
US
President George W. Bush continues to insist that the Iraqi resistance
is just "a few remaining hold-outs" from Saddam Hussein's
defunct regime because he needs this to be true. Otherwise,
his invasion of Iraq would
have been a dreadful mistake. At least in public, the US army
in Iraq agrees: "There's mid-level Baathists, Iraqi intelligence
service people, Special Security Organisation people, Special Republican
Guard people...conducting what I would describe as a classical guerilla-type
campaign against us," said US General John Abizaid two weeks ago.

These are precisely the religious extremists who were suppressed by
Saddam's resolutely secular Baath Party.

However, the videos claiming responsibility for the attacks that are
delivered almost daily to Arabic-language satellite TV channels attest
that most of them are actually being made by radical Islamist groups
within
the
Sunni Arab population. These are precisely the religious extremists
who were suppressed by Saddam's resolutely secular Baath Party: Salafists
and other radicals who long for a 'pure' Iraq purged of corrupting
non-Islamic influences. Now they are free to act at last, and
their first goal is to purify Iraq of American occupation troops.
Drop
a grenade on a Humvee from an overpass, walk up behind an American
soldier in a market and blow his brains out, plant a radio-controlled
mine in the road: it's easy in a country awash with weapons, and meanwhile
the Americans push the population into your arms with endless heavy-handed
raids in search of Saddam Hussein, as if he mattered. 'When in
doubt, do something' is a sound tactical axiom on the battlefield,
but a rotten guide to strategy.
A tipping point of sorts has been passed: there is now a serious guerilla
war in Iraq, even if the US command is still unclear about the nature
of
its opponents. It will get far worse if religious extremists
and nationalists among the Shia Arab majority follow the example of
their Sunni Arab
cousins and begin attacking the occupation forces, but it is already
affecting many
calculations about the near-term future.The
first conclusion is that Washington's strenuous efforts to get other
countries to send troops to Iraq to lessen the burden on American forces
will almost all end in failure, because nobody wants to send their
troops into a meat-grinder.
The Japanese have agreed to send
a (probably token) number of troops to Iraq after a bruising parliamentary
debate, and Turkey may yet send a division because it wants to have
troops in place in case Iraq breaks up entirely when the US finally
pulls out, but that's about it. Nobody wants to anger Washington by
saying bluntly that they don't feel like sharing the blame and the
punishment for a ghastly strategic mistake, so they argue that they
cannot send troops to Iraq without a new United Nations resolution
that puts it under international control.
The
Bush administration is ideologically incapable of agreeing to that, so
there will be no French or German troops going to Iraq, no Indian or
Pakistani troops, no Arab troops, not even Canadian troops.
El Salvador,
Ukraine and a few other governments that desperately want to ingratiate
themselves with Washington will send modest numbers of troops, but that
will not even be enough to make up for the number of British troops that
have been quietly withdrawn from Iraq since April.
(Tony Blair may be
a true believer, but the British general staff aren't fools.) This
will be an American war, just like Vietnam was.
It will escalate, and by this time next year the Bush re-election bid
will be in serious trouble -- so serious only another brief and victorious
war against alleged 'terrorists' may be able to save it.
Washington is
already blaming 'foreign terrorists' for the non-Baathist resistance
in Iraq, and Syria and Iran are going to find themselves filling the same
rhetorical
role that the Ho Chi Minh trail did in the earlier war.
Since Syria is
a much softer target than Iran, it is quite likely to be invaded and
occupied by American forces before November, 2004. If there is
another major terrorist attack on American soil, that likelihood becomes
a near certainty.
Bush probably will be re-elected next year, only to go under a couple
of years later as military and economic troubles overwhelm his second
administration. That would leave radical Islamists in power in Iraq (or
at least in the
Arabic-speaking parts of Iraq, if the country breaks
up in the process). If the US has also invaded Syria in the meantime,
the eventual pull-out would bring the same sort of people to power in
Damascus
-- and in such a general retreat American troops would be pulled out
of Afghanistan
too, allowing the Taliban back into power there
The result, by around 2006-07, would be a solid bloc of radical Islamist states
from the western borders of Pakistan to the eastern borders of Israel.
But
not to worry: Paul Bremer, the US proconsul in
Iraq, has it under control. "We are going to fight them and
impose our will on them and we will capture or ... kill them until we
have imposed
law and order on this country.
We dominate the scene and we will
continue to impose our will on this country." General Westmoreland
could not have put it better.
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