Sahwa Forces Increase Strength, Tensions with Iraqi Government

By Ben Turner
Impunity Watch Reporter, Middle East

BAGHDAD, Iraq –  As a result of the sectarian violence in Iraq, the U.S. has made efforts to promote Sunni-run security forces.  During the spring of 2007, the U.S. government recruited more than 80,000 former Sunni resistance fighters to form a new group, the Sahwa.  The group is also known as “The Awakening Council.”

Sahwa was formed to battle al Qaeda in Iraq.  Sahwa works with U.S. and Iraqi forces to increase security across Iraq.

The motives for joining Sahwa vary.  Many joined as a rejection of al Qaeda’s extremism.  For many Sunnis, having a counterweight to the Shia controlled Iraqi government is also motivation.  And the $300 monthly salary also serves as a great incentive.

The Sunni dominated groups form a counterbalance to the primarily Shiite run Iraqi government.  The relationship between Sahwa and the Iraqi government is delicate and many disagreements arise.

Sahwa forces have accused the police chief of Diyala province Ghanim al-Qureyshi of allowing Shia militiamen and death squads to operate with impunity against Sunnis.

Tensions rose in early February when men dressed in Iraqi security personnel uniforms kidnapped two women.  Their naked bodies were found later.

After the incident with the two women, Sahwa gave Qureyshi a deadline to apologize and to arrest those responsible.  When the deadline passed without an apology, Sahwa stopped working and held demonstrations protesting Qureyshi.

“We hereby declare suspension of all co-operation with U.S. military, Iraqi security forces and the local government,” Abu Abdullah, spokesman for the Awakening Council in Diyala province announced after the deadline passed.

Hundreds of Sahwa members closed their offices and held demonstrations in Baquba, a city 40 kilometers northeast of Baghdad.  The Iraqi government then promised to investigate the incident with the two women and the Sahwa went back to work.

Shortly thereafter, Sahwa again stopped work in protest, accusing the government security forces of further attacks against Sunnis.  Sahwa then cut all ties with the government and U.S. forces and left their security posts.

But on March 1, the government met most of Sahwa’s demands and Sahwa members returned to their posts.  The Iraqi government’s accommodating stance in regards to Sahwa forces underscores the group’s growing influence in Iraq.

The group’s increased influence in security roles has almost made them a third security force in the country, alongside the Iraqi army and the police.  As their influence continues to grow, the tensions between Sahwa and the Iraqi government have become more pronounced.

General Mahdi Subeih from the interior ministry told the Saudi-owned al-Hayat newspaper in London that “the rebellion by some of the members of the Awakening Councils and the confrontations that erupted between them and the security forces reveal the depth of the chasm between the two sides.”

For more information, please see:
Middle East Online – Iraq: Did the Surge Work? – 7 March 2008

Uruknet.info – IRAQ: Sahwa Forces Challenge Govt, and Win – 5 March 2008

Middle East Times – Top US Military Official Visits Iraq Rebel Stronghold – 3 March 2008

The Independent – The Turkish Invasion Could Destroy a Unified Iraq – 27 February 2008

Christian Science Monitor – Rift threatens U.S. antidote to Al Qaeda in Iraq – 13 February 2008

Author: Impunity Watch Archive