Iraqi Intifada Gearing Up

The story now in Iraq is the grow­ing resis­tance to the Amer­i­can occu­pa­tion, not weapons of mass destruc­tion. As casu­alty reports con­tinue their grim drum­beat, the death toll rose to 201 Amer­i­can troops killed since the war started March 20, with the two G.I.s found dead yes­ter­day part of five troops killed since Thurs­day. In all, 24 Amer­i­can troops have died in attacks since May 1, when Pres­i­dent Bush declared the major hos­til­i­ties over. (Sixty-three have died in non-combat related acci­dents with 39 of those deaths com­ing since May 1.) George over on War­blog­ging has a good sum­mary of the recent deaths.
8390999.jpgSad­damists and crim­i­nals who cling to the spec­tre of Saddam’s return are likely fuel­ing this resis­tance. Oh, and Islamic fun­da­men­tal­ists, for­eign Arab fight­ers and Iraqi nation­al­ists, as well.
“It was pre­dictable,” said Iraqi polit­i­cal sci­en­tist Saad al-Jawwad [in the Guardian.] “To any man or any woman or any­body who’s liv­ing in despair what could he do? He has noth­ing left but to carry arms and defy the peo­ple who are here occu­py­ing his coun­try and doing noth­ing for him or his fam­ily. Where is democ­racy? Nonex­is­tent. Where is sta­bil­ity? Nonex­is­tent. Where’s elec­tric­ity? Where’s water?“
Mean­while, SecDef Don­ald Rums­feld denied the U.S. was fac­ing a guerilla insur­gency. “I don’t know that I would use the word,” he said, when asked if the occu­pa­tion was becom­ing a guer­rilla con­flict. He noted that the attacks con­sisted of 10 – 20 men, with no large for­ma­tions involved.
Uh, aren’t small, dis­or­ga­nized cadres of insur­gents, mak­ing hit-and-run harass­ment attacks kind of the def­i­n­i­tion of guer­rilla war­fare? As Strat­for points out:

The more con­cen­trated the force and the more cen­trally com­manded, the eas­ier it is to defeat. Suc­cess­ful guer­rilla move­ments are inher­ently “disorganized” — if by orga­ni­za­tion, one means a com­mand struc­ture that is vul­ner­a­ble to attack. They cer­tainly don’t aggre­gate into large units and rarely need to coor­di­nate attacks. It is the very lack of coor­di­na­tion that makes them unpre­dictable and dif­fi­cult to defend against. They adopt a basic doc­trine, such as attack­ing con­voys, pipelines and elec­tri­cal infra­struc­ture. Then small units carry out these oper­a­tions on their own initiative.

Blam­ing the attacks on crim­i­nals com­pletely glosses over the fact that the attacks, regard­less of who is mak­ing them, are inher­ently polit­i­cal acts; they are attacks on an occu­py­ing power.
Strat­for points out that if this is indeed the begin­ning stages of a guer­rilla war, regard­less of whether Rums­feld says it is or isn’t, it looks like the United States has been ill-prepared to deal with it despite last night’s launch­ing of a counter-insurgency oper­a­tion, dubbed “Sidewinder,” aimed at cap­tur­ing who­ever is behind the grow­ing attack on U.S. troops. Already, 60 peo­ple have been cap­tured as a show of force.
in Wash­ing­ton, offi­cials con­tinue to insist there’s no cen­tral com­mand to the bur­geon­ing Iraqi intifada, but troops on the ground are con­vinced it’s orga­nized. “Some­where in Diala province, some­thing hap­pens every night,” said Capt. John Wrann [in the Guardian], refer­ring to the province north­east of Bagh­dad where much of the oper­a­tion was tak­ing place. “It’s got to be a coor­di­nated thing.“
But, like so many post-war events, Oper­a­tion Sidewinder has an ad hoc feel to it. Not the oper­a­tional details, which by nature have to be devel­oped to respond to rapidly chang­ing threats, but the very need for it. One gets the dis­tinct impres­sion that the U.S. never planned at all for the pos­si­bil­ity of an insur­gency.
Rums­feld seems to be argu­ing that the lack of a com­pre­hen­sive mil­i­tary strat­egy to deal with this isn’t a prob­lem if it’s crim­i­nals and other no-goodniks mak­ing trou­ble, not guer­ril­las in the midst of Amer­i­can troops. Crim­i­nals are a prob­lem for the police and soci­ety, not the mil­i­tary — or so the think­ing at the Pen­ta­gon goes. (Which is ironic, con­sid­er­ing the cur­rent blur­ring of the lines between the crim­i­nal and the mil­i­tary jus­tice sys­tems in the United States.)
But the bot­tom line is that Rums­feld & Co. never planned for a guer­rilla war because they lis­tened too much to the Iraqi National Con­gress, which gave them ridicu­lously rosy sce­nar­ios. I seem to remem­ber a war sold as a “cakewalk” — at least accord­ing to Sharif Ali, a spokesman for the INC, said on Aug. 8, 2002.
“All of Iraq has suf­fered for many years from the oppres­sion of Sad­dam Hussein’s regime, and there is not a sin­gle per­son out there in Iraq that will fight for or defend him, and there­fore, we have full expec­ta­tions that they will turn against Sad­dam Hus­sein. And that is one mes­sage we are giv­ing the admin­is­tra­tion,” Ali told the National Press Club that day.
And not to pull an “I told you so,” but, as I wrote back on Jan. 12, 2003,

