-Caveat Lector-

Begin forwarded message:

From: "Mario Profaca" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: June 28, 2005 1:37:45 PM PDT
To: "!SPY NEWS" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [Spy News] US military sinks further into the Iraqi quagmire


US military sinks further into the Iraqi quagmire
Peter Symonds, WSWS

28 June 2005 - By any measure, the US military occupation of Iraq is
steadily sinking into a quagmire of Washington’s own making. Successive
claims by the Bush administration that the capture of Saddam Hussein in
December 2003, the installation of an interim administration last June,
national elections in January and the inauguration of the new puppet
government of Prime Minister Abrahim al-Jaafari in April would end armed
resistance have proven to be completely illusory.

There is no end in sight to the daily attacks on American and allied
military personnel, or Iraqi government security forces. In London for talks
with British Prime Minister Tony Blair, al-Jaafari told the press yesterday:
“I think two years will be enough, more than enough, to establish security
in our country.” His remarks reflect both wishful thinking and a rather
desperate attempt to retain some credibility with the Shiite supporters who
voted for his United Iraqi Alliance because it promised to set a timetable
for US military withdrawal.

The raw figures demonstrate the scope of the anti-occupation insurgency. US
casualties are running at the highest levels since the January election. In
May, 80 US personnel were killed and so far in June another 75 have died—an
average of nearly three a day. The number of US deaths for the year to June
27, is 890 and, since the US-led invasion of Iraq in March 2003, the total
is 1,740.

The number of attacks by armed insurgents averaged 57 a day for January and
February; dropped slightly to 53 a day in March and April, and hit 70 a day
in May. Figures are not yet available for June but there is no indication
that armed resistance is abating. Over the past two months, 52 Iraqi
government, legal and religious officials have been assassinated. At least
1,338 people, including many Iraqi police and army personnel, have been
killed since al-Jaafari formed his government on April 28.

The attacks reported over the past few days give an indication of the level
of armed conflict. On Monday, a US Apache gunship crashed at Mishahda north
of Baghdad killing both pilots. Eyewitnesses said the helicopter was shot
down by a rocket. According to Associated Press statistics, there have been
20 fatal helicopter crashes since March 2003, in which 128 people have died.

Yesterday also, a bomb exploded in eastern Baghdad killing at least four
people and injuring another 16. Another two people were killed by a roadside
bomb in northern Azamiyah neighbourhood.

On Sunday, three suicide bombs killed at least 32 people in the northern
city of Mosul. The first blast took place when a pickup truck laden with
explosives slammed into a downtown police station, killing at least 10
policemen and two civilians. Two hours later, 16 people lost their lives
when a suicide bomber blew himself up outside an Iraqi army base on the city
outskirts. The third explosion at the Mosul’s Jumhouri Teaching Hospital
killed five policemen and injured several others.

Elsewhere in Iraq, another 18 more people were killed on Sunday, including a
US soldier whose convoy was hit by a roadside bomb in Baghdad. Six Iraqi
soldiers were gunned down outside their base north of the capital. The
previous day in Mosul, a suicide car bomb exploded at a police checkpoint,
killing five officers and wounding two more.

Last Thursday, a suicide car bomber attacked a US convoy near Fallujah,
killing six American troops and injuring at least 13. The US media has
focussed on the fact that three of the dead and 11 of the wounded were
women, but the site of the attack is more significant. Last November, the US
military levelled much of Fallujah and put what remained of the city under
tight martial law, yet it has clearly failed to eliminate armed anti-US
resistance in the area.

An article on the New York Times last week highlighted the difficulties
facing US military commanders: “[W]ith recent American troop levels—139,000
now—they have been forced to play an infernal board game, constantly
shuttling combat units from one war zone to another, leaving insurgent
buildups unmet in some places while they deal with more urgent problems
elsewhere...

“High-intensity operations like the one at Fallujah are like driving a stake
into a hornets’ nest, many American officers say. They scatter the
insurgents, who regroup and return as soon as American troop numbers are
reduced. Seven months after Fallujah was recaptured, in ruins, pockets of
insurgents still operate in the city. Tal Afar, Mosul, Qaim, Haditha,
Samarra, Ramadi, Hillah—all have been targets of coalition offensives, only
for the insurgents to come back, starting the circle over.”

As the article explained, the number of effective combat troops is far
smaller than the overall totals. “American commanders, their army
bottom-heavy with support units, have at most 60,000 American and allied
combat soldiers available, and only a fraction as many Iraqi soldiers rated
combat-ready.”


Unreliable Iraqi government forces

On paper, the number of Iraqi police and soldiers, as of this month, is more
than 168,000. But these forces, on which the Pentagon is depending to play a
larger role, are unreliable and infiltrated by resistance members.

An article in last week’s Newsweek magazine entitled “Enemy Spies”
highlighted the fact that the Iraqi security forces have “hundreds of ‘ghost
soldiers’ who vanish, sometimes for months on end, but continue to draw
their pay.” The fear that these “ghost soldiers” have connections to the
insurgency was confirmed when a recruit to the notorious Wolf Brigade, who
had gone AWOL, walked into the elite unit’s heavily-protected headquarters
in Baghdad on June 11 and blew himself up. Three brigade members were killed
and a dozen others were wounded.

