Untitled Document
Abstract
The phenomenon of death squads operating in Iraq has become generally
accepted over recent months. However, in its treatment of the issue, the mainstream
media has zealously followed a line of attributing extrajudicial killings to
unaccountable Shia militias who have risen to prominence with the electoral
victory of Ibramhim Jafaari’s Shia-led government in January. The following
article examines both the way in which the information has been widely presented
and whether that presentation has any actual basis in fact. Concluding that
the attribution to Shia militias is unsustainable, the article considers who
the intellectual authors of these crimes against humanity are and what purpose
they serve in the context of the ongoing occupation of the country.
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Shortly before dawn on 14 September 2005, just hours before a huge bomb exploded
in Baghdad killing 88 labourers, around 50 men in army uniforms arrived at the
village of Taji 16km north of Baghdad in military vehicles, bearing military
identification. After searching the village, they seized 17 local men, described
by one witness as vegetable sellers, ice sellers and taxi drivers. Handcuffed
and blindfolded, the men were led from their homes before being shot in the
head in the main square (Newsday,
Al Jazeera, Juan Cole).
Such killings represent a pattern of violence as frightening as and perhaps
more systematic than the steady wave of bombings targeting civilians in occupied
Iraq. Whilst the pattern of death-squad-style executions is broadly recognised,
it remains badly understood and, in its representation, deeply distorted.
The appearance of death squads was first highlighted in May this year, when
over a 10-day period dozens of bodies were found casually disposed of in rubbish
dumps and vacant areas around Baghdad. All of the victims had been handcuffed,
blindfolded and shot in the head and many of them also showed signs of having
been brutally tortured. On 5 May 15 bodies were discovered in an industrial
area called Kasra-Wa-Atash and subsequently identified as belonging to a group
of farmers seized from a Baghdad market. The bodies revealed such torture marks
as broken skulls, burning, beatings and right eyeballs removed. Witnesses claimed
the men had been arrested by members of the security forces (BBC,
Guardian). Less than two weeks later, 15 more bodies were found at two sites
(KUNA).
According to the chairman of the Sunni Waqf court, Adnan Muhammad Salman, the
victims were Sunnis who had been arrested at their homes or at mosques (ArabicNews.com).
The evidence was sufficiently compelling for the Association of Muslim Scholars
(AMS), a leading Sunni organisation, to issue public statements in which they
accused the security forces attached to the Ministry of the Interior as well
as the Badr Brigade, the former armed wing of the Supreme Council for Islamic
Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), of being behind the killings. They also accused
the Ministry of the Interior of conducting state terrorism (Financial
Times).
Since then, a steady stream of the victims of extrajudicial killings has flowed
through the Baghdad morgue. Characteristically, the victims’ hands are
tied or handcuffed behind their backs and they have been blindfolded. In most
cases they also appear to have been whipped with a cord, subjected to electric
shocks or beaten with a blunt object and shot to death, often with single bullets
to the head. Yasser Salihee, a journalist for Knight Ridder investigating the
bodies, wrote that eyewitnesses claimed many of the victims were seized by men
wearing commando uniforms in white Toyota Land Cruisers with police markings.
(Knight
Ridder). Salihee’s last article was published on 27 June, three days
after he was fatally shot by a US sniper at a routine checkpoint.
It is impossible to know exactly how many people are being killed in this way.
Salihee reported that more than 30 examples occurred in less than a week, while
Faik Baqr, director of Baghdad’s central morgue, states that before the
occupation of Iraq, the morgue handled 200 to 250 suspicious deaths a month,
of which perhaps 16 had firearm injuries. Now the figure is between 700 and
800, with some 500 firearm wounds (op.
cit.). The Independent’s Robert Fisk adds that there are so many bodies
that human remains are stacked on top of each other and unidentified bodies
are rapidly disposed of (Robert
Fisk).
The killings have not been confined to Baghdad. For example, on 24 June six
farmers were taken from the village of Hashmiyat 15km west of Baquba by men
in army uniform; their decapitated bodies were found soon afterwards a mile
from their homes (Associated
Press). More recently, on 8 September, 18 people were abducted from the
town of Iskandriyah 40km south of the capital by men in National Guard Uniforms
and executed in isolated open land (Xinhuanet).
These few examples represent the tip of a rapidly expanding iceberg, with the
majority of extrajudicial-style killings seriously under-investigated and underreported.
In response to the accusations of police involvement, drawing on eyewitness
accounts, Iraq’s new Ministry of the Interior claims that it is easy to
get hold of police uniforms and that the killings are the work of ‘insurgents’
masquerading as security forces in order to create sectarian divisions (BBC).
