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Iraqi official defends move to re-integrate Saddam army soldiers

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  • Iraqi official defends move to re-integrate Saddam army soldiers

    Iraqi official defends move to re-integrate Saddam army soldiers

    Al-Sharq al-Awsat, London
    11 Dec 04


    Text of report on an interview with Paruska Nuri Shawes, secretary
    general of the Iraqi Defence Ministry, by Ra'd Kamil in Baghdad; date
    not given, headlined "Iraqi forces started to use aircraft to watch
    the borders and oil pipelines. Iraqi Defence Ministry's
    secretary-general to Al-Sharq al-Awsat: we are building a new,
    balanced, national, denominational army", carried by London-based
    newspaper Al-Sharq al-Awsat on 11 December

    Paruska Nuri Shawes, the secretary general of the Iraqi Defence
    Ministry, has reported that his ministry has started to use
    reconnaissance aircraft to watch the border areas and the oil
    pipelines so as to prevent the illegal border crossings and stop the
    attacks on oil pipelines. He added that the ministry is preparing to
    use helicopters for the same purpose.

    Shawes said in an interview with Al-Sharq al-Awsat that his ministry
    is building a new and balanced Iraqi army "which represents all the
    Iraqi people's components" so that not 90 per cent of its officers are
    Sunnis and 90 per cent of its soldiers Shi'is like the army under
    Saddam Husayn's regime.

    He said: "We have received the help of the brothers in the United Arab
    Emirates who trained our pilots to fly the Iraqi reconnaissance
    aircraft that take photographs from the air and send them to the
    centre. They started operations before two weeks to watch the borders
    and were able to take successful photographs of the areas on the Iraqi
    borders where there were movements."

    He added: "We are about to develop our work by using some helicopters
    that the Iraqi army has been trained to fly so as to watch any
    movement in the border areas." He pointed out that there are "areas
    between one country and another where these two countries' forces
    cannot cross according to the international agreements known to
    all. But the border areas can be photographed from a long distance by
    reconnaissance aircraft. This is what we are doing now and these
    aircraft are watching the Iraqi oil pipelines and the movements in the
    border areas."

    Asked about the possibility of recruiting members of the dissolved
    Iraqi army, Shawes said: "We have absorbed many of the good officers
    in the former army whose hands were not tainted by crimes against the
    people." He added: "To avoid what happened in the former army, there
    should be a balance between the Iraqi people's components in the new
    army."

    He pointed out that the "Sunnis comprised 90 per cent of the officers
    in the former army while the Shi'is represented 90 per cent of its
    soldiers. This shows that there was no balance between the people's
    various components. There should be a Shi'i, a Sunni, a Kurd, an
    Assyrian, a Chaldaean, an Armenian, and a Turkoman so that every
    citizen in Iraq feels that he is not isolated from this army and that
    the latter represents him. We take care that where the commander is a
    Shi'i then his aides are a Sunni and a Kurd. All the Iraqis should
    form an indivisible unit. We have to consider that the one who comes
    to us and expresses a desire to enlist in this army should be given
    his chance."

    The Iraqi Defence Ministry official went on to say: "Regarding the
    rights of the dissolved army's soldiers, we are paying them emergency
    grants and we have proposed to the cabinet to keep them. Moreover, the
    Health Ministry has absorbed the former army's military medical cadres
    and the Industry and Works Ministries have absorbed the engineering
    cadres." He added: "There are only between 7,000 and 7,500 former army
    elements who are included in the deba'thification decision." He
    asserted that the "doors of appointment have not been closed before
    them but we feel that the Iraqi people's sons whose relatives were
    killed in the uprising and in Al-Anfal operation or buried in mass
    graves will not be happy with us if we appoint those involved in these
    actions commanders in the new Iraqi army."

    Shawes defended the security role of the Iraqi National Guards and
    said the number of Guards' victims since its establishment till now
    "is commensurate with the responsibilities they were given." He added
    that the National Guards elements "are being targeted because they are
    defending the Iraqi people and their aspirations. This gives us the
    honour of confronting those who do not wish Iraq well."

    Regarding reports that there are problems between the National Guards
    and the Iraqi police force, he said: "This is an allegation made by
    the enemies in an attempt to belittle the Iraqi security forces. This
    is untrue and does not exist because there is coordination between the
    Defence and Interior Ministries. We are also vying with each other in
    devotion and sacrifices." He pointed out however that there "are some
    personal conducts and joint committees have been formed to limit them
    because we are eager that such problems should not occur in the new
    Iraq." He said the National Guards, the Rapid Intervention Forces, and
    the Mechanized Brigade come under the new Iraqi army "and we have
    chosen the National Guards to help the police force. Though their
    training is military, the Guards join the Iraqi police force to
    maintain internal security."

    Asked for his opinion about enlisting women in the new Iraqi army,
    Shawes said: "Though there are physical differences, it is society
    that has put certain restrictions on the woman to prevent her from
    playing her real role, either in the army or the factory. We have to
    give the woman the chance because work in the army is one of the
    important sectors in life. We can say from experience that a woman
    enrolled in the army can carry out a heroic action just like her
    brother the man."

    About his vision of Iraq's future, especially after the elections that
    are scheduled to be held on 30 January 2005, Shawes said: "Iraq is
    going to be in a better position than it is now because the state's
    foundations have been established and its institutions have started to
    function on the track planned for them. The Iraqi people have felt
    this and have started to realize that they can change the authority
    through the ballot boxes without any pressures from any human
    being. But we are now facing a terrorist situation and we have the
    responsibility of establishing a capable army and effective security
    forces so that our people in Iraq can have security and stability."
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