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Politics : Don't Blame Me, I Voted For Kerry -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ChinuSFO who wrote (79229)9/5/2006 11:35:25 PM
From: RichnorthRespond to of 81568
 
US Losing Control
Of Iraq Fast
By Dahr Jamail and Ali Al-Fadhily
Inter Press Service
9-5-6

RAMADI (IPS) - The U.S. military has lost control over the volatile al-Anbar province, Iraqi police and residents say.

The area to the west of Baghdad includes Fallujah, Ramadi and other towns that have seen the worst of military occupation, and the strongest resistance.

Despite massive military operations which destroyed most of Fallujah and much of cities like Haditha and al-Qa'im in Ramadi, real control of the city now seems to be in the hands of local resistance.

In losing control of this province, the U.S. would have lost control over much of Iraq.

"We are talking about nearly a third of the area of Iraq," Ahmed Salman, a historian from Fallujah told IPS. "Al-Anbar borders Jordan, Syria and Saudi Arabia, and the resistance there will never stop as long as there are American soldiers on the ground."

Salman said the U.S. military is working against itself. "Their actions ruin their goal because they use these huge, violent military operations which kill so many civilians, and make it impossible to calm down the people of al-Anbar."

The resistance seems in control of the province now. "No government official can do anything without contacting the resistance first," Abu Ghalib, a government official in Ramadi told IPS.

"Even the governor used to take their approval for everything. When he stopped doing so, they issued a death sentence against him, and now he cannot move without American protection."

Recent weeks have brought countless attacks on U.S. troops in Haditha, Ramadi, Fallujah and on the Baghdad-Amman highway. Several armoured vehicles have been destroyed, and dozens of U.S. soldiers killed in the al-Anbar province, according to both Iraqi witnesses and the U.S. Department of Defence.

Long stretches of the 550km Baghdad-Amman highway which crosses al-Anbar are now controlled by resistance groups. Other parts are targeted by highway looters.

"If we import any supplies for the U.S. Army or Iraqi government, the fighters will take it from us and sell it in the local market," trader Hayder al-Mussawi said. "And if we import for the local market, the robbers will take it."

Eyewitnesses in Ramadi say many of the attacks are taking place within their city. They say that the U.S. military recently asked citizens in al-Anbar to stop targeting them, and promised to withdraw to their bases in Haditha and Habaniyah (near Fallujah) soon, leaving the cities for Iraqi security forces to patrol.

"I do not think that is possible," retired Iraqi police Brigadier-General Kahtan al-Dulaimi from Ramadi told IPS. "I believe no local unit could stand the severe resistance of al-Anbar, and it will be the last province to be handed over to Iraqi security forces."

According to the group Iraq Coalition Casualty Count, 964 coalition soldiers have been killed in al-Anbar, more than in any other Iraqi province.. Baghdad is second, with 665 coalition deaths.

Residents of Ramadi told IPS that the U.S. military has knocked down several buildings near the government centre in the city, the capital of the province.

In an apparent move to secure their offices, U.S. Army and Marine engineers have started to level a half-kilometre stretch of low-rise buildings opposite the centre. Abandoned buildings in this area have been used repeatedly to launch attacks on the government complex.

"They are trying to create a separation area between the offices of the puppet government and the buildings the resistance are using to attack them," a Ramadi resident said. "But now the Americans are making us all angry because they are destroying our city."

U.S. troops have acknowledged their own difficulties in doing this. "We're used to taking down walls, doors and windows, but eight city blocks is something new to us," Marine 1st Lt. Ben Klay, 24, said in the U.S. Department of Defence newspaper Stars and Stripes.

In nearby Fallujah, residents are reporting daily clashes between Iraqi-U.S. security forces and the resistance.

"The local police force which used to be out of the conflict are now being attacked," said a resident who gave his name as Abu Mohammed. "Hundreds of local policemen have quit the force after seeing that they are considered a legitimate target by fighters.."

The U.S. forces seem to have no clear policy in the face of the sustained resistance.

"The U.S. Army seems so confused in handling the security situation in Anbar," said historian Salman. "Attacks are conducted from al-Qa'im on the Syrian border to Abu Ghraib west of Baghdad, all the way through Haditha, Hit, Ramadi and Fallujah on a daily basis."

He added: "A contributing factor to the instability of the province is the endless misery of the civilians who live with no services, no infrastructure, random shootings and so many wrongful detentions."

According to the new Pentagon quarterly report on Measuring Security and Stability in Iraq, Iraqi casualties rose 51 percent in recent months. The report says Sunni-based insurgency is "potent and viable."

The report says that in a period since the establishment of the new Iraqi government, between May 20 and Aug. 11 this year, the average number of weekly attacks rose to nearly 800, almost double the number of the attacks in early 2004.

Casualties among Iraqi civilians and security forces averaged nearly 120 a day during the period, up from 80 a day reported in the previous quarterly report. Two years ago they were averaging roughly 30 a day.

On Aug. 31 the Pentagon announced that it is increasing the number of U.S. troops in Iraq to 140,000, which is 13,000 more than the number five weeks ago.

