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Tuesday, December 30, 2008

An Iraqi Intifada? The Wild-Weird And Ferocious Counter-Surge

Monitoring Iraq is now like watching a weather map of the Mid-West in tornado season. From every, unexpected direction all hell breaks loose with an unpredictability and novelty that we havent quite witnessed before. In the madness and complexity that is Iraq, the US surge is provoking a counter-surge of exceptional clashes, which are wilder, weirder and fiercer than in the past. A serious of unrelated, but successive events, including the intense battles for Haifa Street; the Mission Impossible attack on the Karbala Security Centre and an attack by an armed cult on the holy city of Al-Najaf, seems to be taking the struggle into an extraordinary and almost eccentric stage. What might before have had some method in its madness, appears to be giving way to a sort of madness in its method. Until now the usual suspects, i.e., hit-and-run attacks on US forces, tit-for tat sectarian killings and market bombings, while random, had, nevertheless, acquired a certain, strange predictability. But now the political order seems more like a tank of dancing gas molecules, where spontaneous combustion is the order of the day.

Recent events have been crammed with incongruity and paradoxes, sometimes verging on the absurd. The character of the insurgency has acquired starkly, contradictory features making it seem more like asymmetrical war in a hall of mirrors. On the one hand, there is a level of unity, professionalism, discipline and commitment, not seen before. While, on the other hand, there is a risqu, recklessness and bravado in their actions which sometimes has features of the downright bizarre or absurd. This all reflects a heightened level of social tension and despair, which comes not only from the impasse and suffering, but a sense that this is the last chance saloon. There is an odour of mania in the air, and a strong foreboding that something horrendous is about to happen.

This now means that all the old methods of trying to establish and maintain some form of order are redundant, and only the most novel and obscure of solutions can save the day. In such exceptional circumstances conservative thought is not only inadequate, but also categorically counterproductive. Likewise, solutions once considered contenders for national regeneration, now only lead events more quickly in the direction of destruction. Given the contradictions inherent in the situation and the nature of the main players, the outlook is bleak. Only a force exterior to and independent of all the main players (including and especially, the USA) could now offer a way out. Furthermore, such an unlikely trajectory must present itself quickly, because the inflammable material in society is so dense that an event can take now place, at any moment, which will catapult the situation beyond anyones control and proceed in ways, and at a speed, not hitherto imagined.

Al-Najaf: Insurgent Insanity

If the siege of Waco proved a handful for US law enforcement, the US now finds itself fighting two insurgent cults; Al Qaeda on the Sunni side and Jund al-Samaa or the Soldiers of Heaven on the Shiite flank. On January 28th,Iraqi forces, with US air support, faced off a huge group of fanatical, armed cult members trying to storm the holy city of Al-Najaf, their wives and children with them. The attack was suicidal lunacy from a military standpoint, given that Karbala was ringed with multiple, concentric bands of defenses for the purpose of protecting the holiest Shiite site during its most important religious pilgrimage. Nevertheless, the cult seemed to be whipped up in a manic, delusional belief that they could break through and massacre pilgrims and key Shiite clerics. This was part of a plan to provoke the reappearance of the Hidden Imam, a Shiite saint from 9th century, whom they believe will establish justice and peace throughout the world.

To make things more complex, the group, which has mostly Shiite members, also attracts some Sunnis. And just to muddy the picture further, they were reported to have had support from some of the local population, as well as some foreign fighters and Saddam loyalists.

About 800 of them fought a two-day pitched battle with the Iraqi Army, which was forced to retreat and call in US airpower. The group was heavily armed and used anti-aircraft missiles to bring down one American helicopter. The battle finally ceased after around 200 insurgents were killed, including the cults leader, reportedly armed with a hat and coat and two pistols. Perhaps Nietzsche was right when he observed, in individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations and epochs, it is the rule.

Mission Possible: Audacity and precision bordering on the fictitious.

The weekend before Al-Najaf, around 30, almost certainly Sunni insurgents, disguised themselves and a number of SUVs to look like US military brass, and, then, nonchalantly drove through 3 check points into the secure compound of the Karbala Provincial Joint Coordination Centre, where the US military had convened a meeting to discuss security for the upcoming, Ashura pilgrimage. Having entered the compound, the insurgents coolly picked out only American troops, killing 5 of them and leaving all Iraqi soldiers unharmed. They then left and passed back through the same checkpoints unheeded.

