Sunday, April 27, 2003

Galloway targeted

NOTES: George Galloway, a British MP, is a known
sympathiser with Saddam Hussein. He has visited
Baghdad several times and has met with Saddam and
other Iraqi leaders. He opposed the war. He is very
outspoken. He led several anti-war rallies in London.
He was a communist in Scotland before he embraced the
Labour party in the 70s and rose through the ranks to
become an MP from Glasgow, Scotland. He is known for
his support for the Palestinians and other Arab causes
and in fact these positions have given him respect
among liberal Britons. Therefore, the ongoing campaign
against him is widely seen as retribution by his
pro-Israeli defractors.


by pv vivekanand

BRITISH MP George Galloway is fnding himself under
attack from several quarters for his refusal to
endorse the US-British war against Iraq. He might even
face charges of treachery in a court of law for having
"incited" British soldiers against obeying orders to
fight in Iraq.
What is not said in public but what the waves say is
simple: Galloway took his case against war on Iraq
took too far and insulted and humiliated his Labour
party boss and Prime Minister Tony Blair and his
colleagues. And now the Blair camp is itching to get
back at him through whatever means available.
Blair has the option to take party disciplinary action
against Galloway, but he seems to have opted not to do
so if only because it might have a negative bearing on
him as a vindictive man.
The charges, formal and informal, from his pro-Blair
Labour Party members and the media, include:
-- He stepped beyond party lines when he commented
during an interview with Abu Dhabi Television that
Blair and George Bush were "wolves" and urged British
soldiers not to obey "illegal" orders to wage war
against Iraq.
-- His urging to the soldiers could be construed as
treachery under a 1934 act, and that is being touted
by a private group of lawyers representing British
service personnel to file a private case against him.
The Crown Prosecution Service has declined to wage its
own case but has cleared the lawyers' bid to sue
Galloway, an MP from Glasgow long known for his
involvement with Middle Eastern affairs and as a
friend of Saddam Hussein.
-- Galloway is accused of taking money from Saddam -
£375,000 a year -- by the Telegraph newspaper.
Galloway has denied the charge and is suing the paper,
but the paper says it has found documents that suggest
that its report is accurate. It is ready for a fight
with Galloway.
-- Galloway is accused of "misusing" funds he
collected for the Mariam Appeal to fund medical
treatment of Iraqi victims of the UN sanctions against
Iraq. Gallowway has again challenged the charge, but
the attorney general's office has launched an
investigation into the charges.
-- Galloway is accused of having indirectly a member
of the Al Qaeda group who is suspected of having
played a role in plotting bombings against US
embassies in Africa.
That charge stemmed from a visit he paid to Morocco in
1996 in order to explore a possible deal between the
Saudi government and London-based Saudi dissidents of
the Committee for the Defence of Legitimate Rights.
Galloway has admitted in parliament that Saudi
dissident Saad Al Fagih paid for the trip. Later it
was found that Fayigh bought a satellite phone on
behalf of Fagih for Khaled Al Fawwaz, another Saudi
dissident. Fawwaz is currently held in a British
prison fighting a US effort to get him extradited to
stand trial in an American court.
-- The satellite phone bought by Fayigh was shipped to
Mohammed Atta and was used in plotting for the August
1998 bombings of the US embassies in Tanzania and
Kenya, says the Observer newspaper.
Mohammed Atta, according to the CIA, headed the group
of suicide hijackers in the Sept.11, 2001 attacks in
New York and Washington after having plotted the
bombings in Africa in 1998.
However, there is no insinuation that Galloway had any
knowledge of Al Qaeda activities or he had known Osama
Bin Laden at any point.
Galloway, who describes the accusation that he
collected money from
Saddam Hussein as a "lie of fantastic proportions."
has called that the
investigation into the Mariam Appeal resembled a
"witch hunt."
Galloway has always been involved in Middle Eastern
affairs. It was
that involvement which propelled him into the
forefront of leftist
politics in the UK since the 1970s.
Galloway is not fazed by the "incitement charge."
'I hope to have chiselled on my gravestone: 'He
incited them to disaffect'," he says.
"The people who have betrayed this country are those
who have sold it
to a foreign power and who have been the miserable
surrogates of a
bigger power for reasons very few people in Britain
can understand," said
Galloway,
The investigation into the Mariam Appeal funds is
implicitly linked to
charges that Galloway collected money from Saddam
Hussein.
In a response to Lord Goldsmith, the attorney general,
Galloway said:
"Given your, to many, extraordinary decision to
declare the war on Iraq
legal, despite the opinions of the UN secretary
general and
international law experts around the world, it would
be perverse for you to now declare my anti-war work
illegal under British law."
The Telegraph, which levelled the charge that Galloway
took money from
Saddam, says it stands by its report. Furthermore, it
also followed up
the first report by alleging that Saddam tried to
protect the MP from
the potential scandal of being linked to the Iraqi
secret service, the
Mukhabarat.
It says that it had found documents in Iraq suggesting
that Galloway
was given a percentage of Iraqi oil sales -- worth
about £375,000 a year
through the oil-for-food programme.
The Telegraphs says that would "look forward" to a
legal battle with
Galloway.
In yet another charge, another British paper reported
finding the copy of a letter written in 1998 by the
then foreign secretary, Robin Cook. to Galloway
refusing Galloway's allegation that four members of
the UN weapon inspectors in Iraq were Israeli spies.
The copy of the letter, which was found in the
post-war ruins of the foreign ministry building in
Baghdad last week, was allegedly sent by the head of
the Iraqi interest section in London to the deputy
foreign minister. While it was not classified as a
confidential document, the "clinch," says the
newspaper, was that the iraqi diplomat's covering note
to the deputy minister was dated four days after the
date it was sent by Cook to Galloway. It showed
Galloway's collusion with the Iraqi regime throughout,
the newspaper suggested.