Such denials are echoed by US special advisor to the ministry Steven Casteel,
who has stated that, ‘The small numbers that we’ve investigated
we’ve found to be either rumor or innuendo’ (Salihee, op.
cit.).
Despite such denials, few journalists have been able to dismiss what the Observer’s
foreign editor Peter Beaumont describes as the ‘extraordinary sense of
impunity with which these abductions and killings take place’ as mere
innuendo (Observer),
or the consistent eye-witness accounts of the kidnappers appearing with expensive
foreign equipment issued to the security forces, such as the Toyota Land Cruisers
and the Glock 9mm pistols, as simply rumour (Salihee, op.
cit.). The Interior Ministry’s explanation of large, heavily armed
groups of resistance fighters moving freely about the capital becomes even less
plausible when one considers that many of the killings took place following
the onset of Operation Lightning/Thunder in late May. This divisional-size operation
saw the deployment of 40,000 Iraqi troops, who sealed Baghdad and installed
675 checkpoints around the city (Associated
Press). Hundreds of arrests followed as the security forces began to ‘hunt
down insurgents’ (BBC).
According to the AMS, in one instance, on 13 July, dozens of Interior Ministry
commandos stormed several houses in northern Baghdad and detained 13 people,
before torturing and killing them in a nearby apartment (Gulf
Daily News).
However, instead of placing the blame squarely on the apparatus of the new
Iraqi state, the mainstream media has almost exclusively chosen to shift the
emphasis away, resorting to a number of standardised literary devices. The first
device is to frame extrajudicial killings in the context of a wider panoply
of supposed retaliatory sectarian violence. For example, Francis Curta of the
Associated French Press writes that ‘A series of tit-for-tat killings
has raised sectarian tension to boiling points’ (eg. Mail&Guardian
Online), Mohamad Bazzi writing for Newsday refers to a ‘wave of retaliatory
killings’ (Newsday),
and James Hider of the London Times believes that ‘the only certainty
is that once [the bodies] are identified, someone will want revenge’ (Times
Online). The second device is to state or imply that the security forces
are closely associated with largely unaccountable Shia militias, especially
the Badr Brigade. For instance, Patrick Cockburn of the UK Independent writes
that ‘Some carrying out the attacks appear to belong to the 12,000-strong
paramilitary police commandos’, while, in almost the same breath he adds
that ‘Fear of Shia death squads, perhaps secretly controlled by the Badr
Brigade, the leading Shia militia, frightens the Sunni’ (Independent);
in a similar vein, the BBC claims that ‘Angry mourners at a funeral for
some of those killed said they had died at the hands of police and Shia militiamen’
(BBC).
Most importantly, reports variously stress that the government, Interior Ministry
and police are under sectarian Shia control. Hence, Samir Haddad, a correspondent
for Islam Online, refers to the ‘dominant-Shiite newly-formed security
forces’ (Islam
Online), the Chicago Tribune’s Liz Sly states that Sunnis ‘accused
Iraq’s security forces, now controlled by the Shiite-led government’
(Chicago
Tribune), Tom Lasseter, writing for the Inquirer, claims that ‘Badr
members have gained unprecedented authority’ and that the Interior Minister,
who controls the nation’s police and commando forces, is a former Supreme
Council official with close ties to Badr’ (Philadelphia
Inquirer), the Observer’s Beaumont writes that ‘Accountability
has also become more opaque since the formation of the Shia-dominated government’
(op.
cit.), the BBC’s Richard Galpin states that the ‘Sunni community
in particular claims it is being targeted by the Shia-dominated police force’
(BBC), Anthony
Loyd for the London Times talks of ‘allegations of extensive extra-judicial
killings of Sunnis by the Shia-dominated Iraqi security forces’ (Times
Online) and Sinan Salaheddin of the Associated Press, states ‘The
grisly finds have led Sunnis to believe that Shiite Muslims who dominate the
government and the Interior Ministry are waging a quiet, deadly campaign against
them’ (eg. Seattle
Post-Intelligencer).
Other devices include mentioning the Interior Ministry’s claims of insurgents
donning police or commando uniforms or implying that if the security forces
are involved in torture and murder it is a reflection of the fact that it is
composed of reconstituted members of the former state who know only a culture
of violence and intimidation; this is clearly at odds with those reports that
regard the security forces as entirely Shia dominated. Wilder devices talk about
security forces’ frustration or blame Zarqawi for attempting to inflame
sectarian tensions. Whilst all of these devices are employed in various combinations,
notably absent from every account is any serious examination of the new Iraqi
state or, assiduously avoided, the role of the occupying powers, leaving the
most thoughtful of journalist to wonder with Beaumont whether the Iraqi state
is ‘stumbling towards a policy of institutionalised torture’ or
whether human-rights abuses are conducted by ‘rogue elements’ within
the security apparatus (Salihee’s investigation represents the one exception,
with the emphasis placed firmly on the organs of the state, supported by solid
primary evidence).
