By Ann M. Simmons
Los Angeles Times
December 31, 2007
http://www.boston.com/news/world/middleeast/articles/2007/12/31/in_sunni_enclave_safety_hinges_on_empowering_civilians/{snip}
Army Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Rohling, commander of the 3d Battalion, 187th Infantry Regiment, and a Milwaukee native, sat listening to the elders' requests. Careful not to use a threatening tone, he explained to the leaders that meeting their demands for improvements to checkpoints, more men and more pay, would require the contracts for the concerned local citizens groups that guard their neighborhoods to be renegotiated.
"What we're struggling with now is, how do you make it fair for everybody?" Rohling said. And more important, he told the leaders, was figuring out how gradually to move some of the armed volunteer guards into other jobs, such as the national police force.
"Because I think we all agree, we can't pay volunteers for the rest of their lives," Rohling said.
Again, there were nods of agreement along with noncommittal stares.
"A lot of what you get is posturing," Rohling said later of the leaders. He acknowledged that he often has to combine softer diplomacy with military assertiveness to coax and cajole some local leaders to cooperate.
"It's a cultural challenge," the US commander added.
"In the end they will need to follow our plan, but we've got to make them feel that it's their plan . . ."article:
http://www.boston.com/news/world/middleeast/articles/2007/12/31/in_sunni_enclave_safety_hinges_on_empowering_civilians/I can't help but severely question, why a U.S. Lieutenant Colonel is allowed to shape the direction of what they inevitably call Iraq's 'democracy' on such an intimate level. It's even more disturbing to read his open admission that the U.S. military intends to follow and violently enforce their own agenda (plan; checkpoints, raids, arrests) no matter what the locals decide or want.related: US Military Continues Push for al-Qaeda in Iraq
http://www.voanews.com/english/2007-12-30-voa19.cfm?rss=topstories