Aziz kept out of info

By PV Vivekanand

“What do you mean Yvegny, you need an answer from the
President in 24 hours? It’d take me 48 hours to reach
my president.” These were the words of Tareq Aziz, who
was then foreign minister of Iraq, to Yvegny Primakov,
then a noted Russian journalist, who was on an urgent
mission to Baghdad in late 1990.
He was carrying a message from the then Russian president, Mikhail
Gorbachev, to Saddam Hussein offering a last-minute proposal to avert war over Kuwait.
He wanted a quick response to the offer in order to meet a deadline set
by George Bush senior as a special consideration for Gorbachev.
Aziz did reach Saddam in less than 24 hours and Primakov got his reply in 36 hours: Thanks but no thanks, Iraq would not withdraw from Kuwait.
Well, today the US forces Iraq have Aziz, 67,
under custody and are interrogating him on details of
the toppled Saddam regime’s machinations. Some even
venture to say that Aziz could even provide details
of Saddam’s whereabouts if the toppled leader is alive
or at least give a clear idea about his last movement.
That might indeed be possible. But the interrogators
would stand as much chance in gaining information from
Aziz on Iraq’s alleged weapons of mass destruction as
one could extract water from steel.
It is not because Aziz would or could withstand third
degree methods or he is determined not to reveal the
details. It is simply because he might not have any
such information. It is a safe bet that he would not
have known whether Saddam had any weapons of mass
destruction or, even if he did now, their nature, let
alone their alleged storage sites.
It might sound strange that someone who was seen as
close to Saddam as anyone have no idea about the
so-called weapons of mass destruction and does not
know where they are (allegedly) hidden.
That is where what Aziz told Primakov become relevant:
Although Aziz was part of Saddam’s inner circle, he
was informed of the regime’s actions only on a
need-to-know basis.
The reality, according highly informed sources, is that Saddam made sure Aziz never knew anything about the regime’s strategy on its weapons of
mass destruction or anything that could potentially be
extracted from the man, who was deputy prime minister
at the time of the latest US-led war toppled Saddam..
The reason: Saddam did not want to take the chance
that Aziz could be, at some point during his frequent
travels as his diplomatic pointman, coerced into
talking.
“We always knew that Aziz was told as little as
possible – not because Saddam did not trust him but
because Saddam believed in the adage ‘what the mind
does not know the tongue could not tell’,” says a
highly informed intelligence source. “Saddam did not
even discount the possibility that Aziz could even be
induced to part with whatever information he had
through use of truth serums and the like.”
Aziz was one of the most travelled Saddam aides and,
as far as Saddam was concerned, the minister always
carried the risk of being kidnapped by US agents or
even prompted to reveal what he knew without him being
aware of it (through use of truth serum or through any
of the many methods that does not involve the use of
force or torture). All the CIA might have wanted with
him was a few hours.
As such, Saddam never took the risk of even allowing
Aziz to know of his secret bunkers or his personal
security arrangements. And this was accepted by Aziz
if only because it placed him above suspicion of
having ever revealed anything to anyone.
During some personal moments during his frequent
visits to Amman after the 1991 war, Aziz had indicated
that he was often summoned to meetings with Saddam at
short notice, and was even blindfolded when Saddam’s
security men drive him to the president’s presence.
Again, Aziz welcomed the precautions because Saddam or
his people could not accuse him of having disclosed
the whereabouts of the president if only because he
did not know.
Of course, Aziz could reveal a lot about
how the regime worked and what role each of the Saddam
aides played. But he would know very little about
Saddam’s security arrangements with any accuracy. He
could provide clues but even that could be of little
help.
As such, it is definitely a myth that the US would be
able to secure from Aziz details of the locations
where Saddam hid his alleged stockpile of weapons of
mass destruction – if indeed the American claims have
any grain of truth that Iraq did have such weapons in
the first place.

Sunday, April 13, 2003

Where are Saddam's billions?

by pv vivekanand

International investigators and intelligence agents have yet to come up with the so-called Saddam billions -- bank accounts and assets of Saddam Hussein outside Iraq -- and they could now conveniently argue that the funds would n ever be found.
It was claimed by the US government that Saddam and his sons systematically stashed away a part of the country's income from oil exports; however, from 1990, when the US ordered a freeze on all Iraqi assets and bank accounts of Iraqi leaders, no one has been able to come up with substantiated evidence of such funds.
Some reports have said that Saddam, his sons and some of the close Saddam associates in Baghdad had received kickbacks on oil sales and arms purchases since the 70s and maintained accounts in secretive Switzerland, Germany and other European countries.
It was known among Jordanian businessmen and commodity brokers that Saddam's eldest son Uday, who maintained an office in Amman, Jordan, used to demand up to five per cent of all imports into the country chanelled through the various state organisations. For those who wanted Uday's help in finalising deals and clearing up banking snitches since 1991 had to deal with the manager of the Amman office.
The channel was suddenly closed down in 1996 when the manager, who had served as a senior official of Iraq's Rafidian Bank, "disappeared" with an unspecified amount he had collected as Uday's "commission" for nearly one year.
There had been many estimates of the "Saddam fortunes" -- from $30 billion to $6 billion -- but it has baffled observers that none of these claims was ever proved out, leading some to believe that the toppled Iraqi president never maintained an account outside his country. Some reports argued that Saddam, his sons and associates had hidden the funds in a secret network of offshore bank accounts, front companies and other investments in Europe and elsewhere.
But it is strange that the best efforts of the US government and private investigators never succeeded in unearthing the "billions."
In 1991, unidentified US officials said investigators had identified "dozens" of accounts held in "proxy" names by Saddam and others, but details of such accounts were never released. About $5 billion worth of Iraqi assets were indeed ever frozen, including holdings in America, Britain, Switzerland, France, Luxembourg and Austria.
These included classic cars -- Uday was known for his fascination for expensive cars, particularly sports vehicles -- and an 8.4 per cent stake in Hachette, the French company that publishes Elle. But nothing further was heard of these seized assets after the UN asked for an accounting with a view of taking them over under a Security Council resolution.
If one were to go by Saddam's public statements about Arab economies and petro-dollars, it is difficult to believe that he would maintain foreign bank accounts or investments in the West.
Saddam's two sons-in-law who had defected to Jordan in 1995 and went back after six months and promptly got killed were reported to have brought with them and transferred from abroad some $30 million which was deposited in Jordanian banks. A behind-the-scene dispute developed over that amount after they were killed and their wives filed claims, but the bank concerned said later that it settled the dispute "amicably." That money was supposed to have represented part of wha the sons-in-law had siphoned off from funds allocated for the country's military programmes. One of the sons-in-law was head of the Iraqi Military Industrialisation Commission.
Following the 1991 war, the government of Kuwait hired the New York-based detective agency, Kroll, to trace assets held by the Iraqi government, Saddam Hussein, his family members and other Iraqi leaders. Kroll had come up with the $5 billion figure, but it was never made clear whether these were held in Saddam's name or represented the worth of the country's holdings abroad.
Some accounts say that Saddam's half-brother, Barzan Al Tikriti who served as Iraq's ambassador to the UN's European headquarters in Geneva, used to manage Saddam's money. At the same time, sceptics say, Barzan, who was reportedly killed in an American attack on his residence in Ramadi in Iraq last week, was handling Iraq's arms purchases from Europe during the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war and that no significant deals were made after the 1991 war.
According to a report compiled in 2001 by Kroll, a Swiis-based Iraqi who had a European passport, Hassam Rassam, was the pointman in channelling funds for Saddam's family. Again, it remains unclear whether he was questioned at any point. Asked by the media in 1992 whether he was Saddam's banker, Rassam replied "I only hope it was so..."
The massive looting of presidential palaces and other buildings in Baghdad following the apparent fall of the Saddam regime has given rise to assumptions that the "hidden" Saddam billions would never be traced, if only beause the looters threw away "sensitive" papers that might have offered clues to the investigators.
The post-war regime might launch a fresh hunt, and Kroll might be given the job. However, it is highly unlikely that anyone would be able to unearth the "pot of gold" -- if indeed there was one.