At least 65 U.S. soldiers were killed in August, with 36 of the deaths reported in al-Anbar. That brought the total number killed to at least 2,642.

(c)2006 Dahr Jamail.

All images, photos, photography and text are protected by United States and international copyright law. If you would like to reprint Dahr's Dispatches on the web, you need to include this copyright notice and a prominent link to the dahrjamailiraq.com website. Website by photographer Jeff Pflueger's Photography Media jeffpflueger.com . Any other use of images, photography, photos and text including, but not limited to, reproduction, use on another website, copying and printing requires the permission of Dahr Jamail. Of course, feel free to forward Dahr's dispatches via email.

More writing, commentary, photography, pictures and images at dahrjamailiraq.com



To: ChinuSFO who wrote (79229)9/8/2006 2:51:45 AM
From: RichnorthRespond to of 81568
 
Al-Qaeda's "Simon Says"
by ROBERT PARRY

Republican leaders always take the public statements of al-Qaeda seriously and then do the opposite. It's a kind of reverse "Simon Says."A common refrain from Republican leaders is that Americans must take the public statements of al-Qaeda seriously and then do the opposite. It's a kind of reverse "Simon Says." If al-Qaeda says leave Iraq, American soldiers must stay; if al-Qaeda says defeat George W. Bush and his party, Americans must return them to office.

Republican National Committee Chairman Ken Mehlman revived this theme last week as the Bush administration ratcheted up criticism of Democrats as terrorist "appeasers." Mehlman cited public statements by al-Qaeda leaders about their plans to drive Americans from Iraq and then make it a base of terrorist operations.

"We ought to not ignore when they say they're going to do that," Mehlman said in arguing that withdrawing from Iraq would play into al-Qaeda's hands. [Washington Post, Aug. 31, 2006]

President George W. Bush has made similar points while urging Americans to "stay the course." For instance, earlier this year, Bush told a crowd in Nashville, Tennessee, that America's only option in Iraq was "victory."

"I say that because the enemy has said they want to drive us out of Iraq and use it as safe haven," Bush said. "We've got to take the word seriously of those who want to do us harm."

Bush returned to this theme of how Americans must take al-Qaeda's words seriously in a Sept. 5 speech that essentially accepts the view of neoconservative hardliners who insist that the United States has no choice but to fight World War III with radical Islamists.

Making Sense?

But does that make sense? Should Americans take al-Qaeda's public pronouncements so seriously that this relatively small terrorist band is given a kind of jujitsu veto power over U.S. politics and foreign policy? Or should Americans assess a situation on their own and make judgments as to what's best for the United States?

Al-Qaeda wouldn't be the first extremist group to exaggerate its own influence and the likelihood of accomplishing its outlandish goals - in hopes that overreaction by an adversary will help it become what it otherwise never could be.

During the Cold War, it was common for some fringe leftist group to show up at a broad-based political rally, take a photo of its few members holding a banner, and then pretend that the group was responsible for the large turnout. The group also might issue some demands that few took seriously.

Indeed, the best that such a fringe group might hope for was that the authorities would act as if the group really were significant, thus elevating its notoriety among other activists who then would become potential recruits.

Similarly, al-Qaeda and its leader Osama bin Laden have benefited from President Bush's insistence on exaggerating their importance.

After the 9/11 attacks, the vast majority of Muslims shared the world's revulsion at al-Qaeda's actions. Even in Iran, hundreds of thousands of Iranians marched in sympathy for their longtime adversaries in the United States. Syria provided U.S. intelligence help in hunting down terrorists.

But Bush's blunderbuss "war on terror" - which heavily targeted Muslims - turned around that initial wave of support, allowing al-Qaeda to sell itself as the defender of the Islamic world and regain a measure of respectability.

Meanwhile, back in the United States, Bush got a reverse bounce by presenting himself as the leader who would protect America from the supposedly vast international reach of al-Qaeda. At Consortiumnews.com, we have referred to this mutually beneficial relationship as the "The Bush-Bin Laden Symbiosis."

Public Statements

But there remains the question of whether - as Ken Mehlman warns - the American people "ought not to ignore" what al-Qaeda is saying. One answer is that the appropriate U.S. reaction would depend on the circumstances surrounding al-Qaeda's statements.

If, for instance, al-Qaeda leaders are making public declarations, especially those directed at the American public, their statements probably should be discounted because they could have a secondary intent, i.e. the jujitsu influencing of U.S. opinion. Greater weight might be given to intercepted internal al-Qaeda messages.

So, for instance, when bin Laden broke nearly a year of silence on the Friday before the U.S. election in 2004, his tirade against Bush might best have been viewed as an attempt to manipulate the American voters. Most likely, bin Laden, a student of U.S. politics, understood that he could send voters to Bush by attacking Bush.

Privately, CIA analysts reached exactly that conclusion as did Bush. "Bin Laden certainly did a nice favor today for the President," said deputy CIA director John McLaughlin in opening a meeting to review secret "strategic analysis" after the videotape had dominated the day's news, according to Ron Suskind's The One Percent Doctrine.

