'The Surge' has dominated the debate about the war in Iraq, but no one is talking about a development that has had an even more important impact on the war - 'The Awakening Movement.'
After four years of bloody insurgency in Iraq's Sunni heartland, the course of the war changed abruptly when America formed an alliance with a confederation of Sunni militias known as 'The Awakening movement'.
Under the new program, the US gives money, weapons, and military support to tribal sheiks who provide security in return. 100,000 Sunni militiamen were put on the US payroll, and the program has put a small tribal elite in charge of an army of soldiers and a massive patronage network. Since the 'Awakening' began, attacks on American troops have fallen to their lowest levels of the war - but it is an uneasy alliance of convenience. Many militia members are former insurgents who remain adamant in their demand for an American withdrawal, and see the Iraqi Army as their sectarian enemy. The Shiite led Iraqi government views Awakening militia members with suspicion.
In many ways, the Americans are reconstituting Saddam's old strategy of maintaining order through tribal militia proxies. But it is a delicate balance between the Awakening militias, the Iraqi Army, and the central government in a fragile state. Will this balance hold, or is the United States setting the stage for future sectarian battles in Iraq by arming both sides? Big Noise, with support from the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, went to Iraq to investigate.
(21min.) This report originally aired on Al Jazeera English. Available on Dispatches Vol.4
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Blackwater's Youngest Victim - White Power USA - Vulture Funds Attack Liberia - East St. Louis
Return of the Warlords - Curveball - Broke Down In Motor City - The Continuing Occupation
Moqtada al Sadr and the Mehdi Army - Sunnu Re-awakening - US Detention System in Iraq - Democratic and Republican Conventions 2008 - Vote Suppression
Battle for Basra - New Orleans: Man-made Disaster -Iran:Elections Under Threat- Chevron/Texaco in Ecuador's Rainforest
Sunni Militias in Iraq - Jena, Louisiana - Homeless Power - Vulture Funds
Hugo Chavez - Subcomandante Marcos - The War in Lebanon - Fraud in the Mexican Elections - World Bank Famine in Niger - Vulture Funds - and more
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