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Iraqi guerrilla gives U.S. a dire
warning
Baghdad -
"Commander A," a hawk-nosed, stubble-bearded former Iraqi intelligence
officer who says he leads anti-American guerrillas in this area, sat
in a car on a deserted country road screened by seven-foot reeds
Monday and laid out his vision for driving U.S. forces out of Iraq.
Slowly, he said, the "resistance" has
been building its strength, accumulating stores of weapons and
collecting money from residents. Former supporters of Saddam Hussein
and observant Muslims alike are rallying to the cause, he asserted.
Thousands are willing to die to evict U.S. forces from the country,
and attacks are now being centrally coordinated, he said.
"The American Army will feel that
Vietnam was just a playground by comparison," the self-proclaimed
leader of Serayeh al Jihad — the "Companies of Jihad" — said. At one
point his deputy flinched when two U.S. helicopters passed overhead.
The man who gave his name as
Commander A and the deputy who called himself Commander B agreed to
meet with an American journalist and discuss their activities,
offering a rare glimpse of what may be the thinking behind the
insurgency against U.S. forces in Iraq.
The clandestine meeting was brokered
by an Iraqi journalist from Fallouja who has covered the resistance
for Arab television networks and worked in the Hussein-era Information
Ministry. Although the two reputed resistance fighters were boastful
and prone to exaggerated assertions of their effectiveness, their
knowledge of recent operations, their wariness and their connections
to Hussein's intelligence service lent some credence to their claims.
They said that the guerrillas are
preparing to expand beyond the so-called "Sunni triangle"; that their
group aims to abduct U.S. servicemen and give them to Osama bin Laden
to barter for the Al Qaeda prisoners held in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba; and
that they are starting to develop into a full-fledged underground army
that could take over as soon as they drive U.S. forces from Iraq.
In line with the U.S. assessments
that the resistance is mainly made up of former regime loyalists, both
men were security officers under the Baathist government and said they
want to restore Hussein to power.
At the same time, they said, they
have now embraced the call for a holy war against the United States
espoused by groups such as Al Qaeda, and they also consider themselves
fighting for Islam as well as for their country and Hussein. "And our
symbol will be the virtuous sheik, Osama bin Laden," Commander A
declared.
The Iraqi journalist who brokered the
meeting — and whose sympathies lie with the resistance — said the two
men led a cell of about 25 fighters that had been attacking the U.S.
Army with roadside bombs and ambushes.
Attacks Increasing
Although U.S. officials have played
down the military significance of the guerrilla activity, the U.S.
commander in Iraq, Army Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, acknowledged last
week that attacks are becoming more frequent and are showing greater
sophistication.
U.S. intelligence sees little
evidence that the disparate opposition forces are coalescing around a
common Islamist agenda or leadership structure, but officials do not
rule out the possibility of some limited coordination.
"There may be limited cooperation in
some instances in terms of carrying out attacks, although there
certainly isn't definitive evidence pointing in that direction," a
U.S. official said Monday in Washington. "They do have some
ideological differences. But one of the reasons that would cause them
to cooperate to some extent is mutual hatred of the United States and
interest in trying to get the U.S. out of Iraq."
Since the war began March 20, 320
Americans have died and about 1,300 have been wounded. More than 80
combat deaths have occurred since President Bush declared major combat
over May 1, mostly through roadside bombings and grenade and
small-arms attacks.
Fallouja
has been one of the main centers of the insurgency that began to
emerge in late May. Attacks in and around the city west of Baghdad
recently have been occurring about 20 times a day, the U.S. military
says.
On the highway from Baghdad to
Fallouja on Monday morning, U.S. troops were diverting traffic briefly
onto an overpass. "Bomb," a U.S. soldier called out in explanation as
cars slowed down.
Both reputed guerrilla fighters, who
did not give their ages but appeared to be in their 40s, presented
themselves as major figures in the fighting in the Fallouja area.
Their activities include recruiting and directing fighters, taking
part in "operations" that have killed Americans and coordinating with
fighters in other areas, they said.
Both had worked before the war for
the Iraqi Intelligence Service, the Mukhabarat, and said they regarded
the guerrilla war as the continuation of the war begun in March.