Police Commandos and Disinformation Brigades
An instructive starting point for an examination of the prevailing media consensus
is to consider some of the forces of the Iraqi state most closely associated
with allegations of serious human rights abuses.
The majority of accusations are general. Journalists refer to the police, security
forces, the National Guard or to poorly identified police commandos, but specific
accusations have been made against a unit known as the Wolf Brigade. The identification
of the Wolf Brigade with cases of abduction, torture and execution in Baghdad
was first made on 16 May, when Mothana Harith Al-Dari, a spokesman for the AMS,
stated that ‘The mass killings and the crackdown and detention campaigns
in north-eastern Baghdad over the past two days by members of the Iraqi police
or by an Interior Ministry special force, known as the Wolf Brigade, are part
of a state terror policy’, in relation to the discoveries of the victims
of extrajudicial executions noted above (Islam
Online).
Within days a Knight Ridder journalist, Hannah Allam, had published under a
variety of titles an article about the Wolf Brigade, highlighting their maverick
tough-guy image and presenting their leader, who goes by the nom de guerre of
Abul Waleed, as a devout Shiite, ‘complete with a photo of Imam Ali and
religious chants programmed into his constantly ringing cell phone.’ (Knight
Ridder). Allam informed readers that Waleed regarded the AMS as infidels
and tossed their accusations of torture and murder into the bin. Additionally,
readers learned that the unit was formed as the brainchild of Waleed in October
2004, saw its first action in Mosul after nearly two months’ training
with US forces, and is behind the inhuman television programme Terrorists in
the Grip of Justice, in which tortured detainees are forced to confess to a
lurid array of crimes (Associated
Press). However, whilst belittling charges of horrendous human-rights violations
as ‘the usual complaints’, Allam made no reference to the Wolf Brigade
being a special forces unit attached to the Interior Ministry.
On 9 June rightwing US think tank the Council for Foreign Relations published
a paper devoted to Iraqi militias (CFR),
simultaneously repeated in the New York Times. In a series of FAQ-type entries,
the report reiterated many of Allam’s insights about the Wolf Brigade,
as well as offering some additional tidbits:
What is the Wolf Brigade?
The most feared and effective commando unit in Iraq, experts say. Formed
last October by a former three-star Shiite general and SCIRI member who goes
by the nom de guerre Abu Walid, the Wolf Brigade is composed of roughly 2,000
fighters, mostly young, poor Shiites from Sadr City.
However, the paper went further in emphasising the units’ sectarian Shiite
character, stating that ‘One of Badr's recent offshoots is a feared, elite
commando unit linked to the Iraqi Interior Ministry called the Wolf Brigade’,
and spelling out the distinction between it and other, Sunni militia-style units.
Are there any Sunni-led commando units?
Yes. At least one counterinsurgency unit is headed by a former officer of
Saddam Hussein's Baath Party. The Special Police Commandos, like the Wolf
Brigade, have a reputation for brutality, but the group is also considered
one of Iraq's most effective and well-disciplined counterinsurgency units.
Those familiar with Peter Maas’s article ‘The
Way of the Commandos’, published by The New York Times Magazine just
six weeks earlier, will recognise that, in fact, the Wolf Brigade bears a striking
similarity to the unit he identifies as the Special Police Commandos. The Police
Commandos, too, were formed in autumn 2004 and saw one of their first major
commitments in Mosul in November; like the Wolf Brigade, their leader also founded
an unspeakably vile television show called Terrorism in the Grip of Justice.
But there are fundamental distinctions between these units as well. The Police
Commandos were founded on the initiative of then Interior Minister Falah al-Naqib,
the son of a former Iraqi Chief of Staff, believed by many to have been a major
CIA asset (National
Review Online), under the command of his uncle, an ex-Baathist, Sunni military
intelligence officer and CIA coup-plotter called Adnan Thabit. Its recruits
are drawn from former members of the special forces and Republican Guard, with
mixed ethnic and religious background (Washington
Post), while its chain of command is said to be largely Sunni. Most importantly,
the Police Commandos were formed under the experienced tutelage and oversight
of veteran US counterinsurgency fighters, and from the outset conducted joint-force
operations with elite and highly secretive US special-forces units (Reuters,
National
Review Online).
