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Dead Iraqi's matter more to the USA than dead Israeli's.

usa army and wall iraq.jpg



Gov't Trying To Halt U.S. Pressure for More 'Good Will'

(IsraelNN.com) Government officials have been talking with leaders in the Bush administration in an effort to halt increasing pressure for more "good will" measures, such as removing checkpoints and roadblocks in Judea and Samaria. The discussions are a prelude to a planned meeting on June 19 in Washington between Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and American President George W. Bush.

The State Department several weeks ago drew up a schedule for Israelis easing of travel for Palestinian Authority (PA) Arabs without any specific actions by the PA to halt terrorism.

"The American schedule would spell 'security abandon,'" one government official stated.



Walling Out the Bad Guys

Walling off vulnerable Baghdad neighborhoods is critical to breaking the cycle of revenge killings in Iraq, according to U.S. Army General David Petraeus' counter-insurgency advisor.

Portable barriers installed between neighborhoods enable U.S. and Iraqi forces to limit the nighttime movements of death squads and insurgents, says Dr. David Kilcullen, a lieutenant colonel in the Australian army reserve who has spent years studying terror groups and methods for defeating them.

"What we've tried to do is put in a series of blocks to stop that cycle [of violence] from running, and if it does run, to reduce the number of people killed in attacks" by limiting the scale and frequency of attacks, Kilcullen explains.

He uses the term "gated community" to describe the walled-off neighborhoods. The first to be enclosed was Sunni community of Adhamiyah in April. The decision to wall of a particular area is made by the U.S. battalions on the ground.

Not everyone was thrilled by the Adhamiyah barrier. "This will deepen the sectarian strife and only serve to abort efforts aimed at reconciliation," a Sunni shop owner told The New York Times.

Noting such objections, Kilcullen stresses that the walls are temporary. He compares them to tourniquets. "It's something you do when patient is bleeding to death. But you don't leave it there forever or it causes damage."

"We had 130 bodies turning up per day in Baghdad due to sectarian violence last year. Now it's around 20," he says, adding that the negative psychological effects of the barriers are outweighed by "the negative effects of people getting killed."

Barriers are only one tactic of the new U.S. approach in Iraq, Kilcullen says. He also cites smaller, dispersed patrol bases, a renewed reconstruction effort and stepped-up air patrols, all intended to "reduce feelings of intimidation" among everyday Iraqis and therefore "create more space for compromise and political reconciliation."



Dead Iraqi's matter more to the USA than dead Israeli's.

It is time for Israeli leaders to wake up and to look to the future and either redefine the nature of the relationship that Israel has with America or to have the courage to tell the American Administration keep your money and we will go our own way.

This has to be part of a multi year strategy that Israel builds towards for with friends like these in the State Department and the White House we will join a long list of other friends that in the end were sold out by political considerations in Washington D.C.