By Greg
Rollins. Greg is a member of Christian Peacemaker Teams, an
organization that asks, "What would happen if Christians devoted the same
discipline and self-sacrifice to nonviolent peacemaking that armies devote to
war?"

The other day I watched a police convoy pass on the street.
You could hear the shooting from several blocks away. All the cars pulled over
and waited for the convoy to pass. The first truck sped by with a gunman
hanging out the window holding his Kalashnikov in one hand while he yelled. The
following six trucks and vans looked the same. The shooting continued but it
did not come from these vehicles, it came from the last vehicle in the convoy.
The policeman hanging out the back kept shooting into the air despite the fact
that all the cars were out of the way.

This is a typical scene in Iraq. While the police and ING
are not the only convoys that drive this way, the people are more disturbed by
them than when the U.S. military does it. Iraqis have come to expect this kind
of behaviour from their occupiers, but not from their new government.

In Fallujah, people told CPT that the police and ING are
worse than the U.S. army. “I would rather be arrested by the U.S. than the
Iraqis,” one man said. “At least they would treat us better.” He is not the
only person CPT has heard this from. People from Fallujah told CPT that
whenever a car bomb goes off, the police and ING shoot first and ask questions
later. Even though the Fallujah curfew starts at 10 pm, people are usually home
shortly after 8 because the police and ING will harass them if they are not. A
traffic cop said the police and ING even verbally and physically assault him
when he directs traffic.

Recently a new fear has risen; fear of the Iraqi Special
Forces (ISF). The ISF are a couple different brigades: the Wolf Brigade and Al
Hussain Brigade. They are U.S. trained and work closely with the U.S. military,
carrying out house raids, sweeps and major operations. People say they are
brutal and that the Wolf Brigade is made up of many anti-Saddam Iranians from a
militia called the Badr Brigade. An official from the Interior Ministry told
CPT that approval for these Brigades’ violent behaviour goes all the way up to
the U.S. Embassy. One family told CPT their three brothers were arrested by the
Wolf Brigade one night and the next evening they saw the brothers on TV looking
beaten and confessing to crimes they did not commit. There are also stories
about people being arrested by one of these brigades and found dead at the side
of the road a few days later.

The reality of all this is that Iraq is now a worse police
state under the U.S. than it was under Saddam. Sure, Iraq has a government, but
the U.S controls it. While many people in the U.S. believe that Iraq is on the
road to an American style of democracy, many Iraqis are convinced that there is
no road and there will be no democracy.