The operation had all the audacity and planning of a Western special forces undertaking, with almost Hollywood scale drama. But what exactly was the purpose of this expensive, high risk adventure? Propaganda value? Yes, but, perhaps more ominously, by kidnapping and shooting only Americans, it was a form of psychological warfare, almost as if they were making a statement, or delivering a menace telling the enemy that were coming to get you And you have nowhere to hide! And, moreover, from now on you will be treated just like sectarian victims. Expect to be tortured and executed!

Of course the Americans are incredulous and immediately blamed the Iraqis, pointing to collaboration and raising again the question of being able to trust them in any operations. There certainly is some explaining to do and some almost unbelievable security blunders. Undoubtedly, insider information was involved, but one cant get away from the sophistication and daring of a methodically and meticulously prepared operation, carried out so easily against such a superior foe. Strategists can only be shocked, because it also says that if the Iraqi Army cant implement one single high level security operation, and protect top brass and VIPs, what hope has it of battening down Baghdad, a city of 6 million people!

The Battle for Haifa Street A new tenacity and professionalism

This months battle for Haifa Street was the first inkling of a new Sunni strategy in the face of the anticipated US offensive. From the 4th to the 12th of January, for up to 12 hours a day for almost a week around 1,000 US and Iraqi troops were fought to standstill by 100 or so Sunni insurgents in a fire fight of a character and intensity not normally witnessed before.

Unlike most previous insurgent attacks, which are characterized by hit and run tactics, opportunistic sniper fire or roadside bombs, this was a sophisticated, well-commanded and coordinated assault by up to a dozen different Sunni insurgent groups, collaborating together. It was evidently a well-planned and implemented operation with the express intention of engaging large scale US and Iraqi forces in persistent, relentless and tenacious, close-quarter, urban combat.

Militarily, the battle at Haifa Street was important from a number of standpoints. Firstly, the combined efforts of US and Iraqi forces were unable to defeat the insurgents. The 500 US troops engaged there could neither contain nor crush what were probably at most 100 insurgents. Moreover, the weakness of the Iraqi forces and the big doubt over whether they could hold onto areas after the US withdraws was exposed. There were some 400 Iraqi Army involved and, if they had faced the attack on their own would have been routed. The 500 US troops were fought to a standstill, even though they enjoyed the advantage of air support in the form of repeated assaults by apache attack helicopters and even F-15 jet fighters, which proved worthless in dislodging the determined insurgents.

A key factor in the Sunni success was their high mobility and command and coordination. They changed positions swiftly and often in small numbers of only two or three men, melting away and then reemerging in different positions. Indeed, during the battle, US troops were not just fighting across one side of the street to the other, but they were taking fire from all different directions at once, and were frequently forced to run for their lives, abandoning building after building.

What made Haifa different was from a military standpoint that was the insurgents were more than able to fight the American over a long period in a more classical-style war conflict situation. The Sunni were commanded and co-ordinated in highly professional way and acted with discipline and a high degree of flexibility. They furthermore applied novel tactics that were used to great effect and which the US troops were unable to respond to. At times the guerrillas ran rings around helpless US units and looked near to inflicting a defeat on them, despite having a manpower deficit of some 4 or 5 to 1 in the US favour and one to ten if one bothers to count the Iraqi Army.

The poor US performance must increase reservations about their ability to clear Baghdad of militias and insurgents. At the same time, in the week long battle, Iraqi forces showed more evidence of their inability and unreadiness to take on insurgents, casting further doubt on their potential for success in both the first wave and then in the critical second phase of coming operations, when they are expected to of hold onto areas liberated by US troops. While the US and Iraqi forces appeared uncoordinated and lacking in trust, the new phenomenon for the insurgents was the collaboration in combat of around 12 different insurgent troops, prepared to subjugate themselves to a common command. Finally, there appeared to be a definite deficit in levels of morale between the two battling sides the insurgents coming out on top, while the US, and, especially the Iraqis not showing the same level of tenacity and audacity shown by their opponents.

Assault n2 Operation Boomerang Twice

So following a 10 day pause to lick their wounds and reassess their tactics, the US declared they had learned their lessons from the first encounter and were ready to retake the thoroughfare. On the 24th of January they launched a second offensive or rather a third. Because it comes to light now that, in fact, after intense fighting, they had already cleared Haifa Street of insurgents in 2004 and handed it over to the Iraqis. Unfortunately, that doesnt seem to have worked out. Evidently the insurgents had taken back full control and the Iraqi Army has fled the area. Things, obviously, werent going to be the same this time, or were they?

