Yuram writes perspectives on Islam, social justice, economics and politics from the viewpoint of an American convert to Shia Islam, focusing on the deleterious role played by the U.S. in the Middle East and elsewhere. A dissenting voice from the “Belly of the
Beast”, he lives in Denver, Colorado and can be reached at yuram@sahafa.com.
My goal in writing this article is the immediate withdrawal of US troops from Iraq and for an end to the occupation. I am disturbed by lack of logic and rationality that has permeated our government concerning the US-led war and occupation in Iraq. I am troubled by the language that is used by the media to describe it, as the choice of words veils the reality of the violent and volatile situation in Iraq that the United States, Great Britain and allies have created.
I am appealing for the immediate withdrawal of all US forces and an end to the atrocities of occupation and aggression for the following reasons which I will attempt to validate below:
From the rhetoric we hear, we are to believe that security in Iraq is improving and that insurgency is on the decline. Unfortunately, the facts seem to point in the opposite direction. Frankly, I don’t see progress being made as following indicates.
Rhetoric: American troops are instrumental in training Iraqi police and military personnel. Before we can bring US troops home, Iraqis must provide for their own security.
Fact: The number of trained Iraqi forces has peaked and is actually declining.
The Pentagon intends to train about 35,000 police officers, 62,000 national guardsmen, 24,000 army troops and others for a security force totaling 270,000. The Iraqi Army, which historically was a strong unifying force in Iraq, cutting across religious and ethnic lines, could have been transformed into an effective force for post-invasion security. The following is an excerpt from testimony from the Iraq War Hearings in Congress on 29 Sep. 2005: 1
“SEN. JOHN McCAIN: General Abizaid, there was a report sent over, I think last June, that three of the hundred Iraqi battalions were fully trained and equipped, capable of operating independently. What is that number now?
GEN. JOHN ABIZAID: The number now is, if you're talking about level-one trained --
SEN. JOHN McCAIN: Yeah.
GEN. JOHN ABIZAID: It's one.
SEN. JOHN McCAIN: At one battalion?
GEN. JOHN ABIZAID: Right.
SEN. JOHN McCAIN: The previous report was you had three battalions. Now we're down to one battalion.