Instead of a nice, clean occu­pa­tion that results in the first Arab democ­racy … I pre­dict the United States will have years of guerilla insur­gency from nation­al­is­tic Iraqis (some of the fiercest nation­al­ism in the Arab world), the dirty job of sup­press­ing Kur­dish and Shi’ite inde­pen­dence move­ments and Sunni power grabs, the prob­lem of al Qai’da slip­ping across the bor­ders (with the help of Iran and sym­pa­thetic Saudis) into the coun­try to strike at Amer­i­can troops and med­dling in Iraq’s inter­nal affairs by Turkey, Iran, Saudi Ara­bia and Rus­sia. And don’t for­get the resent­ment in the region that will occur when the United States begins exploit­ing the Iraqi oil fields for its own purposes.

The real­ity on the ground doesn’t gibe with Rumsfeld’s beliefs, and Strat­for sums it up thusly: “Rums­feld and U.S. intel­li­gence did not expect to be fac­ing a guer­rilla war fol­low­ing the fall of Bagh­dad, and there are no coher­ent plans in place for fight­ing one. There­fore, there is no guer­rilla war.“
And if Rums­feld truly believes this — and there is a prece­dent for Rums­feld ignor­ing facts that don’t fit with what he believes — Strat­for wor­ries that the gueril­las have a mas­sive advan­tage and that Rums­feld is in fact buy­ing time while he works on Plan B, what­ever that is.
Con­cern­ing WMD — Remem­ber Those?
All this focus on the Iraqi intifada has caused the Weapons of Mass Destruc­tion, the rai­son de guerre, to fade. No one, it seems, in the United States par­tic­u­larly cares that they’ve not been found, and any scrap of evi­dence is increas­ingly lept upon with breath­less hype that starts to sound more than a lit­tle des­per­ate. The mate­ri­als men­tioned in the story found date from the before the 1991 Gulf War, when the Amer­i­cans knew Sad­dam was work­ing on nuclear weapons. The sci­en­tist who buried the bar­rel, Mahdi Shukur Obeidi, sat on this stuff for 12 years and never got the call to start up the ol’ ura­nium enrich­ment pro­gram. Why not, if Sad­dam were intent on bring­ing the civ­i­lized world to its knees and dom­i­nat­ing the Gulf?
Before this war, I was con­vinced that Sad­dam had weapons of mass destruc­tion — not nukes, but likely bio­log­i­cal and chem­i­cal arms. After all, he had them before, and used them against the Ira­ni­ans and the Kurds in 1984 – 1988 (along with the com­pli­ance if not the bless­ings of the West.) And he had plenty of oppor­tu­nity to develop them, with the United Nations weapons inspec­tors out of the coun­try since 1998.
So I thought there was some­thing there. But I didn’t think he had them in any quan­tity that ren­dered him an exis­ten­tial threat to the United States, nor did I think he would coop­er­ate with Al Qa’ida. I didn’t think the threat from iraq rose to a level that required a war, and I didn’t trust the Bush admin­is­tra­tion to fol­low through with an enlight­ened “lib­er­a­tion.“
Well, as it turns out, peo­ple who thought this way have been proven cat­a­stroph­i­cally cor­rect, with one excep­tion: It looks like there were no weapons of mass destruc­tion at all. Some evi­dence may still be found, of course, but it is increas­ingly obvi­ous that any pro­gram to be uncov­ered was nowhere near the level of devel­op­ment the White House said it was. Can any­one of rea­son­ably sound mind argue to me that weapons so well hid­den or pro­grams in a state of such abeyance could be an immi­nent threat to the United States?
So if there were no weapons, why didn’t the Iraqis say so and avoid an extremely unpleas­ant war, as for­mer chief weapons inspec­tor Hans Blix once mused? Well, actu­ally, they did. All through­out the fall and winter’s diplo­matic cage death match the Iraqis claimed they had noth­ing. And look what it got them: invaded.
War sup­port­ers usu­ally say now that happy, lib­er­ated Iraqis were the rea­son for the war and that the WMD don’t mat­ter. To which I reply: Stop chang­ing the damn sub­ject. There are obvi­ously a fair num­ber of Iraqis nei­ther happy nor par­tic­u­larly lib­er­ated, so those post-war ratio­nal­iza­tion don’t hold much water.
So if there are no weapons of mass destruc­tion and Iraqis increas­ingly nos­tal­gic for the “good ol’ days” of secu­rity, sur­veil­lance and sec­u­lar­ism are killing Amer­i­cans troops, why are we in Iraq?

