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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Iraqi resistance rejects interim government, fighting continues
By James Conachy
12 June 2004
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While news reports from Iraq have focused on the announcement
and UN endorsement of a puppet interim government, much of the
country remains a battleground between US and allied forces and
the Iraqi resistance seeking to free the country from occupation.
The 10-week uprising by Iraqi Shiites under the leadership
of cleric Moqtada al-Sadr shows no signs of abating in either
the working class districts of Baghdad, the Shiite religious centre
of Najaf or other areas of predominantly Shiite southern Iraq.
On Monday, the US Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) and
the US-installed Iraqi prime minister, Iyad Allawi, issued a new
decree proscribing al-Sadrs movement as an illegal militia
and banning him and other key figures in his Mahdi Army from holding
public office for three years. A spokesman for Sadr, Omar Ahmed
Shaybani, rejected the declaration. The Mahdi Army is not
a militia, he told journalists. It is Iraqis legitimately
resisting the occupation. The Mahdi Army exists as long as the
occupation does.
In Najaf, despite the announcement of a ceasefire on May 27
under which the Mahdi Army was to allow Iraqi police back into
the city centre, al-Sadrs militiamen are still in control
of the area surrounding the main Shiite shrine of Imam Ali.
In a graphic demonstration that they remain in charge, members
of the Mahdi Army attacked two police stations in Najaf on Wednesday
night. On Thursday they seized one of the stations, freed prisoners
and set eight police cars ablaze. The Iraqi police claimed the
fighting was triggered after they were shot at while trying to
arrest alleged thieves. A Mahdi Army spokesman, however, Qais
al-Khazali, told Associated Press the police had opened fire on
a group of militiamen protecting offices of Sadrs organisation,
killing a young fighter. The attacks on the stations, he said,
were carried out by his enraged family and other militiamen.
US troops on the outskirts of the city did not come to the
assistance of the Iraqi police. Shiite leaders have repeatedly
warned that American military action near the main icon of the
Shia faith could trigger a generalised uprising among Iraqi Shiites
and unrest in other parts of the Middle East.
Tensions continued in Najaf on Friday. Scuffles, followed by
exchanges of gunfire, reportedly took place between Sadrs
militiamen and several hundred supporters of the pro-occupation
Shiite party, the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in
Iraq (SCIRI), who were attempting to approach the shrine. The
US military has been pressuring SCIRI to launch such physical
attacks on Sadrs supporters. A senior member of SCIRIs
now disbanded militia, the Badr Brigade, was assassinated in Baghdad
on Monday by unknown assailants.
On Thursday night, US troops and Shiite fighters clashed in
the Baghdad working class district of Sadr City. The area was
renamed after the fall of Saddam Husseins regime in honour
of Sadrs father, who was murdered by the Baathists. While
the intensity of the clash is unclear, it ended with the US military
once again calling in helicopter gunships to fire into the densely
populated and impoverished neighbourhood. The Sadr City hospital
reported that two children were killed and at least 23 other civilians
wounded.
Thursdays fighting in Baghdad comes in the wake of a
series of incidents over the past week in and around the capital.
On Wednesday, one US soldier was killed and four wounded in an
attack near Sadr City. Last Sunday, Mahdi Army militiamen took
control of a police station in Sadr City, ordered the police to
leave and destroyed the building after the occupation forces attempted
to use it to mount increased patrols into the suburb.
Two Poles, three Slovaks and a Latvian were killed on Tuesday
in the town of Suwayrah, 25 miles south of Baghdad, when insurgents
mortared their vehicle which was carrying a cargo of explosives.
Yesterday, US troops were wounded in attacks in Baghdads
southern suburbs and in the Shiite town of Hillah.
There has also been no decrease in the number of attacks on
occupation forces in the Sunni Trianglethe predominantly
Sunni Muslim areas of central Iraq. Dozens of US troops and Iraqi
police have been killed or wounded in the last week in Mosul,
Ramadi, Balad, Baqubah, the Sunni suburbs of Baghdad and the city
of Fallujah, which was the site of intense fighting in April.
