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Guerrilla war intensifies in Iraq despite Husseins capture
By James Conachy
11 February 2004
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Contrary to the predictions of the Bush administration, the
Pentagon and much of the US media, the capture of Saddam Hussein
last December has not brought about any significant reduction
in the intensity of Iraqi opposition to the US occupation. Nearly
one year after the invasion, American troops are compelled to
conduct over 1,500 patrols every day to try and disrupt resistance
activities and to maintain control over the country. According
to the most recent briefing by the Provisional Authority in Iraq,
the number of attacks on US forces has increased over recent weeks,
from 18 to 24 per day.
Summing up the impact of Husseins capture on the scale
of fighting in the northern city of Mosul, a 101st Airborne colonel
told the Los Angeles Times on February 4: I would
say there has been no noticeable difference in any way, shape
or form since the time he was captured.
During January, 45 American soldiers died in Iraqfive
more than were killed in Decemberand another 209 were wounded.
The total US casualties since the war began has reached 534 dead,
2,617 wounded-in-action, 408 injured in non-hostile incidents
and at least 8,500 evacuated for other medical reasons.
The Americans who have died came from every state in the Union,
as well as from the US colonies of Puerto Rico and American Samoa.
The class composition of those being killed was pointed out in
a comment by Cynthia Tucker in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
The all-volunteer military is disproportionately drawn from
blue-collar homes. The family median income of recruits
into the US military is between $32,000 and $34,000. Military
sociologist Charles Moskos told Tucker: People are forgetting,
were not losing the sons and daughters of Americas
leaders, but basically minorities and working class whites.
In February so far, seven US troops have been killed and 28
confirmed wounded. Hundreds of Iraqis working for the US
have also been killed or injured. No part of Iraq can be considered
secure.
At the beginning of the month, 109 Iraqi Kurds died and hundreds
more were wounded in simultaneous suicide bomb attacks on gatherings
of the two pro-occupation Kurdish political parties in the northern
city of Irbil.
Yesterday, an explosion outside the police station killed at
least 53 people and injured over 60 in the Shiite town of Iskandariyah,
south of Baghdad. US authorities have not yet confirmed whether
they believe the bomb was remotely detonated or the work of a
suicide bomber. It is believed many of those killed were men queuing
to submit applications to join the Iraqi police. An American soldier
was killed by a roadside bomb near the town on February 3.
In a sign of the bitterness against the occupation forces,
local people blamed the US for the attack, accusing the American
military of either carrying out or organising the bombing in order
to divide Iraqi Sunnis and Shiites. According to Associated Press,
dozens of townspeople demonstrated outside the ruins of the station
chanting: No, no America! The police are traitors: not Sunnis,
not Shiites! This crime was by the Americans! Police were
forced to fire shots over the peoples heads to disperse
the crowd.
In another attack yesterday, four Iraqi police were killed
in ambushes in Baghdad. According to the head of the police force,
General Ahmed Kazem, the deaths brought the number of Iraqi police
killed since the US established the force last April to 604. The
number of police wounded is unknown but is likely to be in the
thousands.
Roadside bombs or improvised explosive devices (IEDs) are inflicting
a heavy toll on American troops. IEDs killed 23 American troops
in January. On Monday, two US soldiers were killed and six wounded
when they accidentally detonated explosives they were trying to
clear from an area near the town of Sinjar, north of Baghdad.
Four other soldiers were wounded near Baquba in what appears to
be a carefully planned ambush. As a soldier approached what he
thought was an inactive roadside bomb, it exploded. As others
rushed to his aid, a second bomb went off. Both explosions were
likely detonated by remote control.
On Sunday, three separate US vehicle convoys were hit by roadside
bombs or rockets in Mosul, Fallujah and Mahmudiyaha town
south of Baghdad. One soldier was killed and at least three wounded
in the attacks.
On Sunday night, guerrillas mortared the Baghdad airport, killing
a former Fijian soldier working for the British company Global
Risk Strategies International. Another Fijian employee of the
company was wounded. Global Risk Strategies International, which
was awarded a multi-million dollar contract by the US to provide
security at various Iraqi facilities and government offices, has
a private army of 500 former British Army Nepalese Gurkhas
and 500 former Fijian soldiers in Iraqmaking it one of the
largest providers of troops for the occupation.
