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Bombing in Irbil points to growing instability in northern
Iraq
By Peter Symonds
13 September 2003
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Among the many lies and half truths contained in President
Bushs keynote TV address last Sunday was a reference to
the relative calm in northern Iraq. Desperate to latch onto any
glimmer of good news, Bush declared in his speech: The north
of Iraq is generally stable and is moving forward with reconstruction
and self-government.
Two days later, a huge car bomb exploded outside a US intelligence
compound in the northern city of Irbil, killing at least three
people and injuring more than 40 others, including six Americans.
The blast not only shattered the illusion of quiescence but highlighted
the sharp tensions that have been created in the region by the
US military occupation.
According to eyewitnesses, the driver, who died in attack,
tried but failed to drive the vehicle into the compound then detonated
the bomb near the perimeter. Estimates put the amount of high
explosives in the bomb at between 150 and 200 kilograms. Such
was the force of the blast that it destroyed several nearby homes,
tore the façade off others and set fire to parked vehicles.
Part of the bombers car was found over a kilometre from
the blast site.
US soldiers were immediately flown in by helicopter and, with
the support of Kurdish militia, sealed off the area. Major James
Bullion, a US military spokesman in Irbil, told the media that
three people were believed deadtwo children and an elderly
woman. But the toll could be higher. There were lots of
body parts around not belonging to any of the injured or dead
that we accounted for, he said.
The blast was the first of its kind in northern Iraq. Elsewhere
US military forces are coming under various forms of attackon
average 15 times a day and the figure is rising. But the north
of the country, which has been under the effective control of
pro-US militia for more than a decade, has been relatively quiet.
That in itself raises some awkward questions: who were these intelligence
officials and what were they doing in Irbil, particularly if the
region is considered generally stable?
No details have been forthcoming from the Pentagon. The Defence
Intelligence Agency in Washington confirmed that four of the injured
Americans, described as military intelligence officers,
suffered serious wounds and were taken by helicopter to Mosul
for treatment. The other two, acknowledged as military personnel,
were less seriously injured.
The compound was not marked. It was guarded by a special Kurdish
militia unit and the American personnel were dressed in civilian
clothes. Local Iraqis did not realise that it was used by US intelligence
and some were angry that it had been sited in a residential area.
It was a blasphemy to put their base in a civilian neighbourhood,
Najib Abdullah, a petrol station manager, told the media.
Mufsen Jamil, Kurdish security chief for the area, explained
that US forces had only recently taken over the compound. The
Americans had been in the neighbourhood for about 40 days,
he said. Frankly we were worried. From our information,
theres a lot of TNT coming over the border. And we know
there are people out there who want to destabilise [the north]
just like the rest of Iraq.
Even though no organisation has claimed responsibility for
the blast and investigations have just begun, unnamed Kurdish
officials immediately blamed the Islamic fundamentalist militiaAnsar
al-Islam. The group is a convenient scapegoat. In February, US
Secretary of State Colin Powell claimed that Ansar al-Islam was
the link between Al Qaeda and Saddam Hussein and produced photographs
of what was purportedly to be an Ansar chemical weapons
factory.
At the time, exiled Ansar leader Mullah Krekar denied any connection
to Al Qaeda and reiterated his groups longstanding enmity
to the Hussein regime. His militia escorted a group of foreign
journalists to the building shown in Powells photograph
where they found no evidence of any weapons factory. The story
almost certainly originated from pro-US Kurdish militiathe
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) and the Kurdistan Democratic
Party (KDP)which have a history of armed conflict with Ansar.
As part of its invasion of Iraq, the US military collaborated
with the PUK in an all-out offensive against Ansars strongholds
in the Halabja Valley in late March. After pounding the area with
cruise missiles and bombs, some 6,000 PUK fighters, backed by
US Special Forces, seized a number of small villages near the
Iranian border held by 600 to 800 Ansar fighters. Seeking to appease
Washington, Iran shut its borders just prior to the offensive,
cutting off their lines of retreat.
It is possible that Ansar survivors have managed to regroup
and launch the attack in Irbil. But Washingtons intrigues
with the KDP and PUK militia have created other enemies. As the
offensive began against Ansar, the US launched a barrage of cruise
missiles against the town of Khormal killing 46 people and causing
a flood of refugees. The town was controlled by a second Islamic
militiaKormala Islami Kurdistanwith which the PUK
had an uneasy alliance. It appears that the PUK, with US backing,
took the opportunity not only to deal with Ansar but to send a
message to a potentially troublesome ally.
The Kurdish north of Iraq is also refuge to an estimated 5,000
fighters from the PKK/KADEK, a separatist militia of Turkish Kurds.
The group is rapidly becoming a focus of US attention because
of negotiations currently underway between Washington and Ankara
over the dispatch of 10,000 Turkish troops to Iraq. Washington
is desperate for additional troops, particularly from Muslim countries
like Turkey, to shore up its position both politically and militarily
in Iraq.
The Turkish military are keen to mend relations with Washington
after the parliament in March blocked US plans to use the country
as a base for invading northern Iraq. But the Turkish government
faces continuing popular opposition to any support for the US
occupation and is driving a hard bargain. As part of the deal,
Washington has already offered $8.5 billion in additional loans,
contingent on Turkey providing military assistance in Iraq and
implementing the IMFs restructuring package.
But the Turkish government has other conditions. In particular,
it is insisting that the US military shut down any PKK/KADEK bases
in northern Iraq. The US has already pledged to disarm those fighters
who fail to surrender under an amnesty law passed last month in
the Turkish parliament. It is not too far fetched to assume that
at least one of the tasks of the recently established military
intelligence unit in Irbil was to draw up plans to deal with the
PKK/KADEK fighters.
While any deal to dispatch Turkish troops is dependent on a
resolution in the UN Security Council, planning appears to be
well advanced. Turkeys Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul indicated
on Tuesday that the government was willing to send the troops
and that military planning could be completed by the end of the
month. US State Department, Pentagon and CIA officials are due
in Turkey next week to discuss details.
However, in its desperation for troop reinforcements, Washington
threatens to undermine whatever semblance of stability has existed
in the northern Iraq. The presence of Turkish troops, even if
they are not stationed in the Kurdish areas, will provoke opposition,
not only from the PKK/KADEK, but from Washingtons Kurdish
allies who are deeply suspicious of Turkish ambitions in northern
Iraq.
The issue has already created an open rift among the US-appointed
political stooges in the Iraqi Governing Council. Close US ally
Ahmad Chalabi, who is currently acting president, has signalled
his support for the plan, provided that no more than 10,000 Turkish
troops are sent and they are not deployed in Kurdish areas. As
a result, Chalabi has received a cordial invitation to visit Turkey.
On the other hand, Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari, a senior
KDP leader, has publicly opposed the intrusion of troops from
any of Iraqs neighbours. Referring to plans to station Turkish
troops in the west of the country, Zebari pointed out that the
supply lines for any Turkish military contingent will necessarily
pass through the Kurdish areas in northern Iraq.
Whoever carried out this weeks attack on the US military
intelligence compound at Irbil, the blast is symptomatic of the
barely concealed tensions that exist in the region, which could
rapidly escalate into armed conflict, directed at US occupation
forces in particular.
See Also:
Washingtons dirty military
intrigues in northern Iraq
[28 March 2003]
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