A key figure in the development of the Special Police Commandos was James Steele,
a former US Army special forces operative who cut his teeth in Vietnam before
moving on to direct the US military mission in El Salvador at the height of
that country’s civil war. Steele was responsible for selecting and training
the small units (or death squads) who were boasted to have inflicted 60% of
the casualties caused in that ‘counterinsurgency’ campaign (Manwaring,
El Salvador at War, 1988, p 306-8). Principally, the tens of thousands of victims
were civilians.
Another US contributor was the same Steven Casteel who as the most senior US
advisor within the Interior Ministry brushed off serious and well-substantiated
accusations of appalling human right violations as ‘rumor and innuendo’.
Like Steele, Casteel gained considerable experience in Latin America, in his
case participating in the hunt for the cocaine baron Pablo Escobar in Colombia’s
Drugs Wars of the 1990s, as well as working alongside local forces in Peru and
Bolivia (Maas op.
cit.). Whilst Casteel’s background is said to be Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA), the operation against Escobar was a joint intelligence
effort, involving the CIA, DEA, Delta Force and a top-secret military intelligence
surveillance unit knows as Centra Spike (Marihemp,
SpecWarNet). The operation
had no impact on Colombia’s position as the world’s major source
of cocaine (which, incidentally or not, owed much to the CIA, who had became
heavily involved in the trade as part of their secret funding of Nicaragua’s
Contra mercenary army; for a detailed account, read the series Dark
Alliance, originally published by the San Jose Mercury News), with the centre
of gravity ultimately shifting to dozens of micro cartels (Houston
Chronicle). However, the operation did lead to the formation of a death
squad known as Los Pepes, which was to form the nucleus for Colombia’s
present paramilitary death-squad umbrella organisation, the AUC, responsible
for over 80 percent of the country’s most serious human-rights abuses
(Colombia Journal).
Whilst no official connection was ever admitted, Los Pepes relied on the intelligence
data held in the fifth-floor steel vault at the US Embassy in Bogota that served
as the operation’s nerve centre. Lists of the death squad’s victims
rapidly came to mirror those of Escobar’s associates collated at the embassy
headquarters (Cocaine.org,
Cannabis News).
Casteel’s background is significant because this kind of intelligence-gathering
support role and the production of death lists are characteristic of US involvement
in counterinsurgency programs and constitute the underlying thread in what can
appear to be random, disjointed killing sprees. Probably the best-attested example
of such an operation is Indonesia during the early years of the Suharto dictatorship,
when CIA officers provided the names of thousands of people, many of them members
of the Indonesian Communist Party, to the army, who dutifully slaughtered them
(Kathy Kadane). Similar cases
can be made for the CIA supplying death lists and/or overseeing operations in
Vietnam (OC Weekly),
Guatemala, where death lists are known to have been compiled but were supposedly
never acted upon (The
Consortium), and El Salvador, where former killers have come forward to
describe sharing desk space with US advisors who collected the ‘intelligence’
from ‘heavy interrogation’ but were spared details of the subsequent
murders (Covert
Action Quarterly). For an extensive list of countries in which the CIA has
supported death squads, see the database compiled by Ralph McGehee (Serendipity).
Such centrally planned genocides are entirely consistent with what is taking
place in Iraq today under the auspices of crackdowns like Operation Lightning,
which make use of so-called Rapid Intrusion Brigades to make widespread, well
orchestrated arrests (Financial
Times). It is also consistent with what little we know about the Special
Police Commandos, which was tailored to provide the Interior Ministry with a
special-forces strike capability (US
Department of Defense). In keeping with such a role, the Police Commando
headquarters has become the hub of a nationwide command, control, communications,
computer and intelligence operations centre, courtesy of the US (Defend
America). Interestingly, supplying a state-of-the-art communications network
to coordinate mass murder was part of the plan in Indonesia as well (Pilger,
The New Rulers of the World, p 30); it is doubtless common practice.
Finally, we know that by 30 January of this year, the Police Commandos had
six functioning brigades and in early April the Al-Nimr (Tiger) Brigade took
over from the Al-Dhib (Wolf) Brigade in Mosul (UNAMI).
Interestingly, one of the Police Commandos’ first Brigade commanders was
a Shiite, apparently called Rashid al-Halafi, but Maas noted that ‘he
was regarded warily by other Shiites because he held senior intelligence posts
under Saddam Hussein’.
Untangling the Web
Clearly, the Wolf Brigade, though commonly treated in media reports as an autonomous
entity, is actually one component of the Interior Ministry’s Special Police
Commandos. Abu Walid, identified occasionally as Brig. Gen. Mohammed Qureishi,
is the brigade commander, under overall command of Adnan Thabit. Another figure
linked with both the Wolf Brigade and Police Commandos is Major General Rashid
Flayyih, variously identified as commander of the brigade or the whole formation.
