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Embarrassed US Starts to Disown Basra Operation
WASHINGTON, Mar 31 (IPS) - As it became clear last week that the "Operation Knights Assault" in Basra was in serious trouble, the George W. Bush administration began to claim in off-the-record statements to journalists that Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki had launched the operation without consulting Washington.
The effort to disclaim U.S. responsibility for the operation is an indication that it was viewed as a major embarrassment just as top commander Gen. David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker are about to testify before Congress.
Behind this furious backpedaling is a major Bush administration miscalculation about Moqtada al-Sadr and the Mahdi Army, which the administration believed was no longer capable of a coordinated military operation. It is now apparent that Sadr and the Mahdi Army were holding back because they were still in the process of retraining and reorganisation, not because Sadr had given up the military option or had lost control of the Mahdi Army.
The process of the administration distancing itself from the Basra operation began on Mar. 27, when the Washington Post reported that administration officials, speaking anonymously, said that al-Maliki had "decided to launch the offensive without consulting his U.S. allies..." One official claimed, "[W]e can't quite decipher" what is going on, adding that it was a question of "who's got the best conspiracy" theory about why al-Maliki acted when he did.
On Mar. 30, the New York Times reported from Baghdad that "few observers in Iraq seem to believe that al-Maliki intended such a bold stroke," and that "many say the notoriously cautious politician stumbled into a major assault".
The Times quoted a "senior Western official in Baghdad" -- the term usually used for the ambassador or senior military commander -- as saying, "Maliki miscalculated," adding, "From all I hear, al-Maliki's trip was not intended to be the start of major combat operations right there, but a show of force."
The official claimed there were "some heated exchanges between him and the generals, who out of hurt pride or out of calculation or both then insisted on him taking responsibility."
These suggestions that it was al-Maliki who miscalculated in Basra are clearly false. No significant Iraqi military action can be planned without a range of military support functions being undertaken by the U.S. command. On Mar. 25, just as the operation was getting under way in Basra, U.S. military spokesman Col. Bill Buckner said "coalition forces" were providing intelligence, surveillance and support aircraft for the operation.
Furthermore, the embedded role of the U.S. Military Transition Teams (MTTs) makes it impossible that any Iraqi military operation could be planned without their full involvement.
A U.S. adviser to the Iraqi security forces involved in the operation told a Washington Post reporter by telephone on Mar. 25 he expected the operation to take a week to 10 days.
Operation Knights Assault also involved actual U.S.-Iraqi joint combat operations. U.S. military spokesman Maj. Gen. Kevin Bergner denied on Mar. 26 that there were any "conventional" U.S. forces involved in the operation. Only on Mar. 30 did the U.S. command confirm that a joint raid by Iraqi and U.S. special forces units had "killed 22 suspected militants" in Basra.
Some observers have expressed doubt that the Bush administration would have chosen to have al-Maliki launch such a risky campaign against well-entrenched Shiite militiamen in Basra until after the Petraeus-Crocker testimony had been completed. But that assumes that Vice President Dick Cheney and the Pentagon recognised the potential danger of a large-scale effort to eliminate or severely weaken the Mahdi Army in Basra.
In fact, the Bush administration and the Iraqi military were clearly taken by surprise when the Mahdi Army in Basra attacked security forces on Mar. 25, initiating a major battle for the city.
For many months the Bush administration, encouraged by Moqtada al-Sadr's unilateral ceasefire of last August, had been testing Sadr and the Mahdi Army to see if they would respond to piecemeal repression by striking back. The U.S. command and Iraqi security forces had carried out constant "cordon and search" operations which had resulted in the detention of at least 2,000 Mahdi Army militiamen since the August ceasefire, according to a Sadrist legislator.
Resistance to such operations by the Mahdi Army had been minimal, and Bush administration officials attributed Sadr's apparent acquiescence to restraining Iranian influence and the decline of the Mahdi Army as a fighting force.
At the meeting with Iranian Ambassador Hassan Kazemi-Qomi Jul. 24, Ambassador Crocker had held Iran directly responsible for what he called "militia-related activity that could be attributed to Iranian support". After the Sadr ceasefire, top officials of the al-Maliki government as well as rival Shiite party leader Abdul Aziz al-Hakim had told U.S. officials that Iran had intervened to convince Sadr to end Mahdi Army fighting, presumably because of its desire to stabilise the Shiite-dominated Iraqi regime.
