To date, the U.S. military has paid more than 17 million
dollars to these fighters, whose groups it calls "Concerned Local
Citizens" and "Awakening Forces." Each member receives around 300
dollars monthly. Many are former resistance fighters who used to attack
occupation forces.
These new forces now have a strength of more
than 76,000. According to the U.S. military, at least 82 percent are
Sunni. It hopes to add another 10,000.
The groups have been
credited with chasing foreign fighters out of cities in al-Anbar
province to the west of Baghdad, and also from parts of Baghdad. But
members of these groups are often accused of extortion, corruption, and
brutal tactics.
The Shia-led government has opposed creation of
groups who might rival its own security forces, which comprise many
members of former Shia militias.
"We completely, absolutely
reject the Awakening becoming a third military organisation," Iraqi
defence minister Abdul-Qadir al-Obaidi said at a news conference Dec.
23. He said the groups would not be allowed any infrastructure like a
headquarters building which could give them longer term legitimacy.
Some
Sunni groups also reject these forces. Offices of the Awakening forces
have been closed down in Fallujah and Najaf despite warnings from
Awakening leader Sheikh Ahmad Abu Risha.
"Fallujah city is not
under the Awakening influence and never will be," Ihsan Ahmad, a
follower of the Islamic Party in Fallujah told IPS. "Those tribal
leaders want to control everything everywhere, but they are not
qualified for leadership. They are just a group of ignorant tribal men."
Fear of a new conflict between tribes and political parties has arisen in many parts of the country.
"The
same story of overthrowing Saddam Hussein is being repeated," Issra
Yasseen, a teacher in Fallujah, told IPS. "They say they finished the
influence of al-Qaeda and so they want to take over everything for
themselves. We are afraid of the possibility that they will then fight
each other and naturally, our lives will be the price."
Many
Awakening leaders and members of these groups in al-Anbar and Baghdad
say they have been betrayed by Islamic Party leaders and by the Iraqi
government.
"The government was using us to protect its
interests, and now it ignores our legitimate demands," Sheikh Hassan
al-Alwani from the outskirts of Fallujah told IPS. "Only those enlisted
with the Islamic Party are getting jobs and contracts, while we who
fought only get the lowest ranks and the worst jobs."
"We were
evicted from Fallujah twice by the Americans and Iraqi government
troops, and our houses were destroyed under the flag of liberating us,"
Salim Mahmood, a former army officer who now works as a barber in
Ramadi told IPS. "Those so-called sheikhs and politicians were all
hiding in Amman while we were being brutally butchered by their army
and allying Americans."
Tensions between politicians in the
government and local tribes affiliated with the Awakening are evident
all over Fallujah. Many people say they fear a new phase of fighting,
this time local.
"This was the American plan from the
beginning," Sammy Hussein, a poet from Fallujah told IPS. "We knew that
after creating a Sunni-Shia fight, they would start a Sunni-Sunni fight
and a Shia-Shia fight so that they ensure control of our country. The
only thing they have not calculated well is that people are still
armed, and that the fighting spirit is still alive in Iraq."
Residents
who do not belong to either side are feeling lost, and living with the
consequences of the lack of any responsible rule.
Many shops are
open in Fallujah, but they have little to sell. "People do not have
money, and business is very slow," a 30-year-old merchant who gave his
name only as Marwan told IPS.
"We are living the worst days
since the November 2004 siege of Fallujah. Unemployment is killing us
slowly, and we have no real government to care for us. Only those who
work with the Americans can afford to buy food, while over 90 percent
of residents are very poor. People are always the biggest losers."
An
Oxfam International report released in July estimated that 45 percent
of Iraqis live in abject poverty, on less than a dollar a day.
(Ali, a correspondent in Baghdad, works in close collaboration with
Dahr Jamail, our U.S.-based specialist writer on Iraq who has reported
extensively from Iraq and the Middle East)