From the Los Angeles Times
Sadr's army proves hard to beat
U.S. soldiers battling Al Mahdi fighters say
that in the eyes of Baghdad residents, the militia offers more than
they can.
By Julian E. Barnes
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
August 23, 2007
BAGHDAD —
In the east Baghdad strongholds of the Al Mahdi militia, U.S. efforts
to weaken ties between the militant Shiite Muslim group and the Shiite
population are falling short, say American soldiers assigned to carry
out the plan.
The attempt to shift the loyalty of residents to the Iraqi central
government is failing because the militia is far more popular than
anything the Americans have to offer, many troops say.
The
campaign in Baghdad's poor Shiite neighborhoods is seen as an important
part of the broader U.S. counterinsurgency campaign underway in Shiite
and Sunni Arab neighborhoods across Baghdad. Although commanders say
the overall strategy is bringing Baghdad increasingly under U.S. and
Iraqi government control, enlisted men and noncommissioned officers say
it is flawed.
"They want to have the militia here," said one
experienced noncommissioned officer who has served multiple tours in
Iraq. "So, why are we here?"
The Americans see the militia as
a criminal organization engaged in racketeering and execution-style
slayings of Sunni Muslims, but many Iraqis believe the militants offer
the only protection against attacks by Sunni insurgents and are a
reliable source for scarce fuel supplies. So many residents reject the
American message of peace between Shiites and Sunnis and continue to
support the militia.
"These people are not going to change,"
said the noncommissioned officer in east Baghdad, who, like other
troops, spoke on condition of anonymity because his views differed from
those of his commander. "They should stand up to the militia, but they
want to have Shiite and Sunni separated."
The flaws underscore
the difficulty of crafting a strategy that can work in an environment
in which few trust the ability of U.S. forces or the central government
to improve their neighborhoods.
Many soldiers also say
practices that worked against insurgencies in other wars or in other
parts of Iraq may not apply to Baghdad's Shiite neighborhoods.
The
Al Mahdi militia is not a textbook insurgent group. To Iraqi Shiites,
the militia offers a source for basic services and support for the
political and religious work of popular anti-U.S. cleric Muqtada Sadr.
"The
Mahdi militia provides services and protects the region," said a
25-year-old clothing salesman in the Shiite neighborhood of New Baghdad
who gave his nickname as Abu Atwar. "Militiamen do some killings from
time to time, but we do not care about the crimes they commit. Only God
can make them pay for that because, as you know, no law is working in
Iraq now."
Even with the additional 28,500 combat and support
troops sent to Iraq in the Bush administration's buildup, there are not
enough soldiers to provide the around-the-clock protection needed to
erode the power of the militia.
"I don't feel we are winning
over people. They all know we are going home. Units change, but the
militia is always there," said Spc. Tyrone Richardson, 24, of Charlie
Company, 1st Battalion, 8th Cavalry. "For the militia, this is their
home. They can walk up to any house and intimidate the people. They can
get results. We can't protect everybody all the time."
Other
soldiers say it is simply a matter of intimidation that prevents
neighborhood residents from providing information to the Americans.
"They
are afraid they will get in trouble from us or trouble from the militia
in the neighborhood," said Sgt. Chris Wilson, 24, a member of Alpha
Company, 1st Battalion, 8th Cavalry.
When it comes down to it,
Iraqi residents of east Baghdad would rather get in trouble with the
Americans than with the militia, many soldiers believe.
"The
Iraqis think, 'The Americans may harass me. But they aren't going to
kill me. The militia, however, they will kill me or kill my family,' "
said the noncommissioned officer. "The people say: 'I trust the
terrorists. I trust that when the terrorist says he will kill my
family, he will do it.' But they say: 'I don't trust the American. He
has been saying I will have water and sewer for two years.' "
Most
insurgencies are fully opposed to the central government. But though
Sadr has withdrawn his ministers from the Shiite-dominated government,
his Al Mahdi militia has supporters throughout the ministries and
security forces. Such support, said one senior American officer, makes
fighting the militia particularly difficult, as does the likelihood
that some members of the Iraqi security forces are also in Sadr's Al
Mahdi militia.
