In trying to defeat the Iraqi insurgency, the Pentagon has turned to
Saddam Hussein's former henchmen. Under former Interim Prime Minister
Iyad Allawi, U.S. officials has installed many of the hated Baathists
who tormented Iraq in high-level posts in the interior and defense
ministries. But the new Iraqi government, overwhelmingly composed of
Shiites and Kurds who suffered the most under Hussein, have announced
that they are going to purge the ex-Baathists, putting them on a
collision course with the United States.
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld made one of his surprise visits to
Baghdad last week, warning the new government not to "come in and clean
house" in the security forces. The official line is that the U.S. is
worried about losing the "most competent" security forces. But there is
a deeper concern that purging the security forces could feed into
sectarian tensions and explode in civil war.
Much of that is due to a ruthless U.S. policy of using any tactic, no
matter how unsavory, in trying to defeat the insurgency. According to a
slew of reports, the U.S. military is encouraging tribal vendettas,
freeing kidnappers to spy on insurgents, incorporating ethnic-based
military units into the security forces, and encouraging the development
of illegal militias that draw in part from Hussein-era security forces.
There is clear evidence that the tactics are having an effect. U.S.
casualties have declined by 75 percent since their peak of 126 combat
deaths in November 2004. Part of that is probably due to sweeping
thousands of Sunni Arab males of the street-Iraqis imprisoned under U.S.
control have more than doubled since last October to 10,500.
It is the more ruthless methods that may be having a greater effect on
squeezing the insurgency. Yet the establishment of militias may
backfire. U.S. military officials express concern that if the former
Baathists who lead the militias are removed, they could take their
forces with them.
A report by the Wall Street Journal from Feb. 16 revealed that numerous
"pop-up militias" thousands strong are proliferating in Iraq. Not only
are many of these shadowy militias linked to Iraqi politicians, but the
Pentagon is arming, training and funding them for use in
counter-insurgency operations.
Most disturbing, one militia in particular-the "special police
commandos"-is being used extensively throughout Iraq and has been
singled out by a U.S. general for conducting death squad strikes known
as the "Salvador option." The police commandos also appear to be a
reconstituted Hussein security force operating under the same revived
government body, the General Security Directorate, that suppressed
internal dissent.
High-level White House officials are banking on the police commandos to
defeat the insurgency. In hearings before the Senate Appropriations
Committee on Feb. 16 Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld said the
commandos are among "forces that are going to have the greatest leverage
on suppressing and eliminating the insurgency."
The police commandos were identified as one of at least six militias by
Greg Jaffe, the Journal reporter. Last October it was said to have
"several thousand soldiers" and lavishly armed with
"rocket-propelled-grenade launchers, mortar tubes and lots of
ammunition." Yet these militias owe their allegiance not to the Iraqi
people or government, but to their self-appointed leaders and associated
politicians such as interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi. Even the
commander of U.S. forces in the Middle East, Gen. John P. Abizaid,
admitted in testimony before Congress on March 1 that such militias are
"destabilizing."
Of these militias, at least three are linked to Allawi. Jaffe writes,
"First came the Muthana Brigade, a unit formed by the order of. Allawi."
The second is the Defenders of Khadamiya, referring to a Shiite shrine
on the outskirts of Baghdad, which appears to be "closely aligned with
prominent Shiite cleric Hussein al Sadr." Al Sadr ran on Allawi's ticket
in the January elections and proved himself loyal when he attacked the
main Shiite ticket publicly for stating it was endorsed by Shiite Grand
Ayatollah Ali Sistani. (Al-Sadr also held the infamous press conference
in Baghdad where several journalists in attendance were seen receiving
$100 gifts from Allawi's government.)
The special police commandos is led by Gen. Adnan Thabit, who
participated in the disastrous 1996 coup against Saddam Hussein that
Allawi coordinated. Thabit was jailed and subsequently released shortly
before the 2003 U.S. invasion. He is also the uncle of Iraq's interim
minister of the interior, under which the commandos operate.
Thabit told the Armed Forces Press Service last October that the police
commandos are drawn from "police who have previous experience fighting
terrorism and also people who received special training under the former
regime" of Saddam Hussein. The report from Oct. 20, 2004, also quotes
U.S. Army Col. James H. Coffman Jr., who specifies that police commandos
are "former special forces and (former Directorate of General Security)
personnel."
