The Iraqi government announced Sunday that it had fired about 1,300 police
officers and soldiers who had refused to take part in the fighting with the
Shiite Muslim militias in Basra.
Apparently, during the operation of disarming militia
fighters, some Iraqi police officers decided to switch sides.
"Some of them
were sympathetic with these lawbreakers, some refused to battle for political
or national or sectarian or religious reasons," Gen. Abdul-Kareem Khalaf,
a spokesman for the Interior Ministry, said.
According to the Los Angeles Times, a U.S. military official in Baghdad considers that most of the soldiers
deserted out of fear rather than loyalty to Sadr. He also said most of the
deserters were very young recruits who had just finished training.
No matter the reasons the soldiers had, the desertion is
clearly a sign of weakness of the Iraqi security forces, which should manage by
themselves as the number of U.S.
troops decreases. The fighting in Basra
was criticized as poorly organized after failing to disarm Shiite militias,
especially the Mehdi Army loyal to cleric Moqtada-al-Sadr.
Gen. Khalaf declared that 500 soldiers and 421 policemen were
fired in Basra,
and the rest were dismissed in Kut. The deserters included 37 senior police
officers that ranked as brigadier general.
On Sunday, the Iraqi Cabinet approved for submission to
parliament a measure that forbade political parties with militias to
participate in future elections, but no specific group was named.
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki had threatened for some
time to take this step against Moqtada al-Sadr unless the radical Shiite cleric
did not disband his Mehdi Army militia.
All major political parties in Iraq are believed to be linked to various
armed groups, but all of them deny the suppositions.
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