http://www.newsweek.com/id/73363The Sunni Civil WarThey're fighting with words, not bullets. But the rift is still dangerous.
The men who shot up Faisal Mohammed Ali's village couldn't have been more conspicuous. "They were all wearing their orange vests," says the 54-year-old teacher, referring to the?uniforms of locals enlisted in the fight against Al Qaeda. The U.S.-sponsored fighters have excelled at pursuing terrorists in Arab Jabour, a notoriously violent area south of Baghdad. But Ali and others say that after a roadside bomb killed two of their comrades in October, the gunmen killed five men from a rival clan in cold blood and torched several houses.
The Americans say the victims died in a fire fight, but acknowledge the militia has sometimes gone after rival tribes. That's a familiar scenario in Iraq. In this case, though,all sides are Sunni.Reconciliation in Iraq is most often portrayed as a matter of bringing Shiites and Sunnis together. But there are deep divisions within the Sunni community as well—between the new tribal levies and old politicians, Baathists and anti-Baathists, fundamentalist mosque-goers and secular whisky drinkers. Shiite leaders warn they can't be expected to find common ground with Sunnis who cannot find it among themselves. "We have been asking them to unify their front and be a full-fledged partner in the process of dialogue and reconciliation, but we cannot get a true partner," says Saad Yousif al-Muttalibi, an adviser to the Shiite leadership.
Ironically, success is fueling some of the internal squabbles. The militias in America's Concerned Local Citizens program now include more than 65,000 orange-vested fighters, many of them former insurgents. They rightly claim credit for quelling violence across Iraq, and want their voices heard. "They say, 'Hey, we've stopped fighting. We've come halfway'," says Col. Martin Stanton, a coordinator of the groups for the U.S. military. " 'We want into the … government'." But there are already Sunnis on the inside, such as the Iraqi Islamic Party, which is led by exiles who opposed Saddam's regime and joined the U.S.-crafted political system early. They're used to speaking for Iraq's Sunnis, and control the local governments (and more important, their budgets) in Sunni-dominated areas like Anbar province.