In an interview with the Washington Post Dec. 23, David Satterfield, a senior advisor to U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and coordinator for Iraq, said the decline in the number of attacks by Mahdi Army militiamen "has to be attributed to an Iranian policy decision" and suggested that the policy decision had been made "at the most senior level" in Tehran.
Pentagon officials weren't sure why the Mahdi Army was not fighting back, but the Los Angeles Times reported Oct. 31 that they hoped both that the gradual decline in attacks would continue, and such a decline "means that Iran has heard their warnings". Two weeks later, Maj. Gen. Jim Simmons, a deputy to Petraeus, said the Iranian "initiatives and commitments" to withhold weapons "appear to be holding up".
Petraeus, meanwhile, was convinced that the ability of the Mahdi Army to resist had been reduced by U.S. military actions as well as by its presumed internal disorganisation. His spokesman, Rear Adm. Gregory Smith, declared in early November, "As we've gone after that training skill levels amongst the enemy, we've degraded their capability..."
Then came Sadr's announcement Feb. 22 that the ceasefire would be extended. That apparently convinced Petraeus and the Bush White House that they could now launch a large-scale "cordon and search" operation against the Mahdi Army in Basra without great risk of a military response.
That assumption ignored the evidence that Sadr had been avoiding major combat because he was in the process of reorganising and rebuilding the Mahdi Army into a more effective force. Thousands of Mahdi Army fighters, including top commanders, were sent to Iran for training -- not as "rogue element", as suggested by the U.S. command, but with Sadr's full support. One veteran Mahdi Army fighter who had undergone such training told The Independent last April that the retraining was "part of a new strategy. We know we are against a strong enemy and we must learn proper methods and techniques."
Last week a Mahdi Army commander in Sadr City was quoted by The Canadian Press as saying, "We are now better organised, have better weapons, command centres and easy access to logistical and financial support."
The ability of Mahdi Army units in Basra to stop in its tracks the biggest operation mounted against it since 2004 suggests that Shiite military resistance to the occupation is only beginning. By making that point just before Petraeus's testimony, Sadr has posed a major challenge to the Bush narrative of military success in Iraq.
Gareth Porter is an historian and national security policy analyst. His latest book, "Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of Power and the Road to War in Vietnam", was published in June 2005.
© 2008 Inter Press Service



41 Comments so far
Show AllThe Surge is working! Victory is just around the corner! We're seeing the light at the end of the tunnel! Just remember that.
How much more of these Keystone Cops charades do we need to take before someone gets the bright idea to close the purse, shut down the entire illegal occupation er operation, and hold the incompetent officials who comprise the Bush Admin (including George, Dick, Condi, and gang) accountable for treason, war crimes, racketeering, and fraud? All of the corporations involved in these crimes should reimburse all taxpayers every single cent plus interest. If it bankrupts them, tough shit! They need to learn how to suffer too.
It's a puppet government! They can't do a thing with out the U.S. knowing it!
As for lying, here's another fine example weaseling out using the Corporate Media. Nothing but excuses and blaming others, what else can we expect!
Fact: U.S. air power was in the fighting! Did Maliki give the orders for that?
If this keeps up, Who knows.... they might still be impeached.
Apparently, Bush, Petraeus and Malaki collaborated on an "event" prior to Petraeus appearing before Congress (and the public). A precursor maybe to nominating Petraeus to take over CENTCOM followed by an attack on Iran?
With no regard for the cost in American and Iraqi lives.
With no regard for the cost in American and Iraqi lives.
With no regard for the cost in American and Iraqi lives.
Who exactly is it that we're fighting? I've lost track...again, and so has BushCo.
"Oceania is at war with Eastasia. Oceania has ALWAYS been at war with Eastasia."
Welcome back dreamertoo -- I've been missing your stiletto wit and enormous heart.
Namaste
… … … … … Mahatma Gandhi … & … ML King … … Inspiration … … … … …
« We must be the change we wish to see in the world »
« There is a sufficiency in the world for man's need but not for man's greed »
« We adopt the means of nonviolence because our end is a community at peace with itself » — MLK
"Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki had launched the operation without consulting Washington."
Oh sure, and I suppose it was just a coincidence that Cheney visited Baghdad just before the assault was launched. So what was he doing there? Vacationing?
Messenger: "Mein Fuehrer, there is heavy resistance and fighting in Leningrad and Moscow."
