May 31,2008:
So far this year, the Iraqi police
force has lost about 10,000 officers. Some80 percent of those were people fired for corruption or incompetence.
The rest were combat casualties, as the police are heavily involved in
operations against the Shia Mahdi Army militia, and al Qaeda.
Some 90
percent of the losses are from the anti-militia operations. That's because many
police units had been infiltrated by Mahdi Army members (who joined for the
paycheck, and to support the Mahdi Army as opportunities presented themselves.)
The Mahdi Army also had the support of a large block of parliament members, as
well as senior officials in the Interior Ministry (which controls all police.)
Thus until the government decided to disarm the Mahdi Army late last year
(after much debate, and arm twisting by the U.S.), police officers who belonged
to the Mahdi Army were left alone (unless they were really, really incompetent,
or corrupt). Once operations against the Mahdi Army began, police commanders
were encouraged to clean house.
The
government, and their foreign advisors (on police operations) have been
training police commanders, and trying to get the government to fire the ones
who were not up to the job, corrupt or traitors (working for the Mahdi Army or
some other group). Many of the corrupt commanders have a senior government
official protecting them (and getting a percentage of the loot.) Now, however,
most government officials have made the connection between bad cops and their
own personal safety. The police provide some of the security for government
officials, and if enough cops are for sale, or not up to the job, the assassins
will more likely get through.
There are
still plenty of bad cops, but at least the house cleaning is under way. At the
same time, the government has allowed thousands of experienced Sunni Arab
police to rejoin the force. These senior officials were fired in 2003 because
they belonged to the Baath Party. That membership was mandatory for those key
positions, and the Sunni Arabs have long been demanding a case-by-case review,
to separate those Baath Party (a largely Sunni Arab outfit) members who really
were Saddam supporters, and those who joined just to keep their jobs.
The Iraqi
Provincial Police have 275,000 people on the payroll, with 155,000 trained and
about 200,000 available for duty. Many of those on the payroll do not exist,
and their commanders pocket the pay for these phantom cops. This is a common
scam, is thousands of years old, and was believed to have been first invented
long ago by some official in this area.
The
National Police have 32,000 on the payroll, and 25-30,000 on the job. Again,
the phantom problem. The Border Police has about 39,000 on the payroll, with
30-35,000 available for duty.