Violence in Iraq Drops in Weeks After Ramadan
As expected, violence in Iraq has dropped following the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, a coalition spokesman said in Baghdad today.Army Maj. Gen. William Caldwell said civilian and Iraqi security force casualties were at the lowest levels since the government was formed in May.
So far this month, the civilian casualty count is well below the casualty count in October and below the six-month average. The security force casualties reduced 21 percent over the past four weeks, and are at the lowest level in 25 weeks, he said.
“In Baghdad, there was a 22 percentage drop in casualties related to sectarian violence and executions,” Caldwell said during a televised news conference. “Coalition forces will continue to work closely with the Iraqi government and Iraqi security forces to control the sectarian violence and terrorist attacks.”
While atributing the decrease in violence to Ramadan is not unreasonable, I also suspect that the increased tempo of attacks in September and October was directly aimed at influencing the political climate in the U.S. and weakening our will to continue the fight. The decrease this month provides some additional evidence for that hypothesis.



Dave,
The only people I’ve seen making the claim that the violence is tied to influencing our elections were Republicans campaigning. The innuendo that somehow Sunni and Shiite radicals wanted Democrats to win is pretty dangerous and, in my opinion, a very cheap shot. Except for this evidence that the violence has scaled down (in which military officials are attributing to Ramadan), I haven’t seen one bit of evidence that there has been an attempt to sway the elections.
Can you provide additional evidence that might point in that direction? Have there been messages intercepted indicating that the violence should scale up to November 7? Is there any reason to believe that the radicals would prefer Democrats in power any more or less than Republicans?
The violence has been steadily escalating for over two years. Just because it took a small dip only a couple weeks after the election does not provide nearly enough data to make any reasonable conclusion like that.