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Army Col. David
Paschal: al-Qaida ‘Virtually Destroyed’ in Kirkuk
May 13, 2008
Violence in Iraq’s Kirkuk province has dropped by 70 percent, and
coalition and Iraqi forces have “virtually destroyed” al-Qaida in Iraq
in the region, the commander of the U.S. brigade combat team in the area
said today.
U.S.
Army soldiers from Charlie Company, 2nd Battalion, 22nd Infantry
Regiment, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division and Iraqi army
soldiers arrive by air assault to search villages through 10 miles of
terrain prohibited to vehicles along the Zaghytun Chay River about 50
miles southeast of Kirkuk, Iraq,
Army Col. David Paschal, commander of
1st Brigade, 10th Mountain Division, said that as security improves in
the strategic northern province, changes are happening in the economy
and in governance that help cement the security progress in place.
Four developments have helped the battle against insurgents in the Rhode
Island-sized province of 1.5 million, Paschal told Pentagon reporters in
a teleconference from his headquarters at Contingency Operating Base
Speicher. The developments are:
-- Precision targeting against insurgent leadership;
-- The growing capabilities and capacities of the Iraqi police and army;
-- Establishment of a “Sons of Iraq” program, in which citizens aid in
the security effort; and
-- Partnership with Kirkuk’s provincial reconstruction team, composed of
State Department and military personnel working along with experts from
other governmental and nongovernmental agencies to aid local
development.
The brigade arrived in September 2007 and has killed or captured 20
high-value targets. U.S. soldiers also captured 63 “persons of interest”
in the area, the colonel said. Enemy activity began trending down in
August and remains low, he added.
None of this would be possible without the improvement in the Iraqi
security forces, Paschal said. Iraqi police are responsible for
maintaining security in Kirkuk, a city of roughly 800,000 people. The
15th Brigade of the 4th Iraqi Army Division conducts independent,
intelligence-driven operations outside the city. The Iraqi army unit has
also conducted joint operations with the fledgling Iraqi air force.
The Sons of Iraq program has been a cornerstone to security in the
region, he said, noting that 400 men who were part of the Sons of Iraq
program from the brigade’s Arab areas are graduating from two months of
police training this week. They’ll be reassigned to the outer district
on the western side of the province.
With more security, the Iraqi people are feeling more confident, Paschal
said.
“The information and actionable intelligence that they provide has grown
exponentially,” he said. “That actionable intelligence is in the form of
the turning of caches, location of [roadside bombs] and, in many cases,
instances of insurgent or terrorist leaders throughout the province,” he
said.
The reconstruction team helps rebuild the province and gives the Iraqis
the tangible benefits of peace.
Kirkuk is the northern oil center of Iraq, and it is providing the
lifeblood to the country. “Since our arrival, there has not been an
interdiction on the oil pipeline,” Paschal said. “In fact, we have
exceeded all … pre-war level exports. Just last month, the Northern Oil
Company exported 13 and a half million barrels of oil, which has been a
phenomenal increase in its capacity.”
Kirkuk may turn over to provincial Iraqi control in November or December
this year. “That will be based on the capability of the Iraqi security
forces to maintain the security gains that we've achieved and continue
to defeat the insurgents,” the colonel said. “I think it all ties back
into the economic opportunities that we are working in conjunction with
the provincial reconstruction team.”

The PRT is working with the Iraqi government in sponsoring a technical
training school in the province, and it is working on an adult literacy
course. The team also is encouraging outside investors to come to the
province. “With the increased security, we've had some outside investors
come that are interested in … conducting some projects within the Kirkuk
province,” Paschal said.
The Iraqi government also is hosting a small-loans program, anywhere
from about $2,500 to $10,000, which opens up small businesses. “With the
increased security, what we're starting to see is some of these that I
would refer to as smaller ‘mom and pop’ businesses that are coming back
into play,” Paschal said.
The challenge ahead is to sustain the new security climate, Paschal told
reporters. “When we first arrived, the enemy was the al-Qaida in Iraq,”
he said. “We have virtually defeated al-Qaida in Iraq within the Kirkuk
province. It's important that we continue to maintain the pressure.” |