The Directorate of General Security was one of the main security
services Hussein used to maintain an iron grip on Iraq. The Center for
Nonproliferation Studies describes the service's role as "detecting
dissent among the Iraqi general public" by monitoring "the day-to-day
lives of the population, creating a pervasive local presence."
Col. Coffman reports to Lt. Gen. David Petraeus, who heads the mammoth
U.S. effort to create Iraq's myriad security forces. Petraeus calls the
police commandos "a horse to back" and has done so by providing it with
"money to fix up its base and buy vehicles, ammunition, radios and more
weapons." In a satellite briefing to the press on Feb. 4, Petraeus
repeatedly praised the special police commandos, calling the leadership
"tremendously aggressive" in operations. Petraeus also revealed that the
commandos, the Muthana Brigade and another militia called the Defenders
of Baghdad were used to provide security on election day.
But a senior officer on Petraeus's staff confided, "If you tried to
replace Gen. [Thavit] he'd take his...brigades with him. He is a very
powerful figure."
Ousting wholesale the ex-Baathist security forces now in the government
could push them to join the insurgency. And this precisely what Iraq's
new president, Jalal Talabini is suggesting. According to the BBC,
Talabani argues "the insurgency could be ended immediately if the
authorities made use of Kurdish, Shia Muslim and other militias. Jalal
Talabani said this would be more effective than waiting for Iraqi forces
to take over from the US-led coalition."
The militias Talabani is referring to include the Kurdish Peshmerga and
Shiite units such as the Badr Brigades. But such a move would cement the
conflict as a sectarian one.
Military analyst William Lind notes that "the rise and spread of Shiite
militias devoted to fighting Sunni insurgents puts ever-greater pressure
on Iraq's Sunnis to cast their lot with the insurgency." Add to this the
use of Kurdish Peshmerga also against Sunni Arabs and civil war would
likely result.
U.S. BETS ON BAATHISTS
Ironically, Allawi-with U.S. encouragement-has put a network of former
Baathists in charge of various security services to fight what the U.S.
claims are other Baathists who form the core of the insurgency. They
include Thavit's nephew, Interior Minister Falah al-Naqib, who is the
son of a prominent Baath official. The Minister of Defense is Hazem
al-Shaalan, a former Baathist from al-Hillah, and. Brig. Gen. Muhammad
Abdullah Shahwani, an old-time Ba'ath officer, is now head of the Iraqi
secret police, according to author and analyst Milan Rai.
This policy of "re-baathification" is actively supported by Bush
administration. The Washington Post reported on Dec. 11, 2003, that the
CIA met with Allawi and another member of his Iraqi National Accord
party to create "an Iraqi intelligence service to spy on groups and
individuals inside Iraq that are targeting U.S. troops and civilians
working to form a new government." The plan was to "screen former
government officials to find agents for the service and weed out those
who are unreliable or unsavory." Evidence of this role comes from Thabit
who told the Armed Forces Press Service that former regime personnel in
his force "were efficiently chosen according to information about their
background."
Even before he officially assumed the post of interim prime minister,
Allawi announced a reorganization of security forces at his first press
conference on June 20, 2004. According to a Human Rights Watch report on
torture in Iraq, Allawi mentioned "Special police units would also be
created to be deployed 'in the frontlines' of the battle against
terrorism and sabotage, and a new directorate for national security
established." Human Rights Watch also noted that Al-Nahdhah, a Iraqi
newspaper, reported on June 21 that the interior ministry "appointed a
new security adviser to assist in the establishment of a new general
security directorate modeled on the erstwhile General Security
Directorate. one of the agencies of the Saddam Hussein government
dissolved by the CPA in May 2003." That security advisor was "Major
General 'Adnan Thabet al-Samarra'i." (There are numerous variations on
Thabet's last name.)
Then on July 15, 2004, just two months before the police commandos
became public, Allawi said the government would establish "internal
intelligence units called General Security Directorate, GSD, that will
annihilate. terrorist groups." Jane's Intelligence Digest commented at
the time that the GSD, "will include former members of Saddam Hussein's
feared security services, collectively known as the Mukhabarat. These
former Ba'athists and Saddam loyalists will be expected to hunt down
their colleagues currently organizing the insurgency."
