May 13, 2003

U.S. Sending More Cops To Baghdad

The Resurgence Of Looting & Violence Is Sparking Anti-U.S. Anger

    • U.S. troops standing guard in Nasariya. The lack of security is hampering other efforts to restart Iraqi services.

      U.S. troops standing guard in Nasariya. The lack of security is hampering other efforts to restart Iraqi services.  (AP)

    • L. Paul Bremer, seated with President Bush, is a State Department veteran. He'll head an administration facing security problems and delays restoring services for Iraqis.

      L. Paul Bremer, seated with President Bush, is a State Department veteran. He'll head an administration facing security problems and delays restoring services for Iraqis.  (AP)

    • Iraqi men gather in front of the main Presidental Palace, now a U.S. Army base, in Baghdad, as U.S soldiers stand guard during a demonstration organized by the Iraqi Independent Movements.

      Iraqi men gather in front of the main Presidental Palace, now a U.S. Army base, in Baghdad, as U.S soldiers stand guard during a demonstration organized by the Iraqi Independent Movements.  (AP)

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(CBS)  U.S. Army commanders say they will increase the number of soldiers on patrol in the Iraqi capital, where ordinary Iraqis are pleading for more security against criminals and other threats.

Police in Baghdad are packing guns again for the first time since the war, as the capital faced a new type of lawlessness — arson, car theft and kidnapping

Lt. Gen. William "Fuzzy" Webster, deputy commander of all allied ground forces in Iraq, said in an interview Monday that within two weeks an additional 1,000 military police would be operating in Baghdad.

"Then it will quickly decline again," he said, because the 1st Armored Division, which is scheduled to enter Iraq soon as a replacement for the 3rd Infantry Division, has fewer military police than the 3rd.

In other developments:

  • Pentagon officials say Iraq's former military chief of staff has been captured. Ibrahim Ahmad Abd al Sattar Muhammad al Tikriti is number 11 on the military's list of the 55 most-wanted Iraqi officials, and the jack of spades in a deck of cards issued to U.S. troops.

  • Iraqis have been pulling bound and blindfolded bodies out of a newly discovered mass grave outside of Basra. The site is believed to contain the remains of up to 150 Shiite Muslims killed by Saddam Hussein's regime during an uprising in 1999.

  • Some 15,000 Iraqis cheered as a Shiite Muslim cleric, Ayatollah Mohammed Baqir al-Hakim, who led the largest anti-Saddam movement visited one of the Shiites' holiest shrines after returning from more than two decades in exile.

  • The flood of dollars into Iraq has helped push up the value of the local currency, the dinar, by 60 percent. But rising prices mean most Iraqis aren't able to buy any more goods than they used to.

  • U.S. experts are poring through millions of pages of documents found in Iraq, looking for information about the country's suspected biological, chemical and nuclear programs.

  • The Army is stepping up efforts to remove cluster bombs and other unexploded munitions that have posed hazards to Iraqi civilians, including children, since the war's major combat ended nearly a month ago, officials said.

  • U.S. experts are examining a second possible mobile weapons laboratory, Pentagon officials said Monday. The trailer was similar to one seized last month that U.S. officials believe may have been a germ weapons workshop for the Iraqis, two officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

    The new American civilian administrator for Iraq, L. Paul Bremer, had been scheduled to hold his first news conference on Tuesday. This was announced prominently to journalists, then canceled via email three hours before it was set to begin.

    Bremer will become the boss of the current U.S. administrator, retired Lt. Gen. Jay Garner, who has faced severe criticism in Iraq and ridicule in foreign capitals for his slowness in re-establishing public order, preventing looting and restoring utilities and other basic government services throughout the country.

    British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw told the House of Commons on Monday that moves to restore a civil administration "in the early weeks has not been as good as we would have hoped," but welcomed the appointment of Bremer.

    Failure to provide adequate security is proving a volatile spark for anti-Americanism in postwar Iraq.

    According to the Washington Post, gunfire was heard in the night, looting resumed at a presidential palace in the capital and fires burned at government buildings. The chaos kept kids from school, prevented bank branches from operating and snarled traffic, the newspaper reported.

    The offices of the humanitarian group CARE were attacked over the weekend, The Post said.

    More than a month after U.S. forces captured Baghdad, Col. Teddy R. Spain, who as head of U.S. Military Police units here serves as the de facto police chief of Baghdad, said he still doesn't have the necessary resources to restore basic law and order to the capital. The weapons problem "is out of control." But he believes help is on the way.

    Some help will come from 4,000 police officers who served under Saddam's fallen regime and have reclaimed their jobs in a force once riddled with corruption and stained by brutality.

    Without any checks into their past records, they are being armed and charged with ensuring security for the capital city. Many, if not most, were members of the ruling Baath Party.

    On Monday, the first police carrying guns hit the streets of Baghdad.

    "Get the thugs off the streets and the weapons off the streets. Those are our over-arching goals," said Spain.

    Privately, some U.S. military officers express fears that many of the thugs are ending up in uniform and that the expediency of quickly reforging an Iraqi police force to stop the looting, murder and arson that daily plague Baghdad will one day come back to haunt the Americans.

    Outside of the capital, efforts to purge the country of its Baath leadership continue.

    In Tikrit, U.S. military commanders meet by day with local tribal chieftains and other citizens to overcome the effects of years of anti-American propaganda. By night, to show that the former regime is no longer to be feared, they orchestrate raids to seize Saddam militants believed to be undermining U.S. authority.

    "The common goal is to bring stability to this area," said Capt. James Walker, 32, of Newport News, Va., the brigade's intelligence officer.

    Since the raids began, mortar and small arms attacks on U.S. troops have stopped, he said.


    ©MMIII, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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