U.S. prepares to withdraw, Iraqi
resistance prepares for battle
'There will be a war in Baghdad,' warns a leader. Insurgents are bitter
about the lack of progress since laying down their arms. Their demands
have been unmet, they say, and now the U.S. is leaving.
By Ned Parker
11:14 PM PDT, May 24, 2009
Reporting from Baghdad — Baghdad will burn, the resistance leader warns.
"If we hear from the Americans they are not capable of supporting us .
. . within six hours we are going to establish our groups to fight
against the corrupt government," says the commander, a portly man with
gold rings and lemon-colored robes who, perhaps understandably, spoke
on condition of anonymity. "There will be a war in Baghdad."
The commander and another insurgent leader interviewed for this story
belong to the secret world of Sunni tribesmen and old military officers
who laid down their arms and helped bring relative peace to Iraq in the
last two years. They decided to try to fight the Shiite religious
parties in control of the government through political channels instead
-- but they never renounced the insurgency.
Now the dormant insurgent groups, with men, weapons and networks
intact, are approaching their moment of truth. If their efforts to
enter the mainstream fail, it appears almost inevitable that they will
take up arms again, either after national elections early next year or
sooner.
With U.S. forces preparing to withdraw from Iraqi cities next month,
insurgent groups see no sign of progress on their demands for the
Americans to guarantee their entry into the political system and
protect them from the parties in power.
As the insurgents watched and waited, they saw the Shiite-led
government continue to jail their fighters, despite their decision to
hold their fire. Likewise, they noticed the inability, or
unwillingness, of U.S. troops to stop a crackdown against leaders of
the Awakening movement, their Sunni brethren who left the insurgency
for formal partnerships with the Americans.
The disenchantment of the Sunnis also could have implications for
Afghanistan, where the U.S. military hopes to reproduce the success of
the Iraq "surge" by reaching out to moderate Taliban elements. The fate
of the Awakening movement and the inactive insurgent groups could cause
Taliban fighters to think twice before embarking on a similar path.
"Perceptions can be hard to predict, but in principle it could reduce
Taliban willingness to realign with us in Afghanistan if we fail to
protect our friends in Iraq," said Stephen Biddle, a defense expert at
the Council on Foreign Relations who served as an advisor to the U.S.
military in Iraq during the 2007 troop buildup.
In the end, the distrust between the Shiites and Sunnis involved may be
too strong to overcome. The Iraqi government views the armed groups as
a Trojan horse for Saddam Hussein's Baath Party to return to power and
are adamant about blocking a creeping coup from inside Baghdad's
government. For their part, the insurgent leaders see a government that
is a proxy for neighboring Shiite-led Iran.
A U.S. military official, speaking on condition of anonymity, says
military and U.S. Embassy personnel are frustrated by their inability
to reconcile the government and armed groups. They worry it's only a
matter of time before insurgent factions renew their armed uprising.
"When they finally realize America is an impotent force, or acting like
one, are they going to give up and say it's useless and return to armed
conflict to topple the government?" the official asked. "Are they going
to take up arms against the coalition as well?"
Contacts between armed groups and the Americans have revolved around
insurgent commanders' demands for protection from arrests and
harassment by the Iraqi government, the restoration of military
officers to their old jobs and help in entering politics. The Americans
have not given any firm answers to their demands.
Squished in a tiny chair, the Sunni commander, who has as many as
12,000 fighters at his disposal, speaks bluntly about what will happen
if the Americans can't deliver.
"Our last option is to go back to resistance, to fighting. We gave our
word to the coalition forces, but this is our last option," says the
former military intelligence general, who led fighters in Salahuddin
province north of Baghdad after the U.S.-led invasion in 2003.
He says that all options will be on the table as the Americans draw
down. He makes it clear that because of the U.S. military, his group is
hoping for a peaceful resolution, but that that could quickly change.
"If the Americans leave Baghdad in 24 hours, the street belongs to the
resistance and the people. The people are boiling. They understand now
the government is representative of Iran," he says.
The insurgent commander, who heads a group called the Iraqi Liberation
Army, describes stopping his war against the Americans at the end of
2007. He had already turned his guns on the group Al Qaeda in Iraq that
year.
After being wounded in battle, he was picked up by U.S. forces and
treated on one of their bases. They didn't realize he was on their
wanted list. Soon after his release, a series of talks were brokered
with the Americans and a truce was struck.
"Our deal was to be friends, not enemies. I believe if we put our hands
with those people, it is better than the religious parties. They are
human beings. We trust them," the commander says.
"We gave orders to stop violence against the U.S. forces. We started
negotiations with them."
But the commander complains that as his alliance with the Americans
emerged, Shiite religious parties in the government started trying to
arrest him.
The commander gestures to the man sitting next to him as his link to
the U.S. military. Abu Fatma, a slight figure in a gray suit and
glasses, belongs to an armed group in the north, estimated to have
2,000 to 5,000 fighters.
Abu Fatma says he helped to persuade armed groups to put down their
weapons in late 2007 and early 2008 and created a loose political
association that the Iraqi Liberation Army and other groups are backing.
But the truce and formation of their party have brought little tangible
benefit, he says. He notes "the betrayal of the Awakening" and talks
about the wariness of some resistance leaders to rally behind the truce
and endorse elections.
"In fact, some groups have met with us to come under our banner to stop
fighting. They ask us, 'What did the Americans do [for us]?' This
question has become the most embarrassing question I hear.
"I can get around questions about politics and religions except this
one. . . . I'm stumped and embarrassed. I don't have an answer," Abu
Fatma says.
"I say, 'Don't lay down your weapons,' because otherwise I would be
dishonest to them. I've told Americans, 'If you keep alienating the
people, all the Iraqis will fight them, even the government.' "
Copyright 2009 Los Angeles Times