Friday, April 11, 2003

Khoei killed.... as implied

pv vivekanand



THE MURDER of a US-British backed Iraqi Shiite
religious leader, Sayyed Abdul Majid Al Khoei, in
Najaf in central Iraq is only the tip of an iceberg in
the Shiite heartland of the shattered country.
At play in the equation are American/British desire
have their own man in charges of Shiite areas in
southern Iraq with a view to having influence over the
people there, the quest of Iranian-supported Iraqi
Shiites to set up a power base there, and Tehran's
wishes to have an Iran-friendly Shiite clergyman to
take charge of Shiite affairs in Iraq. Add to the
bargain the sentiments of the Shiite residents of
southern Iraq.
The killing of Khoei and Haider Kelidar, a caretaker
of shrines in Najaf, and several others at the city's
holiest Shi'ite shrine, Imam Ali Mosque, should not
have been a surprise, given the deep
religious/political currents in the area.
The two and another four were said to have been killed
by a mob in disputed circumstances. Some said the mob
targeted Kelidar for his alleged association with the
toppled Saddam Hussein regime and Khoei, who surfaced
in Najaf last week after more than a decade of life in
exile in London, just happened to be caught in the
crossfire.
Other accounts said Khoei was killed because of
suspicion that he was the man to be installed at the
head of a proposed US-British-backed committee that
would take charge of the Shiite shrines in Najaf.
Khoei had called for Shiite co-operation with the
United States and his appearance in Najaf signalled a
US attempt to promote a "pro-American" current among
Iraq's majority Shiite community as the regime
collapsed.
Khoei was airlifted to Najaf by the coalition forces.
Khoei was the son of Ayatollah Sayyid Abdul Qasim
Musawi Al Khoei, who died in 1992 while under house
arrest since the Baghdad regime crushed a Shi'ite
uprising in the wake of the 1991 Gulf War.
Khoei fled the area to Iran and left for London, where
he assumed charge of the wealthy Al Khoei Foundation
set up by his father.
He also acquired American nationality.
The foundation has blamed "agents of the dictatorial
regime now on its deathbed in Iraq" of being behind
his killing, but it does not seem likely that the
claim could be true.
At the same time, other exile leaders say that Khoei's
killers were angry people who were frustrated from
occupation forces and that exiled opposition members
should not return to Iraq alongside the occupation
forces because they are not going to be welcomed and
will be associated with the invaders.
The Iranian government has condemned the killing, but
it could not be ruled out that hard-line elements in
the country's powerful religious establishment would
have had an indirect role in the killing if only to
pre-empt the pro-Western Khoei being elevated as the
most important Shiite leader in southern Iraq.
The Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq
(SCIRI), the Tehran backed Iraqi Shiite dissident
group, is also seeking to strengthen its influence
among its constituents in southern Iraq. The group,
led by Ayatollah Mohammed Baqer Hakim. could have
deemed Khoei an obstacle to its designs.
Hakim has not revealed his designs in Iraq, but it is
not unfathomable that he would want to have the final
say in Shiite affairs throughout Iraq.
Given the Iranian backing for SCIRI, the US might not
want Hakim to assume that role either.
Prominent among the Shiite residents of Najaf is a
local group led by
Mohammed Baqer Al Sadr, who appears to have his own
plans for the holy city that might run counter the
American and SCIRI plans,
It was reported that the Sadr group wanted to kill the
Saddam-installed caretaker and Khoei pulled a gun and
fired one or two shots. Both men were then rushed by
the crowd and hacked to death with swords and knives,
said the reports.
Khoei, who also in charge of the moderate London-based
Shiite Parliament of Iraq and attended a December 2002
conference in London of the main Iraqi exile
opposition figures, opposed other members of the
Shiite movement, including his father's successor,
Grand Ayatollah Ali Husseini Sistani.
Sistani, who was kept under house arrest until US-led
forces took the city, refused to welcome them,
instead calling for Shiites to remain neutral.
In any event, the killings brought to the surface a
fact the US should have known: It could not afford to
make a false step with the Iraqi Shiites.

