US builds wall in Baghdad
US soldiers are building a three-mile wall to separate one of Baghdad's Sunni enclaves from surrounding Shia neighborhoods.
The move is part of a contentious security plan that has fueled fears of the Iraqi capital's Balkanization.
When the barrier is finished, the minority Sunni community of Adamiya, on the eastern side of the Tigris River, will be completely gated. Traffic control points manned by Iraqi soldiers will provide the only access, the US military said.
"Shias are coming in and hitting Sunnis, and Sunnis are retaliating across the street," Captain Scott McLearn, of the US 407th brigade support battalion, told the Associated Press.
The project, which began on Apr. 10, is being worked on almost nightly, with cranes swinging enormous concrete barriers into place.
Although Baghdad is rife with barriers around marketplaces and areas such as the heavily fortified Green Zone, this is the first in the city to be set up on sectarian lines.
The concrete wall, which will be up to 12 feet high, "is one of the centerpieces of a new strategy by coalition and Iraqi forces to break the cycle of sectarian violence," US officials said.
The officials said the barrier would allow authorities to screen people entering and leaving Adamiya "while keeping death squads and militia groups out."
The construction–which has been nicknamed the "great wall of Adamiya"–is not the first time US military planners have attempted to isolate hostile regions.
In 2005, attempts were made to surround the Sunni-dominated city of Samarra with raised earth barriers to prevent insurgents from entering and leaving. A similar strategy was also deployed in both Tal Afar and Falluja.
General David Petraeus, the new US commander in Iraq, said he believed the tactics in Tal Afar, close to the Syrian border, were successful–but the area has since fallen back under insurgent control.
Critics of the scheme said it had been tried in past counter-insurgency campaigns in Vietnam and Algeria, but found wanting.
Some Sunnis living in Adamiya have welcomed the attempt to improve security but warned that it was another sign of the deep hostility between Sunnis and Shias.
Others were skeptical about the latest initiative to staunch the bloodshed in Baghdad, which reached new heights when a series of suicide bombings killed more than 200 people in a single day this week.
"I don't think this wall will solve the city's serious security problems," Ahmed Abdul-Sattar, a 35-year-old government worker, told the Associated Press. "It will only increase the separation between our people, which has been made so much worse by the war."
Although Baghdad is full of barriers and checkpoints, particularly around the Green Zone where the US and British are based along with the Iraqi government, this is the first time a wall has been built along sectarian lines.
Since the US-led invasion, "ethnic cleansing" has resulted in population shifts that have left Baghdad increasingly divided along sectarian lines, separated by the Tigris which runs through the center of the city.
Sunnis are consolidating on the west side and Shias on the east. The wall is being built around the biggest remaining Sunni enclave on the east bank, at Adhamiya. Referred to by US troops as the Great Wall of Adhamiya, it is surrounded on three sides by Shia neighborhoods and has been the scene of some of the city's worst violence.