B-52s en route…

From Strat­for:

At 1808 GMT (1:08 p.m. EST, 9:08 p.m. Bagh­dad) B-52 bombers were reported tak­ing off from RAF Fair­ford in the United King­dom. Fly­ing time to Iraq is about six hours. Ear­lier today, they were report­edly loaded with cruise mis­siles. The British press has also reported that skir­mish­ing has com­menced between Iraqi troops and U.S. and British spe­cial oper­a­tions forces near Basra. Coali­tion air­craft also have attacked 10 Iraqi artillery pieces in the south­ern no-fly zone, and Israelis have been ordered to open and fit their gas masks, keep­ing them nearby at all times.

*If* this is true, that would put the bomber in range at 7 p.m. or so EST, one hour prior to the dead­line. Cruise for an hour and drop. If I can inject a wry com­ment at this time, Pres­i­dent Bush _is_ known for keep­ing things punctual.

Big Bad Wolfowitz and the coalition starting lineup

_Newsweek_ inter­viewed Deputy Sec­re­tary of Defense Paul Wol­fowitz last Wednes­day. In this tran­script, help­fully pro­vided by the Dept. of Defense, Wol­fowitz refuses to name names in the coali­tion (*see below), talks about how Amer­i­can lead­er­ship is dif­fer­ent from other lead­er­ship and explains other coun­tries’ oppo­si­tion to the war by say­ing they’ve had a “free ride.” And that’s just in the first few ques­tions.

*Newsweek:* … If a threat is so immi­nent and the dan­gers are so real, why is it so dif­fi­cult to get the inter­na­tional com­mu­nity, or at least much more of the inter­na­tional com­mu­nity on board here? What hap­pened? What’s going on? Is this a Kitty Gen­ovese moment, you know, in the sense that peo­ple just don’t want to know how bad it is? What’s going on?
*DepSecDef Wol­fowitz:* I think for one thing there’s a lot of what can be called free rider activ­ity going on. Peo­ple are so used to the United States tak­ing care of prob­lems and they know the President’s going to deal with this one so they can reap the ben­e­fits in what­ever form serves their pur­poses, and fre­quently that’s domes­tic pol­i­tics. Some­times it’s as sim­ple as they don’t want to buck a domes­tic tie. Blair’s a real stand-up guy and it takes a lot of polit­i­cal courage to do that, but unfor­tu­nately part of his prob­lem is caused by a num­ber of lead­ers who are actu­ally dem­a­gogu­ing this issue and whip­ping up opin­ion.
*Newsweek:* But in all these coun­tries it’s a really strong domes­tic tide.
*DepSecDef Wol­fowitz:* But it’s fed by lead­er­ship. Lead­er­ship mat­ters. Amer­i­can opin­ion is dif­fer­ent because our lead­er­ship is talk­ing about it dif­fer­ently.
*Newsweek:* But even in those coun­tries that are really strong tra­di­tional allies of ours where the lead­er­ship is with us, a coun­try even like Poland, their major­ity is against them.
*DepSecDef Wol­fowitz:* But they’re hear­ing all these echoes from France and Ger­many and sup­pos­edly respectable Euro­pean opin­ion.
I think another part is that they’re not threat­ened directly the way we are. They didn’t expe­ri­ence Sep­tem­ber 11th. They’re not the tar­get of Saddam’s threats the way we are.

