(e.g. yourname@email.com)

Forgot Password?

    Defense Visual Information Distribution Service Logo

    Terrorists Won't Return to Anbar Province, General Says

    WASHINGTON, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, UNITED STATES

    02.14.2008

    Courtesy Story

    Office of the Secretary of War Public Affairs           

    By Gerry J. Gilmore
    American Forces Press Service

    WASHINGTON - Al-Qaida had worn out its welcome with Sunni residents of western Iraq's Anbar province, and consequently, the terror group's influence there is over for good, the Marine Corps' most senior officer said today.

    The Sunnis became disgusted with al-Qaida's brutal methods and backward ideology, Marine Corps Commandant Gen. James T. Conway said at a breakfast event at the National Press Club hosted by Government Executive Magazine

    Determined to rid themselves of al-Qaida, Sunni leaders in Anbar province formed concerned local citizens' groups that attacked terrorists at every turn, Conway said.

    During his most recent visit to Iraq in November, Conway recalled, Sunni leaders told him that Anbar province had reached a "post-hostilities" phase.

    "They are convinced that the al-Qaida, in particular, and the Sunni insurgents are not coming back," Conway said. "They have entered a blood feud with the al-Qaida (terrorists)."

    Anbar province's Sunnis found nothing to admire about al-Qaida's "15th-century law," Conway said, which involved suppression of individual rights, beatings and beheadings. There also were forced marriages between al-Qaida foreign-born fighters and local Sunni women, he said.

    The Sunnis "recoiled from all of that" and began to ally themselves with coalition and Iraqi government forces, Conway explained.

    Anbar's Sunnis also know that al-Qaida would extract bloody revenge against those who'd collaborated with U.S. and Iraqi government forces, Conway added.

    "They can't let (al-Qaida) back in," the general said.

    Meanwhile, U.S. Marines in Iraq have been busy patrolling and training members of the Iraqi army.

    "We are pretty proud of those (Iraqi soldiers) we train out there," Conway said.

    He added that when properly equipped and led by good Iraqi officers and noncommissioned officers, the Iraqi troops "do pretty well in the field."

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 02.14.2008
    Date Posted: 02.14.2008 16:50
    Story ID: 16360
    Location: WASHINGTON, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, US

    Web Views: 210
    Downloads: 205

    PUBLIC DOMAIN