In a possible reflection of
self-delusion on the part of the guerrillas, they denied that the
United States has captured most of the 55 Baathist leaders listed in
the U.S. military's deck of most-wanted Iraqis, or that it had killed
Hussein's sons, Uday and Qusai. And in an allegation that appears to
have no basis in reality, they asserted that the United States is
vastly underreporting military deaths in Iraq.
"Why don't they convey the reality to
the American people, how many soldiers are killed every day?"
Commander A asked. "I challenge them.... They say only 1% of the
reality."
The contact began with a rendezvous
outside the principal mosque in Fallouja, then moved to a deserted
stretch of road west of the city, and, when U.S. military vehicles
were spotted in the distance, shifted again to the empty country road
on Fallouja's southwestern outskirts. The hood of their car was raised
so that it would look to passersby that the vehicle had broken down
and was being repaired.
Despite their bravura, the two —
dressed in simple white robes and not revealing any weapons — seemed
extremely nervous; one fingered translucent red worry beads throughout
the discussion. They took precautions to avoid being followed, and
hesitated to go to any house in Fallouja for fear they could be
traced.
Defending His Actions
Commander A said the reason for the
guerrilla activity was plain from the current circumstances of Iraq.
"We believe that there should be resistance to defend our homes and
the dignity of our country," he said. "We don't accept the label of
terrorists. If I am defending my home and the dignity of my country
and people, how can I be called a terrorist?"
He complained that U.S. forces
degrade Iraqis by searching homes, making residents get on the ground
at checkpoints and, when taking them into custody, placing plastic
bags over their heads. He underscored the tribal nature of Iraqi
society and a tradition of revenge.
"We have our own traditions and
customs.... When someone is harmed or beaten or killed from my tribe,
I will respond to that," he said. "There will be a feud.
"For the sake of God and for
liberating Iraq from these treacherous occupiers led by Bush and his
dog Blair, motivated by Zionism, we will retaliate for every single
Iraqi and Muslim, and not only those in this area." Among the
guerrillas' immediate targets, the commander said, were the members of
the Iraqi Governing Council. "Our advice to them is to leave the
country as soon as possible," he said.
He denied that their group was behind
the assassination last month of Iraqi Governing Council member Aqila
Hashimi, who was ambushed leaving her home and died five days later.
He also denied involvement in the bombing in Najaf that killed
esteemed Shiite leader Ayatollah Mohammed Bakr Hakim, and the truck
bombing of the United Nations that killed chief envoy Sergio Vieira de
Mello. Baathist loyalists had been identified as the most likely
suspects by U.S. investigators.
Commander A asserted that the
guerrilla activities — including roadside bombings, ambushes and the
shelling of U.S. bases in the area — are inspired but not personally
directed by Hussein. The attacks, he said, are being coordinated by
what he called an "Islamic command."
"The instruction for us is to move
outside [this] province.... In the near future, God willing, it will
be a hell for them everyplace," he said. "The center of command is
Baghdad itself. This spark started from Fallouja, this city of
mosques. But now it has turned into an Islamic flare."
It seems questionable that the
guerrilla activity could be extended beyond the Sunni tribal areas in
the triangle between Ramadi, Baghdad and Tikrit.
Ethnic Kurds in the north and the
Shiite majority in the south largely abhor Hussein and fear the Sunni
Muslim minority, which was privileged under Hussein.
The Shiites especially have kept
anti-Americanism in check at the behest of their religious leaders,
who reason that the Shiites would be the main victims of a Baathist
resurgence.
The men said the fighters under their
command have been undertaking as many as six or seven operations a day
around Fallouja.
With the approaching Muslim holy
month of Ramadan, operations would increase, Commander A said, because
it is an especially propitious time to die. "For us, death is
martyrdom.... They [the fighters] are as eager to die as others are to
live."
The interview ended when the two men
and the Iraqi journalist got out of the car in the middle of a traffic
jam in Fallouja, near a wall with several lines of pro-Hussein
graffiti, and melted away into the crowd. --
Los Angeles Times
Brudirect.com
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