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RC
6th Dec 2004, 15:01
300,000 Fallujans have to return to their city in time to register for the January elections. The trick is not to let any insurgents in. (!) US military 'Intelligence', an oxymoron if I ever heard one, has come up with a plan. From the Boston Globe:

Under the plans, troops would funnel Fallujans to so-called citizen processing centers on the outskirts of the city to compile a database of their identities through DNA testing and retina scans. Residents would receive badges displaying their home addresses that they must wear at all times. Buses would ferry them into the city, where cars, the deadliest tool of suicide bombers, would be banned.

One idea that has stirred debate among Marine officers would require all men to work, for pay, in military-style battalions. Depending on their skills, they would be assigned jobs in construction, waterworks, or rubble-clearing platoons.

"You have to say, 'Here are the rules,' and you are firm and fair. That radiates stability," said Lieutenant Colonel Dave Bellon, intelligence officer for the First Regimental Combat Team, the Marine regiment that took the western half of Fallujah during the US assault and expects to be based downtown for some time.

Bellon asserted that previous attempts to win trust from Iraqis suspicious of US intentions had telegraphed weakness by asking, " 'What are your needs? What are your emotional needs?' All this Oprah [stuff]," he said. "They want to figure out who the dominant tribe is and say, 'I'm with you.' We need to be the benevolent, dominant tribe.

NottyImp
6th Dec 2004, 15:09
Arbeit macht Frei?

(Probably wrong, my German is non-existent).

wshaw
6th Dec 2004, 22:22
The 25,000 refugees trying to get back into Fallujah feature in this (http://www.tomdispatch.com/index.mhtml?pid=2047)brilliant, bitter article by the US journalist Tom Engelhardt on the unseen - and largely unreported - consequences of America's decision to rely on air superiority to attempt to quash a guerilla war. Though he's a bit disparaging about the book's structure, the article clearly relies on Sven Lindqvist's fantastic A History Of Bombing (http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/1862074909/) - which for my money is one of the most dazzling non-fiction books I've read in in years.