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Sheikh Sittar Killed
This is not good news. Or does it embolden the Anbar Tribes more?
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I suspect that your first impression - that it was not good news - is right on target.
Abu Risha was, apparently, willing to pursue a different strategy; but men of courage are rare. It may be difficult to find someone to fill his role. |
This may be the direction the Sunnis are going in Anbar:
Last Updated: Friday, 14 September 2007, 12:16 GMT 13:16 UK E-mail this to a friend Printable version Iraq Sunni mourners vow revenge Abdul Sattar Abu Risha Abdul Sattar Abu Risha was one of al-Qaeda's top targets Sunni Arab tribesmen have vowed revenge for the killing of a leader who had become a focal point for opposition to al-Qaeda in Iraq. More than 1,500 mourners attended the funeral of Abdul Sattar Abu Risha, who was killed in a bomb attack in the city of Ramadi, Anbar province, on Thursday. Abu Risha led the Anbar Awakening alliance and was endorsed in a meeting with the US president just 10 days ago. The group has been praised for dramatic improvements in security in Anbar. 'Outrage' Iraq's national security adviser, interior minister and defence minister all attended the funeral in Ramadi, along with the second-in-command of US forces in Iraq, Lt-Gen Raymond Odierno. It is a national Iraqi disaster Mowaffaq al-Rubaie National security adviser US recruits Sunni volunteers Abdul Sattar Abu Risha Bush hails Anbar success The procession was guarded by scores of Iraqi police and US military personnel. Mourners chanted "We will take our revenge" and "There is no God but Allah and al-Qaeda is the enemy of Allah" as the procession continued to the family cemetery. No group has said it carried out the attack but most believe it was the work of al-Qaeda. Ahmed Abu Risha has been named as the tribal group's new leader after the death of his brother. He told the Reuters news agency: "All the tribes agreed to fight al-Qaeda until the last child in Anbar." Sheikh Rashid Majid, a leader of the al-Bufahad tribe in Ramadi, said: "The killing will give us more energy... to continue confronting al-Qaeda members and to dispose of them." Abu Risha was killed in his car, along with two bodyguards, by a roadside bomb planted near his home in Ramadi. Reports said he was one of al-Qaeda's top targets and that the group had made a number of attempts on his life. map Iraqi National Security Adviser Mowaffaq al-Rubaie said: "It is a national Iraqi disaster. What Abu Risha did for Iraq, no single man has done in the country's history." The White House also condemned his assassination as "an outrage". Anbar Awakening, or the Anbar Salvation Council, is an alliance of clans that sided with US forces and the Iraqi government in order to try to reclaim Anbar province from al-Qaeda. Anbar was once controlled by the insurgents, and was where they declared an "Islamic State of Iraq". It was one of the deadliest parts of Iraq for US troops. But the tribal alliance managed to force the insurgents back and reduce violence. Abu Risha said last week: "I wish we could do in all the provinces of Iraq what we did in Anbar, which is that the people and the government come together." http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/mid...st/6994823.stm |
http://www.longwarjournal.org/today-...aptured_an.php
US Special Forces captured an al Qaeda operative linked to the assassination of Sheik Sattar. Special Forces also captured a senior al Qaeda leader in Tarmiyah known as "The Executioner." Al Qaeda in Iraq killed 14 civilians in an attack in the town of Muqdadiyah in Diyala province. |
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