Monday, April 07, 2003

Saddam's options...

by pv vivekanand

LIVING UP TO his own promise, Saddam Hussein has brought in American soldiers into urban warfare in Baghdad, who were on Monday facing stiff resistance from his Republican Guards, Feyadeen militia and Baathist party loyalists, but his options remained unclear except that his strategy appeared to be eventually engaging the allied forces in guerrilla warfare.
It is subject to speculation where he could be based in guiding the guerrilla warfare if the ongoing urban warfare fails to result in massive American casualties that Saddam obviously hopes might prompt his nemesis George W Bush to stop in his tracks and reconsider his course. An unlikely scenario indeed, given the way the war has unfolded itself.
Reports from the southern city of Basra that one of his closest aides and cousins, Ali Hassan Al Majid, a former defence minister, had died in a British attack on his home there might have dealt Saddam a blow. But then, the president could not have but known that he was sending Majid to certain death when he assigned the former defence minister to defend the Basra area, one of the four military zones that he carved out before the war started.
Despite reports in the British press that the president had fled the capital to the north, all indications were that he remained very much in Baghdad. That is the kind of person that Saddam is, judging from his track record. He is not the type to cut and run and go down in history as a man who engaged only in rhetoric and let himself down in the final moment.
A man who wanted to etch himself in the history of his country by engraving his name in every brick of many buildings in Baghdad, Saddam would want to be known as a man who fought to his last and went down fighting and not cowering before invaders.
Saddam, 66, is a proud man and it is highly unlikely that he would abandon Baghdad and thus signal defeat to his people since his very bet to counter the US forces is his people.
Sources close to Saddam have always maintained that he had reserved "the last bullet for himself" if capture became inevitable. Repeated hints and suggestions by US officers, and backed by the media, that he was killed or wounded have been proved wrong by his public appearance and television messages.
The hypothesis that he had moved to Mosul in the north does not hold much water since tens of thousands of Kurdish fighters backed by American airpower and a small US contingent are pushing towards that town from the north. At the same time, there is also a school of thought that says he could opt to make his "last stand" in Mosul instead of Baghdad.
That thought is based on the loose argument that if the Iraqi Kurds led the march on Mosul and Kirkuk, the major oil centre in the north, then Turkey might intervene to block them for considerations of its own.
But then, the US could opt to block the Kurds from taking over Mosul and Kirkuk by inserting its own forces on the front-line and thus pacify the Turks.
From the very outset of the war that began on March 20, Saddam and his close aides, including his deputy Taha Yassin Ramadan, Deputy Prime Minister Tareq Aziz and Information Minister Mohammed Saed Al Sahhaf, have maintained the invading forces would meet their graves in Baghdad.
On Monday, several hours into an assault launched by the American forces, Iraqi fighters were bunkered down to fighting the invaders in several parts of the capital while US officers claimed advances. They said they had taken two presidential palaces and were closing in on the information ministry and the famous Al Rasheed Hotel.
As those claims were made, Sahhaf made a dramatic appearance at Baghdad's Palestine Hotel, where most foreign journalists are located, and categorically rejected all American assertions. He said Iraqi defenders had taught a "lesson" to the "mercenaries" and had massacred many American soldiers.
The US leaders in Washington have sent their soldiers on "suicide missions" to Baghdad, he declared.
"As our leader Saddam Hussein said, God is grilling their stomachs in hell," said Sahhaf. "Fighting is continuing in the main battlefields. Baghdad is secured and fortified and Baghdadis are heroes."
That was like giving the Americans a triple dose of their own medicine, given that US spokesman had made tall claims in the initial days of the conflict and these claims were proved to be half-truths and propaganda strategies later on.
It remains to be seen how far Sahhaf and others like him could continue to send such messages to the outside world since their options are getting narrowed even in terms of physical space as the Americans fought their way into the heart of the capital.
As for Saddam himself, it seemed likely that he remained tucked away in secret at some place known only to those immediately around him. It could be anywhere.
Saddam learnt one lesson from the 1991 war when foreigners who built secret bunkers for him during the 80s provided the details and diagrams of those structures to the allied forces. As such, it is highly like that his own most trusted people have built new structures about which even members of his inner circle might not know about.
There have been "mysterious" disappearances of engineers and technicians over the past years in Iraq, and speculation is that they were eliminated once they accomplished the task of building secret bunkers for the president.
It was speculated that Saddam would cross the border to Syria and regroup there to wage a war of attrition against entrenched American forces in Iraq. Indeed, Syria is about all the only place he could opt for.
At the same time, Syria, mindful of American warnings and fearful of getting dragged into direct confrontation with the US, is unlikely to offer refuge to Saddam.
In view of the 1980-88 war he waged on Iran, a sanctuary endorsed by the Iranians is all but ruled out. His other neighbours are Jordan and Turkey, both in the American camp although not as combatants, and Saudi Arabia, which had secretly offered him refuge before the war began.
One thing is certain: He would not accept a refuge anywhere where he would not have the freedom of mounting resistance against the Americans in his country, and that leaves out opting for Bahrain, which said it would shelter the Iraqi leader if he were to abdicate in order to save his people the agony of war.
There was talk in Baghdad last week that Saddam was in touch with Russian leaders with a view to seeking refuge in Russia. Informed sources said the idea had surfaced in the Egyptian media, which is known for shots in the dark in the past.
As the day dragged on in Baghdad, the urban warfare that Saddam promised the invaders unfolded itself.
The main bridges that cross the Tigris River appear to be under the control of forces loyal to Saddam.
Two of the bridges across the Tigris which bisects the capital were destroyed on Sunday, denying the invaders their use. Other bridges were said to be under Iraqi control and it seemed almost certain that these would also be blown by the defenders when the going gets tough.
Again, that does not answer the key question among the Arabs at large today: Where and how exactly does Saddam plan to stage his promised slaughter of the invaders? Or was it just tough talk?