On Wednesday morning the day erupted to the thunder of heavy artillery and a huge display of aerial firepower. In scenes more reminiscent of the Russian obliteration of Grozny, the US mercilessly pounded apartments and other high-rise buildings from air and ground. What was called Operation Tomahawk Strike 11 was in full swing. Heavy gunfire, sniper bullets and mortars and RPG rockets met them. The fighting lasted from dawn to dusk for some three days. Civilian casualties were much higher than before, some 37 on one day alone, including women and children, prompting a cry of genocide from the Muslim Scholars Association. Film crews were embedded from CNN and heavy media coverage was invited in, obviously in anticipation of a victory this time round. However, when two days coverage had evaporated and evidently Operation Tomahawk 11 had become Operation Boomerang Twice the media silently slunk away.

What was clear was that Haifa was indented as a model operation as part of the new offensive a series according to officials, of target raids to disrupt illegal militia activity and help restore Iraqis security force control in the area. But despite the massive numbers, 1,000 or more US and Iraqi troops, with massive heavy weapons and aerial back up, they failed again to dislodge or seriously impede the insurgents.

The insurgents are clearly much better prepared and ready to take casualties. However, the damage inflicted was minor even according to the official communiques that some 30 militants were killed and 35 detained. A small number for such a massive investment. Although they had supposedly learned the lessons of earlier in the month the Americans yet again showed the futility of this form of traditional warfare against asymmetrical forms.

The effectiveness of the Sunni defense and the spread of fighting to the two other Sunni districts of Al Fadl and Adhamiya, could now mark a shift away from an insurgency based mostly on psuedo or adapted peasant guerrilla warfare, to a more sophisticated form of urban guerillarism, also incorporating, but not relying on elements of classical warfare. The combination of the flexibility and agility of terrorist and guerrilla tactics with classical methods of warfare could prove a formidable mix, which would leave US forces totally confused and wrong-footed.

Had the US and Iraqi forces wanted a better simulation exercise they could have asked for it. However, if this is a harbinger of things to come, the ability of the insurgents to intensify and diversify tactics means that the outcome doesnt bode well for the real thing. They could well be facing a much more humiliating and devastating defeat than the first time they tried to secure Baghdad. One has to say that after employing such numbers and force for just one area, what hope do they have of clearing and holding a city of 6 million?

The intensification of sectarian atrocities, combined with a number of unusually belligerent and audacious attacks on US forces, appears to suggest, that these are not just a response to the hanging of Saddam Hussein, but a decision to meet the new US troops head on, fire with fire! But the character of the attacks is new, in that there is not only a highly effective military professionalism involved, but also a new level of ferocious determination, daring and bravado, almost to the point of wild recklessness and suicidal inhibition.

This is the last chance saloon mentality. There is not going to be another Battle for Baghdad, - this is the one and only final one. The Americans know it, the government knows it, the insurgents and militias know it, and the people know it too. What each of them also knows is that it is not going to succeed in any of its objectives. Beneath the surface everyone already knows what the outcome will be and few wish to face it. Nobody wants the US to win, but everybody knows Armageddon follows, should they likely loose.

An Iraqi Intifada - on the menu or pie in the sky?

The recent assault on Al-Najaf is in a way a distorted expression of a desire among section of the Iraqi people for unity in battle. Reports of support from local people confirm that despite its perversion through the prism of this cult, there are still substantial reservoirs of unity, which are heavily suppressed by the current pervasive sectarianism. These are reservoirs which neither the Maliki government or the US can tap from above. They can only develop from below, but it may well be triggered by some atrocity or massacre on the part of Americans.

An intensified offensive is pregnant with unforeseeable inflammatory incidents. Almost certainly, American troops will engage in massacres and atrocities at some point, with far-reaching consequences. When morale begins to break down, so too do morals. The abuse at Abu Ghraib prison, the atrocities carried out in Fallujah, Haditha and Mahmoudiya are only the tip of the iceberg of what is already going on and mere blips on the radar screen of what is to come as the battle gets more brutal. In what will be considered by both sides as a fight to the last, with US troops engaged in the most intense urban warfare ever, it is inevitable that US troops will cause large scale collateral damage at some point.

