Report from Baghdad -- Opening the Gates of Hell
07/04/2004
- Opinión
Before the Iraq war, at a meeting of the Arab League, Secretary
General Amr Moussa famously said that a U.S. war on Iraq would "open
the gates of hell."
In Iraq, those gates are yawning wider than they ever have before --
at least for the United States.
"Sunni and Shi'a are now one hand, together against the Americans," a
man on the street in the mostly Shi'a slum of Shuala on the west side
of Baghdad told me, as we conversed in the shadow of a burnt-out
American tank transporter. Those sentiments were echoed at the local
headquarters of Moqtada al-Sadr's organization, which had one day
previously come under assault from U.S. forces.
And, indeed, everyone in the area agreed that when those forces were
driven from Shuala, it was done by Sunni and Shi'a fighting together
-- and by unorganized local inhabitants, not al-Sadr's Mahdi Army.
Whether or not the resistance here grows to a scale that the United
States cannot control -- and this is more in the hands of Grand
Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani than of Paul Bremer or George Bush -- it is
already clear that the events of the last ten days mark a critical
turning point in the occupation of Iraq.
We're being told a convenient and self-serving story about those
events. In that story, a few barbaric "isolated extremists" from the
"Saddamist stronghold" of Falluja killed four contractors who were
guarding food convoys in an act of unprovoked lawlessness. Moqtada
al-Sadr is fighting the U.S. forces right now because, in the words
of George Bush, he decided that "rather than allow democracy to
flourish, he's going to exercise force."
The truth is rather different. Falluja, although heavily Sunni Arab,
was hardly in Saddam's pocket. Its imams got into trouble for
refusing to obey his orders to praise him personally during prayers.
Many inhabitants were Salafists (Wahhabism is a subset of Salafism),
a group singled out for political persecution by Saddam.
In fact, during the war, Falluja was not a hotbed of resistance. Its
turn to resistance started on April 28, when U.S. troops opened fire
on a group of 100 to 200 peaceful protesters, killing 15. They
claimed they were returning gunfire, but Human Rights Watch
investigated and found that the bullet holes in the area were
inconsistent with that story -- and, furthermore, every Iraqi witness
maintained that the crowd was unarmed. Two days later, another three
protesters were killed.
These incidents caused many people in the area to join the
resistance, forming their own groups.
Violence back and forth and frequent collective punishment measures
levied on the twon quickly turned it into a place seething with anger
against the occupation -- to an even greater degree than other
places.
The most recent incident, in which four mercenaries from Blackwater
Security, a company formed by ex-Navy Seals (Blackwater people are
performing many of the same functions as soldiers in Iraq and do get
involved in combat), did not arise in a vacuum. In fact, just the
week before, U.S. Marines had mounted heavy raids on Fallujah,
killing at least seven civilians, including a cameraman. Residents
spoke of this as the reason for the attack on the Blackwater people
and the gruesome spectacle that followed.
With the recent fighting in Falluja, cordoning off the city, in which
12 Marines, two other soldiers, and at least 66 Iraqis were killed,
there is no chance to get off this track in the foreseeable future.
But, not satisfied with this massive problem with the Sunni, the CPA
chose the same time to pick a fight with the Shi'a followers of
Moqtada al-Sadr.
Whatever al-Sadr's views about democracy may be, Bush's claim that he
started this violence to derail democracy is ridiculous. First of
all, for all of al-Sadr's firebrand rhetoric, he and his followers
had always stopped short of overt violence against the occupying
forces. Second, the incident that precipitated this whole round of
violence was the closing of his newspaper, al-Hawza, a blatantly
undemocratic act. In fact, the paper was not closed for directly
advocating violence, but simply for reporting one eyewitness claim
that a supposed car bombing that killed numerous volunteers for the
New Iraqi defense forces was actually done by plane (and therefore by
the United States).
In general, there is no quicker way to get an Iraqi to laugh than to
talk about how the United States is bringing freedom or democracy to
the country. It's standard when talking about the latest problem the
Americans cause, to say derisively, "This is the freedom." When I
asked Rasool Gurawi, a spokesman at the al-Sadr office in Thawra, the
slum of two million that is perhaps al-Sadr's strongest base of
support, about Bush's claims, he said, "This is democracy? Attacking
peaceful demonstrations?
Killing people and destroying buildings?"
As the occupation simultaneously loses control in Basra, Najaf,
Kerbala, Nasiriyah, Kufa, Kut, Diwaniyah, and in Thawra, Shuala, and
Kadhimiyah in Baghdad, Bremer and Bush have backed off a little.
Instead of wanting al-Sadr for his political role, they now say he is
wanted in connection with the murder of Shi'a cleric Abdul Majid al-
Khoei last April. And, indeed, one of the other precipitating factors
in the recent violence was the arrest of Mustafa Yacoubi, a top Sadr
aide, for the same killing. They even say it has nothing to do with
them -- an Iraqi judge, acting independently, issued the warrant.
This explanation isn't getting very far with anyone here. It's
already been revealed that the warrants were written long ago and
have been sitting unused until the right time. In fact, claimed
Gurawi, the Iraqi Minister of Justice proclaimed publicly that he had
no information about Sadr's or Yacoubi's involvement with al-Khoei
and that they were not wanted by the Iraqi government.
Whatever the case, the administration's militaristic response and
hollow rhetoric cut no ice with any Iraqis here, and are certain
simply to exacerbate a situation that has already spun out of control
for the United States.
Although the situation with Fallujah seems to have been mostly
happenstance (of the kind that was inevitable with the constant
skirmishing), the signs seem to indicate that the move against al-
Sadr's people was deliberately timed. If so, it was presumably an
attempt to squeeze him out of the political sphere before the token
"transfer of sovereignty" on June 30.
It has backfired in the way that anyone who reads the newspapers
himself instead of having them explained to him by aides could have
predicted. When three U.S. soldiers were killed in the Kadhimiyah
district of Baghdad yesterday, that was a clear sign. Although al-
Sadr supporters are probably a majority in Thawra and a very sizeable
minority in Shuala, his influence had always been negligible in
Kadhimiyah.
Even though the violence that has broken out is major news right now,
in a sense it's not the real story. The killing of over 100 people in
the last ten days is a tragedy, but so is everyday life under the
occupation.
The people in the Shi'a slums of Baghdad who are now furiously
resisting the Americans hate Saddam with a passion to this day. They
suffered under his repression and they also suffered from neglect,
especially under the sanctions -- scarce resources and repairs went
to politically more favored areas. They expected great improvements
when the United States took over.
Shaykh Sadun al-Shemary, a former member of the Iraqi army who
participated in the 1991 uprising and now a spokesman for the al-Sadr
organization in Shuala, told me, "Things are exactly the same as in
Saddam's time -- maybe worse."
That is all you need to know about the occupation of Iraq.
Rahul Mahajan is the publisher of the weblog Empire Notes
(http://www.empirenotes.org ) and is
currently writing and blogging from Baghdad. His latest book is "Full
Spectrum Dominance: U.S. Power in Iraq and Beyond." He can be reached
at Rahul@empirenotes.org
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