Fuehrer: "Ha, that means the surge is working and that success against these deadenders, who are in their last throes, is just around the corner!"
"Thousands of Mahdi Army fighters, including top commanders, were sent to Iran for training — not as "rogue element", as suggested by the U.S. command, but with Sadr's full support."
Mr General Petraeus may be too young to remember it but this situation reminds me of another military situation. Patraeus was ending his studies and beginning his career just as fighting came to an end in 1975.
Back then it was the French rather than the British that pulled out of a far-flung colonial operation, leaving the US to fight the natives. Then, as now, the defenders were aided by their next-door neighbours. Back then it was the Chinese. Today it is the Iranians.
A US army report blamed the French for not winning "the loyalty and support" of the natives but the Americans fared no better. Then, as now, the US backed a puppet leader. As in recent days in Iraq, the Americans bombed indiscriminately in a vain attempt to stop a well backed, organized and motivated local population.
Is it a surprise that their fellow "ragheads", as US soldiers call them, next door, would want to help their cousins? Having lived through the Vietnam war, or at least read about it ( or seen the film "Platoon" maybe), I'm gobstruck that Americans such as The New York Times' "senior Western officials" are surprised by this turn of events.
Jim Glover, don't hold your breath. The Democratic leadership see Iraqi deaths as an opportunity, not a tragedy.
Whenever I read a story like this, one thing I know for sure is it didn't come from the US corporate media. I haven't looked, but I can guess that the MSM is faithfully parroting the Bush administration lies about what came down. Tet offensive all over again.
kathyodat
Wow! A conspiracy exists among Al-Maliki's government and various elements of Shiite militias against the foreign occupiers! Who would have guessed that those greeted as liberators would be subjected to such perfidy! I guess thay aren't freedom lovers after all. "We'll stand down when they stand up, but not if they stand up and take a swing at the bad guys (No, not those bad guys, the other bad guys fighting the first bad guys who are no longer bad guys because now they honest Iraqis working for $300 a month). But this is just the exception that proves the rule. The surge is working. The surge is working! The surge is working! Two-thirds of Americans want us out of there? They must not have heard: the surge is working!"
The Americans and their puppet Iraqi Govt got bitch-slapped by the Mehdi Army ... so whats new. The Americans will never get the troops out till there are dramatic American deaths. Muqtada Al Sadr is no fool. The barrage of rockets into the Green Zone is just the beginning. Lets see how this plays out.
I have read on several other news sites that Iraqi police and army units turned their weapons over to the mahdi army before walking away. Weapons that may have included anti-tank armaments. That were initially provides by the US.
So now the 'insugents' and 'terrorists' have access to anti-tank weapons most likely. That means that the US Abrams M1 tank is now exquisitely vulnerable. To US supplied weapons.
More US servicemen dead, killed by US weapons.
Ever hear of the circular firing squad?
"The Light at The End of The Tunnel!"
Hey man . . . . That's a locomotive . . . .
Get off the tracks . . . .
Just one more miscalculation and more people are needlessly dead and wounded.
If you haven't already done so, please take a look at my little video (YouTube banned it last week).
http://nukular-waste.tripod.com/nukular-waste.htm
Here's the link to the kinder/gentler promo piece for the video.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xz7iliaJDiI
As always, call your congressmen,
Oscar Lewis
Mendo Chuck- You can't dodge in a tunnel. All you can do is hope it's over quick...
Admin and Military on Basra Assault-
"We're Not With Stupid!"
It seems this is just the beggining...
Wasn't that evil bag of shit Cheney skulking around Iraq just prior to the assault?
What next? Will Bush claim that he never intended to illegally invade and occupy Iraq, and that the military did it without consulting him?
history screams at the American government and they put in their ''Neocon Dream'' ear plugs..
nothing new here folks, move along, the surge is working, victory is near, just another whack job didn't follow the script.
One of the most under-reported facets of the failed operation against Moktada's militia was his call (as part of the ceasefire brokered by Iran) for the release of all detainees now held in US/Maliki custody who have not been charged with crimes.
The much ballyhooed temporary decline in violence which coincided with the surge was largely attributable to these mass arrest sweeps in Sadr City, along with the finalizing of ethnic cleansing into sectarian neighborhood enclaves in Baghdad and the awakening of the Anbar shieks to the benefits of accepting cash from Uncle Sam to scale back on targeting our US troops.
