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Insurgency Unpopular; Iraqi Forces Growing
More Capable
Blackanthem.com, WASHINGTON, D.C., June 17, 2005
The June 14 capture of Muhammad Khalaf Shakar reflects the growing
intolerance of the Iraqi people for an "unpopular insurgency" and shows the
increasing capability of Iraqi security forces, a U.S. military official in
Iraq said today.
Shakar, also known as Abu Talha, was captured in a quiet Mosul neighborhood.
U.S. officials said he is terrorist leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's most
trusted operations agent in Iraq.
"Over the past few months we've had considerable success taking apart the
Abu Talha network in the Mosul area," Air Force Brig. Gen. Donald Alston, a
spokesman for Multinational Force Iraq, said in a Baghdad news conference.
"This success has included killing or capturing cell leaders, car-bomb
makers, financiers, extortionists, kidnappers, foreign fighters, as well as
those Iraqis who support terrorists."
Alston said the capture occurred in part due to "constant pressure" applied
to the insurgency by coalition and Iraqi forces, but also because of
cooperation from Iraqis.
"This is a major defeat for the al Qaeda terrorist organization in Iraq.
Zarqawi's leader in Mosul is out of business," Alston said.
Previous reports indicated Talha wore a suicide vest 24 hours a day and that
he would never surrender. Instead, Talha gave up without a fight, according
to U.S. Central Command officials.
"Information from Iraqi citizens contributed to the capture of Abu Talha,
further evidence this increasingly unpopular insurgency has ordinary people
stepping up against terror," Alston said.
Meanwhile, the same day in Kirkuk, a homicide bomber detonated himself in a
crowded area of the city. Alston said retired Iraqis were in a bank line
waiting to cash their pension checks. The attacker pushed a cart with
explosives in front of the bank and detonated the bomb, killing two dozen
and wounding 90.
Despite terrorists' claims, Alston said, older civilians were the targets of
this attack, continuing the trend of attacks specifically aimed at civilians
in Iraq. Alston noted that possibly thousands of Iraqi civilians have been
killed since Zarqawi proclaimed in May that civilians were legitimate
targets for his bomb squads.
Iraqi security forces have suffered significant casualties in recent months,
too. While he could not provide a definitive number, Alston said Iraqi
forces have taken more casualties recently, partly due to their increase in
numbers, but also due to their increased operational tempo.
"There are roughly 169,000 Iraqi police and Iraqi army troops that are in
the fight," Alston said. "Their confidence and their growing capability make
them what the enemy would call a necessary target, because as every day goes
by and as their confidence grows, they become even more of a substantiated
threat to the insurgency."
The Iraqi security forces show "great promise in their ability to continue
to shoulder the load here in fighting this insurgency," Alston said.
However, he added, Iraqi forces are still growing and learning.
"It is essential for us to not forget that we started this army from scratch
a year ago and they've come a long way to be where they are today -- from
virtually no organization, to over 100 battalions today," Alston said.
Alston pointed to successful operations throughout Iraq as an indicator that
the Iraqi forces were gaining more momentum. Specifically, he referred to
the Talha capture, in which Iraqi forces supported coalition forces. He also
pointed to the rescue of Australian Douglas Wood who was taken hostage
earlier this year.
Iraqi military forces discovered Wood as they conducted routine operations.
The Iraqis had not planned a rescue mission, but discovered Wood nonetheless
using what Alston described as "a combination of training, a combination of
instinct, and professionalism." Coalition forces supported the hostage
rescue.
By Capt. Steve Alvarez, USA
American Forces Press Service
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