Monday, November 27, 2006

 

Al Qaeda attacks tribe near Ramadi

Security, Insurgency, Tribal
Al Qaeda-linked insurgents attacked a tribe allied to the Iraqi government and US forces in the restive western province of Al Anbar, prompting US air and artillery support, the military reported Sunday. The insurgents attacked the Abu Soda tribe in Sofiya, near the provincial capital of Ramadi, with mortars and small arms, burning homes, in apparent revenge for their support of the Iraqi government. Some 25 tribes in Al Anbar formed an alliance, the "Anbar Awakening," in September and pledged to fight Al Qaeda militants in the insurgency-plagued province by forming their own paramilitary units and sending recruits to the local police force. "Al Qaeda has decided to attack the tribes due to their support," said Sheikh Abdel Sittar Baziya, head of the Abu Risha tribe and a founder of the movement. "The terrorists have gone to a neighboring tribe and have brought fighters to attack the Abu Soda," he said in the military's statement.
Following up reports of the attack, US forces hit the Al Qaeda attackers with artillery fire and air strikes. According to Sheikh Jassim of the Abu Soda tribe, 15 members of his tribe and 45 insurgents were killed in figures that were briefly flashed on state television Saturday night. The US military could not confirm the figures. Al Anbar has long seen the fiercest resistance to the US occupation of Iraq and the insurgency there has claimed a lion's share of US casualties in the past three-and-a-half years. In recent months, however, US military officials there have seen a turning point with a number of the desert province's powerful tribes turning against the Al Qaeda-influenced insurgency and funneling men into the Iraqi security forces. Insurgents have struck back by assassinating tribal leaders and blowing up recruiting centers.





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