If he can be identified with the brigade commander Rashid al-Halafi identified
by Maas, it can be surmised that he has either been promoted or is another incarnation
of Abu Walid.
Incredibly, I have not been able to find a single report written since accusations
started to be made about the Wolf Brigade’s involvement in the Baghdad
killings that makes their identification with the Police Commandos clear, with
journalists content to loosely refer to the unit as police commandos, as though
there might be all sorts of police commando units. Though this might at first
seem pedantic, the lack of clarity becomes even more incredible in the case
of the 10 bricklayers suffocated in the back of a police van on 10 July (San
Diego Union Tribune). To my knowledge, this remains the only case in which
members of the security forces have been securely identified, with a survivor
who had feigned death able to provide first-hand testimony. The unit responsible
was the Wolf Brigade, but this information must be deduced from a reference
in one article to the victims being taken to a police station at al Nisour Square
(Knight Ridder)
and Beaumont’s mention that the Wolf Brigade is accused of running an
interrogation centre as its Nissor Square headquarters (op.
cit.). It seems that a nebulous Wolf Brigade linked to Badr, full of vengeful
Shiite militiamen serves as a useful foil for allegations of ‘state terrorism’,
but that when the accusations are sufficiently well-grounded, it is easier to
keep it out of the spotlight for fear that a pattern of gross and systematic
violations of human rights might start to emerge. The significance of this lies
far beyond merely being able to expose sloppy journalistic practices, but actually
reveals key characteristics of both the US imperial war machine and of the nature
of their current occupation of Iraq.
With the finger of responsibility increasingly and inevitably pointing at well-organised
counterinsurgency units operating from the Interior Ministry, one line of defence
remains before intellectual authorship must be placed at the hands of the occupying
powers. Since the election of 30 January and the transfer of office from the
interim government of Ayad Allawi to the transitional one of Ibrahim Jafari
in May, the mainstream media has unanimously chorused that power has fallen
into the hands of Iraq’s Shia majority. Most specifically, it is repeatedly
claimed that the Interior Ministry and its security forces have come under the
control of SCIRI and even that the Badr Brigades now wield considerable power
within the ministry, with the new Interior Minister, Bayan Jabor, described
as a former Badr member. The manifestation of this control lies in the policy
of de-Baathification, a process that was halted under the interim government
of Ayad Allawi, but that was considered fundamental by the incoming government.
The policy was actively opposed by the US administration, which feared that
experienced personnel (for which, read Washington’s favourites) might
be lost, especially within the security forces and intelligence apparatus (Washington
Post).
According to Firas al-Nakib, a legal advisor at the Interior Ministry and a
Sunni, 160 senior members of the Interior Ministry staff were rapidly dismissed
and many police commanders were replaced with Shiites loyal to the Shiite bloc
that won the elections (Knight
Ridder). Yet, after speaking with Jabor, General Flayyih was reported to
be reassured, with the former Badr member not only promising to support the
Police Commandos (Financial
Times), but calling for their rapid and more extensive deployment (Los
Angeles Times). Flayyih’s continuing tenure is particularly noteworthy,
as, though a Shiite himself, Flayyih was in charge of the suppression of the
Shia uprising in Nasiriya following the first Gulf War, and is, as such, a frontrunner
in any serious Shia-led policy of de-Baathification. Like Flayyih, Adnan Thabit
has retained a senior position, commanding all of the Interior Ministry’s
special forces (Multi-National
Force - Iraq).
The issue of de-Baathification was recently addressed by Jabor, who explained
that the discharge of personnel was handled by a general inspector and that
recruitment was not influenced by sect (Al
Mendhar). Backing up his statements, he pointed out that many senior security
posts within the ministry were held by Sunnis, including that of deputy minister
for intelligence affairs (also leader of the Interior Ministry’s spy service),
currently held by General Hussain Kamal.
