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Iraq Is the Republic of Fear: By Nir Rosen

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kpete Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun May-28-06 11:09 AM
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Iraq Is the Republic of Fear: By Nir Rosen
KILLING FIELDS
Iraq Is the Republic of Fear

By Nir Rosen
Sunday, May 28, 2006; Page B01

Every morning the streets of Baghdad are littered with dozens of bodies, bruised, torn, mutilated, executed only because they are Sunni or because they are Shiite. Power drills are an especially popular torture device.

I have spent nearly two of the three years since Baghdad fell in Iraq. On my last trip, a few weeks back, I flew out of the city overcome with fatalism. Over the course of six weeks, I worked with three different drivers; at various times each had to take a day off because a neighbor or relative had been killed. One morning 14 bodies were found, all with ID cards in their front pockets, all called Omar. Omar is a Sunni name. In Baghdad these days, nobody is more insecure than men called Omar. On another day a group of bodies was found with hands folded on their abdomens, right hand over left, the way Sunnis pray. It was a message. These days many Sunnis are obtaining false papers with neutral names. Sunni militias are retaliating, stopping buses and demanding the jinsiya , or ID cards, of all passengers. Individuals belonging to Shiite tribes are executed.

Under the reign of Saddam Hussein, dissidents called Iraq "the republic of fear" and hoped it would end when Hussein was toppled. But the war, it turns out, has spread the fear democratically. Now the terror is not merely from the regime, or from U.S. troops, but from everybody, everywhere.

..................

The world wonders if Iraq is on the brink of civil war, while Iraqis fear calling it one, knowing the fate such a description would portend. In truth, the civil war started long before Samarra and long before the first uprisings. It started when U.S. troops arrived in Baghdad. It began when Sunnis discovered what they had lost, and Shiites learned what they had gained. And the worst is yet to come.

article here:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/05/26/AR2006052601578_2.html
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enigma000 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun May-28-06 04:54 PM
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1. That's the sentence
"It began when Sunnis discovered what they had lost, and Shiites learned what they had gained."

Until the Sunni can accept that Iraq is no longer just their property and the Shiites can fully share power this will continue.
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