View on Iraq -- View from the
Battlefield
Since 01-30-07
From: Lowell J Mix [mailto:ljmix@juno.com]
Sent: Tuesday, January 30, 2007 12:07 AM
Subject: View on Iraq -- View from the Battlefield
----- Forwarded Message -----
From: "Art Hawn" <arthawn@charter.net>
To: <Undisclosed-Recipient:;>
Date: Mon, 29 Jan 2007 11:12:54 -0800
Subject: Fw: View on Iraq Message-ID: <004c01c743d9$7d0544d0$05fea8c0@dell>
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, January 28, 2007 5:47 PM Subject: View on Iraq
From: Bryant Shurley <batmanvshomer@yahoo.com> Subject: My view of Iraq
Following the article I sent about Bush's national address and troop increase, I
thought it was a good idea to let you all know what the perspective is over
here. I'm tired of hearing the media's skewed version, the politicians
squabbling over what they read in a report, and the average ill-informed
American ranting about things he knows NOTHING about.
I've been over here a couple of months now, and I've learned more about this
country than a year's worth of watching CNN. I've sat in mission briefs with
Colonels, talked with village elders, had tea with Shieks, played with the kids.
And I agree with the President. We need more troops and we need to take greater
action.
There are 3 major factions here. The Sunnis, Shiites, and Kurds. The Shiites are
in the majority, but Saddam was a Sunni, so he kept the Shiites in check
Everyone hates the Kurds, who are Christian and in the vast minority. The Kurds
received the brunt of Saddam's murderous tyranny. Now that Saddam is gone, the
Shiites have taken control of Baghdad. The largely peaceful Sunnis are now the
victims of radical Shiite terrorism. So the young Sunni men, who can no longer
go to work and support their families, do what all young men would do. They join
the Sunni militia and battle the Shiites. And thus the country sits on the brink
of civil war.
But this war is between them. They largely do not concern themselves with the
U.S. troops. The insurgents who battle the Coalition Forces are from outside the
country. And the biggest problem down here isn't the insurgents. It's the
politicians. The local politicians. Even though the country is controlled by
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, downtown Baghdad is controlled by radical Shiite
cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. The Shiites follow al-Sadr and thus the Prime Minister
does what al-Sadr says. Think of it as if a warlord controlled New York and
blackmailed the President into diplomatic immunity.
When 1st Cav (mainly 2/5 Cav) came here in 2004, they took downtown Baghdad
(known as Sadr City) by force. It cost many lives, but after a year, we held an
iron grip on the largest insurgent breeding ground in Iraq. The insurgents were
afraid of the Horse People, and rightfully so. But when 1st Cav left, al-Sadr
influenced the Prime Minister to kick out the Coalition forces from that area of
Baghdad. He said the Iraqi military forces could hold the city. But all that
happened was al-Sadr regained control of his city, and it is now a heavily
guarded fortress. A place where insurgents and terrorists can train and
stockpile arms. And we cannot go back in because the Prime Minister won't let
us. Our hands are tied.
So where does al-Sadr get his backing? From Iran and Syria. Iran supplies him
with money and Syria supplies the terrorists. The insurgents that battle the
Coalition Forces are from Syria, Somalia and dozens of other places outside of
Iraq. Iraq is literally a terrorist breeding ground. They have terrorist and
sniper schools here. Why not? They train by teaching them to attack the military
forces here. And they have an endless supply of these training tools. They have
factories in Sadr City to build bombs. Both Iran and Syria have openly
proclaimed their number one goal in life is to destroy the great Western Devil
and the little Western Devil (America and Britain). Iran wants to control Iraq
to further this purpose. Al-Sadr will get to "run the country and live like a
king, but in reality Iran will pull the puppet strings. Iran will have access to
thousands of radical Shiites who will do whatever a al-Sadr tells them to. And
Iraq will be used as a breeding ground for terrorism. Terrorism that will be
targeted directly at America and Britain. The Iraq Study Group advised we should
let Iran and Syria help with rebuilding? Bravo to President Bush for striking
that idea down and vowing to keep those two countries out of Iraq.
So how do the Iraqi people feel about everything? Of course they don't want the
Americans here. But they would far rather have us here than the Iranians My
platoon visited an average Sunni village on a patrol a few days ago. Their only
source of income was to farm, as they could not go to the city to work for fear
of violence. Many of the young men had already run off to join the militia for
no other reason than to feed their families. They had no school or hospital near
them and the community was dying The village elder's granddaughter was very sick
and I was able to treat her. Afterwards he invited me and my Platoon Leader to
sit in his house and have tea with him, and we talked about the situation.
The people want peace. The Shiites kill the Sunnis because al-Sadr tells them to
do so. The Sunnis fight back because they have no choice. They are glad Saddam
is dead (Sunni or not), but do not want to replace him with another dictator in
a politician's clothes (which is what al-Sadr will become). And they especially
don't want Iran in charge. Many innocent Iraqis will die if this happens. These
are the words that came out of the elder's mouth:
"We do not want America here, and America does not want to be here. But you
cannot leave because the militias control the country. America must use the
might of its giant army and sweep through, root out and destroy the militias
Then Iraq can be free and you can leave."
What appears to have happened within our diplomatic community, is that Prime
Minister finally realizes that his days are numbered. If al-Sadr remains, he
will be kicked to the curb. So hopefully he is about to allow us to reenter Sadr
City, root out and destroy the enemy. A dramatic troop increase will allow us to
do this. And the Horse People are back and ready to finish what they started
over 2 years ago.
If leave now, it will be a failure for democracy. Iran will control Iraq and the
end result will be more terrorist attacks on America. The American people don't
want soldiers dying over here, but its better than American civilians dying over
there. Do NOT forget 9/11. They will do it again. The moment we loosen our grip
on the noose, they will do it again. And the only way to root out the evil here
is to stop beating around the bush, increase troops and destroy the insurgents
once and for all. The Iraqi government cannot do this on their own. The Iraqi
security forces are inadequate for this task. We are the only ones who can stop
al-Sadr.
Feel free to share this with whomever wants a real soldier's opinion about the
war.
SPC "Doc" Shurley
2/5 Cav, 1st CB