http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-zarqawi19may19,1,548760.story?coll=la-headlines-world

May 19, 2005
THE CONFLICT IN IRAQ

Zarqawi Reportedly Called for Shift in Strategy

•  He met with other rebel leaders and sought more suicide car
attacks, U.S. military official says.

By Jeffrey Fleishman, Times Staff Writer
BAGHDAD — Militant leader Abu Musab Zarqawi met with heads of Iraqi
insurgent groups in Syria a month ago and called for a shift in
strategy against Iraqi and American forces by increasing suicide car
bombings, a senior U.S. military official said Wednesday.

The official said that shortly after the meeting, held just inside the
Syrian border, insurgents unleashed dozens of car bombs throughout
Iraq as part of a wave of violence that in recent weeks has killed
more than 450 people. The official's comments on Zarqawi could not be
independently verified, and it was not known how U.S. forces gleaned
information about a clandestine insurgent meeting.
So far this month, there have been 21 car bombings in Baghdad. That
compares with about 25 attacks of that type here in all of 2004. Since
Feb. 27, according to the U.S. military, 126 car bombs have either
exploded or been defused in the capital.

"Zarqawi was not happy with how the insurgency was going," said the
official, who declined to be identified. U.S. officials say that
Zarqawi's emphasis on vehicle bombs suggests a frustration among
extremists attempting to sustain a war against 140,000 U.S. troops and
a growing Iraqi army.

The senior U.S. official asserted that several intelligence sources
reported that Zarqawi and various guerrilla leaders had attended at
least five meetings in Syria and western Iraq over the last year.
There was no indication that the Syrian government was aware of the
gatherings, the official said.

Asked if the Iraqi government was equipped to deal with the insurgency
and an increasingly frightened and disillusioned public, the U.S.
military man struck a less upbeat tone than that usually offered by
American officials. He said a democratic Iraq was likely to succeed,
but added, "I think it could still fail," and that the country could
veer back into civil war and chaos.

In a message posted on an Islamic website Wednesday and attributed to
Zarqawi, the militant leader sought to justify the car bombings that
multiplied after the new Iraqi government named its Cabinet on April 28.

"The killing of infidels by any method including martyrdom [suicide]
operations has been sanctified by many Islamic scholars even if it
means killing innocent Muslims. This legality has been agreed upon …
so as not to disrupt jihad," he said.

The insurgents, according to the U.S. military official, "are
listening to what [Zarqawi] said."

When asked if the insurgency was becoming more formidable, the
official added: "I don't think they're gaining strength. I think
they're changing their techniques."

The official's comments came amid a two-day lull in bombings after
sweeps by the Army's 3rd Infantry Division in Baghdad and a Marine
offensive along the Syrian border that U.S. commanders said killed
about 125 fighters. Nine Marines also died and 40 were injured in the
weeklong operation.

The rebels' increased reliance on car bombs complicates the new Iraqi
government's handling of the war as it struggles with a surge in
assassinations of public officials and sectarian violence between
Shiite and Sunni Muslim Arabs. Gunmen firing from a sedan Wednesday
killed Brig. Gen. Ibrahim Khamas, a senior police official with the
Iraqi Interior Ministry, as he was driving in southeast Baghdad.

The U.S. military official said it was unclear to American forces
whether "tit for tat" slayings between religious groups foreshadowed a
civil war or signaled the reemergence of clan animosities that were
contained by Saddam Hussein's police state.

"It's hard for us to see right now," said the official, although he
later acknowledged he has sensed rising prejudice among religious and
political leaders.

Zarqawi, a Jordanian-born Sunni, attempted to increase tensions in the
website message. He assailed Iraqi Shiites who control the new
government for collaborating with the U.S.

"Throughout history," Zarqawi said, "there have been many battles and
now we have a new chapter in the land of two rivers [Iraq] — the
Christian infidels who are torturing this country and its holy sites
with the help of their brothers, the infidel Shiite, who when there is
a war against Islam always become the knife against Islam."

The military official said the insurgency in Baghdad encompasses
several groups that sometimes join forces but don't follow a single
leader. The factions, he said, include Zarqawi's Al Qaeda-inspired
militants, former Hussein regime elements, Sunni radicals, Shiite
cleric Muqtada Sadr's Al Mahdi militia and disparate criminals. When
these factions have come together, they have inflicted sizable casualties.

Army Gen. John P. Abizaid said the failure by Iraqi police forces to
quickly take on greater responsibilities will prevent any reduction of
the U.S. contingent in Iraq. During an interview in Washington, he
added that some Sunni militants were "playing both sides" by
attempting to join the political process while working with the
insurgency.

"It's my impression that the majority of insurgents that are fighting
continue to be Iraqis," said Abizaid, the top general directing U.S.
forces in Iraq. "People are killing their own people for no good
reason that I can see other than to gain political advantage." 

The military official in Baghdad said recent arrests of 1,100
suspected militants and discoveries at bombing sites had given U.S.
forces information about the insurgent arsenal, which has long
included suicide car bombs.
But it remains unclear what proportion of the vehicles carrying bombs
are driven by foreign fighters, he said. It is also difficult to gauge
how many assailants think they have been dispatched to park a car
bomb, unaware that once they reach the destination the device will be
remotely detonated, the official said.

Many Iraqis, the military official observed, have become frustrated by
the inability of the new leadership to stop attacks and impose order
in Baghdad. The euphoria that followed the January election is
beginning to wither, according to a recent Baghdad University survey.
Only 45% of the Iraqis polled believed the government would get
stronger within three months.
Iraqi Defense Minister Saadoun Dulaimi said Monday that the suicide
bomb attacks on civilians indicated the insurgency was foundering.

"Terrorists in Iraq are living their final days due to the intensified
security measures which pushed them to commit such attacks that caused
casualties among Iraqi civilians," Dulaimi said at a news conference.

A Western diplomat said this month that insurgents may have been
stockpiling car bombs. "Now they've launched them on us. My
expectation will be that [soon] you will see a significant drop in
violence, because I don't think they can sustain this."

*
 
Times staff writers Patrick J. McDonnell in Baghdad and John Hendren
in Washington contributed to this report.







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