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Attacks on Abu Ghraib highlight continuing Iraqi armed resistance
By James Cogan
9 April 2005
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On April 2, Iraqi insurgents launched one of the highest profile
attacks of the two-year guerilla war against the US-led occupation:
an assault on the Abu Ghraib prison complex in Baghdad where thousands
of Iraqis are being detained.
As dusk fell, as many as 50 well-armed guerillas unleashed
a barrage of mortar rounds and rocket-propelled grenades at a
prison watchtower, giving cover to suicide bombers who detonated
two explosive-filled vehicles in attempts to blow a hole in the
prison walls.
Over the next two hours, the insurgents fought a pitched battle
with prison guards and US military reinforcements before carrying
out a military-style withdrawal into the surrounding residential
neighbourhoods. In the course of the firefight, 44 American troops
and at least 13 prisoners were wounded.
On April 4, a second attack on the prison was carried out.
A suicide bomber detonated a tractor laden with explosives outside
the complex, wounding five civilians in the vicinity.
There is little doubt that Abu Ghraib was targeted to ensure
the insurgents actions were widely reported and to develop
political support for the armed resistance. Once notorious for
the brutality of Saddam Husseins rule, the prison has become
a symbol of the crimes being committed against the Iraqi people
under US occupation, especially since the publication last year
of photos showing detainees being tortured and degraded by American
interrogators and prison guards.
Many of the 3,500 Iraqis currently held in the prison camp
were seized by American troops during the massive US assault that
reduced the city of Fallujah to rubble last November, or in the
course of more recent raids. Hundreds of men are being held for
little more than being of fighting age, members of the former
ruling Baathist Party or the relatives of suspected insurgent
leadersso-called security detainees. Many have
no idea when or if they will face trial and have no access to
legal counsel. There are widespread allegations of overcrowding,
abuse, poor food and denial of family visits.
A leaflet had been circulated at Baghdads Sunni mosques
just days before the first attack, allegedly authored by a female
prisoner at the complex, claiming she was being raped by American
troops and appealing for the resistance to carry out a rescue
operation.
On April 1, the day before the attack, the appalling conditions
facing US-held detainees provoked a riot at Camp Bucca, the largest
US-run prison camp, located near the southern city of Umm Qasr.
The riot was led by supporters of Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr,
who have been held in the facility since being rounded up during
the uprising of Iraqi Shiites from April to September 2004.
The timing of the guerilla assault on Abu Ghraibwhich
had little prospect of military successsuggests that it
was also a propaganda effort by the insurgent groups to demonstrate
they had not been broken by the wave of American crackdowns over
the past six months.
Amid the manoeuvring over the formation of an Iraqi transitional
government over the past two months, the American military and
the locally-recruited security forces have conducted another series
of offensives in primarily Sunni Muslim areas of Iraq, where the
majority of the population boycotted the January 30 elections.
In February, US forces initiated a major operation, codenamed
River Blitz, to round up suspected insurgents in the area around
Ramadi. The city, with a population of 300,000, was placed under
an 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew, with US tanks stationed on the main
streets. By March 5, the US military claimed that over 400 Iraqis
had been detained in American raids and at roadblocks.
More recently, two major operations have been carried out by
US and local Iraqi forces against alleged insurgent training camps
and hideouts. On March 21, US forces claimed to have killed 85
guerillas at a camp on the outskirts of Baghdad. On March 26,
they reported the capture of 131 insurgents during raids near
Karbala, 100 kilometres south of the capital. Iraqi defence ministry
sources asserted that the captured men were members of the Sunni
fundamentalist organisation Ansar al-Sunna.
On Monday, another raid by US and Iraqi government troops on
a suspected guerilla hideout, this time in Diyala province to
the east of Baghdad, resulted in a four-hour battle and left at
least 17 insurgents and two American soldiers dead.
The number of anti-occupation fighters killed, wounded or detained
this year in what is called the Sunni Triangle almost
certainly exceeds 1,000. Despite the repression, however, there
are few indications that the insurgency is close to being quelled
or, as British general John Kiszely declared on April 4, running
out of steam.
At the beginning of 2004, guerilla groups were mounting an
estimated 10 to 20 attacks per day on American-led forces. In
March this year, despite what has been described as a lull
since the large number of clashes from November 2004 to January
2005, at least 40 to 45 attacks were carried out each day.
Commenting on the security conditions this week, the New
York Times noted that it showed that Baghdad was still
very much a city under siege. Apache attack helicopters circled
the skies, while the Iraqi police set up checkpoints along the
major roads downtown.
One justification for asserting that the insurgency is dying
out is the fall in the American casualty rate since the end of
the January 30 elections. Whereas 107 American troops were killed
in January, the death toll fell to 58 in February and 36 in March.
A large factor in the decline in American dead and wounded, however,
is the increasing use of Iraqi military units and police to conduct
the more dangerous operations. Instead of US troops, Iraqis are
being deployed to repress the population with roadblocks, armed
patrols through the streets and night raids on residential areas.
While the rate of US casualties has fallen back to one or two
deaths and 10 to 20 wounded per day, an estimated 200 locally-recruited
Iraqi security personnel were killed in March. As well, at least
240 civilians died, many of them employees of the US-sponsored
government or people associated with the pro-occupation Iraqi
political factions.
The casualties are shaping up to be even higher this month.
On April 5, three Iraqi soldiers were killed and over 40 wounded
in western Iraq, when the bus in which they were traveling was
struck by a remotely-detonated car bomb. Other attacks in the
past seven days include: a deputy director of education was assassinated
and an interior ministry general kidnapped in Baghdad; 11 Iraqi
employees at a US base near Ramadi were found executed; an official
of a pro-US Kurdish party was assassinated in Mosul; the headless
bodies of 10 Iraqi soldiers were found south of Baghdad; a provincial
government representative in Hillah was gunned down; a government
translator was wounded in a drive-by shooting in Baqubah; and
police were hit by car bombs in Basra.
An Iraqi army officer told Associated Press this week: The
Iraqi army and police are easy targets for the terrorists. They
lack the modern equipment of the Americans.
Nevertheless, the Bush administration and the Pentagon are
stepping up the use of Iraqi forces to enforce the occupation.
The Washington Post reported this week that an entire area
of the volatile city of Mosul has been handed over to Iraqi army
units. The trial use of Iraqi troops in Mosul, the article stated,
is at the centre of the US militarys strategy to hand
off counterinsurgency operations to Iraqi security forces and
ultimately draw down the number of American troops.
Over the coming weeks, US troop numbers in Iraq are expected
to fall back to 135,000down from the 150,000 deployed in
the country to suppress the insurgency in the months before the
January elections. The reality in Iraq remains that the anti-occupation
resistance has not been broken. The local forces ostensibly loyal
to the US-sponsored government in Baghdad are not capable of doing
so.
A US military advisor attached to the Iraqi units, Staff Sergeant
Craig E. Patrick, commented to the Washington Post:
Its all about perception, to convince the American
public that everything is going as planned and were right
on schedule to be out of here. I mean, they [the Bush administration]
can [mislead] the American people, but they cant [mislead]
us. These guys [the Iraqi security forces] are not ready.
See Also:
New puppet government takes shape in
Iraq
[8 April 2005]
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