At least 176 Iraqi police have been directly implicated in recent car
bombings—their fingerprints were found on bomb debris. According to Security
Minister Abdul Karim al-Inizi, that is only a fraction of the total number
of infiltrators. “A number way bigger than that is still active and still in
service,” he told Newsweek. Referring to the recruitment of former members
of Saddam Hussein’s hated Mukhabarat intelligence service, he added: “They
penetrated easily because [the] government brought them back without asking
enough questions.”

According to US estimates, its forces killed 15,000 insurgents over the past
year, but the figure for the strength of the insurgency remains about the
same—between 12,000 and 20,000. An unnamed Special Operations source told
the magazine, only 1,000 of the insurgents were foreign fighters and the
rest were Iraqis, who could count on “as many as 400,000 auxiliaries and
support personnel”. He indicated that there were at least 40 distinct
resistance groups which at times combined forces for joint operations.

The US is continuing to mount repressive sweeps through areas thought to be
sympathetic to the insurgency. The arbitrary killing and detention of
“suspected insurgents” only fuels anger and hostility that provides more
recruits to the armed resistance groups. One indication of the size and
scope of such operations is the fact that the US military has been compelled
to expand the capacity of the jails under its control to make room for more
and more detainees.

An article in the Los Angeles Times on June 26 revealed that as of last
Saturday the prisoner total in June stood at 10,783 on average, up from
7,837 in January and 5,435 in June 2004. Major General William Brandenburg,
who oversees US-run prisons in Iraq, told the newspaper: “Business is
booming”. Not only has the Pentagon been compelled to abandon plans to hand
over Abu Ghraib prison to Iraqi authorities, but is preparing to spend $50
million to expand overall jail capacity to 16,000 prisoners.

The main two US-run prisons—Abu Ghraib and Camp Bucca—are operating near
their limits. So volatile are the prisons that US authorities are constantly
on the watch for potential unrest. Two major riots have broken out in Camp
Bucca over the last six months. On January 31, guards used live ammunition
to break up a riot, killing four inmates. The vast majority of the prisoners
are Iraqis and only a small fraction—about 1,600 detainees over more than
two years—have been sent to the Iraqi court system.

Confronted with the failure to suppress the insurgency, US and Iraqi
officials are attempting to split the opposition. An article in the
London-based Times on June 26 provided details of a meeting between US
officials and insurgent leaders at a villa north of Baghdad. It included
representatives of Ansar al-Sunna, which claimed responsibility for killing
22 people in the dining hall of a US base at Mosul last Christmas. The US
group included senior American military and intelligence officers, an
embassy official and a Congressional staff member.

US Defence Secretary Rumsfeld acknowledged that the meeting, and “probably
many more”, had taken place, but refused to confirm any details and
downplayed its significance. There was every reason for Rumsfeld to dismiss
the Times article, which confirmed that such efforts have been a complete
failure. While US intelligence officers unsuccessfully attempted to wheedle
information from those present, the insurgent leaders insisted that all they
were interested in talking about was a withdrawal date for US forces.

One response in Washington to the deteriorating military situation is to
demand a beefing up of the US military presence in Iraq—more soldiers, more
gunships and more repression to cow a hostile population. Whatever its
immediate and temporary successes, such a strategy would inevitably generate
more hostility and provoke broader overt opposition—armed and otherwise—to
what is an illegal neo-colonial occupation aimed at subjugating the oil-rich
country to US economic and strategic interests.






-__ ___ _ ___ __ ___ _ _ _ __  
/-_|-0-\-V-/-\|-|-__|-|-|-/-_| 
\_-\--_/\-/|-\\-|-_||-V-V-\_-\ 
|__/_|--//-|_|\_|___|\_A_/|__/ 

 SPY NEWS is OSINT newsletter and discussion list associated to 
Mario's Cyberspace Station - The Global Intelligence News Portal

######## CAUTION! #########
 Since you are receiving and reading documents, news stories,
comments and opinions not only from so called (or self-proclaimed) 
"reliable sources", but also a lot of possible misinformation collected
by Spy News moderator and subscribers and posted to Spy News
for OSINT purposes - it should be a serious reason (particularly to
journalists and web publishers) to think twice before using it for their
story writing, further publishing or forwarding throughout Cyberspace.

To unsubscribe:

*** FAIR USE NOTICE: This message contains copyrighted material whose use has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Spy News is making it available without profit to SPY NEWS eGroup members who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information in their efforts to advance the understanding of intelligence and law enforcement organizations, their activities, methods, techniques, human rights, civil liberties, social justice and other intelligence related issues, for non-profit research and educational purposes only. We believe that this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law. If you wish to use this copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use,' you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
For more information go to:

 -----------------------------------------------

 SPY NEWS home page:

 Mario Profaca
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:





www.ctrl.org DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis- directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector. ======================================================================== Archives Available at:

http://www.mail-archive.com/ctrl@listserv.aol.com/ <A HREF="">ctrl</A> ======================================================================== To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email: SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email: SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to