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To: American Spirit who wrote (829)3/29/2006 12:12:02 PM
From: Bill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 14758
 
The Jayson Blair Times prints all the news that's fit to flush.



To: American Spirit who wrote (829)3/29/2006 12:47:05 PM
From: Karen Lawrence  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 14758
 
The Bush administration's handling of the war is turning allies into enemies
Two Fronts In Iraq
Robert Dreyfuss
March 29, 2006



Robert Dreyfuss is the author of Devil's Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam (Henry Holt/Metropolitan Books, 2005). Dreyfuss is a freelance writer based in Alexandria, Va., who specializes in politics and national security issues. He is a contributing editor at The Nation, a contributing writer at Mother Jones, a senior correspondent for The American Prospect, and a frequent contributor to Rolling Stone.He can be reached through his website: www.robertdreyfuss.com

One week into the fourth year of the war in Iraq, the United States is now fighting two robust insurgencies, not one. The first insurgency, of course, is the Sunni-led one, a resistance movement made up of former and current Iraqi Baathists, many loyal to Saddam Hussein, former Iraqi military officers and fighters from the old Republican Guard and a coalition of tribal and Sunni religious leaders bitterly opposed to the U.S. occupation. That force shows no sign of weakening. And indeed, it is steadily killing American soldiers and Marines, along with scores of Iraqi army and police recruits weekly.

But now a Shiite insurgency has emerged—nearly full-blown and with Iranian support—to confront the occupation. Because it can draw on the majority of Iraq’s population, and because it can count on lethal assistance from Tehran, it is a far more deadly threat to U.S. forces than the first insurgency. It’s safe to say that most Americans, who’ve been paying attention to the first insurgency, have failed to notice the emergence of the second.

Needless to say, the two insurgencies are also battling each other, in what can only be called Iraq’s civil war. There’s little chance that they will unite against their common foe, the United States. But that doesn’t make the situation any less deadly for U.S. forces in Iraq. What is means is that the United States is now fighting virtually the entire Iraqi Arab population. Only the non-Arab Kurds seem loyal to the United States now, and the notoriously fickle Kurds, famed for shifting their allegiances on a dime, can’t be counted on as permanent friends, either.

Last week, Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, the neoconservative warrior who is America’s proconsul in Baghdad, officially declared war on the second insurgency. In a definitive interview in The Washington Post, Khalilzad threw down the gauntlet against Iran and its Shiite allies, accusing the Iranian military and secret service of sponsoring the militias, paramilitary forces and death squads who are wreaking havoc in Baghdad and across southern Iraq. “Our judgment is that training and supplying, direct or indirect, takes place, and that there is also provision of financial resources to people, to militias, and that there is presence of people associated with [Iran’s] Revolutionary Guard and with [Iran’s] MOIS,” said Khalilzad. (The MOIS is Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence and Security.) He went on to declare, accurately, that more Iraqis are being killed by the second insurgency than by the first. “More Iraqis in Baghdad are dying—if you look at the recent period of two, three weeks—from the [Shiite] militia attacks than from the terrorist car bombings.”

Khalilzad’s declaration capped a period of several months during which the United States has turned to confront the second insurgency. It represents a major shift by Washington, and it began late last year when U.S. forces raided the infamous torture prison in which hundreds of Sunnis detainees were being held illegally, tortured with electric drills and murdered. Since then, gradually, while continuing to battle the first insurgency, U.S. forces have engaged the Shiites, too. From time to time, U.S. forces have seized death squads in action, uncovered more Shiite-run torture prisons and skirmished with forces allied to Moqtada Al Sadr’s Mahdi Army, one of the Iranian-allied Shiite militias. Further, Khalilzad definitively broke with Iraq’s interior minister, Bayan Jabr, an official with the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, whose own militia, called the Badr Brigade, is a 20,000-strong force created and armed by Iran.

Then, on Sunday, just days after Khalilzad’s declaration of war against Insurgency II, U.S. forces led an attack against a fortified Shiite compound in Baghdad. That raid, it should be noted, was apparently carried out with the able assistance of Iraqi army units made up of Kurds, who enthusiastically massacred Mahdi Army forces inside what may or may not have been a mosque.

The result, so far at least, is nothing short of a full-blown crisis, in which the entire Shiite spectrum—from Sadr’s Mahdi Army to SCIRI to Prime Minister Jaafari’s Al Dawa party, which has its own small militia—sees itself in open conflict with the United States. Virtually the entire Shiite coalition is condemning the United States, attacking Khalilzad for allegedly favoring the Sunnis and threatening to end its cooperation with the United States. Unsaid, of course, is the possibility that many of the Shiite militias might start to attack U.S. and British forces in Iraq, something they have mostly refrained from doing thus far. Making matters worse, President Bush and Ambassador Khalilzad imperiously told the Shiites this week that their choice for Iraq’s permanent prime minister, Ibrahim Al Jaafari, was unacceptable. It was a stunning diktat that belies the American insistence that Iraq is a democracy. Rather unconvincingly, Khalilzad told the Post: “I have been reduced—and I am not complaining—to an observer, which is a good thing.” Some observer.

www.tompaine.com