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Iraq: Who did the US military massacre near Najaf?
By James Cogan
2 February 2007
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Many aspects of what transpired last Sunday on the outskirts
of the southern Iraqi city of Najaf are confused and unclear.
But one thing is certain: American and British jets and helicopters
killed hundreds of men who were resisting an assault by Iraqi
government troops on the village of Zarqa. Who the men were is
still the subject of controversy. However, an increasing number
of credible reports have been published alleging that the official
version of events is a crude attempt to cover up a terrible massacre.
Iraqi authorities have claimed that the defenders of Zarqa
were members of the Soldiers of Heaven, a Shiite splinter
group, which was conspiring to attack the Ashura religious festival
in Najaf on Monday and assassinate the top Shiite clergy, including
religious leader Ali al-Sistani. Government troops, acting on
a tip-off, launched a pre-emptive attack but were beaten back.
Iraqi and American ground reinforcements were called in and repeated
US and British air strikes razed much of the village.
The outcome was a slaughter. Iraqi officials claim that 263
sect members were killed and another 400 taken prisonerof
whom 210 were wounded. A correspondent for the Los Angeles
Times who visited the scene on Tuesday described a compound
of eight farms, surrounded by a defensive berm and trench, which
had been devastated by US airpower. The newspaper wrote: Mangled
bodies filled the trenches... contorted and burned from the bombing
campaign. A few were blown to pieces. The fighters included young
boys as well as middle-aged men. Some apparently held ordinary
day jobs.
The Los Angeles Times correspondent reported that he
saw a copy of a newspaper published by the Soldiers of Heaven
and that he was shown a book outlining the groups beliefs,
which allegedly had been found at the scene.
The Soldiers of Heaven is a doomsday cult that believes that
the Imam Mahdi has returneda figure in Shiite theology who
will come back to earth in a time of evil, end the breach between
Shiite and Sunni Muslims and bring peace to the world. A Shiite
cleric, Ahmad al-Hussan al-Yamami, reportedly claimed in 1999
to have met the Mahdi and has subsequently built a congregation
of about 5,000 in the major southern city of Basra. Both Shiites
and Sunnis joined the cult.
A man named Abdul Zahra has been identified as the person who
claimed to be the returned imam. The Iraqi government alleges
that he was among those killed on Sunday. Other articles report
Ahmad al-Hussan was slain as well.
The alleged motive for seeking to murder Sistani and other
leading Shiite clerics was to eliminate the religious opposition
to their claim that Abdul Zahra was the Mahdi. Major General Hussein
Kamal, the Iraqi interior ministry undersecretary for security,
told Associated Press: They started surfacing two years
ago as a political movement in southern Iraq and gained followers.
In the end they carried arms against the state. The Soldiers
of Heaven, the Iraqi government insists, intended to enter Najaf
posing as Ashura pilgrims, kill the clerical hierarchy, take control
of the Imam Ali mosque and proclaim the Mahdis return. The
apparent aim was to trigger a wholesale uprising against the US
occupation.
This entire story has been dismissed as a fabrication by the
Iraqi newspaper Azzaman, Patrick Cockburn writing in the
British Independent, and Dahr Jamail, writing for the International
Press Service (IPS). Both Cockburn and Jamail write from Iraq
and have built up a number of independent sources over the past
four years. In 2004, Jamail played a central role in exposing
US military war crimes in the city of Fallujah, such as the use
of phosphorous bombs against civilian targets, indiscriminate
killings by marine snipers and the strafing of ambulances.
All three articles have reported that the people slaughtered
at Zarqa were members of two Arab tribes, the Hawatim or al-Hatami
and the Khazail or al-Khazaali, who reportedly oppose the
Shiite fundamentalist parties that dominate the Iraqi government.
Fighting broke out after a soldier at an Iraqi military checkpoint
fired on a Hawatim convoy making its way toward Najaf to participate
in the Ashura celebrations. Their leader and his wife were killed,
provoking a retaliatory attack by the tribesmen. Khazaali tribesmen
en route to Najaf also came under fire and joined the battle against
the government troops, who called in reinforcements and, ultimately,
US air strikes.