In these circumstances, outrage among both sides of the community could fuel the fire of the war in Iraq to frenzied levels. A spiral of clashes could occur. Even instances of joint Sunni/Shia actions, rising up from among the masses, could not be ruled out, when anger against the Americans reaches boiling point. In todays Iraq it would mean the appearance of tens of thousands of armed protesters. It should be not be forgotten that many streets have their own volunteer defence forces and that almost every man in the country is armed with rifles and small arms for his own and his familys self-defence. These same weapons could be quite easily turned on the Americans by outraged mobs demanding their immediate withdrawal. US troops could be caught in a position of mowing down hundreds of civilians threatening to overwhelm them. If such things come about, then, for the first time, serious demands could be made to indict US generals and officers for war crimes in front of international tribunals.

Should the current Iraqi insurgency become a full-blown uprising or intifada, it would be even more ferocious and deadly than in the Occupied Territories. It would quickly become a mass, armed uprising involving hundreds of thousands, if not millions on the streets. Numbers of US casualties would explode geometrically. Thousands of troops could loose their lives within hours. US TV screens may soon be carrying pictures of helpless units trapped under fire, with soldiers being dragged from burning buildings and smoldering humvies and then being torn apart by crazed mobs. The spectre of beheaded American corpses lining the Baghdad thoroughfares and US troops swinging from the lampposts is not out of the question. As the battle intensifies outside powers will supply the insurgents with anti-aircraft weaponry and other more sophisticated arms. The sight of Black-Hawk-downs falling from the sky is already almost becoming commonplace. Sooner rather than latter, the US Army would have no option but to flee the country.

Ironically, just at the time that the Palestinians appear to be descending in factional civil war, an Iraqi Intifada is now the countrys only hope of holding the nation together. Despite, the seemed impossibility of it, in paradoxical situations like this the rules of formal logic are often stood on their heads. Against all current expectations, should a popular uprising begin - especially as a result of an American atrocity and regardless of whatever section of the population starts it a real uprising would have an incredible power of attraction across the sectarian divide. The population would sense an astonishing force of empowerment as it suddenly becomes aware that, united, it represents an irresistible force, which its oppressor simply could have no hope of withstanding.

Moreover, such a movement would tend to also sweep over the heads of the existing sectarian and insurgents and militia leaders. New leaders could be thrown up from among the people and a new popular, non-sectarian government could even be swept into power. This would be a real surge and it would traverse the country like a tidal wave. Its ripple effects would be felt across the Middle East, where pan-Arab, nationalist, anti-American feelings could even engulf the present rise of fundamentalism.

However, the trouble with all unusual movements of the sea is that it depends on many factors in the environment converging at once, for it to come about. Unless it firmly changes the shoreline, such a popular surge can be dissipated into many different channels and the old patterns will reemerge. Concretising such a movement in the face of so many complex forces and challenges would extremely difficult, but not totally impossible.

Today everything is in flux. The vortex is beginning to spin. The situation is becoming even more wild and unpredictable. All that is certain in the specifics of development are the general facts, which are; the US is doomed to come out of this emasculated as a great power. In other words it too will lose a great part of its former identity. Iraq, for its part, will either be gripped by a unifying, popular, revolutionary uprising, which will build a new identity out of the positive parts of the old; or like the dreadful sight of a psyche broken to pieces by trauma, it will tear its own Self apart from inside out and, finally, cease to be a part of reality.

Stephen J. Morgan is a former member of the British Labour Party Executive Committee, a political writer and accredited Emotional Intelligence Coach. His first book was the "The Mind of a Terrorist Fundamentalist - the Cult of Al Qaeda." He has lived and worked in more than 27 different countries and is also a professional speaker who has spoken at more than 2000 meetings including the National Convention of the American Psychological Association and The Global Human Resources Conference He is currently writing a book on the Bush Administration. He is a political psychologist, researcher into Chaos/Complexity Theory and lives in Brussels (Old Europe) http://morgansreview.tripod.com Contact morganreply@yahoo.com

A Pakistani paramilitary soldier stands guard at a checkpost on the Jamrud Road, leading to Afghanistan after its closed by authorities, Tuesday, Dec. 30, 2008 in Peshawar, Pakistan.  A Pakistani official says a main road used to ferry supplies to U.S and allied troops in Afghanistan has been closed because of an army offensive against militants in northwest Pakistan.  (AP Photo/Muhammad Sajjad)AP - Pakistan suspended truck shipments of U.S. military supplies through the famed Khyber Pass on Tuesday after launching an offensive against militants who are trying to cripple Washington's war on a resurgent Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan.

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