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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Helicopter downing in Basra underscores hostility to British
occupation
By Peter Symonds
12 May 2006
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The downing of a British military helicopter in the Iraqi city
of Basra last weekend once again demonstrated that the British
occupation forces in the Shiite south of the country are just
as ruthless, and just as hated, as their American counterparts.
The Lynx helicopter crashed into residential buildings in the
Basra suburb of Saee last Saturday afternoon, after being hit
by ground fire, possibly an anti-aircraft rocket. All five military
personnel aboard were killed. Hundreds of jubilant Iraqis swarmed
onto the streets, raining stones and Molotov cocktails on British
soldiers who attempted to reach the area.
As described by the New York Times: The crash
in Basra drew crowds of young men and boys, who cheered and waved
shirts in a celebratory spectacle as smoke rose from behind several
houses, where the helicopter had gone down. In scenes broadcast
on Al Jazeera television, men were seen lobbing stones at the
crash site and at British soldiers who had rushed to it.
British troops took hours to secure the site. Reuters reported
that eventually around 600 soldiers were needed to maintain a
cordon around the wreckage. Sergeant Stuart Lansdowne told the
agency his troops came under a constant hail of rocks, petrol
bombs, grenades and homemade bombs. It was a constant stream
of about eight hours of folks being pummelled, he said.
British forces responded with plastic bullets and live rounds.
Basra hospital authorities said at least four Iraqis, including
a child, died at the scene and another 42 were wounded. While
the British military attempted to blame the deaths on hostile
militia, local residents were in no doubt as to who was responsible.
I cannot understand why they [British soldiers] started
randomly shooting at innocent people, Karar told the Telegraph.
British authorities pointed the finger at Shiite fundamentalist
cleric Moqtada al-Sadr and his militia, the Mahdi Army, in an
effort to deflect attention from the obvious popular hostility
to the British presence in Basra. The immediate targetting of
the Mahdi Army has more to do with US efforts to marginalise Sadr
in the new puppet government in Baghdad than any evidence of involvement
in the attack.
Lieutenant-General Rob Fry, British deputy commander of multinational
forces in Iraq, issued what amounted to an ultimatum to newly
installed Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to crack down on
groups operating in Basra. He warned that if the government failed
to curb the militias, military action might have to be used. He
[al Sadr] cant be taken as a serious politician and have
this tinpot army around him, Fry declared.
In the UK, the embattled Blair government tried to downplay
the incident, amid more calls for the prime minister to step down.
Newly installed Defence Secretary Des Browne declared that calm
and control have been restored and reassured parliament
that Basra was not rising up. According to a recent
Telegraph poll, 57 percent of Britons oppose the Iraq war
while only 33 percent support it.
In a public relations exercise last Sunday, British soldiers
were ordered to patrol Basras streets to demonstrate that
all was peaceful. On the same day, Basra regional governor Mohammed
al-Waili appeared on the steps of the British Embassy announcing
that the Basra police would resume their cooperation with the
British military. Just three months ago, the regional council
was compelled to break off relations amid widespread anger over
the release of a video showing British soldiers beating Iraqi
youth.
Nothing can disguise the overwhelming opposition to the British
occupation of Basra. The British military is compelled to rely
on helicopter transport because its troops have come under repeated
attack on the ground. An intelligence official told the Daily
Mirror: British troops are now in a terrible position
in the city as it is clear the public mood is swinging towards
wanting them to leave. Whereas troops were once able to go out
and take part in reconstruction schemes and meet locals it is
now extremely difficult for them to do so.
A US embassy Provincial Stability Assessment leaked
last month included Basra in the six of Iraqs 18 provinces
ranked as serious. According to the document, the
serious rating meant having a government that
is not fully formed or cannot serve the needs of its residents;
economic development that is stagnant with high unemployment,
and a security situation marked by routine violence, assassinations
and extremism.
Fuelling the discontent is a deepening social disaster in Basra.
The distress caused by high levels of unemployment, particularly
among young people, is compounded by a lack of basic services,
including electricity supplies, health care and education. Housing
Department director Hamad Ghali told the media in February that
more than 250,000 families, or about a third of the citys
population, were without homes.
Last month Marie Fernandez, spokeswoman for the European aid
agency Saving Children from War, estimated that child mortality
in Basra had increased by 30 percent as compared to before the
US-led invasion. Children are dying daily and no one is
doing anything to help them, she said. Many children under
five were dying from extreme cases of diarrhoea because the citys
hospitals had no IV fluids. Doctors cited unsafe water, malnutrition,
infectious diseases, maternal stress and poverty as the primary
causes of infant deaths.
