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This Is What a Guerrilla War Looks Like
by Maria Tomchick
While it's now apparent that The Pentagon made no substantial plans for how
to run post-war Iraq, somebody else in Iraq has certainly made plans for
how to sabotage US rule.
Before the war began, military strategists insisted that they had a plan
for Iraq after the fighting was over. Their plan was to swoop in, seize or
kill Saddam Hussein and his top cadre, and leave the mid-level government
managers, city officials, village mayors, and police forces in place to run
the country. The Pentagon expected the Iraqi military to refuse to fight,
to depose Saddam in a coup, and to maintain control of the security
situation in Iraq so US troops could waltz into Baghdad and set up a new
government.
None of these optimistic scenarios has played out as planned. In fact,
while Congress slowly nibbles on the intelligence data from the CIA and
Defense Intelligence Agency in search of the people who overestimated
Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, no one has thought to demand hearings
over which military planners or upper level Bush administration officials
took us into a war with a long-term plan that resembles a Harry Potter
novel.
As US troops advanced during the invasion, Baath Party officials and police
abandoned their posts and went into hiding, leaving behind chaos and
looting. In many of the smaller villages, particularly in the southern
Shiite region, Baath party officials were killed or deposed by the village
residents themselves, whose hatred for Saddam was intense. Powerful local
families or sheiks took their place, setting up their own militias and
spawning inter-tribal feuds. As US and British troops have stepped up raids
and house-to-house searches, confusion about which militias control which
towns or neighborhoods has led to attacks and ambushes against US and
British troops, including the shootout that killed six British soldiers
last week.
Security and looting remain the single biggest problem for the US interim
authority. If the security problem were solved, aid agencies would be able
to bring food into Iraq, and civilian contractors would be able to rebuild
damaged infrastructure. On June 19, however, the US Agency for
International Development released a report saying that security at the
port of Umm Qasr, the first city taken and "secured" by the invasion force,
remains "a major problem" and "has become even more problematic." USAID
reported that armed men have been stealing bags of flour directly off
humanitarian ships docked at the port (which, by the way, is a very cheap
and efficient way to feed a guerrilla army).
The escalating sabotage of oil and gas pipelines in Iraq is an even bigger
problem. Nearly everything in Iraq runs on oil and gas. Oil powers the main
electricity generating plants, which in turn power everything from water
pumping stations to ice factories to the gas pumps at fuel stations.
Meanwhile, exported oil pumps much-needed cash into the Iraqi economy; the
Bush administration had hoped that resuming oil exports would provide most
of the cash for reconstruction.
Initially, the Bush administration estimated that Iraq's oil exports would
be brought back up to pre-war levels within two weeks of the end of the
war. That deadline was postponed to mid-June. Now, however, two months have
passed since George Bush declared the end of major hostilities in Iraq and
oil production is barely high enough to cover domestic supply.
Distribution,
it turns out, has become almost impossible.
On the same day that the US announced it would resume exporting Iraqi oil
from the port of Ceyhan, Turkey, the main export pipeline between Iraq's
northern oil fields and Ceyhan was bombed. Oil from the north can't be
shifted south to Umm Qasr because the main pipeline south was destroyed in
a US bombing raid during the war; it won't be fixed until the end of the
year, at the soonest. On June 23, saboteurs located a pipeline junction
buried in the ground about 200 yards off a main highway from Iraq into
Syria. They dug down to the line, planted explosives, and blew a hole in
the pipeline that carries oil from the northern fields in Iraq to ports in
Syria and Lebanon, effectively cutting off exports from the north.
The southern oil fields in Rumaila, which were expected to produce export
oil immediately, have faltered. Widespread and systematic looting has
severely damaged the nearby water pumping stations. (Water is injected into
the oil wells to create enough pressure to pump out oil and to flush salt
out of the oil so it can be refined.) Halliburton contractors are convinced
that the looting is intentional sabotage and not for economic gain. Said
one, "There have been other attacks on facilities that seem senseless,
except to impede the development of the oil sector."
But the sabotage has gone further than that. On June 22 an explosion hit
the main oil pipeline linking the southern oil fields to Baghdad's main
Dura oil refinery. Subsequent attacks in the past week have damaged the
lines that bring gas to electrical stations that power all of central Iraq,
including the capital city. Residents of Baghdad and the surrounding areas
have suffered a complete lack of electricity, running water, air
conditioning, and refrigeration since June 23, while day-time temperatures
in central Iraq have soared to 115 degrees.
