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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
The Iraqi oppositionists and US plans for regime change
in Baghdad
Part 1
By Peter Symonds
30 September 2002
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Below is the first of a two-part article on the Iraqi opposition.
The second part will be published on October 1.
The Bush administration argues that a US invasion of Iraq and
the ouster of Saddam Hussein will constitute an act of liberation,
ushering in a new period of peace and democracy for the long-suffering
Iraqi people. US officials are currently engaged in a flurry of
activity among Iraqi exile circles aimed at fashioning a replacement
regime.
But there will be nothing democratic about the installation
of a US-backed regime in Baghdad. A new leader will be foisted
on the Iraqi people in the same way that Washington plucked long-time
CIA asset Hamid Karzai out of obscurity in Pakistan and turned
him into the Afghan president. And, like the regime in Kabul,
the new administration in Baghdad will be filled with carefully
vetted personnel. Perhaps an Iraqi version of the stage-managed
loya jirga (grand tribal assembly held in Kabul) will even
be convened to give the proceedings a veneer of legitimacy.
The process is well in train. Key hard-line figures in the
Bush administration, including Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld,
his deputy Paul Wolfowitz and US Defence Policy Board chairman
Richard Perle, have long championed the arming of Iraqi opposition
groups to topple Hussein. Soon after Bush took office, the flow
of money to various Iraqi oppositionists began to substantially
increase.
The clear favourite has been the Iraqi National Congress (INC),
which has been the main focus of US intrigues inside Iraq for
more than a decade. It currently operates from offices in London
but its chairman Ahmad Chalabi, a shady financier who has been
convicted on major fraud charges in Jordan, is well known in Washington
and counts people like Perle among his long-time American friends.
Over the last few months, the CIA, State Department and other
agencies have been bullying, bribing and cajoling various other
Iraqi opposition groups to back the Bush administrations
war plans. Their aim is to establish a unified front that can,
superficially at least, provide a coherent and plausible alternative
to Hussein. The US also wants intelligence, militia and bases
inside Iraq to help plan and facilitate a US invasion.
In April, the CIA met with two Kurdish groupsthe Kurdistan
Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK)to
seek permission to establish bases in two cities in northern Iraq.
According to a report in the British-based Guardian, the
two groups were wary because the CIA had double-crossed them before.
Northern Iraq, which the two Kurdish militias have effectively
controlled since 1991, has been a hotbed of US intrigue for over
a decade.
In June, the State Department held the first official talks
in Washington with the Shiite-based Supreme Council for the Islamic
Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI). SCIRI, which is just one of a number
of organisations based among Iraqs Shiite majority, has
connections to Iran where its leader Muhammad Baqir Hakim resides.
Initially cautious about openly supporting a US invasion of Iraq,
SCIRI now appears to have joined Washingtons anti-Hussein
front.
The most significant meeting took place on August 10 at the
White House. It brought together the six groups at the core of
US plans for a post-Hussein regime for high-level discussions
with top Bush administration officials, including Powell, Rumsfeld
and Vice-President Dick Cheney. The gathering, which was jointly
organised by the Defence and State Departments as well as the
CIA and National Security Council, pledged to work together for
a free Iraq.
The groups included Chalabis INC, the two Kurdish groups
and SCIRI, as well as two other exile formationsthe Iraqi
National Accord (INA) and the Constitutional Monarchy Movement
(CMM). The INA is a shadowy group of defectors from Husseins
Baathist Party, the Iraqi military and security apparatus with
close contacts to the CIA, British MI6 and Saudi Intelligence.
It has offices in London and the Middle East. The CMM aspires
to put the heir apparent, Sharif Ali Bin Al-Hussein, back on the
throne as king of Iraq.
Since the White House meeting, preparations have accelerated.
A week later, the Sunday Times reported that the US was
intending to provide additional funding to Iraqi opposition groups
to conduct covert operations inside Iraq for the purpose of gathering
intelligence and encouraging high-level defections. The State
Departments Future of Iraq Project, which was
described by the Guardian in July as a small underfunded
and understaffed office, has mushroomed into six working
groups, which have begun holding meetings in the US and Britain.
Last week the US media reported that the Bush administration was
preparing to seek congressional approval to provide military training
for up to 10,000 members of Iraqi opposition groups.
After the Gulf War
One look at the assortment of military defectors, dubious businessmen,
aspiring monarchists, political opportunists and thugs that constitute
the Iraqi opposition is enough to make clear the venal nature
of the regime that the US proposes to install in Baghdad.
All of them have collaborated and connived with Washington,
to one degree or another, since the 1990-1991 Persian Gulf War.
Some have been directly on Washingtons payroll and involved
in the various failed US schemes and plots to oust Hussein. Others,
like the Shiite- and Kurdish-based groups, have exploited the
opportunities opened after the war to establish a degree of autonomy
and to manoeuvre with the US and various regional powers.
Neither Washington nor its Iraqi clients want a popular rebellion
or any genuine expression of democracy, either of which would
be profoundly destabilising in Iraq and throughout the region.
In February 1991, in the midst of the Gulf War, George Bush senior
called for a revolt against Hussein, but rapidly backtracked when
the Shiites in the south and the Kurds in the north rose up. The
US military stood by while Husseins elite Republican Guards
slaughtered the insurgents, sending streams of refugees flooding
towards the borders.