In fact, the entire intelligence establishment is a creation of the Anglo-American
secret services (Los
Angeles Times), which began building at least as early as the beginning
of the occupation (Detroit
Free Press), although it may be suspected that the process was conceived
long before. The new Iraqi establishment was staffed by long-term CIA assets,
such as General Mohammad Shahwani, who had been nurtured by the CIA since the
late 1980s (Asia
Times Online) and became director of the new National Intelligence Service
(the Mukhabarat). Like Thabit and Flayyih, other old CIA hands, Shahwani had
participated in attempted coups against the government of Iraq. Further agents
(presumably existing intelligence assets for the most part) were recruited from
Iraq’s main political groups, consisting of SCIRI, the Dawa Party, the
two main Kurdish parties, the Iraqi National Congress and the Iraqi National
Accord. These agents became the Collection, Management and Analysis Directorate
(CMAD), whose principal job was to ‘turn raw intelligence into targets
that could be used in operations’ (Detroit
Free Press, op. cit.). Initially, ‘operations’ were carried
out by a paramilitary unit composed of militia from the five main parties, who,
under the supervision of US commanders, worked with US special forces to track
down ‘insurgents’ (Washington
Post). As the new Iraqi state apparatus developed, CMAD was split between
the ministries of Defence and Interior, with an ‘elite corps’ creamed
off to form the National Intelligence Service (Detroit
Free Press op. cit.). To oversee all three bodies, the National Intelligence
Coordination Committee was established, headed, as National Security Advisor
(appointed in April 2004), by Mowaffak Rubaie. This ‘leading Shiite moderate’
had been a spokesman for the Dawa Party in the 1980s when it was a serious terrorist
organisation targeting Iraq, before moving on to help coordinate the Iraqi opposition
from London (Asia
Times Online, op. cit.). In London he worked with the Khoei Foundation,
a pro-US charitable organisation that has distributed money for the CIA and
is linked with the National Endowment for Democracy through Prime minister Jaafari’s
advisor Laith Kuba, another long-term CIA asset (Village
Voice).
These new intelligence agencies supply the data for the Interior Ministry to
make arrests. A graphic and harrowing account of such arrests on 27 June 2004
was provided by UPI’s P. Mitchell Prothero, in what he describes as the
‘welcome arrival of frontier-style law enforcement’. Prothero described
how local residents ‘seemed shocked’ as their doors were broken
in and ‘men were dragged from their homes dishevelled and screaming’
by members of a SWAT team in central Baghdad. The raid had been planned for
months by General Kamal’s intelligence agency within the Interior Ministry
and the names of more than 100 detainees were checked against prepared lists
(Washington
Times). Prothero witnessed many of those detainees ‘worked over’
with metal batons and lengths of hose in the backs of vans, but the most serious
abuse came later, within the Interior Ministry compound. On 29 June members
of the Oregon National Guard swept into the grounds of the Interior Ministry
and disarmed plain-clothed Iraqi policemen whom they had observed beating bound
and blindfolded prisoners (Oregonian).
The US soldiers began to administer first aid to the prisoners, who had also
been starved of food and water for three days; many were clearly in a very serious
condition. Steven Casteel was called to help deal with the situation (Boston
Globe). After hours of negotiations, the soldiers unwillingly withdrew,
leaving the victims in the hands of their torturers. Perhaps their ultimate
fate will never be known, but as Casteel commented, ‘There’s always
a pendulum between freedom and security’.
Like Thabit and Flayyih, Shahwani has retained his position under the transitional
government and continues to report directly to the CIA (Seattle
Times). Clearly, however, the purpose of stating or implying that unaccountable
militias are behind the extrajudicial executions and/or that sectarian rivalries,
especially Shia control of the Interior Ministry (which, as Beaumont correctly
points out, is the centre of the horror), are to blame, is to distance the US
from the almost unthinkable ongoing crimes against humanity. Comparable disinformation
strategies have been employed in every counterinsurgency conflict with which
the US has been involved; it is known as establishing ‘plausible deniability’.
For example, in Colombia, where the US as been deeply involved for decades,
paramilitary death squads are invariably described in the media as a third force
in the armed conflict, despite the fact that their victims are typically civilian
opponents of the government, their members are drawn directly from serving members
of the armed forces and they are only able to operate with the active complicity
of the army (Human
Rights Watch: The “Sixth Division"). In reality, they function
as part of a shadow state, which exists to implement policies that must remain
unaccountable.
More specifically, in the case of Iraq, this disinformation strategy not only
seems to be designed to mask the real intellectual authors of genocidal crimes,
but also, increasingly, appears to be directed towards creating the very sectarian
divisions that it hides behind.
Towards Balkanisation
In every country where US-backed counter insurgency operations have taken place
with their attendant massacres and death squads, the conflict has existed as
one dimension in a strategy of neo-colonisation. In Indonesia the communists
were exterminated as part of the corporate takeover of the economy, setting
the stage for the globalisation of Asia (Pilger, op. cit. p 15-44); in Colombia
today, brutal death-squad massacres and the assassination of popular leaders
exist to safeguard and extend the investments of foreign multinationals in oil
and mining as well as as part of an ongoing process of privatisation.