Mortar attacks are now regular events and this month they have
been particularly lethal. On February 5, guerrillas also mortared
the Baghdad airport, killing one American soldier and wounding
another. On February 1, guerrillas launched a barrage of at least
seven rockets into an American base near Balad, a city 75 kilometres
north of Baghdad. One US soldier died and 12 were wounded.
There are growing indications that the resistance has free
rein in some Iraqi cities and that insurgents have infiltrated
the US-created Iraqi police, military and civilian authorities.
On Saturday, a bus carrying members of the new American-created
Iraqi Army was hit by a RPG in broad daylight outside the mayors
office in downtown Fallujah. The attack wounded at least five
of the Iraqi soldiers. The assailants escaped.
The same day, a bomb exploded inside a police station in Suwayrah,
south of Baghdad, killing four Iraqi police and wounding 11. The
station commander told the Los Angeles Times the bombing
must have been carried out by one of his own officers, as no-one
else had access to the room where the explosive had been rigged
up. Later on Saturday, the occupants of a house in Tikrit suspected
of resistance activity allegedly opened fire on American troops
monitoring the building. One Iraqi was killed and two others wounded
in a subsequent gun battle. The man killed turned out to be an
officer in the local Iraqi police.
The reality of an ongoing guerrilla war and the toll of casualties
continually pose the question before both American soldiers and
the broader American population: why is the US in Iraq? The lies
of the Bush administration are now being thoroughly exposed. Iraq
possessed no weapons of mass destruction and the Iraqi peoplewhatever
their feelings toward Saddam Husseinhave not welcomed the
American forces as liberators. They are viewed by
the majority of Iraqis as an invasion force that has come into
the country to plunder its oil and turn it into a puppet state
for American interests in the Middle East.
A captain of the Fourth Infantry Division about to leave Iraq
posted on the website companycommand.com the following blunt advice
to the soldiers replacing his unit in Tikrit: What they
have to understand is that most of the people here want us dead,
they hate us and everything we stand for, and will take any opportunity
to cause us harm.
In order to reduce US casualties, the Pentagon intends to pull
American troops back into heavily defended bases located on the
outskirts of Iraqs major cities and intends to rely on local
Iraqi forces to do the day-to-day fighting. By May 1, the US intends
to reduce the number of forward bases it has in Baghdad from 26
to just 8. Many of the American troops will be based as far as
35 kilometres from the city.
The US claims to have 9,000 Iraqi police already employed in
Baghdad, 4,000 civil defence troops and over 5,700 security guards.
During his visit to the city earlier this month, Deputy Defense
Secretary Paul Wolfowitz declared: Its clearly better
for us if they are on the front lines, and its better for
them and its better for their country.
The Iraqi forces, however, are unlikely to be particularly
effective against the insurgents. Firstly, their morale and motivation
is questionableunder conditions of mass unemployment, the
majority enlisted for a pay packet not out of any support for
the US. Secondly, they are woefully ill-equipped. The Chicago
Tribune documented this month that a 160-strong company of
civil defence troops already on operations in Baghdad did not
have vehicles, radios, bullet-proof vests or even furniture in
their barracks.
The most likely impact of the US pullback from Baghdad is that
the insurgent groups will be able to improve their ability to
supply and recruit fighters and to coordinate attacks on US and
other occupation targets.
In Fallujahwhere troops have already been largely pulled
out of the citya resistance group calling itself Muhammads
Army issued a leaflet last week informing the police and
locals that they will be assuming control when the US completely
withdraws. The leaflet declares: America is getting ready
to withdraw its forces from our country with its tail between
its legs.
The Washington Posts Daniel Williams described
the state of affairs in Fallujah in a column on Sunday: US
forces are seen less often than before in the muddy streets. The
US-sanctioned local government operates behind barricades, and
police hunker down in fortress-like compounds. Iraqi resistance
groups move in and out of the city with ease, and foreign infiltrators
opposed to the US presence have taken up residence, people here
say.
Much of Baghdad could be in same state in a matter of months.
Until the day every last American and foreign soldier is withdrawn
from Iraq and the illegal occupation of the country is ended,
the fighting will go on and the casualties will grow, for both
the occupiers and the occupied.
See Also:
UN summoned to salvage US plans for Iraq
[10 February 2004]
Irbil suicide bombings aggravate tensions
in northern Iraq
[5 February 2004]
Day three of US media
coverage of Hussein's capture: no let-up in the hysteria
[17 December 2003]
Saddam Hussein's capture
will not resolve Iraqi quagmire
[15 December 2003]
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