Perhaps Allawi's announcement was spurred by events in the city of
Samarra. A July 15 report from Radio Free Europe noted that a Shiite
website, www.ebaa.net , stated Islamic militants
had blown up numerous sites in Samarra, including "the headquarters of
the Iraqi National Movement Party led by Interior Minister Falah
al-Naqib, the City Council, the headquarters of the [Kurdish] peshmerga
forces, and the home of Municipal Council Chairman Adnan Thabit."
It seems then, former Baathist brutes may have gone from one security
service under Hussein to the exact same one as under Allawi, another
ex-Baathist. And the rougues apparently haven't forgotten their old tactics.
'GAY ORGIES'
The police commandos have been supplying suspects who confess their
crimes on the TV show, "Terrorism in the Hands of Justice." Described as
the Iraqi government's "slick new propaganda tool," the program runs six
nights a week on the Iraqiya network, which was set up by the Pentagon
and is now run by Australian-based Harris Corp. (a major U.S. government
contractor that gave 96 percent of its political funding, more than
$260,000, to Republicans in 2004). According to the Boston Globe, camera
crews are sent "wherever police commandos make a lot of arrests."
The show features an unseen interrogator haranguing alleged insurgents
for confessions. Virtually every press account notes that the suspects
appear to have been beaten or tortured, their faces bruised and swollen.
The London Guardian states "some have. robotic manners of those beaten
and coached by police interrogators off-camera." The Boston Globe
observed, "The neat confessions of terrorist attacks at times fit
together so seamlessly as to seem implausible." And then there's the
nature of the confessions. Many suspects admit to "drunkeness, gay
orgies and pornography," according to the Guardian. The Financial Times
reported that, "One long-bearded preacher known as Abu Tabarek recently
confessed that guerrillas had usually held orgies in his mosques."
Another preacher giving a confession says he was fired for "having sex
with men in the mosque," the Globe account stated that suspects
"frequently admit to rape and pedophilia."
The show is said to be popular, particularly among many Shiites and
Kurds, which causes concern that depicting Sunni Arab nationalists as
"thieving scumbags" could deepen communal strife. Political and
religious leaders from the Sunni Arabs have denounced the show, calling
for it to be pulled off the air.
The police commandos' penchant for tall tales caused them considerable
embarrassment after they crowed about a major operation that killed more
than 80 insurgents at a training camp along Lake Tharthar in Al Anbar on
March 22. Within a day many discrepancies emerged-how many insurgents
were killed, reports of more than 20 prisoners versus none, a number of
different locations cited, many miles apart. The story fell apart after
an AFP reporter visited the camp and still found 40 to 50 insurgents
camped there.
But the police commandos are still receiving special treatment from the
U.S. occupation. A State Department report to Congress from Jan. 5 noted
that at the request of the Iraqi Ministry of the Interior, "billeting
space" was provided for 1,500 police commandos in the Baghdad Public
Safety Academy, postponing a basic training class of 2,000 scheduled to
begin in November and limiting the number of students to 1,000 while the
commandos received training "until the planned January 2005 elections."
Overall, the militias are a tacit admission that the U.S. effort to
create an Iraqi military force has been a colossal failure, costing at
least $5 billion to date. During the most recent large-scale military
campaign, "Operation River Blitz," U.S. Marines raided towns West of
Baghdad along the Euphrates River. The first order of business in many
of these Sunni Arab towns, according to the Christian Science monitor,
was to "round up and detain police officers"-the very ones who had been
"trained" by the U.S. to fight the insurgency. In Tikrit in early March,
the police went on strike after U.S. troops raided the provincial police
headquarters there and arrested two high-ranking officers. (About the
same time in Samarra, the mayor and city council resigned after the
mayor's office was raided and in protest of U.S. troops refusing to
withdraw from the city as agreed.)
