You have yet to say anything requiring a responce. Are the majority of these tens of thousands of militiamen combing the streets killing everyone they see or sitting in their own neighborhoods guarding their shops and homes. I know this will be hard for you to admit, but almost all of them are doing the latter.
That's a strawman. Yes, there aren't tens of thousands of serial killers on the loose. But these aren't nice people who help grannies cross streets. To pretend otherwise is naive in the extreme. They're a severely malignant influence in Iraq, as the articles above can attest. The South of Iraq is basically controlled by a bunch of religious fanatic mafias. Who really like ethnic cleansing. Again from ICG:
Basra’s political arena remains in the hands of actors engaged in bloody competition for resources, undermining what is left of governorate institutions and coercively enforcing their rule. The local population has no choice but to seek protection from one of the dominant camps. Periods of stability do not reflect greater governing authority so much as they do a momentary – and fragile – balance of interests or of terror between rival militias. Inevitably, conflicts re-emerge and even apparently minor incidents can set off a cycle of retaliatory violence. A political process designed to pacify competition and ensure the non-violent allocation of goods and power has become a source of intense and often brutal struggle.
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