely tamed. Two suicide bombings in the city Tuesday suggested the terrorists have not yet given up, and a vehicle ban in some suburbs makes it clear that coalition officials remain wary about the organization's facility with car bombs. "They get more inventive and we get more inventive and the circle continues," said Capt. Roland Minez, civil affairs officer with the 1st Battalion of the 38th Infantry Regiment.

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  • Posted By: observer101 @ 01/30/2008 4:33:09 PM

    Despite what powers the media thinks it has, they cant report everything they want to. Esp. if it comprimises operations. Sometimes they are censored to some extent, or told to hold off airing some stories. And they do, fearing it will make them look bad in the publics eyes , knowing they put lives in danger and only cared about ratings. So they stick with celeb. stories as fillers and to take ppls minds off of Iraq. Which I think is good, last thing the enemy needs is exposure.

  • Posted By: faminchin @ 01/26/2008 8:31:17 AM

    What I don't understand is the under-reporting of what's actually going on in Iraq?

    The US introduced a new weapon a couple of months ago that has proven to be very effective. It's an unmanned aircraft, that dials up every cell phone for miles around it as it flys over head. The terrorist use cell phones to set off their bombs, but this new weapon has been effective in blowing up the terrorist as they are building their bombs. Where are the stories about this?

    Also, a widely know story in Iraq is how Al Qaeda in Iraq backed about a dozen 10 year old children in a oven, stuffed fruit in their mouths and served them to their parents on a plater. This action has done more to turn Iraqi's against Al Qaeda than anything the US has done, yet I haven't seen any news coverage of it?

    But let the terrorist blow up one of their bombs in a market.....and it's headline breaking news. Why is that?

  • Posted By: ryanh_07 @ 01/25/2008 1:07:02 PM

    Yes the hard work is paying off like it usually does if given the proper support and time. The "Cut and runners" have been and still are invested in Americas defeat so we will probably still see them try to pull our men and women out of Iraq before the job is complete. Probably why you don't see any news reporting the gains we make in Iraq but news of tradgedy is rushed to our living rooms. America hey listen up, it's o.k. to be proud to be an American. We have the best country in the world and the most freedoms and highest quality of life. Every time you see a poitician or some other publicity hound telling you how horrible America is just remember they only have their own personal gains at heart and they will help our enemies defeat us as long as it serves their own purpose. Get on the right side and support your own home it's the only one you have.

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