The rest of the inter­view is an inter­est­ing read, but be warned: if you don’t trust Wol­fowitz, your head will explode with all the rea­sons he gives for attack­ing Iraq.
* Oops! The State Depart­ment released the start­ing lineup today. The “Coali­tion for the Imme­di­ate Dis­ar­ma­ment of Iraq” (CIDI?) includes

Afghanistan, Alba­nia, Aus­tralia, Azer­bai­jan, Bul­garia, Colom­bia, Czech Repub­lic, Den­mark, El Sal­vador, Eritrea, Esto­nia, Ethiopia, Geor­gia, Hun­gary, Italy, Japan (post con­flict), South Korea, Latvia, Lithua­nia, Mace­do­nia, Nether­lands, Nicaragua, Philip­pines, Poland, Roma­nia, Slo­va­kia, Spain, Turkey, Britain, Uzbekistan.

George over at War­blog­ging gets it right, again, call­ing it “Coali­tion­stan.“
(P.S. War­blog­ging is a con­sis­tently good read. I’m proud to be asso­ci­ated with it.)
The real ques­tion is, of course, how much help these coun­tries are giv­ing. Aus­tralia and Britain are send­ing troops — although the Brits kept Wash­ing­ton sweat­ing until just now — but what about the other coun­tries? Turkey is still dither­ing, despite ini­tial reports that said Ankara was about to flip. Other coun­tries have no doubt granted over­flight or bas­ing rights, but do those per­mis­sions and ver­bal cheer­ing (i.e., issu­ing “me too” state­ments) count as being a mem­ber of the coali­tion? To use an sport­ing metaphor, are cheer­lead­ers mem­bers of the team?
I guess it depends on how much sup­port is forth­com­ing. Egypt’s keep­ing the Suez Canal open, to me, doesn’t count, since that’s what it’s sup­posed to do any­way. The deploy­ment of Czech Repub­lic anti-chemical troops does, how­ever.
In other news, I’m _still_ wait­ing on word on my Syr­ian visa. The Turk­ish one should be forth­com­ing within a few days as I’m just get­ting a tourist visa. I’m not hope­ful that I’ll be able to get in through Turkey, but the more visas in the pass­port the bet­ter.
My friend at the Wash­ing­ton office of the Patri­otic Union of Kur­dis­tan told me that Iran closed the bor­der today. Another jour­nal­ist i know in Tehran told me that it doesn’t mat­ter as the Per­sian new year (March 20 – 24) pretty much shuts down the coun­try any­way. Just as well, as the Ira­ni­ans were drag­ging their heels on my visa, not telling me any­thing. I may hit Rome first, as I heard the embassy there is eas­ier to work with. I’m still look­ing at a depar­ture date about two weeks from yes­ter­day, though, which would put me in coun­try in early April.

Turkey allows U.S. troops; Saddam to Iraqis: “lock and load!”

Whoa. Turkey has appar­ently reversed course and will now allow its ter­ri­tory to be used by U.S. troops.
There are no details on how all this will go down yet, but the Turk­ish lira slid to a new low against the dol­lar, sug­gest­ing at least one rea­son for Turkey’s sud­den con­ver­sion.
BlobServer.jpgMater­iél and equip­ment has been tran­sit­ing the coun­try for weeks, but no troops other than a token con­tin­gent of “base inspec­tors.” Most of the boats that were always described as “idling off the Turk­ish coast” have split for the Suez Canal and Kuwait. What good is this rever­sal?
Well, as reported before, hang­ing back until it was too late to offer much help (except maybe over­flight rights) was prob­a­bly Turkey’s plan along. But now that Erdo­gan is Prime Min­is­ter, he’s going to do all he can to prove his inten­tions to Wash­ing­ton. Per­haps he’s rea­son­ing that if Turkey’s help is too lit­tle, too late that can hardly be blamed on him, can it?
Mean­while, far­ther south, aver­age Iraqis are appar­ently arm­ing them­selves in prepa­ra­tion of the chaos that will surely fol­low the onset of hos­til­i­ties, um, Wednes­day? It’s appar­ently an old cul­tural tra­di­tion of Iraqis, but this time — surprise! — it’s been encour­aged by the Ba’ath regime.
But the real dan­ger is not that Iraqis will start fir­ing on Amer­i­can troops but on each other. “No one knows at whom these weapons will be pointed and after a U.S. strike we might see a new Iraq, in the Lebanese or Alger­ian style,” an Arab diplo­mat said.

Bush to address the nation at 8 pm EST

Pres­i­dent Bush will address the coun­try at 8 pm EST tonight and call on Sad­dam to leave the coun­try to avoid war.
Also, French ambas­sador says a large major­ity on Secu­rity Coun­cil would have voted against the res­o­lu­tion, not the close vote that the U.S. and the U.K. main­tained would have been the result. It’s –like– likely the United States never got much more than four votes: U.S., U.K., Spain and Bul­garia.
The U.S. never wanted this res­o­lu­tion anyway.