Thursday, April 03, 2003

Deadly Khoei factor

by pv vivekanand

A BITTER feud is brewing behind the scenes between
allied forces on the one hand and Iran and
Iranian-backed Iraqi Shiites on the other over what is
emerging as a secret American plan to install
Washington's man in charges of religious affairs at
Shiite shrines in the occupied Iraqi towns of Najaf
and Karbala.
The feud adds to the rift in American-Iranian
relations and to apprehension in Tehran that the US is
seeking to marginalise Iran's strategic religious
interests in the area.
The US could not afford to make a false step with the
Shiites in the south and US commanders are obviously
been coached well. That explains why American officers
and soldiers went out of their way to point their gun
downwards and appeal to Iraqi Shiite crowds that they
were not hostile when they took over Najaf last week.
The crowds were so worked up believing that the
invaders would enter the holy mosque in Najaf that
they challenged the American soldiers and preventef
them from going near the mosque.
Another lesson for the Americans: The Shiites are a
different breed and would not be intimidated even by
military power when it comes to religious affairs and
this is a point they might remember if and when they
try to take on Iran -- the next in President George
Bush's "exis of evil."
The first sign of a secret American plan in southern
Iraq came when Sayyed Abdul Majid Al Khoei, son of
the late Ayatullah Al Uzma Sayyid Abul-Qasim Al Khoei,
appeared in Najaf last week.
Abdul Majid Al Khoei, who fled Iraq in 1991, was based
in London and runnng the affairs of the Khoei
Foundation. His return to Najaf amidst the war gave
immediate rise to suspicion that the US wanted him as
the supreme Shiite leader in Iraq.
Najaf, which lies about 150 kilometres south of
Baghdad and Karbala, which is located about 70
kilometres southwest of the Iraqi capital, have been
the scene of intense fighting between coalition troops
and Iraqi forces, are the holiest in Shiite Islam
after Mecca and Medina.
The Ali Bin Abu Talib Mosque in Najaf is deemed by the
Shiites as the ultimate seat of Shiite authority and
it is a dream of Shiites around the world to see a
grand ayatollah reign supreme there away from the
influence of all non-Shiite elements.
It was this desire that prompted Iran to take
advantage of the war chaos in 1991 to send up to
55,000 Iran-based Iraqi Shiites and elements from the
Iranian military across the border to Najaf with a
view to wrenching control of the holy city from the
Saddam regime. That attempt failed from Saddam struck
back, resulting in fierce clashes in Najaf and the
invaders expelled from the city.
As such, the sudden emergence of Abdul Majid Al Khoei,
who is known to be friendly with the US, has upset the
Iranians as well as the main Iraqi Shiite opposition
group, the Supreme Council of Islamic Revolution in
Iraq (SCIRI), which is backed by Iran.
The underlying fear is that the US, in view of the
SCIRI's close ties with Iran, is seeking to
marginalise the group and install its own man -- Khoei
-- in Najaf.
It was to SCIRI's fighting force, Badr Brigade, that
US Defence Secretary Donald Rusmsfled referred to when
he accused Iran of allowing Iraqi Shiite rebels to to
penetrate across the border into Iraq and create
troubles for the US-British force waging war to oust
Saddam Hussein.
SCIRI has little interest in what is happening in the
north of the country. It maintains a token presence of
some 1,000 fighters near the border in
Kurdish-controlled territory. That force is staying
put and is not part of the Kurdish-American advance
towards Baghdad from the north.
It is no accident that Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani,
former Iranian president and still an influential
figure in Iran, warned the US against causing any
damages to the Shiite shrines in southern Iraq.
"I am warning the White House and Britain: let not
your vanity or your fervor harm Shiite Islam's holy
sites because Shiites will never forgive you and
they, as well as God, will avenge it in due time," he
said on Friday.
The late Ayatullah Al Uzma Sayyid Abul-Qasim Al Khoei
was one of the most respected Shiite leaders. Known to
be one of the most benevolent and visionaries of
Shiite Islam, he established many welfare centres and
charity organisations whose services were not limited
to Shiites.
Abul-Qasim Al Khoei had been under constant pressure
from the Sunni-led Saddam regime to issue fatwas
favouring the government. In March 1991, following the
quelling of the Shiite revolt in south linked to the
failed attempt to seize Najaf, Abul Qasim Al Khoei was
forced to appear on television with Saddam and pay
tribute to the Iraqi strongman.
The Khoei Foundation says that he was being held under
house arrest -- for having resisted Saddam's demands
following the 1991 chaos -- when he died of a heart
attack in August 1992.
When Khoei died, some of his followers in Iran and
elsewhere accused the Saddam regime of having
engineered his death. They pointed out that the
government had cut telephone lines to his residence in
Kufa on the morning of his death. Later, it became
clear that the lines were cut after the ayalollah died
and the regime had wanted to pick its own time to
announce his demise.
At present, the Shiite religious leader in Najaf is
Grand Ayatollah Mirza Ali Sistani, whose official
title is "religious scientist at Scientific Haoza
(Religious Society) in Holy Najaf Province."
Sistani has denied a US military report that he had
issued a fatwa calling on the Shiites of the town
not to impede coalition military forces.
In fact, on April 1, Mirza Ali Sistani issued a fatwa
calling on "Muslims all over the world" to help Iraqis
in "a fierce battle against infidel followers who have
invaded our homeland".
As the only grand ayatollah of Iraq, Sistani, one of
the give grand ayatollahs alive today, is the most
senior cleric for Iraqi Shi'ites, who form 70 per cent
of ethnic Arabs in Iraq and about 55 per cent of
Iraq's population.
There is not much love lost between the Sunni regime
in Baghdad and the southern Shiites, but the Shiites,
taking a cue from Iranian stands, loathe the Americans
more than they do Saddam.
Contrary to the widespread belief that the Shiites
would opt to embrace Iran at the first given
opportunity, their track record shows that Saddam
managed to retain the loyalty of the Iraqi army, where
Shi'ite conscripts formed a majority during the
1980-88 war with Iran.
Saddam has offered much-publicised prayers at the
Shi'ite shrines in Najaf, Karbala and elsewhere. He
has even published his family tree, which supposedly
showed him to be a descendant of Imam Ali, a cousin
and a son-in-law of the Prophet Mohammed, entitling
him to the honorific of sayyid (lord or prince)
accorded to the male descendants of the Prophet
Mohammed. The authorities distributed millions of
copies of Sayyid Saddam Hussein's family tree to
emphasise his religious credentials.
Ali is revered by both Shi'ites and Sunnis. Shi'ites
regard him as the only legitimate caliph after the
Prophet Mohammed and Sunnis address him by the
honorific of caliph.
The Iran-backed Shiite opposition group has vowed that
Shiites of Iraq would stay out of the ongoing war to
topple Saddam "until they are certain that the Iraqi
regime's repressive machine has been annihilated."
From the very outset of the war, SCIRI leader Mohammed
Baqer Hakim urged Shiites to remain neutral, blaming
both the Americans and Saddam for the war.
Baghdad countered that call by putting on Iraq
Television Sistani and four other top Shiite clerics
at Najaf calling on Iraqis of all beliefs and ethnic
groups to unite in the defence of their country
against "the enemies of God and humanity."
Against tug-of-war comes the apparent American designs
to control Shiite power in southern Iraq.
According to a SCIRI official, if Washington "tries
to exclude us, we will see what our position will
be." However, "so far this is not the case," said the
official.
That might indeed be the case at this point in time.
But the US would soon find out it has opened not only
a Panadora's box which it won't be able to close but
also stirred a deadly hornest's nest if it tries to
tamper with the sentiments of the Shiites of southern
Iraq.





