the commander of British troops in southern
Iraq, Brig Nick Carter, admitted that he would be
powerless to prevent the overthrow of Coalition
forces if the Shia majority in Basra rose up in
rebellion. Brig Carter, of the 20 Armoured
Brigade, who has been in Iraq for four months,
said British forces would stay in Basra with the
consent of local Shia leaders, or not at all. Last
month, 14 British soldiers were injured in
Basra, at least three seriously, when they came
under attack from demonstrators armed with
petrol bombs, rocks and a grenade. "A crowd of
150,000 people at the gates of this barracks
would be the end of this, as far as I'm
concerned," Brig Carter said. "There would be
absolutely nothing I could do about that . . ."
During an interview in Basra last week Brig
Carter acknowledged that the Coalition's
presence in southern Iraq was entirely
dependent on the goodwill of the local Shia
Muslim leader, Sayid Ali al-Safi al-Musawi. He
represents Ayatollah Sistani, Iraq's leading Shia
cleric. "The moment that Sayid Ali says, 'We
don't want the Coalition here', we might as well
go home," Brig Carter said. '
posted by Juan Cole at 4/18/2004 07:15:16 AM
B
Baerwald
(view)
the commander of British troops in southern
Iraq, Brig Nick Carter, admitted that he would be
powerless to prevent the overthrow of Coalition
forces if the Shia majority in Basra rose up in
rebellion. Brig Carter, of the 20 Armoured
Brigade, who has been in Iraq for four months,
said British forces would stay in Basra with the
consent of local Shia leaders, or not at all. Last
month, 14 British soldiers were injured in
Basra, at least three seriously, when they came
under attack from demonstrators armed with
petrol bombs, rocks and a grenade. "A crowd of
150,000 people at the gates of this barracks
would be the end of this, as far as I'm
concerned," Brig Carter said. "There would be
absolutely nothing I could do about that . . ."
During an interview in Basra last week Brig
Carter acknowledged that the Coalition's
presence in southern Iraq was entirely
dependent on the goodwill of the local Shia
Muslim leader, Sayid Ali al-Safi al-Musawi. He
represents Ayatollah Sistani, Iraq's leading Shia
cleric. "The moment that Sayid Ali says, 'We
don't want the Coalition here', we might as well
go home," Brig Carter said. '
posted by Juan Cole at 4/18/2004 07:15:16 AM