At the end of March, police brandishing Kalishnikovs staged a
demonstration in Hit, one of the towns targeted, demanding their jobs
back. An AP account of the protest dated March 29 noted that police
forces have been dismissed across the province of Al Anbar, the heart of
the insurgency, and "former local police officers have been protesting
in several cities in recent weeks against a new plan to replace them
with police from other Iraqi provinces."
By introducing of militias and other units composed of Shiites and Kurds
into the Sunni Arab regions, the U.S. may just turn the insurgency into
a civil war.
10,000 STRONG
In terms of numbers, a column by David Ignatius in the Feb. 25
Washington Post notes that Thabit "commands a force of about 10,000
men," which would make them larger than the British military, the second
largest foreign force in Iraq. The commandos have been used extensively,
first last October in the assault on Samara that was called a "model"
for how to retake a city from insurgents (but which is stilled roiled by
regular attacks). The commandos have also become a fixture in major
cities such as Ramadi and Mosul. In Ramadi, The Stars and Stripes
describes the commandos as "the Iraqi forces that might soon be
responsible for security in the city."
A report in Dec. 25 issue of The Advisor-a Pentagon publication with the
tagline "Iraq's Official Weekly Command Information Reporter"-stated
that the "Special Police Commandos have been deployed all over Iraq to
hunt down insurgents and to help provide security for the upcoming Jan.
30 elections."
FEARS OF CIVIL WAR
Jaffe notes many of the pop-up militias come "from Shiite-dominated
southern Iraq." And they appear to be operating mainly in Sunni Arab
areas. The police commandos in particular are taking the lead in
operations in such Sunni Arab hotspots as Samarra, Ramadi, Mosul, Tikrit
and Baghdad. Last October they were assigned to Haifa Street, which had
been a resistance stronghold on the edge of the Green Zone, the heart of
the U.S. occupation. It's a district of 170,000 Sunnis and Shiites where
insurgents find willing recruits among the Sunni neighborhoods. Two
Iraqi battalions of more than 2,000 patrol the neighborhood, and the New
York Times observes that one is lead by a Shiite general "commanding a
unit composed mostly of Shiites." (The units are the Iraqi 302nd and
303rd Battalion; it's unclear if they are affiliated with the police
commandos assigned there.)
Knight Ridder correspondent Tom Lasseter filed a report from Haifa on
March 16, also noting that "Most of the Iraqi troops who patrol the
area. are Shiite." During the operations, Lasseter wrote, "When Iraqi
and American soldiers detained a suspected Sunni insurgent in Haifa this
week, a group of the Shiite troops crowded around him. A sergeant kicked
him in the face. Another soldier grabbed him by the neck and slammed his
head into a wall. A third slapped him hard in the face." The Americans'
Iraqi interpreter yelled at the detainee, "If you come with us, we will
slaughter you."
The ethnic-based militias are having a trickle-down effect on Iraqi
society. With no functioning government, various communities are
increasingly arming themselves. In another report, Lasseter spoke to a
Shiite soldier who claimed that, "Shiite neighborhoods on the edges of
Haifa have formed militias to enforce the sectarian boundary." The
soldier added, ""That militia is secretly funded by a sheik at a local
Shiite mosque... what's happening right now could be the beginning of
civil war in Baghdad." And in what remains of Fallujah, "Sunni residents
say anger toward Shiite troops is reaching a boiling point." Bush may be
right after all that "freedom is on the march" in Iraq: the freedom to
hate and kill.
As for the "hunt" for insurgents, it seems to include death squads.
Retired Gen. Wayne Downing, the former head of all U.S. special
operations forces, appeared on NBC's Today show on Jan. 10 to discuss a
Newsweek report about the Salvador option. The reference is to the
extensive use of death squads by El Salvador's military during its war
against the left in the 1980s. Downing called it a "very valid tactic"
that has been employed "since we started the war back in March of 2003."
In the account, brought to light by analyst Stephen Shalom, Downing
adds, "We have special police commandos now of the Iraqi forces which
conduct these kind of strike operations."
And there is evidence for such operations. According to the March 12
London Times, the body of Qahtan Jouli was delivered to his family in
Samarra by commandos from the interior ministry. He had appeared on
"Terror in the Grip of Justice" and confessed to collaborating with
insurgents in 10 killings. Qahtan's father charged that "My son was
killed after he was tortured by the Interior Ministry commandos. They
killed him to cover up the lies they broadcast on the al-Iraqiya channel
that my son killed many people, including Iraqi army officers."