Suskind wrote that CIA analysts had spent years "parsing each expressed word of the al-Qaeda leader and his deputy, [Ayman] Zawahiri. What they'd learned over nearly a decade is that bin Laden speaks only for strategic reasons. ... Today's conclusion: bin Laden's message was clearly designed to assist the President's reelection."

Jami Miscik, CIA deputy associate director for intelligence, expressed the consensus view that bin Laden recognized how Bush's heavy-handed policies - such as the Guantanamo prison camp, the Abu Ghraib scandal and the war in Iraq - were serving al-Qaeda's strategic goals for recruiting a new generation of jihadists.

"Certainly," Miscik said, "he would want Bush to keep doing what he's doing for a few more years."

The CIA analysts were troubled by the implications of their own conclusions. "An ocean of hard truths before them - such as what did it say about U.S. policies that bin Laden would want Bush reelected - remained untouched," Suskind wrote.

Even Bush recognized that his struggling campaign got a boost from bin Laden. "I thought it was going to help," Bush said in a post-election interview about the videotape. "I thought it would help remind people that if bin Laden doesn't want Bush to be the President, something must be right with Bush."

In the last days of Campaign 2004, Bush's supporters exploited bin Laden's attack against Bush, calling it an "endorsement" of John Kerry. Pollsters recorded a jump of several percentage points for Bush, from nearly a dead heat to a five- or six-point lead. On Election Day, Bush won by an official margin of less than three percentage points.

Internal Worries

While casting a very suspicious eye on al-Qaeda's public remarks, Americans might give greater weight when they learn of al-Qaeda's internal discussions from intercepted communications describing the group's assessments of its real problems and potential.

For instance, a 6,000-word letter purportedly written by Osama bin Laden's deputy Ayman Zawahiri in mid-2005 and sent to Abu Musab Zarqawi expressed concern about an early U.S. military withdrawal from Iraq.

The letter, which was reportedly intercepted by U.S. intelligence, showed Zawahiri suggesting strategies to keep Zarqawi's foreign jihadists from simply deserting the field and leaving Iraq once the Americans were gone.

"The mujahedeen must not have their mission end with the expulsion of the Americans from Iraq, and then lay down their weapons, and silence the fighting zeal," the letter said, according to a text released by the office of the U.S. Director of National Intelligence.

Zawahiri suggested that al-Qaeda leaders in Iraq talk up the "idea" of a caliphate along the eastern Mediterranean as a way to avoid a collapse of the Iraqi theater of operations if the Americans left, according to the letter.

The letter also asked if the embattled al-Qaeda operatives in Iraq might be able to spare $100,000 to relieve a cash squeeze facing the group's top leaders back in hiding, presumably along the Afghan-Pakistani border.

Yet, even with this fretful letter in hand, Bush warned Americans in fall 2005 that al-Qaeda planned to follow up any U.S. withdrawal from Iraq by turning the country into a base to "establish a radical Islamic empire that spans from Spain to Indonesia." Bush said such an "empire" would spell the strategic defeat of the United States. [See Consortiumnews.com's "Osama's Briar Patch."]

In his Sept. 5 speech, Bush returned to this alarmist view. "This caliphate would be a totalitarian Islamic empire encompassing all current and former Muslim lands, stretching from Europe to North Africa, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia," Bush said. "We know this because al-Qaeda has told us."

Apocalyptic Vision

But how realistic is Bush's apocalyptic vision?

In the so-called "Zawahiri letter," al-Qaeda comes across as a marginal movement worried about the reaction of many Muslims to its brutal tactics. Al-Qaeda even lacked a reliable means for getting out its messages. Zawahiri complains that six of his audio statements "were not published for one reason or another," the letter said.

Though the "Zawahiri letter" depicts a nearly bankrupt movement facing political and physical isolation, Bush gave the American people another image: al-Qaeda as a menacing strategic threat preparing for first regional and then global domination.

Many Middle East experts, however, say al-Qaeda jihadists represent less than 10 percent of the Iraqi insurgency, which is dominated by disaffected Sunnis fighting to stop their own marginalization in a country they have long dominated.

Al-Qaeda has been tolerated by many of these Iraqi Sunnis out of desperation and expediency. If the Americans left, al-Qaeda could find itself in trouble not only because the jihadists will have lost their "fighting zeal," as the "Zawahiri letter" fears, but because Iraqis of all sects might want to rid the country of these violent foreign interlopers.

Middle East experts also have noted that al-Qaeda's goals always have been relatively modest: seeking to punish the United States for its interference in the Muslim world, its positioning of military bases in Saudi Arabia and its support for Arab governments that Islamic fundamentalists consider corrupt.

But - in the five years since 9/11 - al-Qaeda also has learned that its popularity has risen among disaffected Muslims in large part because of the excesses in the "war on terror" carried out by the United States and its allies, including Israel.

Al-Qaeda now realizes that its greatest strength is the overreaction of its American adversaries in the Bush administration.Al-Qaeda now realizes that its greatest strength is the overreaction of its American adversaries in the Bush administration.

So whatever al-Qaeda leaders say publicly about their intent - or when Bush's advisers say Americans must do the opposite of whatever al-Qaeda supposedly wants - the American people might want to take the whole business with a large grain of salt.

baltimorechronicle.com