Progress In Iraq
By Pejman Yousefzadeh Posted in Archived — Comments (2) / Email this page » / Leave a comment »
When stories like this appear, they are cause for at least small celebration:
In a number of Shiite neighborhoods across Baghdad, residents are beginning to turn away from the Mahdi Army, the Shiite militia they once saw as their only protector against Sunni militants. Now they resent it as a band of street thugs without ideology.
The hardening Shiite feeling in Baghdad opens an opportunity for the American military, which has long struggled against the Mahdi Army, as American commanders rely increasingly on tribes and local leaders in their prosecution of the war.
The sectarian landscape has shifted, with Sunni extremists largely defeated in many Shiite neighborhoods, and the war in those places has sunk into a criminality that is often blind to sect.
In interviews, 10 Shiites from four neighborhoods in eastern and western Baghdad described a pattern in which militia members, looking for new sources of income, turned on Shiites.
The pattern appears less frequently in neighborhoods where Sunnis and Shiites are still struggling for territory. Sadr City, the largest Shiite neighborhood, where the Mahdi Army's face is more political than military, has largely escaped the wave of criminality.
Among the people killed in the neighborhood of Topchi over the past two months, residents said, were the owner of an electrical shop, a sweets seller, a rich man, three women, two local council members, and two children, ages 9 and 11.
It was a disparate group with one thing in common: All were Shiites killed by Shiites. Residents blamed the Mahdi Army, which controls the neighborhood.
"Everyone knew who the killers were," said a mother from Topchi, whose neighbor, a Shiite woman, was one of the victims. "I'm Shiite, and I pray to God that he will punish them."
The feeling was the same in other neighborhoods.
"We thought they were soldiers defending the Shiites," said Sayeed Sabah, a Shiite who runs a charity in the western neighborhood of Huriya. "But now we see they are youngster-killers, no more than that. People want to get rid of them."
Read the whole thing. In addition to showing that the Mahdi Army has alienated itself from the population, stories like this one also serve to show that the U.S. is profiting not only from the surge but from the implementation of the counterinsurgency plan General Petraeus helped write. For those who are genuinely interested in the fate and future of Iraq and want to see the country succeed, this story should be a big one and should point the way to how policy should be implemented in the coming months.
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Progress In Iraq 2 Comments (0 topical, 2 editorial, 0 hidden) Post a comment »
And sad:
Quality government is coming from the bottom up. The most local nodes are the first to recognize the proper abstraction for these insurgents: Nihilistic.
What's sad to me is that the Iraqiis had originally sought a government structure much like the federalist U.S., but were talked out of the structure by international NGO's and our own state department. I posted on Iraq the Model about a year ago that I believed solutions would come from regional and local government, and in fact that's what we are seeing (with the help of the amazing us military, of course).
The problem, as I see it, is that all the elite structures on the planet hate to face the obvious reality because it will limit their power: The more local the power structures, the higher the quality of governance.

This is huge. I can't wait to go talk to my DailyKos bud.
Jim Tomasik