Rebels Scam U.S. Troops with Tips on Roadside Bombs

Published in Azzaman
(Iraq) on 5 January 2007
by Ali Khaleel (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by . Edited by .
American and Iraqi forces lack reliable information on imminent attacks by insurgents and armed groups.

"I think they are in the dark and that most of their operations target the wrong people and areas," said a Mr. Hamed, who for security reasons didn't want to give his first name.

Stories of U.S. troops arresting or killing the wrong people and attacking the wrong houses abound in Baghdad. As for Iraqi forces, most of their operations are carried out for purely sectarian reasons.

The reason for the lack of information from the public is not hard to see. Iraqi insurgents are fully prepared to punish any Iraqi believed to have tipped off U.S. or Iraqi forces about rebel operations.

The Iraqi resistance is not the gathering of rag-tag fighters U.S. commanders would like us to believe. The resistance is highly organized with intelligence-gathering systems superior to those at the disposal of American forces.

"Iraqi armed groups have infiltrated the police and the army, and usually kill anyone suspected of informing on their activities," said A. Abed.

Most of the Iraqis who inform the police about the presence of explosives, car bombs and roadside bombs have been killed. Resistance fighters treat those who collaborate with U.S. troops very harshly. They kidnap translators and either kill them or release them in return for massive ransoms.

U.S. troops pay rewards to Iraqis who inform them about roadside bombs, but there are reports of armed men placing roadside bombs specifically to collect such rewards. Rebels are in need of cash, and it seems as though their tactics of planting bombs with the specific aim of obtaining U.S. rewards have succeeded.

Mr. Saheb says U.S. forces pay for some of the bombs in cash and others in blood.

Iraqi authorities are reluctant to give such rewards in return for tips on explosives or imminent attacks. "If they (the government) paid, they would be flooded with tips," said Mr. S. Mansour.

Mansour also says there is no lack of explosives or bombs in Iraq. With the prospect of a reward, many are ready to use them in any manner that would help them earn some money, he said.


This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link .

Hot this week

South Africa: Trump’s China Visit Was a Diplomatic Disappointment

Poland: ‘Trump Brand Is Toxic.’ Australia Will Not Get Its Tallest Skyscraper*

Australia: Donald Trump’s Latest Trophy Proves His Power over His Party — Despite the Polls

South Korea: Precarious US-China Rivalry: Risky Game of Chess

Japan: US-China Leadership Summit: Are the US Economic Results Exaggerated?

Topics

France: The United States Has Not Abandoned Its Expansionist Ambitions in Greenland

Japan: US-China Leadership Summit: Are the US Economic Results Exaggerated?

Poland: ‘Trump Brand Is Toxic.’ Australia Will Not Get Its Tallest Skyscraper*

South Africa: Trump’s China Visit Was a Diplomatic Disappointment

Israel: Has Trump Had Enough?

South Korea: Precarious US-China Rivalry: Risky Game of Chess

Related Articles

Egypt: Iran’s Fate Is Not in Trump’s Hands

Saudi Arabia: Transitional Dualism and the Role Required of America

India: How America’s Iraq Oil Saga Might Be Replayed in Syria

Venezuela: What Is ExxonMobil Up to in Iraq and the Essequibo?

Turkey: Will the US Withdraw from Iraq?