___________________________

Wednesday, April 02, 2003

'Battle for Baghdad'

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Hani Baghdad

MIsc







Following are the English versions of my writings in
Manorama. Very unfortunately, the translators have not
done justice to the central themes. It is being
explained to me as lack of knowledge of Mideastern
issues on the part of the translators.

pv vivekanand
The US-British war on Iraq has marked two weeks. A
massacre of civilians is in the offing when the
invaders come closer to Baghdad. Defenders of the
Iraqi capital are prepared. The US is sending massive
reinforcements for the decisive battle. In the
meantime, the stakes have gone up with US and Israeli
threats against Syria. To cap it all, strong signs
have emerged of how Israel is seeking to turn the
situation into its favour.
However, the danger lurks that US intelligence, with
help from Iraqi exiles, has already bribed senior
Iraqi generals and officers to desert at the most decisive moment.
PV Vivekanand writes


AS THE FRONTLINE SITUATION in the US-British war stood
on Thursday, the "battle for Baghdad" could begin in a
few days in the most crucial phase of the military
action aimed at toppling Saddam Hussein.
Both sides have affirmed that the military
confrontation for control of Baghdad is going to be
tough.
While the American and British forces were careful in
their assessment of the expected battle, the Iraqi
leadership appeared to be confident that their forces
would be able to inflict enough casualties on the
invading force in street battles in Baghdad to
persuade US President George W. Bush to call off the
war.
The Iraqi calculation seems to be rather simple:
Saddam could afford to absorb high casulaty rates
among Iraqi defenders of the capital while Bush and
his ally British Prime Minister Tony Blair would be
held accountable for every American and British life
lost in the war that does not have international
legitimacy.
At the very outset of the war, the war suffered a
setback. Turkey refused to allow the US to use Turkish
territory as a springboard for a "northern front"
against Baghdad.
The US-British expectations that the "oppressed
people" Iraq would welcome the invading forces with
open arms have been shattered, and along them one of
the central pillars of their strategy.
Another major setback is the mounting civilian
casualty. Again, that is going to figure prominently
in the battle for Baghdad.
Obviously, the Iraq's strategy is to inflict the
maximum casualties among the invading American and
British forces. The only hope, as seen from
Saddam's vantage point, is that massive American
casualties could, at some point, dissuade Bush.
However, Bush is as determined as Saddam and it is
highly unlikely that he would step back and put an end
to the war with his goal of regime change unachieved.
A withdrawal from Iraq is not at all in the cards.
The war would soon reach a point where Bush and his
military commanders would have to either open up
their big guns indiscriminately in the battle for
baghdad. They would be left with no option but to do
with because
they would not be able to trust anyone not to be a
suicide bomber.
Civilian casualties would be high, raising the tempo
in the international rejection of the war, and this is
one of the key cards that Saddam believes he has up
his sleeve.
The time element, according to the iraqi thinking, is
in its favour. as every day passes, pressure would
mount on Bush to finish the war or call it off, but
the US president would not be in a position to do call
the shots on the ground.
With natonalist fervour at its height in Iraq whipped
up by official rhetorics and pledges to turn Baghdad a
cemetery for the invaders, thousands are ready to
strap explosives around them or rig vehicles with
bombs and explode themselves and take as many American
and British soldiers with them.
Iraqi officials say that up to 6,000 people, both
Iraqis and other arabs, are waiting for orders to turn
themselves "martyr" for Iraq by staging suicide
attacks.
Waves of such attacks would come when the allied
forces get closer to their strategic prize - Baghdad
-- and would hit their peak when the siege of the
Iraqi capital is launched.
Under Saddam's strategy, every nook and corncer and
every building in the capital would be turned into a
trap for the American and British soldiers; Republican
Guard soldiers, regular army soldiers, Baathist party
militiamen, "suicide bombers" and Iraqis and Arab
volunteers would be posted in every building.
The challenge that the invaders would face is: how to
"take out" the military elements without causing
civilian casualties? Any hesitation would indeed be
exploited by the defending fighters and thus result in
American and British casualties. That is the core of
the Iraqi strategy. .
Saddam could not but be counting on the haste with
which the US withdrew from the UN peace-keeping force
in Somalia when 18 American soldiers were killed in
1993. Somalis downed the US helicopter soldiers were
flying on a mission and attacked other soldiers who
sent to rescue their comrades.
On the other end, Bush and his commanders seem to
hoping that they would not have to actually take
Baghdad in a conventional military sense because
theywould have to confront at least 50,000 Republican
Guards and an unknown number of Baathist Party
militiamen to contend with once they try to enter the
capital.
Hopes that Iraqis would rise up in revolt against the
regime and make it easy for the invaders to make a
beeline for Saddam and his inner circle are no longer
entertained.
The US is now adding more strength to the campaign.
Bush has ordered another 120,000 soldiers to join the
225,000 already in and around Iraq; and, if need be,
it would appear, Bush is ready to pour in more.
The US strategy at this point to move towards Baghdad
and stay put on the
ground and continue air assaults until the units are
reinforced for a direct confrontation.
In the meantime, US military commanders are hoping
that the "northern push" would reach the capital. As
of this week, there was not enough American soldiers
in the north, and there the US strategists seem to be
hoping to use the 80,000 plus Kurdish fighters to lead
the advance and use them as the US did with the
Northern Alliance in Afghanistan,
The Iraqi retreat from northern lines seems to be
aimed at luring the Kurdish forces into a military
trap, some reports say.
That strategy, if true, would prove out this week.