In addition, utility managers in Baghdad have come under attack. On June
24, the head of a power station that covers all of western Baghdad was
assassinated in her home, and the Baghdad director of electrical
rehabilitation was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade while traveling in a
guarded convoy to meet with Western journalists to discuss electricity
problems in the city.
Such well-coordinated, knowledgeable attacks don't happen by accident. They
point to an organized guerrilla movement--in spite of what Pentagon
officials say. And despite coordinated sweeps by US troops through towns
and villages in the "Sunni Belt" west and north of Baghdad, daily attacks
against US soldiers continue to mount, with 25 separate ambushes and
attacks reported in one day alone last week.
Who is behind these attacks? The Pentagon claims that remnants of Saddam's
militias and Baath Party loyalists are the culprit. But the isolated
"pockets of resistance theory" seems weak, even with a careful examination
of Pentagon statements on the subject. "What once appeared random is now
looking somewhat organized," a senior administration official admitted to
the Washington Post. A "loose network" of armed fighters from Saddam
Hussein's security agencies have formed a group called "The Return," which
is being funded by rich Sunni families, other officials say. Two other
militias--The Snake Party and The New Return--are also cited as suspects.
Other groups have stepped forward to take credit for attacks against US
troops. A videotape made by a group calling itself the Iraqi National Front
of Fedayeen was aired on Lebanon's LBC TV. The Iraqi Resistance Brigades
sent a statement to Al-Jazeera claiming credit for all attacks against
occupation forces since the end of the war. US officials admit that "Muslim
organizations, arms smugglers and other common criminals, and Iraqis
seeking revenge for the deaths of kin at the hands of Americans are also
involved in attacks against U.S. forces." (Washington Post, 6/22/03.)
But civilians seeking revenge on American troops are not responsible for
the strategic destruction of infrastructure timed to coincide with major
policy statements by the US interim authority. The day after Paul Bremer
stood before the World Economic Forum in Jordan and announced that he would
unilaterally sell off Iraq's national assets to foreign private companies,
saboteurs blew the gas pipeline that cut off electricity to Baghdad and all
of central Iraq. This sets the stage for a major uprising in the days to
come as residents begin to succumb to searing heat, thirst, starvation
(because of the lack of refrigeration), and disease from drinking and
bathing in polluted rivers and pools of stagnant water.
Clearly, someone has a plan for Iraq, but it's not the Bush administration.
Some sources for this article:
"Thefts Plague US Contractors' Efforts in Iraq," Jackie Spinner, Washington
Post, 6/20/03,
www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A14326-2003Jun19?language=printer; "Fire,
Explosions Hit Iraq-Turkey Pipeline," Michael Georgy and Steve Bryant,
Reuters, 6/13/03; "Iraqi Pipeline Blast and Fire Are Laid to Sabotage,"
Neela Banerjee, New York Times, 6/14/03, www.nytimes.com; "Key Iraq
Pipeline Won't Reopen Before Year's End," Keith Johnson, Wall Street
Journal, 6/18/03, A14; "Attack on fuel pipeline in western Iraq: oil
official," Agence France Presse, 6/23/03; "Explosion in Iraqi oil pipeline,
residents claim sabotage," Agence France Presse, 6/22/03; "Rash of Pipeline
Fires Is Keeping Workers Busy," Neela Banerjee, New York Times, 6/23/03,
www.nytimes.com/2003/06/24/international/worldspecial/24OIL.html; "Iraq
Pipelines Easy Targets for a Sabateur," Warren Vieth and Alissa J. Rubin,
Los Angeles Times, 6/25/03, www.latimes.com; "Gunmen shoot dead Baghdad
power-station boss; Explosion damages oil pipeline," Agence France Presse,
6/25/03; "US soldier killed, 8 hurt in attack," Ellen Barry and Rebecca Bou
Chebel, Boston Globe,
www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/178/nation/US_soldier_killed_8_hurt_in_attackP.sh
tml; "Facing Well-Planned Attacks, US Alters Tactics to Military Sweeps,"
Bradley Graham, Washington Post, 6/18/03, A16; "Attacks in Iraq Traced to
Network," Daniel Williams, Washington Post, 6/22/03, Al; "Unknown Iraqi
Group Vows to Kill US Soldiers," Reuters, 6/23/03; "Four killed in new
clashes in Baghdad, London warns of lack of security," Agence France
Presse, 6/18/03; "Overseer in Iraq Vows to Sell Off Government-Owned
Companies," Edmund L. Andrews, New York Times, 6/23/03,
www.nytimes.com.
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