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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
US military prepares assault on Najaf and Fallujah
By James Conachy
15 April 2004
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Under the cover of ceasefires and negotiations ostensibly aimed
at achieving a political settlement to the Iraqi uprising, the
US military is assembling the forces to crush the most prominent
centres of resistance. Marines are being reinforced for a renewed
offensive on the besieged city of Fallujah, while US troops have
been rushed from northern Iraq to the southern Shiite city of
Najaf, where cleric Moqtada al-Sadr and thousands of his supporters
have fortified themselves near the Iman Ali Shrine, the holiest
site of Shia Islam.
Iraqi fighters have conducted determined efforts to prevent
the US build-up around Najaf, which has been in the hands of the
uprising since April 3. Shiite militiamen armed only with automatic
weapons and rocket-propelled grenades suffered heavy losses attacking
American convoys traveling south earlier in the week. Overpasses
in Baghdad were brought down and one bridge over the Euphrates
River was destroyed and two others so badly damaged that US armour
could not cross.
However, Najaf is now under siege by an American force of 2,500.
It includes squadrons of tanks, Stryker armoured fighting vehicles,
infantry and ground artillery, backed by helicopter gunships and
fighter-bombers. Thousands of Spanish, Polish and Ukrainian troops
are also being prepared to take part in an assault.
American and coalition troops have checkpoints blocking all
the main roads into the city. Leaflets are being distributed denouncing
Sadr for the murder of a moderate Shia cleric at a Najaf mosque
in April 2003. As many as 6,000 fighters loyal to Sadr are believed
to be ready to resist any US attack. Local people are said to
be stock-piling food, water and oil, and shop-keepers are piling
sandbags around their stores, in anticipation of weeks of street-to-street
fighting.
Colonel Dana Pritchard of the Third Brigade, First Infantry
Division, summed up the mentality of the US forces. He told the
Los Angeles Times at the beginning of the week: My
intent is to destroy Sadrs militia, absolutely destroy it,
and then to capture or kill Sadr. Thats our mission. Were
just waiting to be unleashed.
The breathing space for the US military preparations has been
provided by the clerical leadership under Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani
and the two Shiite parties that sit in the puppet Iraqi Governing
Council (ICG)the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution
in Iraq (SCIRI) and the Al Dawa Islamic Party.
Hundreds of Shiites have fought and died over the past 12 days
against the US occupation, and hundreds of thousands have demonstrated
in sympathy, especially in Baghdad where Sadr has his main base
of support among the working class and urban poor. But Sistani,
SCIRI and Al Dawa have used their influence to try to defuse the
uprising.
Clerics aligned to Sistaniwho is the most authoritative
leader in the Shiite hierarchyhave issued repeated calls
for calm and refused to endorse the armed resistance.
The 10,000-strong Badr Brigade militia of SCIRI stood by last
week while coalition forces suppressed the uprising and reestablished
control over all the main southern Iraqi cities except Najaf.
According to the US military, while fighting is continuing
in Sadr City and other suburbs of Baghdad, the situation has been
mainly stable this week across southern Iraq, including in Basra,
Amara, Nasiriyah, Kut and Karbala. Most of the youth in the south
who took up arms on April 3 have gone to ground, been killed or
wounded or have made their way to Najaf.
Since the weekend, delegations including Sistanis sons
and representatives of Al Dawa have met with Sadr and sought to
pressure him into calling off the insurrection.
The motives of the Shiite elites are twofold. Firstly, they
fear that any attack on Najafwhich one US officer compared
with attacking the Vaticanwill unleash a rebellion among
Iraqi Shiites they cannot control. Khither Jaafer, a spokesman
for Al Dawa, told the Los Angeles Times: The situation
is so dangerous because it doesnt just involve Moqtada [Sadr]...
the Shias are feeling in general that this is a confrontation.
If the US moves militarily, it will be understood as a message
against all Shiites. We are very concerned that if this sedition
breaks out, it will be hard to stop.
The second motive is even more base. The Shiite elites are
making a venal gamble that by betraying the aspirations of the
mass of Iraqi Shiites for an end to the US occupation, the Bush
administration will give them a dominant position in the puppet
state it is attempting to establish in Iraq. The main demand of
Sistani and the Shia parties is that Iraqs interim constitution
is revised to remove clauses that give a degree of power to Iraqs
minority Kurdish and Sunni communities. Iraqi Shiites make up
some 60 percent of the population. The Shia clerics and parties
hope to be able to mobilise them on a sectarian basis in elections
and dominate any future parliament.
