![]() Friday, May 13, 2005 |
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Michael Howard
SULAIMANIYA (IRAQ): In July 2003, when U.S. President George Bush was asked about the growing number of attacks by militants in Iraq, he said: ``Bring them on. We have the force necessary to deal with the situation.'' That assertion was being questioned again on Wednesday after a fresh wave of suicide bombings that has killed nearly 400 persons in the past fortnight. According to a Western diplomatic source in Baghdad, 135 car bombs exploded in Iraq in April, up from 69 in March. And if May continues as it has started, it could be the worst month yet. The situation is causing consternation and frustration among some in the new Iraqi Government. One Iraqi Government official said that the U.S. had ``failed to stem the strategic insurgency''. ``Millions of dollars have gone on military and intelligence actions, and training up the Iraqi forces, but innocent people are still killed and terrorised every day,'' said the official, who requested anonymity. ``[Iraqis] are very angry and disillusioned.'' Of the suicide bombers, the diplomat said: ``Is there a never-ending supply of these men? Can it really still be the case that they all come in from outside Iraq?'' Most Iraqi analysts agree that the young men who carry out the majority of the suicide bombings are foreign jihadis. Hiwa Osman of the Institute of War and Peace Reporting in Iraq said: ``Suicide bombing is not a natural Iraqi response. Saddam killed hundreds of thousands of Iraqis, but there was not a single suicide bomb during his regime. Iraqis fought back with other means. It is realistic to say the people blowing themselves up and causing the carnage now are foreigners.'' But analysts also conclude that the foreign jihadis would not be able to strike so successfully in Iraq without substantial help in planning and assistance from home-grown militants such as diehard Ba'athists, ex-regime military and security service officers, and radical Sunni Islamists. Mr Osman said: ``The foreign Islamists and the ex-Ba'athists and regime people have nothing in common ideologically, but tactically they both want to disrupt and destroy the new situation in Iraq, and they are prepared to ally to that end.'' One Iraqi intelligence officer said many young men from Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Syria, Tunisia, Iran and Egypt have come to Iraq to ``achieve martyrdom''. ``Cooperation between these foreign militants and the domestic insurgency, however, is also in danger of turning the home-grown resistance into a breeding ground for a major jihadi movement.'' - Guardian Newspapers Limited 2005
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