Associated Press
June 28, 2003 Saturday
HEADLINE: U.S. Troops Prodding New Iraqi Police
BYLINE: BORZOU DARAGAHI; Associated Press Writer
DATELINE: KHALIS, Iraq
BODY:
Police were just doing their jobs when they arrested four men
for shooting at a vegetable store owner in this dusty town near
the Iranian border. But for the men of Charlie Company, the
arrests were momentous.
"For once, the local police began acting like cops,"
said Army Capt. John Wrann, who commands the platoons and tanks
stationed at the former offices of Saddam Hussein's deposed
Baath Party in this town of 60,000.
Wrann's troops - Charlie Company, 588th Engineer Battalion of
the Fourth Infantry Division - are working with police in Khalis
to try to restore order, but they must work around deep ethnic
traditions as well as inexperience.
Many police in the new Iraqi force took jobs for the steady
salary, and getting them to clamp down has not been easy, Wrann
said. In a heavily tribal society, the new police officers were
apparently worried that if they shot a suspect, the man's family
would seek retribution.
"For the last seven weeks, anytime there was any crime
we had to go with them," Wrann said. "They kept wanting
us to go on simple calls."
A few days ago, after the Iraqi cops refused to search cars
at a checkpoint aggressively, Sgt. Greg Rockhill, using colorful
vocabulary, questioned the police officers' courage. He brought
in the best translator he could find to make sure they understood.
On Friday, when the four men rolled into town and began shooting
at the vegetable store owner, the police acted, wounding one
of them in the knee and capturing all of them.
"That's the end game," said Wrann. "If these
guys start maintaining their own security, I can go home."
The job has been especially difficult because Wrann's men have
been trying to do what even Saddam's dictatorship couldn't:
control an area that is extremely volatile, both ethnically
and religiously. It is home to anti-Saddam militiamen backed
by Iran , pro-Saddam warriors who seek the overthrow of Iran
's government, and pro-American Kurdish guerrillas.
"You've got tribal relations laid on top of religious affiliations,
and you've got the former regime elements," said Lt. Col.
Mark Young, a 4th Infantry Division battalion commander charged
with overseeing a part of the Diala province that includes Khalis.
"On top of that, you've got elements from other countries."
There are also mysterious armed men possibly linked to the former
regime who have fired rocket-propelled grenades and launched
mortars at U.S. troops.
Security has improved here since the first days after Saddam
was ousted. The number of gunshot and stabbing victims treated
at Khalis' hospital has dropped from about 10 a day to about
two, said Ahmad Muhammad, a general practitioner.
But Charlie Company has been plagued by attacks recently. On
Wednesday night, a rocket-propelled grenade barely missed their
building, hitting a nearby school.
And neighbors and families often settle their disputes with
weaponry. On Thursday, soldiers sorted through the police log:
an aunt reported that her nephews threw hand grenades at her
home, and a man reported that his brother launched a rocket-propelled
grenade at him, injuring his daughter.