In this respect, Iraq is no different. Over and above the desire to control
Iraq’s massive oil reserves, the country is being subjected to enforced
neo-liberal shock therapy, with wages slashed and the extensive state sector
rapidly offered up for sale. Corresponding with this, is a catastrophic level
of unemployment and the abandonment of service provision for the majority of
the population, in short a return to typical Third World conditions (The
New Standard). Such a process of economic devastation is not only unpopular,
it is intolerable and there can be no doubt that most people in Iraq will oppose
cuts and sell-offs and demand a restoration of employment and services. This
is not a sectarian issue. To the extent to which opposition becomes effective,
the leaders and activists of the movement are likely to become military targets
for the state death squads, whatever guise they take.
It is hard to know exactly who the victims of the present wave of assassinations
are. Certainly they have included some trade union leaders (Iraqi
Federation of Workers' Trade Unions), while in the period up to March 2004
more than 1000 leading professionals and intellectuals had already been killed
and thousands more had fled the country (Al
Jazeera). Many of these people would have been members of the Baath party
and their murders are very likely to be part of the policy of de-Baathification,
which, insofar as it exists, has not targeted CIA collaborators, but will undoubtedly
have included those seen as potential opponents of the new state. In passing,
it is worth noting that while thousands of former teachers have been sacked,
thousands more are being recruited from outside Iraq (Al
Mendhar), presumably because they are either cheaper to employ (denied by
the Iraqi government) or because they are more malleable to the new educational
regime, which works closely with the World Bank and provides lucrative contracts
to the Washington-based Creative Associates Inc (Education
News). Iraq’s 30,000 new teachers have received just five days’
training and must teach religion and a history that portrays Iraq’s occupiers
as saviours, rather than the former ‘anti-Western propaganda’ that
might have served Iraqis better. Other victims of the death squads may be communists,
the commentator Juan Cole noting that the Communist Party is so alarmed by the
course of events that it is considering going underground; though he does not
spell out the events that would force the party into hiding, they are not difficult
to surmise (Juan
Cole).
A further possibility, however, in addition to defeating a popularly backed
resistance, is that the monstrous intelligence nexus created by the US in Iraq
is orchestrating a strategy of ethnic cleansing as part of an effort to partition
a country that might otherwise remain a regional pretender. Most of the military
assaults have resulted in substantial civilian displacement (eg Washington
Times), but, more worryingly, reports of families uprooting as the result
of perceived sectarian violence are starting to become common. For example,
in July, Mariam Fam of the Associated Press reported dozens of Shiites abandoned
their homes in a poor farming community on the edge of Baghdad after receiving
threats from Sunni militants that appeared in the form of typewritten flyers
scattered on streets and doorsteps; prior to the Anglo-American invasion these
people had shared their poverty, labour, food and intermarried with their Sunni
neighbours (North
Country Times). Similarly, Hala Jaber writing for the Sunday Times describes
how Sunni families have fled Baghdad’s majority-Shiite Iskan neighbourhood
after the killings of 22 young Sunni men, taken away by men in police uniform
who arrived in vehicles bearing police markings (Times
Online). A similar situation is described in Baghdad’s Ghalaliya district,
where a spate of seemingly motiveless murders accelerated sharply over the summer,
leaving more than 30 people, Sunnis and Shiites, dead (Los
Angeles Times). The report claims that minority families there and elsewhere
are selling their homes and moving to areas where they are in the majority.
A similar picture is starting to emerge from other parts of the country. Jaber
notes that thousands of Shiites have fled the predominantly Sunni towns of Ramadi,
Falluja and Latafiya, while, according to Juan Cole, Sunnis are leaving Iraq’s
deep south and Arabs, presumably of both denominations, are being forced from
the Kurdish district of Kirkuk (Juan
Cole).
While many in the mainstream media and Iraq’s puppet government have
argued that insurgents linked to Abu Musab Zarqawi and al-Qaida are behind much
of the violence, deliberately hoping to inflame sectarian divisions and incite
a civil war (eg. News
Day), it is interesting to note how closely their dangerous schemes correspond
with the avowed aims of one of the most powerful figures in present-day Iraq.
Mowaffak Rubaie, the US-installed national security advisor, promotes a vision
that he calls ‘democratic regionalism’, by which Iraq would be dismembered
into a loose federal system of four to six distinct provinces, with at least
two Shiite provinces to the south and Baghdad as a separate district as well
as the seat of federal government, nominally responsible for national defence
(Newsweek).
Coincidentally, such a plan is well catered for by Iraq’s new constitution
(NPR),
but would amount to the disintegration of the Iraqi state. A de facto civil
war would undoubtedly advance this process.
The parallels with the break up of Yugoslavia are obvious. Ed Joseph of the
highly establishment Woodrow Wilson International Centre for Scholars notes
that ‘the likelihood of civil war increases if, after attacks targeting
a community, other members of the minority population flee’, in turn persecuting
minorities in the area to which they fled (Los
Angeles Times, op. cit.). However, where he sees the situation in Iraq as
comparable to Bosnia, in many ways the pattern is closer to that of Kosovo,
where widespread ethnic cleansing against Serbs took places under the noses
of NATO observers after the withdrawal of Yugoslav forces (World
Socialist Website).