Washington had no intention of making any concessions to Kurdish
demands for independence, or calls by the Shiites, who constitute
60 percent of the population, for a greater say in the countrys
political affairs. US ally Turkey, as well as Iran and Syria,
were all acutely sensitive to any move that would have strengthened
their substantial Kurdish minorities. In the case of the Shiites,
the US, along with Saudi Arabia, was opposed to any step that
would bolster the position of predominantly Shiite Iran within
the region.
The US, with the backing of Britain, exploited the plight of
the Kurds and the Shiites to unilaterally impose safe havens
or no-fly zones in the north of the country in April
1991 and in the south in August 1992. The military exclusion zones
effectively partitioned the country into three and provided Washington
with the pretext needed to keep its warplanes patrolling over
Iraq and attacking military targets.
Having stopped short of a full-scale assault on Baghdad in
1991, the Bush administration focused its attention on ousting
Hussein through an internal coup or military putsch. Washington
was instrumental in establishing the Iraqi National Congress
(INC) at a gathering in Vienna in June 1992. The INC
was both an umbrella organisation for anti-Hussein groups and
a front for clandestine activities inside Iraq.
The INC and its CIA advisers set up a base of operations in
Irbul inside the northern no-fly zonethe area
of Iraq north of latitude 36 degrees, which included some, but
not all, of the major Kurdish cities. The two Kurdish groupsthe
KDP and the PUKhad taken advantage of the military exclusion
zone to establish a de-facto Kurdish autonomous region. Elections
were even held in 1992 for a Kurdish Regional Government, which
resulted in an uneasy power-sharing arrangement between KDP leader
Massoud Barzani and his PUK counterpart Jalal Talabani.
Notwithstanding the bitter experiences of Kurdish and Shiite
insurgencies the previous year, both Kurdish groupsthe KDP
and PUKjoined the INC. The Stalinist Iraqi Communist Party,
the Islamic fundamentalist Al Daawa party and the forerunner to
SCIRI, the Supreme Assembly of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq,
signed up at a meeting held in northern Iraq in October 1992.
The US is estimated to have spent $100 million financing the
activities of Iraqi opposition groups in the early 1990smuch
of it purportedly spent on propaganda and public relations. But
the CIAs efforts to foment a revolt in Baghdad failed dismally.
Coup attempts were reported in 1992 and 1993, but each ended in
arrests, executions and a further strengthening of Husseins
security apparatus.
Moreover, the shaky alliance of opposition groups that comprised
the INC began to rapidly fall apart. The two Kurdish groups came
into conflict over the division of profits from the lucrative
smuggling operations that had sprung up to circumvent the UN-imposed
sanctions on Iraq. Scores of trucks carrying goods from Turkey
to Iraq passed through the northern no-fly zone every
day and returned laden with cheap oil and petroleum products.
But the route passed through KDP territory, and Barzani refused
to share the huge customs fees with his PUK rivals.
Fighting between the groups broke out in 1993 and continued
to escalate. Each manoeuvred and schemed against the other, trying
to garner the support of the regional powersIran, Syria,
Turkey, Jordan and Saudi Arabia. The conflict destabilised the
INC and resulted in the departure of other groups, including the
Shiite organisations and the Iraqi Communist Party.
At the same time, the CIA began to concentrate more of its
activities on INA, which had been established in 1990 with the
backing of the British MI6 and Saudi intelligence. The INA, with
its focus on establishing clandestine military networks in Baghdad,
was more in line with the CIAs needs than the rather amorphous
and increasingly unstable front organisation, the INC.
The most extensive CIA operation appears to have been in March
1995 and included the INC and the INA based in Irbul and other
operatives inside areas of Iraq controlled by Hussein. Insofar
as details are available, the plan involved both a military offensive
in the north and a coup attempt in Baghdad. The CIA conspired
with elements of the INA and other contacts to organise the putsch
in the capital.
At the same time, Chalabi enlisted the support of the Kurdish
militia to retake the Kurdish cities of Kirkuk and Mosul, which
lay outside the northern no-fly zone, after implying
that the US would provide the attackers with air cover. The KDP
and PUK were particularly keen to seize control of Kirkuk, because
it lies at the centre of Iraqs rich northern oil and gas
fields. Thousands of ill-trained and poorly equipped militia members
were dispatched to fight the Iraqi army.
The whole affairboth the coup attempt in Baghdad and
the military offensive in the northfailed miserably, leading
to bitter and continuing recriminations on all sides. With the
support of US and British intelligence, the INA reorganised its
operations in 1996 and received permission to use Jordan as a
base. Its network was infiltrated by Iraqi intelligence, however,
with devastating results. In June 1996, well over 100 military
officers linked to the INA were rounded up, at least 30 of whom
were summarily executed.
In northern Iraq, matters went from bad to worse for the CIA
and its Iraqi proxies. The bloody fighting between the KDP and
the PUK reached its climax in August 1996. Barzani, claiming that
his rival was being supported by the Iranian military, invited
the Iraqi army into the Kurdish areas to retake Irbul from the
PUK. The Iraqi security forces not only seized the city, but also
took the opportunity to crush the Iraqi oppositionists.
The result was a complete disaster for the CIA, the INC and
the INA. According to one estimate, 200 oppositionists were executed
by the Iraqi army and as many as 2,000 arrested. Another 650,
mainly INC members along with their CIA handlers, managed to escape
and were resettled in the US. As an umbrella group, the INC all
but disintegrated. And in the space of a year, the INA had lost
both its network in Baghdad and its base of operations in northern
Iraq.
To be continued
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