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Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Al-Qaida Fails Sexual Politics
By Austin Bay
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Do you personally know a young voter who has been sucked into Obamamania?


The U.S. Marine Corps Command and Staff College in Quantico, Va., now has a cultural anthropologist on its faculty. Welcome to 21st century warfare, where knowing your enemy includes knowing his myths and marriage mores, as well as his political goals and military capabilities.

Given al-Qaida's recent defeats in western Iraq's Al Anbar province, and the underlying reasons for armed conflict with its former allies in the region, the terror cartel ought to hire a cultural anthropologist and perhaps a sex therapist.

Let's hope they don't recruit either.

The "Anbar Awakening," as the split between the Anbar's Sunni tribes and al-Qaida is called, may prove to be a case study in aligning political and cultural considerations with combat security operations. It is certainly an object lesson in al-Qaida's cultural and religious imperialism, as well as outright social clumsiness -- in other words, an example of how al-Qaida does make critical mistakes and how we capitalize on its errors.

The Chicago Tribune reported in May that a blood feud led to the split. The Tribune identified the key leader as a young sheik "bent on avenging the murder of his father" by al-Qaida. The sheik said, "We started remembering what had happened (with al-Qaida) and how things went, and we decided to fight (al-Qaida)."

The tribes are now participating in "salvation councils," which serve a local security function. They are also becoming platforms for political development and integration.

But back to sex -- that tantalus plopped in the second paragraph.

Dr. David Kilcullen serves as Gen. David Petraeus' chief adviser on counter-insurgency warfare. A former Australian infantry officer thoroughly versed in the cultural and historical contexts that shape people's perceptions and influence their opinions, Kilcullen assesses the cultural implications of Coalition military operations.

Kilcullen appeared this week on PajamasMedia.com's "Blog Week in Review" Internet program. (Full disclosure: I host the show.)

In Anbar, al-Qaida botched it big-time.

"It boiled down to a conflict over women, as so many of these things do," Kilcullen told me. "Al-Qaida basically went to their tribal allies and said, 'Give us your daughter, or give us your sister in marriage.' ... In tribal custom, you don't allow outsiders ... to marry your daughter, I mean not on a regular basis ... they just don't willy-nilly give their women away to outsiders." Continued...

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About The Author

Austin Bay Austin Bay is author of three novels. His third novel, The Wrong Side of Brightness, was published by Putnam/Jove in June 2003. He has also co-authored four non-fiction books, to include A Quick and Dirty Guide to War: Third Edition (with James Dunnigan, Morrow, 1996).
 
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©Creators Syndicate
Subject: Polls of Iraqis don't look this rosy!
AlQaida did not exist in Iraq, a secular country, before the US invasion. The Iraqis calling themselves AlQaida don't have any direct leadership, coordination, instruction, or material support from any known AlQaida leadership from outside Iraq.

A clue is in the caption in the article referring to "Al Qaida-inspired militants". Foreign fighters are a minute percent. Therefore, to say that the U.S. is fighting against AlQaida in Iraq is propaganda in its purest form!

The anecdotes above are cute, but the feelings of Iraqis has been frequently polled, see below as to the real progress in that front!

In 2004, most Iraqis (52%)said that attacks on coalition forces were justifiable: http://www.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/meast/04/28/iraq.poll/index.html

In 2005, up to 65% of Iraqis support attacks and fewer than one per cent think Allied military involvement is helping to improve security.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/10/23/wirq23.xml. But even CNN-Time poll of 2005 acknowledgeed that 65% oppose U.S. occupation.

In Sep 2006, 61% of Iraqis support attacks against U.S. troops, 79% believe U.S. occupation bad for Iraq.
http://thinkprogress.org/2006/09/27/iraqis-poll/

Nov 2006 poll, reported 90% of Iraqis believing they were better BEFORE the occupation.
http://www.angus- reid.com/ polls/index. cfm/fuseaction/ viewItem/ itemID/14282

Decd 2006, 95% believe that things got much worse after arrival of U.S. forces; and
18-19 Mar 2007, most Iraqis (53%) believe that situation will IMPROVE when U.S. forces LEAVE.
http://www.iraqanalysis.org/info/55

How about this one: only 38% of Marines and 47% of soldiers believed "All non-combatants should be treated with dignity and respect".
http://www.iraqanalysis.org/info/55

All the above polls are very logicval outcome from the personal outcome of the U.S. occupation: 1 in 4 Iraqis have had a relative murdered or kidnapped. Accoridng to John Hopkins University, and validated by officials in the British government, 655,000 Iraqis have perished from this war, twice as many as it is claimed Sadam murdered in decades.

If there were democracy in Iraq, (which there isn't of course) wouldn't it be so that the wishes of the majority of people in Iraq would be heeded?

I am a veteran and I grieve for my brothers in arms in harm's way unnecessarily. Iraq is a country which the Iraqis have to handle, the sooner the better. American blood shall not be spilt considered to be less valuable than Iraqi blood, should it?

God have mercy on all of us! We are saved only through grace, and none is worthy of his kingdom! God have mercy on us!

Mateo70
Thanks for your service! We support you and are praying for swift victory!

God Bless you and these United States.
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