AP - Main findings of the declassified portion of the National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq: ? Growing polarization of Iraqi society, weak security forces and a weak government are driving violence and political extremism. ? If new plans for Iraq don't work over the coming year to 18 months, security ...
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| Highlights of Iraq intelligence report AP - Main findings of the declassified portion of the National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq: ? Growing polarization of Iraqi society, weak security forces and a weak government are driving violence and political extremism. ? If new plans for Iraq don't work over the coming year to 18 months, security in Iraq will continue to deteriorate as in the second half of 2006. ? Even if the violence lessens, Iraqi leaders will be hard-pressed to stabilize the country by mid-2008. ? Iraq faces "daunting" challenges driven by Shiite insecurity after years of Sunni domination, Sunni unwillingness to accept minority status, divided leaders who can't control the groups they represent, a Kurdish movement toward autonomy, an ineffective Iraqi army, extremist groups inside and outside Iraq and problems with refugees. ? The term "civil war" accurately describes key aspects of the conflict in Iraq but doesn't encompass all of its complexities. ? American and international forces play a key role in the country, and the Iraqi army probably wouldn't survive a rapid U.S. withdrawal. ? Political developments — particularly Sunni acceptance of the current government, concessions from the Shiites and the Kurds, and efforts to reduce violence in neighborhoods — could help calm the conflict. Having stronger Iraqi leaders would help this to happen. ? Iraq's neighbors have some influence in the country and in some cases have intensified the conflict, but they don't play a major role because the sectarian divisions are firmly entrenched and driven by internal political forces. ? Other Sunni Arab regimes in the region are reluctant to support the Shiite-dominated Baghdad government and are considering supporting Sunni groups in Iraq. Turkey wants a stable Iraq to keep a Turkish Kurdish terrorist group from finding safe haven in northern Iraq. ? The security situation in Iraq could take a sharp turn for the worse if there is a political crisis such as sustained mass killings, a high-profile assassination or complete Sunni withdrawal from the government. If that happens, one of three scenarios might emerge: The central government could disintegrate and lead to a de facto partition of Iraq along sectarian lines, resulting in protracted violence; a Shiite strongman could emerge, or an anarchic pattern of local control could arise, leading to chaos and extreme violence. source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070202/ap_on_go_pr_wh/intelligence_estimate_highlights [link] | ||||
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