|
WSWS
: News &
Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
Hundreds die as US military steps up operations in Iraq
By James Cogan
30 January 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The US military is stepping up its attacks on both Sunni and
Shiite opponents of the occupation of Iraq as the Bush administrations
plan for an increase in US troop numbers and an offensive in Baghdad
is put into motion.
American and Iraqi government troops are continuing the bloody
operation launched at the beginning of the year to seize the Haifa
Street district of Iraqs capital from Sunni guerillas. The
compact area of offices and housing along the Tigris River, just
several kilometres from the Green Zone headquarters of the US
occupation and the Iraqi puppet government, has been a centre
of resistance since the March 2003 invasion.
Intense fighting took place last Wednesday during Operation
Tomahawk Strike 11an assault aimed at clearing insurgents
from residential areas adjacent to Haifa Street. As was the case
earlier this month, American troops called in air strikes and
helicopter gunships against guerilla positions in the once densely
populated streets. More than 30 fighters were allegedly killed
and 35 arrested.
There was no report on civilian causalities. Adnan Dulaimi,
however, a leading Sunni parliamentarian, denounced the operation
as a barbaric attack on an area filled with
poor people and lower-class families. A resident told the
Los Angeles Times: What kind of security plan is
this? They are destroying us, pounding an area less than one square
kilometre with mortars, and shells from helicopters and their
tanks. Most of the districts inhabitants are reported
to have fled their homes, adding to the countrys estimated
1.7 million internally displaced persons.
The attack on Haifa Street is part of a sweeping operation
authored by the new American commander in Iraq, General David
Petraeus, to try to wrest control of Baghdad from an array of
anti-US opponents. To do so, he requested extra forces. An additional
17,500 US troops will be deployed to the city over the next few
months, as well as two or three brigades of ethnic Kurdish troops
from northern Iraq.
Bushs national security advisor Stephen Hadley argued
in yesterdays Washington Post that there was no alternative.
Headlined Baghdad is key, the op-ed comment declared:
Any plan that limits our ability to reinforce our troops
in the field is a plan for failureand could hand Baghdad
to terrorists and extremists before legitimate Iraqi forces are
ready to take over the fight. That is an outcome the president
simply could not accept.
The first 3,200 American reinforcementsa brigade of the
82nd Airborne Divisionarrived in the capital over the weekend.
For the first time, the US military intends to move in force
into Sadr City, the Shiite working class district of two million
people in eastern Baghdad, and attempt to destroy the Mahdi Army
militia formed in 2003 by followers of cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.
The prospect is looming of bitter and protracted urban warfare
between the occupation forces and the thousands-strong militia.
Civilian casualties will be considerable.
Top US officers have denounced the Mahdi Army as the
greatest threat to the occupation. It is recruited from
among the urban working class and poor, who are overwhelmingly
opposed to the US presence and the Bush administrations
perspective of opening up Iraqs oil resources to transnational
corporations. The militiamen are also hostile to US threats of
aggression against Iran. Even though the Sadrist leaders are desperately
seeking to avoid a confrontation, it is by no means certain that
they could prevent Mahdi Army fighters from attacking US troops
within Iraq if Iran were attacked.
The official US pretext for the crackdown is the claim that
Mahdi Army fighters are responsible for the killing of Sunni Arabs
in Baghdad in what is an escalating sectarian war. The initial
stages of US operations to disarm and break-up the militia are
well underway. Last week the US military announced that raids
over the past 45 days had led to the arrest of 600 Mahdi Army
militiamen and five key leaders. Among them is Abdel Hadi al-Daraji,
one of Sadrs main lieutenants, who was seized by American
troops and detained on murder allegations.
Despite the targeting of their own supporters, Sadrist parliamentarians,
who make up a key faction of the Iraqi government headed by Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki, voted over the weekend to support the
Baghdad security plan. Sadr has made no public statements condemning
the offensive or the arrests. On January 19, he told the Italian
newspaper La Repubblica he had moved his family into safe
houses and was not calling for resistance.
The London-based Sunday Times reported on the weekend
that some leading militia commanders have left the country. Other
media reports indicate that sections of the Mahdi Army have gone
to ground and hidden their weapons. The US ambassador to Iraq
Zalmay Khalilzad warned earlier this month there was a danger
the militiamen were lying low, avoiding conflict now in
order to fight another day.
More militant factions of the Mahdi Army are likely to bitterly
resist any US entry into Sadr City, regardless of Sadrs
stance. An article in the New York Times on January 18
indicated that the Sadrist leadership was becoming discredited
in the eyes of some supporters. The article commented: Iraqis
who live in the neighbourhoods where the Mahdi Army is strong
say the primary motivation for avoiding full-scale confrontation
with the Americans is money. Members have grown rich on political
channels of financing from Iran as well as from Iraqi government
ministries, the residents say, and the militiamen do not want
to fight the Americans directly for fear of losing their new found
status.
Disaffection among Shiites with the clerical and political
establishment is already widespread. While the elites have been
hoisted to political power and gained economic privileges from
the US occupation, millions of ordinary people face catastrophic
living conditions, police state repression and a fratricidal civil
war between Iraqs religious and ethnic groups.
Events over the past several days near the southern city of
Najaf are one indication of the growing disaffection of sections
of the Shiite masses with the Shiite parties that dominate the
Iraqi government
On Sunday, Iraqi government troops, supported by US tanks,
helicopter gunships and jet-fighters, carried out a bloody massacre
of adherents of the Soldiers of Heaven, a small Shiite
sect that had taken control of several villages close to Najaf.
Between 200 and 300 members of the organisation were slaughtered
and hundreds more were reportedly wounded and captured. Women
and children are believed to be among those killed.
The fighting against the Soldiers of Heaven was the most intense
in southern Iraq since the end of a Mahdi Army uprising in 2004.
In the course of the battle, two American pilots were killed when
their helicopter was shot down.
The sect was allegedly plotting to assassinate the top Shiite
clerics in Iraq, including grand ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, and
seize control of the Imam Ali mosque in Najafthe most important
shrine of the Shiite faith. The conspiracy was timed to coincide
with the Ashura festival, during which thousands of Shiite believers
march from Najaf to the nearby city of Karbala. The killing of
the clerical hierarchy was apparently intended to trigger a generalised
Shiite uprising against both the US occupation and its puppet
government in Baghdad.
Najafs deputy-governor told the New York Times
that the Soldiers of Heaven had attracted naïve people
to its ranks with doomsday declarations that the Imam Mahdi had
returned. In Shiite theology, the Mahdia Shiite leader who
disappeared in the ninth centurywill return in a time of
great evil and bring peace and justice to the world. If people
are being attracted to such beliefs, however, it is one reflection
of the widespread hostility to the US occupation, its Iraqi supporters
and the nightmare it has created.
The 24 hours of fighting against the Soldiers of Heaven point
to the type of the carnage that can be expected when US troops
try to root out and destroy the Shiite militias in the warren-like
and densely populated streets of eastern Baghdad. The surge of
troops ordered by the Bush administration will inevitably lead
to a sharp escalation in both Iraqi and American casualties.
See Also:
Iraq's colonial occupier, the US, denounces
"foreign meddling"
[30 January 2007]
Troop surge paves way for wider war
Bush authorizes shoot-to-kill policy against Iranians in Iraq
[29 January 2007]
US occupation turns 3.7 million Iraqis
into refugees
[23 January 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |