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Thursday, January 13th, 2005

EVIDENCE THAT “SYSTEM ADMINISTRATION” FORCES CAN PLAY A KEY ROLE IN THE GWOT

The unintended result of world cooperation and a Core humanitarian intervention relief effort in the Gap led by the United States and Australia in the wake of the Tsunami seems to be a political retreat by Islamist extremism.

Perhaps this is a recognizable precedent for the Pentagon ?

Thursday, January 13th, 2005

NEO-BAATHISM IN IRAQ [Updated]



Juan Cole had a post today that I can endorse virtually in its entirety. Here it is followed by my commentary. I have emphasized a couple of points for my own reasons:

” The Third Baath Coup?



If, as I have argued, the Baathists along with some Salafi (Sunni fundamentalist) allies are behind the guerrilla war, what do they want? They want to drive the Americans out of Iraq and make a third Baath coup, putting the Shiite genie back in its bottle and restoring Sunni Arab primacy.



A third Baath coup is no more inherently implausible than the first two. The Baathists probably have access to some 250,000 tons of munitions which are still missing. They know how to use them, and have been the managerial class, and many are Iran-Iraq War and Gulf War veterans with substantial military experience.



As long-time readers know, I have long held a position similar to that enunciated by former weapons inspector Scott Ritter’s assessment that the lion’s share of violence in Iraq is the work of Baathist military intelligence and military gone underground, and that the tendency to blame everything on Zarqawi and a handful of foreigners is a propaganda move that suits both the Baath mukhabarat and the Bush administration.



AP correspondent in Baghdad, Borzou Daragahi, makes much the same argument.Only 6 percent of the fighters captured at Fallujah were foreigners, and Fallujah anyway had long had a high foreign-born population, being a frontier and desert port. By Baath I don’t necessarily mean committed ideological Baathists, but the party was how they were formed politically, along with networks of clientelage based in the Sunni Arab heartland.



The Baath has been systematically killing members of the new political class. This is visible at the provincial level. The governors of Diyala and Baghdad provinces have recently been killed. The killing and kidnapping of members of the provincial governing councils go virtually unremarked in the US press but are legion. A female member of the Salahuddin GC was kidnapped and killed recently. The police chiefs of many cities have been killed or kidnapped, or members of their family have, such that many more have just resigned, often along with dozens of their men.



The US is powerless to stop this campaign of assassination.And this is my problem with the idea of just having the US suddenly withdraw its military from Iraq. What is to stop the neo-Baath from just killing Grand Ayatollah Sistani, Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, Ibrahim Jaafari, Iyad Allawi (who is rumored not to sleep in the same bed twice), etc., all the members of the provincial councils and the new parliament, and then making a military coup that brings the party and its Sunni patronage networks back to power?



I think this coup would look more like the failed 1963 effort than like 1968, and has the potential to roil the country and the region for decades. The tanks and helicopter gunships and chemical weapons that the Sunni Arab minority regime used to put down the other groups are gone, and it is not clear that car bombs, Kalashnikovs and sniping could substitute for them. They can probably take the Green Zone and the television stations if the US abruptly withdraws, but could they really put down the South effectively again?For this reason, I fear I think the US is stuck in Iraq. Sistani clearly fears a Sunni Arab coup, as well, and this is one reason he has not acted forcefully to end the military occupation, which he deeply dislikes.



Is the Neo-Baath Coup scenario one that the US could live with?”



MY COMMENTS:

A Neo-Baathist Iraq – which really means an Iraqi version of Sierra Leone or Somalia is not in American interests. Or in the interests of any of Iraq’s neighbors except perhaps Syria who would gain influence in the Sunni heartland.