Anybody know how many thousands of surge-arrested detainees we're talking about? When they do return to their communities, I think I know where their loyalties will now lie, if they weren't pro-insurgency before.
The theme of this article also raises another point: much like Maliki's recent attack upon Basra, didn't the mainstream media several months ago repeatedly tell us how surprised (and pleased) the US occupation command was by the great, spontaneous and totally unanticipated Sunni Awakening?
Bill from Saginaw
Galen wrote: Iraqi police and army units turned their weapons over to the mahdi army before walking away. Weapons that may have included anti-tank armaments. That were initially provides by the US.
These US weapons are special and highly secretive; they morph into "Iranian-made, Iranian supplied" weapons.
American air power F/22 Raptor, Helicopter gunships, Cruise missiles that will hit Al Wueada even as he shits into the shit hole. What a comedy, lies today and lies forever !
The USA is use LESS ! I really think the Mahdi Army is a mere 400 insurgents running around the Americans in circles. The USA failed in Korea, in Vietnam, in Iraq, in Afghanistan IN EVERYWHERE. The USA Army sucks !
USA military thinking is old hat, mired in the thinking of the second world war. The wars of the 21st century and beyond are all about asymetrical wars and an obsolete military like that of the USA has no application; nobody with a mind at all will fight a conventional war against the USA. There will not be any battle of big formations. The wars of today is all about making the USA go broke. A chicken shit like good ole Mokhtada Al Sadr must have learned from our Great Mao Tze Tung; when the enemy is strong we retreat ! when the enemy is weak we attack, when the enemy is resting we harass ! we are like fish in the water. THE TEACHING OF OUR GREAT MAO TZE TUNG IS TIMELESS. His theory is still relevant today as they were 100 years ago.
It has always been my thinking that China need not arm herself to the teeth and that we ought to focus on catching up to the developed nations and that we merely need a strong enough defense force because expensive military weapons become obsolete very quickly and in the world of the 21st century great nations cannot go to war or all the world will perish !
A nation need to assess their geo-political circumstances and decide if she needs to arm herself for a probable attack and how much. A nation like Australia is not likely to face attack because her neighbours are too far and do not have the capability to mount an attack; THERE IS NO NEED FOR AN F/22 RAPTOR AIR CRAFT-- too expensive ! All of Australia's neighbours do not have the capability. For a John Howard government to spend big on the Raptor is just sheer waste. I hope this RUDD government will scrap their committment to purchase the Raptor. Why not buy the Chinese 4th generation fighter air craft the J10 for a fraction of the costs of the F/22 ?
Coming back to Iraq, there is no way out for the USA except to accept Mokhtada Al Sadr, but of course from the USA past history they do not have the smarts to know what is good for themselves. The USA in the war of liberation in China sent a delegation (the Dixie Mission)to Mao's liberated region to assess the relative strength of CPC vs KMT forces. Mao had a mere 30,000 men army while KMT had 4 million men army, the Dixie Mission recommended USA support Mao's side in the conflict, but as alwys the USA chose the wrong side. The rest is now history. I believe FDR knew that Mao was the stronger but the USA wants a weaker China so he chose KMT.
The perennial weakness of the USA is their absolute belief that the USA has the capability to SHAPE EVENTS TO THEIR ADVANTAGE and to their liking ! An incorrigible tunnel vision; just like HOLLYWOOD MAKE BELIEVE.
What's the problem? -- Wall Street rebounded today.
What arrogance! The leader(sic)of Iraq dared to do something without United States approval. Who the hell does he think he is?
Well I guess this experience will certainly teach *us* a lesson! This'll be the last time we try to be nice and free nations from evil and bring them democracy! Right?
Hahaha, gd, there are millions of Americans who believe exactly that.
So, what is the moral responsibility of one who finds himself a citizen of a facist country?
preznit, well if nothing else it should help those of us who have thought (as I used to) what the hell was wrong with the German citizens who did nothing while their government did such evil things...
Hmmm. Looks like Russian Karma to me.
When Russia was in Afghanistan the America was funding and training, no other than, Osama. This, of course, is old news. If you are a disciple of dissent, then Noam has already informed you of this interesting fact.
So when they tell you that the U.S. administration (military et al) has underestimated Moqtada al-Sadr and the Mahdi Army, it's just another way of saying that our fearless brainless leaders underestimated the influence of covert Russian support of Moqtada al-Sadr and the Mahdi Army.