Despite the pressure, the insurgency is still capable of conducting
large-scale attacks. It's still mounting 50 to 60 strikes a day across
Iraq. The difference is U.S. forces have become more effective at
responding to the attacks-with more armor, more surveillance and
electronic countermeasures. The insurgents have responded by shifting
their targets to the Iraqi security forces and intensifying economic
sabotage by crippling the electrical and petroleum infrastructure. They
still have the upper hand there by showing the U.S. and its Iraqi allies
are incapable of ruling the country.
The militias are central to many of these roundups. According to The
Advisor, in Samarra, the special police commandos detained 200 suspected
insurgents in the "short time [they] have been operational in the area."
In one week in the Mosul area, according to a Dec. 7 press release from
U.S. Task Force Olympia, the commandos and Iraqi National Guardsmen,
backed by U.S. troops, detained 232 people. A report from the Iraqi
Ministry of Defense claimed that more than 400 suspects were seized in
Baghdad in just one week in March with hundreds more taken from
surrounding towns. Many of those arrested remain under Iraqi
control-where many are tortured according to human rights groups as well
as the U.S. State Department. Thus the actual prison population in Iraq
is unknown, with many more thousands probably in custody above the U.S.
total (which itself is unverified).
U.S. Marine units have taken the militia strategy to a new level: by
creating their own. In a recent sweep through Al Anbar province, The 7th
Marines Regiment brought with the Iraqi Freedom Guard, a 61-man unit set
up by the Marines in January and paid $400 a month each, according to a
Reuters report. During the same operation, Marines of the 23rd Regiment
were accompanied by 20 members of a special forces unit called the
Freedom Fighters. The Christian Science Monitor described them as
Shiites from the southern city of Basra, with "little love between them
and the Sunni Arab citizens of Anbar."
In the greatest irony, U.S. forces have reached a pact with elements of
Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr's Mehdi Army to have them hunt down
insurgents. This is the same militia that U.S. forces fought in lopsided
battles last year that saw the Americans' massive firepower devastate
much of Sadr City in Baghdad and Najaf's old city and kill thousands of
Iraqis.
According to Agence France-Presse, U.S. forces are using a Shiite tribal
leader to enforce vigilante justice in Baghdad's Dura district. One U.S.
officer calls the leader, Sayed Malik, "the godfather" and notes he's
received lots of public works contracts, enough to make him a
millionaire. Another Sadr official states point blank that "people from
Sadr organization are publicly hunting down the terrorists." This
apparently includes the kidnapping and disappearing of a Sunni cleric
from a mosque in Dura.
The U.S. military is so obsessed with defeating the insurgents that it
is "routinely freeing dangerous criminals in return for a promise to spy
on insurgents," according to The Independent. One senior Iraqi police
officer charged that "The Americans are allowing the breakdown of Iraqi
society.We are dealing with an epidemic of kidnapping, extortion and
violent crime, but even though we know the Americans monitor calls on
mobiles and satellite phones, which are often used in ransom
negotiations, they will not pass on any criminal intelligence to us.
They only want to use the information against insurgents."
Despite the grab bag of ruthless and destabilizing tactics, the
insurgency is far from over. One U.S. general recently noted that it
takes on average nine years to defeat an insurgency. Additionally, it's
the violence of the U.S. occupation that gives the insurgency such
force. Even if the rebellion is contained to "manageable" levels for the
Pentagon, meaning a low rate of combat deaths, that does not mean the
resistance will end. U.S. forces long ago lost the battle for hearts and
minds.
And Iraq's own "democracy" is already in trouble, leaving many Iraqis
disillusioned. The winning parties have been unable to form a government
almost three months after the election. They are still squabbling over
who will control the most important portfolios-defense, interior and
oil-which is where the real power lies. With a do-nothing government
ensconced in bosom of the deadly U.S. occupation, the stage is now set
for a further descent into rebellion and repression.
A.K. Gupta is an editor with the NYC Indymedia Center,
www.nyc.indymedia.org . This is an
updated version of an article that appears in the May issue of Z
Magazine.
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