Reports from Baghdad so far indicate a systematic
destruction of every symbol of government and
suspected premises that help the Saddam Hussein
regime run the state and military apparata.
A major tragedy is in the waiting, local residents
say, when the allied bombs and missiles might miss
their target and crash into heavily populated areas.
In one attack, at least 55 people were killed last
week when two missiles crashed into a market area.
A death toll of 55 is just a scratch on the surface
when compared with the five million or more of the
population of Baghdad, where massive complexes house
thousands of families.
The fear is indeed true that a missile or a bomb
hitting any of the state-built housing complexes where
damage would not be limited to a single building.
Officials are putting up a brave face, as reports from
Baghdad indicate. "Historically Baghdad is known to
resilient and it has sprung back to its
feet everytime after it everyone thought it had become
part of history," said an official. That is a history
that dates back to the 7th century when an invading
force obliterated the city, which sprang back into
life in less than 20 to 30 years, according to history
books.
Hit so far in the war that began on March 20 are
presidential palaces, key government buildings
including those which used to host parliament and
cabinet meetings, offices used by senior figures like
the vice-president and deputy prime minister, several
ministries, and complexes used for military purposes
by Saddam's son Uday and Qussai as well as
headquarters of the elite Republican Guard have been
wrecked.
Sprawling compounds on the banks of the River Tigris
have been on the main targets of the attacks.
Several missiles and bombs have crashed into civilian
areas, resulting in the death of at least 80 people
and causing injuries to more than 300 in what the
allied forces had promised to be a "clean war with
minimum collateral damage."

THE US has dramatically increased the stakes in the
war by issuing an implied threat of military action
against Syria if it helped its Arab neighbour to
resist the American-British invading force.
Syria countered by declaring that it has chosen to
align itself with the people or Iraq.
Syrian President Bashar Al Assad also made scathing
comments against the US.
As far as these statements remain as a war of words,
the risk is minimal of Syria being targeted for
attack.
However, danger signals have started flashing after
Israel pitched in and warned Syria by reminding it of
Israel's military might.
Israeli Defence Minister Ahahul Mofaz has ratcheted
the tension by saying that Washington and Tel Aviv
viewed as very grave the wartime aid Damascus was
allegedly supplying to Baghdad.
Israel has has claimed that Iraq may be hiding
surface-to-surface missiles and chemical or biological
weapons in Syria.
Mofaz said Israel was monitoring statements made by
Syrian officials includingAssad that suggested that
peace with Israel was impossible.
"Bashar Assad has recently engaged in and expressed
himself in two spheres that in the view of the
Americans and in our view are very grave, " said
Mofaz.
"Israel's first concern is the very fact of their
(Syria's) granting physical aid to the Iraqis," he
said. "The second is his (Assad's) remark about
Israel, in which he says in essence that no peace
agreement can be reached with Israel," mofaz said.
"We must follow both his remarks and his actions in a
very, very thorough manner, " he added.
The writing was indeed on the wall that Syria could be
targeted when the US said last week that Russian
companies were supplying night goggles and
communication jamming gear to Iraq.
The implication was then clear that Russian firms
could have supplied such equipment to Syria while the
Moscow government kept a blind eye and Damascus could
have sent the gear to Iraq.
Given the rising unilateralism in American actions and
words as represented by President Bush and his aides
like Defence Secretary Donald Rumseld, it would
appear that Washington might be willing to take on
Syria -- and probably Iran at a later stage -- in what
many Arab commentators see as a grandoise plan to
reshape the entire Middle East to suit American and
Israeli interests, and not necessarily in that order
either.
While it does not appear that the US has any
intentions to widen the war, the natural course of the
bellicose approach would inevitably trigger
unexpected developments.
However, it is widely expected that the US would
switch its gunsights to Syria and Syrian-backed
Lebanese hardline groups like Hizbollah as well as
Palestinian factions based in Damascus after it "takes
care" of the Saddam regime in Baghdad.
Syria has rejected Rumsfeld's charges and described
them as prompted by America's "failures" in the ground
offensive in Iraq and the "blunders" it made in view
of the high civilian casualties in the war. However,
Damascus has very good reasons to remain on guard,
given the implicit Israeli threats.
Israel does indeed have a vested interest in military
action against Syria.
The Damascus-backed Palestinian groups -- Hamas,
Islamic Jihad, the Democratic Front for the Liberation
of Palestine, the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine, Fateh Uprising -- a breakaway group from
Yasser Arafat's mainstream Fateh - the Arab Liberation
Front, and the Palestine Liberation Front among others
-- are a constant source of problems for Israel.
Israel has accused Syria of extending logistic and
tactical support for these groups to stage armed
attacks against Israeli targets and of encouraging
Hizbollah and other groups in Lebanon to keep the
tempo high across the Lebanese-Israeli border even
after Israel left southern Lebanese territory after a
disasterous 17-year occupation in 1999.
The Israeli argument is that Syria wants to keep a
front alive with the Jewish state so that the
outstanding dispute over Israel's occupation of
Syria's Golan Heights does not get pushed back in
regional priorities.
It has for long pressured the US to act against
Damascus.
With the tempo of war high in the region, the US
might be goaded into taking action against Syria in
order to serve Israeli interests.
And that is the danger to be see in Mofaz's comments.