Dahr Jamail reported: The fighting took place on the
Diwaniya-Najaf road and spread into nearby date-palm plantations
after pilgrims sought refuge there. American helicopters
participated in the slaughter, Jassim Abbas, a farmer from
the area told IPS. They were soon there to kill the pilgrims
without hesitation but they were never there for helping Iraqis
in anything they need. We just watched them killed group by group
while trapped in those plantations. Much of the killing
was done by US and British warplanes, eyewitnesses said.
Abdulimam Jabbar, a representative of the Soldiers of Heaven
in Basra, has denied that the sect was involved at all. He told
Azzaman: This is part of a propaganda campaign to
discredit our group. The sect, he declared, was peaceful
and does not believe at all in violence. This was supported
by Reider Visser, the editor of the Iraqi history website www.historiae.org,
who told Reuters there was no record of them using violence
in the past.
Cockburn has suggested in the Independent that the accusation
that the Soldiers of Heaven were involved is an attempt by the
Iraqi government to cover up its use of US airpower to slaughter
tribal opponents. He reported: The messianic group led by
Ahmad al-Hassani, which was already at odds with the Iraqi authorities
in Najaf, was drawn into the fighting because it was based in
Zarqa and its presence provided a convenient excuse for what was
in effect a massacre. The Hawatim and Khazail tribes are
opposed to the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq
(SCIRI) and the Dawa Party, who both control Najaf and make
up the core of the Baghdad government.
According to sources cited by Dahr Jamail, the tribes have
called for the building of a united movement to oppose the sectarian
civil war taking place between Sunni and Shiite extremists and
to end the control of the government by Shiite fundamentalist
parties.
As the controversy developed, the Iraqi government embellished
its conspiracy theory yesterday with accusations that Ahmad al-Hassan
was in fact a former intelligence operative of Saddam Husseins
Baath regime. Contradictory claims were made by officials, with
some asserting he had links to the Sunni extremists of Al Qaeda,
and others declaring he was financed by the Shiite regime in Iran.
The New York Times noted that the reports have only
added to confusion about who exactly the Americans and Iraqis
had fought in a long battle beginning Sunday.
The truth may not be known for some time. What can be said,
however, is that the massive firepower unleashed indiscriminately
at Zarqa reflects the tenuous control the US military and the
Iraqi government exert over the country, including in the predominantly
Shiite south of the country.
The battle was the bloodiest in southern Iraq since the end
of a short-lived uprising by supporters of cleric Moqtada al-Sadr
in mid-2004. Last year, the southern provinces were relatively
stable. The opposition of millions of Shiites toward the US occupation
was diverted by Shiite fundamentalist parties such as SCIRI, Dawa
and the Sadrists into participation in the December 2005 elections.
They won support by promising to use the US-established parliament
to demand a timetable for the withdrawal of the foreign occupiers
and bring about rapid improvements in the catastrophic living
conditions that face the working class and rural poor.
The illusions that existed a year ago have been dashed. Social
conditions have worsened; sectarian tensions have burgeoned into
civil war; and the US military is increasing its troop numbers.
The resulting alienation and anger is aggravating the numerous
currents of opposition that exist toward the US occupation and
its puppets in Baghdad.
Whether the slaughter outside Najaf was inflicted on a cult,
anti-government tribesmen or a combination of both, it demonstrates
that the illegal American presence in Iraq can only be continued
by repression and indiscriminate killing in every part of the
country. The scale of the massacre is a warning of what is being
prepared as US operations are stepped up in Baghdad under Bushs
planned surge.
See Also:
Stepped up US preparations for war against
Iran
[1 February 2007]
Steny Hoyer at the Brookings Institution:
House majority leader lays out Democratic position on Iraq
[1 February 2007]
Iraqs colonial occupier,
the US, denounces foreign meddling
[30 January 2007]
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