In view of mounting evidence of Anglo-American involvement in the bombing campaigns
targeting Iraqi civilians, notably the brief arrest of two British SAS men found
with a car packed with explosives (William
Bowles), it is worth speculating a little on the implementation of their
wider strategy. Discounting Al-Qaida and Zarqawi in Iraq as fabrications designed
for easy media consumption (Centre
for Research on Globalisation), we are left with a situation in which someone
is targeting Shias, mainly through the planting of bombs around mosques and
at religious ceremonies, and someone is targeting Sunnis, mainly through extrajudicial
executions carried out by parties that look a lot like the police but have become
linked with the Shiite Badr Brigade in the popular imagination. It is impossible
that the Iraqi resistance could account for this pandemic of fratricidal violence,
whatever Adnan Thabit might say about insurgents in police uniforms. It is equally
impossible that SCIRI and the Badr Brigade could account for much of it in a
milieu dominated by CIA assets and US military forces. What is possible is that
both sides of the apparent sectarian violence are run as part of a huge CIA-lead
intelligence operation designed to split Iraq at the seams. I tentatively suggest
that the intelligence apparatus at the Interior Ministry is contriving attacks
on Sunnis and that British and US special forces in conjunction with the intelligence
apparatus at the Iraqi Defence Ministry are fabricating insurgent bombings of
Shias. Overseeing the entire operation is the ‘cream’ of CMAD under
the direction of top-level US intelligence asset Mowaffak Rubaie, a man already
experienced at participating in bombing campaigns, undoubtedly working hand
in glove with the CIA and the National Security Council in the US.
False Flags, Semiotics and Vulgar Marxists
The French theorist Jean Baudrillard famously once stated that the first Gulf
War did not take place. By this he did not mean that nothing happened, but that
its presentation in the media consisted of an overwhelming barrage of the signs
of War, which bore essentially no relationship to the annihilation of a Third
World army by the most advanced military power in history. In short it was a
simulation of war. This was perhaps the most extreme example of what Baudrilliard
referred to as the ‘ecstacy of communication’, that in our Information
Age, concepts spin at such a rate that their outlines become lost and their
original meanings are replaced with empty alternatives.
Fifteen years later, the same charges can be levelled against the recent Iraq
‘War’ and the country’s subsequent occupation. Most importantly,
I believe that a process akin to that Baudrillard highlighted is being actively
employed to simulate a civil war in Iraq. False-flag intelligence operations
are aimed at sowing seeds of a sectarian strife that was largely non-existent
prior to the invasion. Thus, even many Sunni Iraqis are coming to believe that
the well-organised death squads run from the CIA-controlled intelligence hub
are actually the Badr Brigade they often claim to be; and thus British SAS men
in Arab disguise plant bombs at Shia religious festivals to be blamed on fanatical
Wahabi Sunni ‘insurgents’.
Whether such tactics succeed in provoking further, autonomous acts of violence
directed against the civilian population is much less significant than the impact
they are able to exert within the media. This Anglo-American intelligence operation
acts as a factory churning out the signs of Civil War: a ‘wave of tit-for-tat
sectarian violence’ and the consequent ethnic cleansing. The signs are
produced to be picked up by the media and spun and spun until nothing is left
but a nebulous Civil War with no internal logic or structure, with the occupying
forces as powerless to intervene as they were in the Balkans while Iraq splits
into Rubiae’s desired four to six autonomous provinces. Those few journalists,
like Yasser Salihee and Steven Vincent, who break the mould and start to investigate
the actual authorship of extrajudicial killings themselves become victims.
When one former CIA operative candidly claimed that ‘Intelligence services
are the heart and soul of a new country’ (Washington
Post)), they were inadvertently expressing a position that Noam Chomsky
might call ‘vulgar Marxist’. What they were actually confessing
is that the essence of a state is the organisation of violence as the ultimate
coercive measure and that the intelligence apparatus functions as its brain.
Little wonder then that the US is so closely involved with intelligence services
the world over, or that both coup d’états and savage repressions
of sectors of the population deemed opposed to US interests have emanated from
the offices of these same services.
To penetrate the media smokescreen of spontaneous, uncontrollable violence
and understand the role of intelligence operations in the creation of a beholden,
occupied client state or series of statelets is fundamental to understanding
the processes in Iraq today. It is also fundamental to recognising that the
presence of Anglo-American forces in Iraq does not merely exacerbate the present
violence; in Iraq we are the violence.