Accusations against Iran
Allegations of Iranian support for the anti-occupation militias
in Basra have surfaced once again. An article in the Telegraph
based on British army sources claimed that the helicopter had
been shot down by a Russian-made surface-to-air missile. Even
though an official report will not be completed for months, the
newspaper speculated that the weapon was one of hundreds
of missiles... known to have been sold to Iran and some to Syria.
Top US and British officials have repeatedly accused Iran of
interference in Iraq and supplying resistance forces
with sophisticated bombs used in roadside attacks on occupation
troops. A spate of unsubstantiated claims emerged in the aftermath
of a murky incident last September in which two undercover Special
Air Service (SAS) soldiers were detained by Iraqi police in Basra
driving a car packed with explosives and weapons. British troops
backed by helicopters and armoured vehicles fought a pitched battle
to free the two from a Basra jail.
The British military has never provided an adequate explanation
of what the two SAS soldiers were doing. None of the accounts
leaked to the press, including one to the Sunday Times,
which claimed the SAS was involved in a secret war
against Iranian-backed insurgents, explained why the two soldiers
had explosives. One obvious explanation was that the SAS, which
is notorious for its dirty undercover operations in Northern Ireland,
is carrying out provocations aimed at deliberately fomenting communal
tensions and creating the pretext for further repression.
It is clear that Basra has become a den of intrigue as 8,000
British soldiers attempt to suppress armed resistance and intimidate
a hostile local population of more than two million. Earlier this
year, the British military purged sections of the Basra police
in an effort to eliminate the influence of hostile militias. It
may well be that Iranian agents are operating in Basra and southern
Iraq among a population that has strong historical and religious
ties to Iran. At the same time, British intelligence is operating
in force in Iraq, particularly in the southern areas.
An article entitled Britain, Iran playing with Iraqi
Shiite fire on the Asia Times website in October
pointed to the growing concerns of Shiite organisations at British
activities. These fears are not without basis, as every
civilian and military agency of the British secret state has a
presence in Iraq. These include the Secret Intelligence Service
(better known as MI6), GCHQ (the electronic surveillance arm of
the British intelligence), the Army Intelligence Corps and elements
of the revamped Force Research Unit (an ultra-secret branch of
British military intelligence, which gained notoriety for its
abuses in Northern Ireland). Even the British domestic security
service (MI5) and the Metropolitan police Special Branch maintain
a presence in Iraq. Given the breadth and depth of the intelligence
presence, it is not altogether surprising that the Iraqi Shiites
are fast losing confidence in the British.
While this substantial intelligence apparatus is directed at
suppressing Iraqi resistance groups, there is another aspect of
the intrigues in Basra that is rarely commented on. The city is
located a short distance from the Iranian border and there is
a regular flow of people in both directions. While British officials
accuse Iran of infiltrating into southern Iraq, it is just as
likely that the British operatives are crossing the border into
the Iranian province of Khuzestan.
As the US and Britain have adopted a more aggressive stance
over Tehrans nuclear programs, there have been a steady
stream of press reports pointing to Washingtons plans for
military strikes against Iran. In lengthy articles in the New
Yorker in early 2005 and again this year, veteran American
journalist Seymour Hersh noted the activities of US special forces
inside Iran.
Khuzestan holds a particular strategic and economic significance
as the centre of the Iranian oil industry. Its largely Arab population,
though predominantly Shiite, includes rebel groups opposed to
Persian domination. While the US and Britain have denied Iranian
allegations that US and British special forces were involved in
a series of bombings last year in Khuzestan, the capture of two
undercover SAS soldiers in Basra with a carload of explosives
lends weight to the accusation.
As well as destabilising the regime in Tehran, such activities
could also be linked to the Pentagons broader planning for
attacks on Iran. What has been described as the Khuzestan
gambita rapid US strike across the border to seize
and hold Irans oil-rich regionhas been discussed on
Globalsecurity.orga thinktank with close connections
to the US defence establishment.
Whether or not there was any Iranian involvement in the downing
of the helicopter, the anti-occupation sentiment revealed by the
incident is a direct consequence of the activities of the British
military in suppressing opposition to the illegal occupation of
Iraq and in preparing for new colonial adventures in neighbouring
Iran.
See Also:
British companies draw huge
profits from occupied Iraq
[1 April 2006]
Bush administration drags
Iraq towards the abyss of civil war
[1 March 2006]
Video shows British Army brutality
in Iraq
[14 February 2006]
One hundredth British military
death in Iraq
[3 February 2006]
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