Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Trickle Down

Terrorists in Iraq are short of money:

Meanwhile, the terrorists are suffering a severe cash flow problem. The al Qaeda contributions are gone, and most of the money coming from foreigners has dried up. The Iraqi "resistance" is seen as broken, and no one wants to support a lost cause. Being on the run has made it difficult to organize the roadside bomb teams. ...

The corruption that is so characteristic of Iraq, works against the terrorists as well. Iraqi media is full of stories of former terrorists complaining of betrayal and cheating by their fellow killers. It's always been about money, and the police and army have been able to disrupt a lot of the criminal activity (theft, extortion, kidnapping) that the terror groups used to fund the terrorism. It was often difficult to determine if some guys were gangsters moonlighting as Islamic terrorists, or the other way around. The reputation for being an Islamic terrorist was useful, as it tagged you as a real badass. But in the last year, it too often tagged you as one of the usual suspects for the increasingly efficient police and army commands. Most holy warriors have decided that terrorism is too dangerous. Those that could, just became full time crooks, other went straight, and some joined over a million other Sunni Arabs and fled the country.


I'd mentioned that the corruption that our press seems to think is limited to the Iraqi government is a societal thing that would affect our enemies inside Iraq, too. As the enemy loses, the temptation to the money men to keep a bigger cut will grow, accelerating the enemy defeat as resources reaching the line terrorists declines even more rapidly than the resources reaching the money men above the bombers and gunmen.