In practical terms, the US, with the additional
120,000 soldiers ordered into the Middle East to store
up the war against Iraq in view of unexpected Iraqi
resistance, could be tempted to take on Syria.
The natural candidate to do the job on behalf of the
US is of course Israel, which is itching for action to
remove Syria as a military power in the equation and
thus do away with Syria's insistence that it return
the Golan Heights in its entirety.
Despite half-hearted overtures in the past that came
to nought, it is a foregone conclusion that Israel has
no intention whatsover of returning the Golan Heights
to Syria.
While the conventional argument is that the Heights
would give Syria a strategic military advantage, the
prime reason for Israel's refusal to retun it is the
very fact that it represents the main source for water
for the Jewish state. It has to be taken note here
that Israel's has an almost fanatic obsession with not
only securing its water sources but also seeking to
increase the quanity of water available to it.
In a wider context, it is not ruled out that the US
would and could call on Israel for help if the going
gets tough in the region.
There is an argument that the US might not favour
invovling Israel in a widened version of the war since
would lead to further strain in US-Arab relations,
However, such a consideration might not be key to any
decisions taken by the US, which has pulled all the
plugs in striving towards war against Iraq, including
dumping the UN Security Council and alienating many
European countries,
Waging a war on two fronts -- Iraq and Syria might
not appear feasible for the US at this point, it need
not be so. The US might simply assign Israel to "take
care of Syria" while it concentrates on Iraq.
If that happens, then the region would have to deal
with an unprecedented wave of Arab nationalism which
would only turn the situation worse and restrict all
diplomatic options.
The wild card in the game will be Iran, which would
step in if Syria is targeted. Rusmfeld accused Iran
of allowing Iraqi exiles opposed to the Saddam regime
were crossing the border into Iraq and this was
complicating the US war to topple Saddam Hussein.
What he stopped short of mentioning is the American
fear that the Iran-backed Iraqis might put up stiff
resistance to the US plans for post-war Iraq.
Both Syria and Iran appear in the American list of
countries that support "international terrorism" and
this would justify any action that Rumsfeld might
order against them. Iran has so far remained mostly
vocal in its barrage against Israel, but its backing
for the Palestinian struggle, training of Islamic
Jihad members, funding Hamas fighters, arming
Hizbollah with rockets is undeniable.
Israel fears Iranian military advances and its
nuclear programme would and would gladly welcome a
chance to have a go at Iran.
Overriding all these considerations are the emerging
signs of Israeli designs on Iraq's oil and water
wealth.
Israel has already issued a call for reopening
decades-old oil pipeline running from the northern
Iraqi city of Mosul to the Israeli port of Haifa on
the Mediterranean after the US-led war on Iraq ends.
Such are the strategic prizes sought by Israel from a
post-war Iraq that the call for Iraqi oil to be pumped
to Israel will be followed by another for a pipeline
to pump Iraqi water to Israel.
Seen against the obvious "invisible" US objective of
removing Iraq as a potential military threat against
Israel, there is little doubt that there could be
pre-determined plans to address the Jewish state's
various concerns, including its oil and water needs.
With the US in absolute control of Iraq, it would be
free to use Iraqi territory to convey water Israel
through Jordan, which has signed a peace treaty with
the Jewish state and has strong economic and trade
links with the US,
According to a report in Israel's Haaretz newspaper,
Israeli Infrastructure Minister Joseph Paritzky wants
to reopen the Mosul-Haifa pipeline so that Israel
could save the cost of importing expensive crude from
Russia.
The minister also expressed confidence that the US
administration, which hopes to take control of
post-war Iraq, would support the Israeli call.
Indeed, Paritzky's confidence comes from the deals
Israel appears to have already made with the US on
how to divide the spoils of the war against Iraq. No
doubt Iraqi oil and water figure high among them.
The Mosul-Haifa pipeline was built during the British
mandate over Palestine, and Iraq stopped pumping oil
through it when the state of Israel was created in
1948 when Haifa came under Israeli control.
Since the 60s, Israel was engaged in deceptive efforts
to arrange some deal under which the oil flow from
Mosul could be resumed. But Iraq, which stood firm
against recognising the Jewish state and backed the
Arab and Palestinian struggles to regain their
occupied land from Israel, steadfastly refused. It
switched pumping to the Mediterranean through a
pipeline to the Syria port of Latakia and to a Turkish
terminal in the Mediterranean.
Syria, which backed Iran during the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq
war, closed the pipeline during the 1980s in response
to a request from Tehran. Iran had blocked Iraqi oil
exports through the Gulf during the war and wanted to
choke off Iraqi oil revenues.
During that period, Israel, obviously seeking to
exploit the Iraqi dilemma, suggested through the US to
Baghdad that the Mosul-Haifa pipeline could be
reopened. But again Saddam Hussein refused.
Interestingly, the main pointman in those discussions
was none other than the current US defence secretary,
Rumsfeld, who reportedly raised the issue with Saddam
during a visit he paid to Baghdad in 1983 only to face
Iraqi rejection of the proposal.
Israel also tried in vain through various third
parties, including the Europeans, to convince Iraq to
build a pipeline to pump Iraqi oil to Jordan's Red Sea
port of Aqaba; again, the idea was to pump Iraqi oil
from Aqaba to Israel's port of Eilat, only three
kilometres away, from where it would be sent to the
refinery in Haifa on the Mediterranean.
By 1946, two pipelines were built to pump Iraqi oil to
serve the British naval and military bases in the
Eastern Mediterranean: the first a 25-centimetre line
running direct from Iraq to Palestine, and the second
a 40-centimetre line running from Iraq to Palestine
via Jordanoil needs while it is situated a few hundred
kilometres from some of the richest oil deposits in
the world; and it is only natural that Israel would
want to devise some means to get that Arab oil. What
better means than using its US connections to get
Iraqi oil through the existing pipeline?
Now comes the turn of Iraqi water.
International experts have assessed that Iraq has the
most extensive river system in the Middle East.
The country has an impressive system of dams and river
control projects, the largest being the Darbandikhan
dam in the northern Kurdish area.
Israel tried in the 1990s to encourage the realisation
of a so-called Peace Pipeline that would bring the
waters of the Tigris and Euphrates south to the Gulf
states, and to Israel by extending it through Jordan.
Under the proposal, Turkey was dam up the Euphrates
and sell the water to the region's countries,
including Israel.
Turkey on the one hand and downstream Syria and Iraq
had been for long locked in disputes over the
Euphrates since Turkey slowed down the flow of the
river through dams build upstream. In the 90s, it
built the Ataturk Dam, which has considerably reduced
the flow.
Israel never gave up its efforts through various means
to increase its availability of water but the
geopolitics of the region -- mainly the Arab-Israeli
dispute with the Palestinian problem and Israel's
occupation of the Golan being the central issues --
made all such efforts a non-starter.
Now, with the expectation of a US-controlled
administration taking charge in post-war Iraq, Israel
is free to have the run of the country as it always
wished.