Cole has correctly identified, in my view, some key truths about the situation in Iraq. That most our enemies there are driven by the idea of Sunni-Baathist resurgence. That they recruit along lines of family-clan-tribe clientage networks. That the brain of the insurgency are the surviving elements of Saddam’s SSO, Mukhabarat, MI, Special Republican Guard and Fedayeen who are following the old Soviet unconventional warfare doctrine of Spetsnaz forces ( hardly unexpected since Baathist Iraq had a Soviet model military establishment grafted on to a ME society with a decades long relationship with the USSR and Russia ). Soviet Spetsnaz doctrine called for “ Deep Operations”:

“At this crisis stage, the Soviets will put these forces[ Spetsnaz sleeper units] into play. From the outset, the ultimate Soviet objective will be the total political collapse or neutralization of key NATO governments.5 Because frontal military assaults would be less effective in accomplishing this, Soviet strategy emphasizes the need for initial operations in the enemy’s rear echelon, the domain of Spetsnaz forces whose operations are intended to sow the seeds of a political-military collapse. Indeed, the Soviets’ aim is to prevent the formation of a static, frontline war with NATO on one side and Warsaw Pact forces on the other.6 Therefore, the Soviets intend to infiltrate NATO’s rear area before the outbreak of hostilities to begin eroding NATO’s political and military structure from within” ( Campbell, Captain Erin E., USAF. Aerospace Power Journal 1988)

Soviet Spetsnz unit personnel however, like the Zarqawri Jihadis, were atomized individuals. The neo-Baathist Iraqi insurgents are not, as Cole pointed out with his reference to clientage networks. You catch and identify one individual chances are extremely high that other adult males linked to the captive by family and marriage ties are also involved. This is the insurgencies Achilles heel. This is also why aggressive Counterinsurgency tactics will put a dent in the insurgency, the culprits are naturally more identifiable unlike with Marxist guerilla movements.

The political bullet to bite is that we have to accept that a fairly significant portion of Iraqi Sunnis are really ” the enemy” now in the same sense that the Germans and Japanese were during WWII and act accordingly. Some of this is our fault for mishandling the occupation but mostly its a vicious group of political gangsters determined to shoot their way back to power and dominance over the Kurds and Shiites. Let’s stop sugarcoating things and face reality – the Sunnis by and large want a new dictatorship that will secure their priviliges once again.

Any prospects for broad-based democracyin Iraq will fail- or even maintaining Iraq’s territorial integrity – unless we can isolate the more politically backward Sunni dominated areas from the rest of Iraq and put the insurgency on the defensive.

Sistani and the Kurds need to face that fact as well.

LINK: tdaxp had this to say.




Thursday, January 13th, 2005

RECOMMENDED READING [ Updated]

First, for those involved in the Sullivan-IraqWar discussion, Dave Schuyler had updated his post to include some new links and Andrew at Politics, Applied responded to my post, digging in for the long haul. Mohammed at Iraq the Model also discusses the potential for an Iraqi Civil War and Juan Cole examined the polling for the upcoming Iraqi election.

Marc Shulman has had so many good posts with interesting news items up in the last few days that all I can say is go spend some time on his blog, American Future.

New blog added to the blogroll on the advice of The Diplomad – an all expert group too…The Counterterrorism Blog. This one is a regular must read for anyone following the GWOT though I’m hoping the authors will shift toward including more analysis in their “breaking news, realtime” format.

Kirk Johnson’s interview with realist foreign policy heavyweight, John Mearshimer is worth a look.

Finally, for something completely different, Geitner Simmons takes a look at slavery on Barbados.

UPDATE: An exchange with JB on Iran in his comments section at riting on the wall.

Thursday, January 13th, 2005

NICE TO SEE

I just noticed that The Rule-Set Reset has been upgraded by The New Rule-Sets Project,LLC. partners to a journal. Excellent. I signed off on the final edits of my first article after some minor tinkering last Saturday. It was a very good writing experience, much more of an intellectual collaboration than I had expected, throwing concepts back and forth with Bob Jacobson over email. Very stimulating.

Not only am I eager to start article number two for RSR but once I get my computer issues resolved here at home that I’ll tackle analyzing a second deleted scene from The Pentagon’s New Map here at Zenpundit. Most likely on the Rule-Set shift after the Cold War but I’m undecided at this point.

Sorry if the posts are looking abrupt- I need to post before I lose them to a bad connection, having lost three earlier today.

Thursday, January 13th, 2005

BACK ONLINE……SORT OF

I am blogging on the equivalent of a chewing gum and a shoestring jerry-rigged connection. Good news is my router trouble is now upgraded by Earthlink’s outsourced techs in Punjab to a ” problem ticket”.


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