But - you assume the only chance of death is from US action. Quite a few Iraqis know that they have a chance of death of if the Baath takeover whether they cooperate or not. So they have more incentive to cooperate. Granted though, not too many of those people in Baiji, Tikrit or Fallujah.
Nice annalysis, for the areas of the country, such a the Kurdish north and Shi'a south, places were the fighting has been minimal. But the fact is that a return to Baathist power is NOT guaranteed if this rebellion succeeds, since other groups have been arming and there is no, or would not be sans the coolition, a state apparatus- So if the US left, fundamentalist fundie clergy would have as good a chance as any.
Even more people who have cooperated with the coalition since April. They also are goners if the Baathists return. And we have such people almost everywhere.
Look above.
Also, they have to evaluate the odds of the Baathists being able to carry out their threats. As a a guerrilla organization its far from foolproof - every attack on a collaborator exposes them, to yet other informants. If they can come back into complete control they can kill every informant - at least every informant they KNOW about.
Even if not foolproof, they still outknowledge us in the areas of the rebellion, which is what matters at this point. The question, as always, is the accurate application of power, not how much power there is.
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