TRIBAL RESISTANCE COMING TOGETHER?
AGAINST AL-QAEDA IN AL-ANBAR
with sufficient help,
“their force will collapse in one month.”
Twenty-five
of about 31 tribes in Anbar came together for the first time on September 17, 2006 and announced to the government in Baghdad their plams to join
forces and create a militia of 30,000 willing to confront and kill the foreign insurgents, who are mostly gathered around
Ramadi. This would drive out of their province the some 1,300 al’ Qaeda sponsored foreign-born jihadists and associated
criminal gangs who are financially backed by foreign intelligence services, which backers are known to the tribal leaders.
The tribes
blame al-Qaeda for damaging tribal life in Anbar, dividing members by religious sect and driving a wave of violent crime in
Ramadi. The Iraqi government is encouraging and will probably supply new arms to the tribes.
The foreigner’s
fighters (mostly Saudi Arabian, trained to believe that torture, killing “false” Muslims and suicide attacks are
OK for the great jihad against Crusaders SEE: East of the Nile Terrorist Virus), are organized as a’ Qaeda-Sunni jihad gangs (Ikwan)who are fighting a Sunni-Shiite civil war in Iraq. When
Osama anointed Zarqawi he had taught his men about cutting off heads. They already knew about Islamikazis, bombings, kidnapping
and torture, the brutalities against fellow Muslims. Godfather Osama had swallowed
his humanity again and became spokesman for the new leader of al’ Qaeda and his brutal tactics, arguing for him to
his sceptical inner circle.
Late in 2004
after forming al’ Qaeda Inc. in Iraq, Osama launched a great recruitment campaign to rival his campaign of exactly of
20 years previously, to recruit an army of young Muslim zealots to drive the Red Army out of Afghanistan. The operation, financed by contributions from the CIA and from Saudi Arabia,
has been successful and in 2004, recruits from around the world started showing up in Iraq.
Do you know who is financing them now? What's the secret? I wonder who's
financing them now?
The tribal
spokesmen proclaim in their alliance they have “agreed to fight those who call themselves mujahadeen … We believe
that there is a conspiracy against our Iraqi people.” The tribes blame
these fighters for damaging tribal life in Anbar, dividing members by religious sect and for driving a wave of violent crime
in and around Ramadi. “We are in battle with the terrorists who kill Sunnis
and Shiites, and we do not respect anyone between us who talks in a sectarian sense,” said the leader of the Rishawi
tribe with a population half Shiite and half Sunni Arabs.
A HARD DAY AT WAR
News of the agreement came on the same Sunday when Kirkuk, the oil-rich city bordering
the autonomous Kurdish region in the north, suffered its most damaging bombing yet, as coordinated suicide bombings were perpetrated
over a period of minutes, killing two dozen, wounding over 100; it was the same day in Falluja that Islamikazis blew up 5
car bombs over 15 minutes, leaving 5, wounding 23; it was the same day massive evidence of more sectarian killings appeared
on the streets of Baghdad - 36 bodies of human beings who had been tortured with drills and fire and castration and shot in
the head.
The coalition of 25 tribes sent letters to prime minister
al-Maliki and their representatives have met with a Shiite deputy speaker of Parliament who gave them the government’s
“positive response.” The government included indications of support for requested weapons, equipment and tactical
help from an Iraqi Army brigade. “The terrorists have different kinds of weapons while we have only AK-47’s,”
with sufficient help, “their force will collapse in one month.” From The New York Times, September 18, 2006, ‘Most Tribes
in Anbar Agree to Unite Against Insurgents .’