"If we are spending energy figuring out who needs
to be marginalized in the [Iraqi] government, that is not classic
counterinsurgency," the officer said.
Iraqi residents tell U.S.
soldiers that there would be no need for the militia if the Americans
left. And militia supporters claim their attacks on the Americans are
justified.
Many Iraqis who back the militia do so in part
because of their continuing loyalty to Sadr's father, a revered cleric
believed to have been killed by Saddam Hussein's forces.
"People
feel completely comfortable about the Sadr militia taking care of
everything in Baghdad, especially in Sadr City and the neighborhoods
that ally with Muqtada Sadr," said Abu Sajad Asari, a water and sewage
contractor in east Baghdad.
Not all Americans serving in Iraq hold a pessimistic view of the
counterinsurgency approach.
Lt.
Col. Jeffrey Sauer, commander of the 1st Battalion, 8th Cavalry, says
U.S. intelligence on the militia has grown stronger. Sauer argues he
can turn the residents of east Baghdad away from the militia, which the
military calls Jaish al Mahdi, or JAM.
"The conditions were
not there two years ago to splinter people from JAM," he said. "The
conditions are there now and that is what we are pursuing."
Gen.
David H. Petraeus, the top American commander in Iraq, said he did not
believe that support for the militia was widespread. And with
improvements in security, much of the support will fade, he said.
"The
truth is, there is a little bit of mythology that the people support
Jaish al Mahdi," Petraeus said. "That is not our perception. Our
perception is that once the Al Qaeda threat is reduced, people will
reject groups like Jaish al Mahdi, that are basically criminal elements
extorting money in various schemes who are jeopardizing the
neighborhood by launching attacks."
U.S. commanders have made
Sunni extremist groups such as Al Qaeda in Iraq the main target of the
offensive. But Petraeus alleged "extremist militia elements" were a
"very serious threat to Iraq."
A White House report last month
said concerns remained about Iraqi political interference hindering
U.S. and Iraqi military operations against extremists.
U.S.
officials estimate that only about 5% of the Shiite militia members are
hard-core fighters behind attacks on American patrols and bases, and
say these "secret cells" are supplied by Iranian agents.
"These
are the ones trained, armed, funded and in some cases directed by the
Iranian Quds Force," Petraeus said in a recent interview. "They
represent more than just street thugs. Those are a very serious threat
to Iraq to the longer term security and stability."
U.S.
officials believe that Sadr is not in control of the "secret cells" and
is almost as worried about the influence of the Iranian agents as
Americans are. Some military and administration officials have
speculated that Sadr wants the U.S. to eliminate elements of his
militia that are under Iranian influence.
"The Sadr militia is a
complex organization. There are some parts you can live with and some
parts you can't," said a senior military officer who spoke on condition
of anonymity when discussing defense strategy. "The art of this is to
figure out how to maximize the first and minimize the latter."
Some
U.S. soldiers in east Baghdad are unsure that even a string of arrests
of militia members would do much good. One junior officer compared the
fight to the drug war in the United States, saying he believed that for
every "high value" militia member they detained, another one took his
place.
"The only way to change their attitudes is over
generations," the officer said. "They don't want our democracy, but we
keep saying, 'Take it, take it, take it.' "
Soldiers say they would like nothing better than for the militia to
leave the shadows and confront them directly.
"That
would be any tanker's dream if they came out of Sadr City in tanks. For
once, we could see the enemy," said Staff Sgt. Patrick Bussell, 36, of
Charlie Company.
But the soldiers know that won't happen.
"It is like we're fighting ghosts," said Wilson of Alpha Company. "It's
a little unnerving."
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times