Karma is a bitch sometimes...
And the beat goes on...
"Operation Refining Moment"
This looks like the British cost of their Airbus Tanker sale just went up by a few dozen widows and orphans. Such is the Business of Death.
Put Sadr in control of security for lraq.
CANUCKCHUCK WROTE: Wasn't that evil bag of shit Cheney skulking around Iraq just prior to the assault? What next? Will Bush claim that he never intended to illegally invade and occupy Iraq, and that the military did it without consulting him?
I heard or read somewhere, maybe on WBAI or CommonDreams, that Karl Rove was starting to say exactly that. I believe that in a speech he said something to the effect that Congress had pushed the Bush administration into the war with Iraq.
It would seem that a clear pattern has developed over the past five years - as soon as anything goes wrong (and let's face it a lot has gone wrong), the US administration blames it on someone else.
The British supposedly supplied false intelligence which led to war.
The French and Germans were branded cowards, because they could see the folly of the war.
Iran were blamed for the insurgency and supplying weapons and training (it didn't much matter that Arab states were the main cause).
Britain were blamed for initially losing control of Basra and the South of Iraq (we did only have 6000 troops there).
Now, the Iraqi army and police are going to be regularly blamed for anything which happens.
Welcome to democracy and freedom Iraq - you never had it so good!
AndyUK:
No, that pattern is actually a very old maneuver establshed waaaaaaaay before 5 years ago (the Greeks and Romans for example, used it quite extensively whenever military operations went south).
In previous incarnations it was known as "The Nixon Two Step,' `Backpeddling," and "Evasive Maneuvers," et al.
So Maliki did this on his own, sans the micromanagers from Washingtoon greenlighting this? IROTFLMAO Yeah sure!
Stories about Iraq make up about 3% of the mainstream media's stories (and I wonder what percentage of the 3% actually contain facts). Knowledge about what's going on over there is at an all time low among the average US citizen. Bush and Cheney can lie all the want, can bomb as many countries as they want, and no one will do anything; besides maybe a bunch of old hippies having candle vigils on street corners.
http://www.ryanhartman.wordpress.com
highie,
I am glad that we still have folks doin vigils... What do you propose...and are you doing what you propose?
I read your first blog on your name above and it seems you are mad at Obama because he is not radical like you are.
It is true he is not as radical as 99 percent of the bloggers on CD and any candidate who was would not have a chance
Maybe Obama is smart enough to figure that there is no point in running for the most powerful post in the world unless it is to win...not merely to make statements that will guarantee defeat.
We make lots of statements here but we are not in a position to change much... ending wars and leading them is the job of the president.... Obama listens to everyone, even his radical preacher so I'll give him the benefit of any doubt because in the present time if anybody can, Obama is the Man.
I think we have the same goals, I just wanted to point out what our two party winner take all system requires of winning so that things can possibly change for the better.
This could be our last chance for some sane leadership... I could be wrong but I will take that chance.
Great comment, Jim Glover, I agree with you. I've read that many people, including Republicans, say they are voting for Obama because he strikes them as being authentic. I get that sense too. I also like his ability to stay calm and focussed when attacked, and to turn the tables on the attacker. Smart guy. He must be frustrating the s**t out of Hillary. And now polls are already showing him closing the gap between them in Pennsylvania. Poor Hillary. The faster she runs, the behinder she gets. He always goes into a state unknown and behind and out of it much better than he went in.
When Florida and Michigan voted there had been no campaigning in those states, nothing except Hillary's name recognition (and two visits by Hillary in Florida just before the primary). If the situation had been reversed, she would have been insisting rules are rules.
It remains to be seen if we will turn this mess around or sink in deeper. If the American public needs some more head slapping they will get it. On the good side, Obama won't be a doddering old man in four years.
kathyodat
AndyUK, the blame is not limited to just what happens in Iraq. Some time ago, Canadians were told by senior US officials that they probably needed to change/improve tactics in Afghanistan. Right now the other NATO members are being pressured to contribute more to the fighting in Afghanistan. That's where the original firefighting needed to be done, and there were offers of support from many countries back then. Going into Iraq was like starting a major fire before putting out another fire and then complaining you don't have enough firemen or firetrucks to fight two fires. There are no words to describe how the neocons squandered all the goodwill of the world community that poured in immediately after 9/11.
Smoke and Mirrors.
http://www.bccmeteorites.com/misconduct-planetary.html