As Brits Leave, Basra Crumbles

Former success story turns sour
As Brits Leave, Basra Crumbles
Iraqi police respond to an oil pipeline fire in central Basra, 550 kilometers southeast of Baghdad, Iraq on Saturday, Aug. 4, 2007. British helicopters fired four rockets on gunmen with Katusha rockets who took up position near an oil pipeline to attack the British and American consulates, said an oil...   (Associated Press)

The southern Iraqi port of Basra was once hailed as a success for coalition troops, but as British forces pull out, the city is devolving into violent conflict typical of Baghdad. Loose political parties and criminal gangs, which the remaining Brits are powerless to control, are fighting to dominate the town—perhaps prefiguring a possible Balkanization when the US leaves Iraq.

Basra is in a homogenous Shiite region, ruling out sectarian conflict as the cause of the violence, as well as the meddling of Iran and al-Qaeda. Visitors describe the remaining British troops barricaded behind sandbags and peppered by mortars. "The British have basically been defeated in the south," says a US intelligence official. (More Basra stories.)

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