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U.S. Faces a
"Battle of Algiers" in Baghdad
Martin Sieff
There
is a grim inevitability to the latest wave of suicide
car bombings, assassinations and other attacks in Iraq
and a dire conclusion can no longer be avoided. The
United States
now has a Battle of Algiers on its hands in
Baghdad.
It is
very likely that veteran jihadi, or holy warrior Islamic
extremists from outside Iraq, are now applying their
expertise in recruiting, training and organizing suicide
bombers, especially in ambitious operations like the
assassinations of UN special envoy Sergio Vieira de
Mello and of Shiite Ayatollah Mohammed Baqr al-Hakim in
August.
It is
also very likely that veteran Ba’athists, especially
Special Republican Guards veterans, who quietly
dissolved their units and slipped away during the
misleadingly rapid three week military conquest of Iraq
in March and April are involved in many of the hundreds
of attacks on U.S. troops in their country, now running
at rates of 20 to 35 such assaults a day.
And it
is certainly true that there are plenty of places in
Iraq, especially around the countryside, where things
are a lot quieter than in Baghdad, as administration
spokesmen and apologists claim. But none of those
things, nor the limited but real success of the
administration in getting international donors to pony
up several billion dollars for reconstruction at the
Madrid conference can alter a central fact: a full-scale
guerrilla war against U.S. and Western forces in Iraq is
now fully underway, and it has already reached
formidable proportions.
The
attacks are by no means limited to
Baghdad
or even only to major cities. And U.S. and British
military analysts have told UPI they cannot be all
blamed on old Iraqi Baathists or foreign jihadi
troublemakers either. On the contrary, these
professional military experts are explicit that the
overall pattern of violence clearly shows a widespread,
popular revolt with a high degree of decentralization
and local initiative. The resistance is rapidly evolving
and organizing, they say, but it is organizing from the
bottom up rather than from the top down.
And for
all the problems the
U.S.
occupation problems now face in Basra, Falluja and
around the country, their biggest headache is in
Baghdad.
The attacks of this past week show that only half a year
since the U.S. armed forces rolled into the Iraqi
capital as unstoppable conquerors, they are facing a
full-scale urban revolt as serious as anything the
British Army faced in Belfast during a quarter century
of urban conflict there from the riots of August 1969 to
the Irish Republican Army cease-fire of 1994.
Indeed,
in many respects, the security dilemma the U.S. Army now
faces in Baghdad is far worse than anything the British
and French faced in
Belfast
and
Algiers.
Belfast
had been a British city for all of its 300-year history
before the new wave of "Troubles" began in August 1969.
France had ruled and colonized Algiers for 120 years
before the great and terrible FLN uprising began in
1954. Algiers, indeed, under French law was part of
Metropolitan France. In other words, the British and
French armies knew the cities of Belfast and Algiers
very well. And they could also count on large elements
of the population being loyal and supportive of them.
Two-thirds of
Northern Ireland
and Belfast's population were Protestant unionists. The
IRA could only hope to count on support from people who
were a minority even within the minority Catholic
republican community.
In
Algeria, the French army could count on the strong
support of the pieds noir, the populist French
immigrant colonist community and to the end of the
eight-year war; they continued to enjoy loyal and strong
support from large elements of the Muslim majority.
After Algerian independence, hundreds of thousands of
these people were massacred, along with their families,
by the victorious FLN forces.
But in
Baghdad, the United States has no prior history,
experience or associations whatsoever. And
proportionately, it even has far fewer troops on the
ground than the British did in Northern Ireland or the
French, with their great conscript army, did in Algeria.
At the
height of the Northern Ireland Troubles, Britain had to
flood the tiny province of 1.5 million people with
35,000 troops. And the security threat they had to
contain came only from unrepresentative elements within
a community of half a million people. Even if the
guerrilla violence in Iraq gets no worse than Northern
Ireland was -- and in fact it already has -- that would
require around 600,000 U.S. and allied troops compared
to the around 160,000 British and U.S. ones in the
country today. And even that would be on the assumption
that Iraq's majority 15 million Shiites stay entirely on
the sidelines: an assumption that is looking
increasingly uncertain.
Also,
Baghdad is a vastly larger and more populous city with
at least 15 times more people than either Belfast or
Algiers had during their worst years of guerrilla-terror
insurgency. In their wave of coordinated suicide bomb
attacks in a single day this past week, the guerrilla
forces in Baghdad showed a capability and ruthlessness
comparable to that of the National Liberation Front, or
FLN, during the frightful Battle of Algiers in the 1950s
and the early 1960s, arguably the most horrific of all
modern urban guerrilla wars.
Back in
August, after the bombing assassinations of UN envoy
Vieira de Mello and Ayatollah Baqr al-Hakim, we
concluded in UPI Analysis, "Not only does the United
States have a wolf by the ears in Iraq, but the muzzle
is off and the wolf has learned how to bite. Fast."
Today the wolf is bigger than ever and growing by the
day, and its appetite for violence is growing too.
Martin
Sieff is chief news analyst for United Press
International. This adapted piece is used with the
permission of UPI. |