Last Saturday a car filled with explosives exploded outside
a US base 12 miles north of Baghdad, killing nine people and wounding
three American troops. The same day, a police station was attacked
in the town of Musayyib, 45 miles south of the capital, by unknown
insurgents. Seven US-recruited Iraqi police who resisted were
killed and the building destroyed. A car bombing on Tuesday in
Baqubah killed one American soldier and five Iraqi police, and
wounded 10 Americans and 15 Iraqis.
Two American and two Polish mercenaries working for US firm
Blackwater Security were ambushed and killed last Saturday while
escorting a convoy between a US base and Baghdad airport. A British
mercenary working for the company ArmorGroup was killed and three
others wounded in the northern city of Mosul. Three Nepalese mercenaries
working for the British firm Global Risk Strategies were wounded
in Mosul on Sunday.
Leaders among Iraqs Sunni population, which has supported
a guerrilla war against the occupation since it began, vocally
rejected the interim government this week and called for continued
resistance. Mohammed Bashar al-Faidhi, a spokesman for the Sunni
Association of Muslim Scholars, preached on Friday: We cannot
trust the occupation forces after all their lies. We cannot imagine
people getting freedom and sovereignty with the presence of 150,000
soldiers stationed on their land. We cannot expect any success
for any political process under the thumb of the occupation, whether
as the Governing Council or interim government.
The leading Sunni cleric in the restive Baghdad suburb of Adhamiyah,
Hassan al-Taha al-Samarai, used his Friday sermon to denounce
former members of the Iraqi military who had not taken up arms
against the occupation as being guilty of treason
and demanded they help train the youth who were carrying out resistance
attacks on US forces.
The statements of the Sunni clerics follow the joint statement
issued by 18 resistance groups based in Fallujah last week, pledging
to continue armed struggle until the US military leaves. The deal
struck between the US military and former Iraqi generals in the
city has effectively collapsed. The generals have been unable
to establish any authority over the guerrillas that have operated
from the city since the first days of the occupation and conducted
a continuous campaign against US forces.
US troops have not entered Fallujah since May 10. However,
they have come under continual attack and regularly suffered casualties
in the surrounding province of Al Anbar. The Fallujah Brigade
itself was attacked by insurgents for the first time on Tuesday.
At least 12 of its members were killed and 10 wounded in a mortar
strike on one of its camps. A column of 15 US tanks and armoured
vehicles approached the outskirts of the city, but did not advance
any farther. According to an Agence France Presse (AFP) correspondent,
armed men gathered in the street, toting assault rifles
and rocket-propelled grenades bracing for an attack.
A report by Washington Post correspondent Daniel Williams,
who visited Fallujah last week, helps explain the reluctance of
the American forces to enter the city. Six weeks after the US
military announced that a Fallujah Brigade would enforce
the authority of the interim government in the city, the latter
remains totally under the control of the resistance groups.
After he passed through a checkpoint manned by the brigade,
Williams reported, It became apparent who was really in
charge. A few yards in, he wrote: Wild-eyed
young men in masks pulled cars over at will, searched them and
demanded identification documents. No-one could leave or enter
without passing muster. Other groups of fighters in masks roamed
side-streets and alleys, brandishing rifles at all sorts of angles....
The brigade stays outside of town in tents, the police cower in
their patrol cars and the civil defense force nominally occupies
checkpoints on the citys fringes but exerts no influence
over masked insurgents who operate only a few yards away.
No regime in Iraq that owes its origins to the US invasion
will ever be accepted as legitimate by the Iraqi people. It will
exist only as long as American troops remain, and as long as they
remain, the human and fiscal cost of the Bush administrations
colonial aspirations in the Middle East will escalate. In just
the past 10 weeks, at least 249 American and coalition troops
have been killed in Iraq and well over 2,000 woundedfar
more casualties than were suffered during the three-week invasion
and the first two months of the occupation.
See Also:
UN Security Council rubberstamps Washingtons
continuing subjugation of Iraq
[11 June 2004]
Australian SEP public meeting: Iraq has
become a military and political debacle for the US
[5 June 2004]
Inside Fallujah: An insightful report
on US atrocities against Iraqi civillians
[2 June 2004]
US makes tactical retreat before Iraqi
uprising
[1 June 2004]
Marines pull back from Fallujah:
a debacle for American imperialism
[4 May 2004]
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