Sadr, a member of one of the most powerful families of the
Shiite establishment, is bowing to the pressure. At the start
of the week, as the US made its preparations for a massacre, he
ordered his militiamen to hand back police stations and strategic
buildings in Najaf to Iraqi police. Yesterday, Sadrs spokesman
declared the cleric was ready accept what the Marjaiya [the
Shiite religious leadership] ask for and to drop the conditions
he had set for mediation.
Sadrs conditions had been that the Bush administration
pull US troops out of all Iraqi cities, release hundreds of his
militiamen who have been detained over the past two weeks and
give guarantees as to when the US military would completely withdraw
from the country. Sadr has also declared his willingness to disband
his militia and submit to being tried for murder in the future,
under a legitimate and democratic government established
after the end of the US occupation.
Representatives of the Iranian government were invited by the
British to take part in talks with the Shiite leadership in Iraqgiving
rise to speculation that an attempt was being made to strike a
deal with Sadr in which he is given temporary asylum in Iran,
in exchange for calling on his supporters to lay down their arms.
The Iranian regime is also anxious to end the uprising. The theocracy
in Tehran fears it could galvanise the urban poor and oppressed
in Iran against its brutal rule and its efforts to reestablish
relations with US imperialism
The various efforts by the Shiite establishment, the British
and Iran for some type of compromise appear to have broken down,
however, due to US refusal to accept anything less than Sadrs
total submission and the destruction of his militia. Iranian Foreign
Minister Kamal Kharrazi told reporters late Wednesday that Irans
involvement in negotiations had ended. We felt we were going
nowhere, Kharrazi said. The Americans give promises
but dont keep their promises. Currently, they are taking
a wrong path.
A US assault on Najaf, with all the potentially explosive consequences,
may be imminent.
In Fallujahwhere at least 700 Iraqis have already been
killed and over 1,200 seriously wounded in the past two weeksthere
is little doubt that a renewed attack is being prepared.
For the Bush administration and the entire US political establishment,
the citys defiance of the occupation over the past year,
and especially over the past two weeks, has made it an unacceptable
symbol of resistance. The official US military position is that
operations will continue until Fallujah has been completely pacified.
As many as 200 American troops have been killed or wounded
in and around the city since April 5. A ceasefire since the beginning
of this week has enabled the US military to rest its forces and
bring in hundreds of fresh troops and new tank units. Aerial surveillance
has been constant, pin-pointing concentrations of resistance fighters.
The ceasefire has also been used to depopulate much of city. As
many as 80,000 refugees have now fled to Baghdad.
The ceasefire was already breaking down on Tuesday evening,
with US tanks storming into the city to rescue an armoured fighting
vehicle that allegedly strayed into resistance-held
territory. Helicopter gunships and jet fighters used the opportunity
to carry out strafing and bombing runs over suspected Iraqi positions.
The scenes being described from the city are ones of total
devastation and bitter urban warfare. A marine major told the
New York Times: Its the fight that never came
last year. I guess these guys didnt really want to die for
Saddam. But all this anti-American feeling is now uniting them.
Associated Press correspondents reported yesterday: In
the abandoned homes they occupy on the frontlines a few blocks
into the city, marines punched bricks out of wall to make holes
to fire through and knocked down walls between rooftop terraces
to allow movement from house to house without descending to the
street. Shards of glass were spread across doorsteps, so the approaching
boot of an enemy would be heard approaching the door... Insurgents
were also organising. Marines said they suspected tunnels had
been dug under houses held by gunmen to allow them to move without
being targeted by marine snipers....
The US military is clearly preparing for a bloodbath against
the thousands of armed Iraqi men and youth defending Fallujah.
A marine corporal told Associated Press on Monday it didnt
concern him if the Iraqi fighters used the ceasefire to rest and
resupply, because theyre all gonna die.
Lieutenant Frank Dillbeck told AP: If theyre trying
to find a peaceful way out of this, great. But at this point there
seems to be few options other than to get the innocents out and
level it, wipe it clear off the map.
See Also:
US press justifies slaughter in Iraq
[13 April 2004]
Thousands dead and wounded
US military seeks to crush Iraqi uprising
[13 April 2004]
The inevitable logic of US repression
in Iraq
[12 April 2004]
Defend the Iraqi masses
[8 April 2004]
Stop the war on the Iraqi people
[7 April 2004]
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