IRAQ WAR - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Notes From A Lost War: 20,000 Resistance Soldiers: 2000 Resistance Attacks A Month |
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from militaryproject.org
Entered into the database on Friday, December 09th, 2005 @ 14:06:37 MST |
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And They Got Training Bases For New Recruits With Instructional
Videos Many insurgent groups have become more tactically sophisticated and
more lethal, and around 2,000 attacks are launched each month. Training facilities
are dotted across Iraq; videos obtained by TIME show classes in infantry techniques
and handling weapons. 12.4.05 By MICHAEL WARE, BAGHDAD. Time Magazine [Excerpts] "This insurgency has got roots, it's got money, and it's got motivation,"
says a U.S. intelligence official, in an assessment echoed by military officers
and insurgent leaders alike. "And the life span of this insurgency could
be years." "Will we ever see Iraqi security forces capable of crushing this
insurgency? Probably not. No," says a high-ranking military-intelligence
officer in Iraq. U.S. commanders believe that as many as 20,000 fighters are in the
field on any given day, a figure that has remained constant for almost two years.
Many insurgent groups have become more tactically sophisticated and
more lethal, and around 2,000 attacks are launched each month. Training facilities are dotted across Iraq; videos obtained by TIME
show classes in infantry techniques and handling weapons. Abu Baqr, a former emir, or commander, of a nationalist militia in Baghdad
who was recently released from a U.S. military prison and is rebuilding his
team, tells TIME that "in the beginning, even I didn't know how to use
most of the weapons, but I learned. We give out weapons from the old army, and
the money that funds us comes from wealthy individuals." Part of the insurgents' resilience comes from their fluidity. "The
U.S. is not fighting an army," says Abu Mohammed, a strategist for a prominent
Islamic nationalist group. "We hit and move. We're more like groups
of gangs that can't be pinned down and can't be stamped out." Many voted in the Oct. 15 constitutional referendum and have plans to participate
in the Dec. 15 election. Few see a contradiction between voting and continuing to battle U.S.
forces. "I voted in the referendum, and I'm still fighting, and everybody
in my organization did the same," says Abu Marwan, the Army of Mohammed
commander. "This is two-track war--bullets and the ballot. They are not
mutually exclusive." And even if the U.S. can lure some guerrillas to the negotiating table,
it still faces a seemingly inescapable quandary: so long as U.S. troops are
involved in combat in Iraq, there's every reason to believe the insurgency will
be able to recruit sufficient numbers of motivated new fighters to do battle
with them. Democratic Senator Jack Reed, a former Army paratrooper who was briefed
privately by military officials during a visit to Iraq in October, says "One
of the problems with an insurgency is that every time you turn a corner, there's
another corner." MORE: Why Do The Collaborator Troops Need So Much Training? Why Is It All Useless? Why Don't The Resistance Troops Have This Problem? 12.7.05 Baltimore Sun Although the United States has spent billions of dollars training Iraq's military
and police forces, defense analysts and U.S. military officers say it could
be at least 2007 before Iraqis can take the lead in fighting the insurgency
because they lack the hardware, expertise and ethnic balance to be effective.
One senior U.S. official in Baghdad said it "doesn't take much
to train an infantry soldier" but that training logistics and supply personnel
is harder because Iraqi soldiers "don't have the technological background."
[Oh please. The resistance troops are doing just fine in the "technological
background" department. Ever hear of IEDs? Guess that's something "senior
U.S. officials" don't have to worry much about. They sit safely in the
Green Zone while the troops die.] [As for the billions pissed away on this useless "training"
for the traitor troops, gee, could it possibly be that when you're fighting
to free your country from a foreign Imperial occupation, you are motivated,
but when you're recruited to be a traitor serving George Bush, things just don't
work out so well? For 100 points and an immediate trip home from Iraq, answer
the following question: How did that work in America in 1776 when a different
George tried the same kind of Imperial occupation?] MORE: The U.S. Official Quoted Above Says Iraqi Soldiers "Don't
Have The Technological Background" [As Resistance Escalates High Tech Publicity Campaign!] As roadside bombs become more sophisticated, so do the methods to record
them. Recently, insurgents synchronized a roadside bomb with a remote-controlled
video camera to film the explosion, Zahner said. "It's a virtual jihadist
experience," he said. "That's what gets them the money. That's what
gets them the recruits." 12/7/2005 By Rick Jervis, USA TODAY BAGHDAD Insurgents in Iraq have launched a publicity blitz. They increased
the number of Web postings to 825 last month from 145 in January, according
to the U.S. military. Most postings detail insurgent bombings or attacks on
Iraqi and U.S. forces. The Web postings are also growing more sophisticated and frequently
include video, soundtracks and professional editing, Army Maj. Gen. Richard
Zahner, the top U.S. military intelligence officer in Iraq, said Tuesday. Concerned that insurgents were gaining an advantage in the information war,
the U.S. military has stepped up efforts to counter the publicity onslaught
from the insurgents. "The information environment has become a battlefield in a very real way,"
said Lt. Col. Barry Johnson, a military spokesman. "There was a decision
early on that this was not something we could allow to go uncontested."
He said efforts have accelerated to combat insurgents' media campaign. Nearly all insurgent groups operating in Iraq have media teams responsible
for posting statements on the Internet and creating videos for Web and television
broadcasts, said Col. Pat McNiece, an intelligence officer. Insurgent messages often target Iraq and the Arab world, McNiece said. The
messages are used as a recruiting tool for militants and as a way to raise money
for the insurgency, he said. The U.S. government monitors websites but rarely makes an effort to shut them
down because it's so easy for terrorists to set up new ones, said Ben Venzke
of IntelCenter, a Washington-area think tank that monitors terrorist declarations
and does work for U.S. intelligence. "If you shut it down, it will be back in about five seconds in
a million other locations," Venzke said. For militants, it's important to publicize the attacks, widening the impact
of a bombing or a kidnapping to help influence public opinion. Insurgents sometimes rehearse missions with the group's cameraman to
find the best angle to capture the attack on tape, Zahner said. Cameramen then
join militants on missions. They film the attacks, then edit and post them on
websites, sometimes within a matter of hours, he said. As roadside bombs become more sophisticated, so do the methods to record
them. Recently, insurgents synchronized a roadside bomb with a remote-controlled
video camera to film the explosion, Zahner said. "It's a virtual jihadist
experience," he said. "That's what gets them the money. That's what
gets them the recruits." |