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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

25 September 2006

Iraq on Track for Meeting Police Goals, U.S. General Says

Strong, capable civil law enforcement institutions beginning to develop in Iraq

Washington – One indication of Iraq’s advance toward self-sufficiency is its progress toward building strong, capable national and local law enforcement agencies – essential to guaranteeing the country’s long-term security, a coalition officer says.

With less than four months left in the coalition-designated “Year of the Police,” Army Major General Joseph Peterson, the coalition’s top officer dedicated to training Iraqi police, told reporters September 20 that there are now 128,000 police officers on the streets nationwide – 95 percent of the Iraqi Interior Ministry’s goal of 135,000 by year’s end.

“We see no reason why we will not achieve 100 percent and, in fact, in some categories exceed 100 percent of what was promised before December,” Peterson said during a videoconference briefing from Baghdad.

REGAINING PUBLIC TRUST AN INITIAL CHALLENGE

As in many other transitional societies, where police forces once served as an instrument of repression, Iraqi authorities first challenge was to regain the public’s trust in their police officers.

This task was complicated by the fact that as the post-Saddam  government was forming, armed groups were invited to join the country’s new security forces, adding to concerns as violence among the country’s Shi’ite, Sunni and Kurdish communities gradually increased in 2006, Peterson said.

In the wake of the February 22 bombing of the Golden Mosque in Samarra, efforts to build public trust in the police were further set back by allegations that some police failed to fully discharge their security duties and that some officers might even have participated in attacks on civilians.

In response to these charges, Peterson said, coalition officials have supported an aggressive series of investigations by the Iraqi Interior Ministry into alleged police misconduct, which has resulting in the dismissals of individual officers, mid-level commanders – even entire units – for corruption and other types of misconduct.  (See related article.)

Peterson added that these investigations have also shown that there have been far fewer confirmed incidents of police involvement in sectarian violence than had been alleged – yet another positive indicator of police loyalty to the new Iraq’s democratic ideals.

Other initiatives, such as sending former militants to newly established police academies and establishing an evaluation program to assess police performance and provide unit-specific training, are also helping Iraqi officers as they work through the ongoing challenges of becoming part of a modern law enforcement institution, he said.

A second challenge facing Iraqi law enforcement was the imperative to build national, provincial and local police forces while simultaneously confronting a complex array of threats, including Sunni insurgent groups, foreign terrorists such as al-Qaida in Iraq, militants engaged in sectarian violence and other well-armed criminal gangs.

This challenge, Peterson said, led Iraqi authorities and their coalition allies to pursue a two-tiered strategy which focused first, on mobilizing large numbers of prospective officers, and then using a combination of training, embedded advisers and joint operations to mold them into a modern, effective police force.

In all, 6,000 coalition police professionals, mainly from Italy, Poland, the United Kingdom and the United States staff 185 of these police transition teams across the country, with another 39 teams supporting the Iraqi National Police.

The next phase for improving the quality of Iraqi police, Peterson said, will require more training for officers in community policing techniques as well as identifying and developing the force's future leaders.

This has been a good year for the Ministry of Interior in terms of increasing its “ability to administer, support and manage the ministry and its forces,” Peterson said, “and it's also been a great year from the standpoint of creating the capability in the police forces themselves to assist the Iraqi army in providing a safe and secure environment in the country of Iraq.”

A transcript of Peterson’s briefing, along with briefing slides and a video link, is available on the Multi-National Force – Iraq Web site.

For more information, see Iraq Update.

(The Washington File is a product of the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)



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