Car Bombs With Wings
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Mike Davis
by Tom Engelhardt and
Mike Davis
In the first
part of his unique history of the car bomb, "The
Poor Man's Air Force," Mike Davis (author of the only significant
book on the Avian flu, The
Monster at Our Door, and Planet
of Slums, a startling analysis of the way significant parts
of our planet have been rapidly urbanizing and de-industrializing
all at once) took us up through a crucial moment in 1984. It was
then that Hezbollah sent the Reagan administration into flight in
Lebanon with its massive suicide car bombings and perhaps altered
the state of our planet forever. In the second part of his history,
we enter a "return to sender" world in which the sponsorship of
"surrogate terrorism" blows back all over the globe and the car
bomb becomes a near universal weapon of destruction. ~ Tom
History
of the Car Bomb (Part 2): The CIA's Car Bomb University (the 1980s)
By Mike
Davis
"The CIA
officers that Yousef worked with closely impressed upon him one
rule: never use the terms sabotage or assassination when speaking
with visiting congressmen."
~
Steve Coll, Ghost
Wars
Gunboat diplomacy
had been defeated by car bombs in Lebanon, but the Reagan administration
and, above all, CIA Director William Casey were left thirsting for
revenge against Hezbollah. "Finally in 1985," according to the Washington
Post's Bob Woodward in Veil, his book on Casey's career,
"he worked out with the Saudis a plan to use a car bomb to kill
[Hezbollah leader] Sheikh Fadlallah who they determined was one
of the people behind, not only the Marine barracks, but was involved
in the taking of American hostages in Beirut… It was Casey on his
own, saying, ‘I‘m going to solve the big problem by essentially
getting tougher or as tough as the terrorists in using their weapon
the car bomb.'"
The CIA's
own operatives, however, proved incapable of carrying out the bombing,
so Casey subcontracted the operation to Lebanese agents led by a
former British SAS officer and financed by Saudi Ambassador Prince
Bandar. In March 1984, a large car bomb was detonated about 50 yards
from Sheikh Fadlallah's house in Bir El-Abed, a crowded Shiite neighborhood
in southern Beirut. The sheikh wasn't harmed, but 80 innocent neighbors
and passersby were killed and 200 wounded. Fadlallah immediately
had a huge "MADE IN USA" banner hung across the shattered street,
while Hezbollah returned tit for tat in September when a suicide
truck driver managed to break through the supposedly impregnable
perimeter defenses of the new U.S. embassy in eastern (Christian)
Beirut, killing 23 employees and visitors.
Despite the
Fadlallah fiasco, Casey remained an enthusiast for using urban terrorism
to advance American goals, especially against the Soviets and their
allies in Afghanistan. A year after the Bir El-Abed massacre, Casey
won President Reagan's approval for NSDD-166, a secret directive
that, according to Steve Coll in Ghost Wars, inaugurated
a "new era of direct infusions of advanced U.S. military technology
into Afghanistan, intensified training of Islamist guerrillas in
explosives and sabotage techniques, and targeted attacks on Soviet
military officers."
U.S. Special
Forces experts would now provide high-tech explosives and teach
state-of-the-art sabotage techniques, including the fabrication
of ANFO (ammonium nitrate-fuel oil) car bombs, to Pakistani intelligence
service (or ISI) officers under the command of Brigadier Mohammed
Yousaf. These officers, in turn, would tutor thousands of Afghan
and foreign mujahedin, including the future cadre of al-Qaeda,
in scores of training camps financed by the Saudis. "Under ISI direction,"
Coll writes, "the mujahedin received training and malleable
explosives to mount car-bomb and even camel-bomb attacks in Soviet-occupied
cities, usually designed to kill Soviet soldiers and commanders.
Casey endorsed these despite the qualms of some CIA career officers."
Mujahedin
car bombers, working with teams of snipers and assassins, not only
terrorized uniformed Soviet forces in a series of devastating attacks
in Afghanistan but also massacred leftwing intelligentsia in Kabul,
the country's capital. "Yousaf and the Afghan car-bombing squads
he trained," writes Coll, "regarded Kabul University professors
as fair game," as well as movie theaters and cultural events. Although
some members of the National Security Council reportedly denounced
the bombings and assassinations as "outright terrorism," Casey was
delighted with the results. Meanwhile, "by the late 1980s, the ISI
had effectively eliminated all the secular, leftist, and royalist
political parties that had first formed when Afghan refugees fled
communist rule." As a result, most of the billions of dollars that
the Saudis and Washington pumped into Afghanistan ended up in the
hands of radical Islamist groups sponsored by the ISI. They were
also the chief recipients of huge quantities of CIA-supplied plastic
explosives as well as thousands of advanced E-cell delay detonators.
It was the
greatest technology transfer of terrorist technique in history.
There was no need for angry Islamists to take car-bomb extension
courses from Hezbollah when they could matriculate in a CIA-supported
urban-sabotage graduate program in Pakistan's frontier provinces.
"Ten years later," Coll observes, "the vast training infrastructure
that Yousaf and his colleagues built with the enormous budgets endorsed
by NSDD-166 the specialized camps, the sabotage training
manuals, the electronic bomb detonators, and so on would
be referred to routinely in America as ‘terrorist infrastructure.'"
Moreover the alumni of the ISI training camps like Ramzi Yousef,
who plotted the first 1993 World Trade Center attack, or his uncle
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who allegedly designed the second, would
soon be applying their expertise on every continent.
Cities
under Siege (the 1990s)
"The
hour of dynamite, terror without limit, has arrived."
~
Peruvian Journalist Gustavo Gorritti, 1992
Twenty-first
century hindsight makes it clear that the defeat of the U.S. intervention
in Lebanon in 198384, followed by the CIA's dirty war in Afghanistan,
had wider and more potent geopolitical repercussions than the loss
of Saigon in 1975. The Vietnam War was, of course, an epic struggle
whose imprint upon domestic American politics remains profound,
but it belonged to the era of the Cold War's bipolar superpower
rivalry. Hezbollah's war in Beirut and south Lebanon, on the other
hand, prefigured (and even inspired) the "asymmetric" conflicts
that characterize the millennium. Moreover, unlike peoples' war
on the scale sustained by the NLF and the North Vietnamese for more
than a generation, car-bombing and suicide terrorism are easily
franchised and gruesomely applicable in a variety of scenarios.
Although rural guerrillas survive in rugged redoubts like Kashmir,
the Khyber Pass, and the Andes, the center of gravity of global
insurgency has moved from the countryside back to the cities and
their slum peripheries. In this post-Cold-War urban context, the
Hezbollah bombing of the Marine barracks has become the gold standard
of terrorism; the 9/11 attacks, it can be argued, were only an inevitable
scaling-up of the suicide truck bomb to airliners.
Washington,
however, was loath to recognize the new military leverage that powerful
vehicle bombs offered its enemies or even to acknowledge their surprising
lethality. After the 1983 Beirut bombings, the Sandia National Laboratory
in New Mexico began an intensive investigation into the physics
of truck bombs. Researchers were shocked by what they discovered.
In addition to the deadly air blast, truck bombs also produced unexpectedly
huge ground waves.
"The lateral
accelerations propagated through the ground from a truck bomb far
exceed those produced during the peak magnitude of an earthquake."
Indeed, the scientists of Sandia came to the conclusion that even
an offsite detonation near a nuclear power plant might "cause enough
damage to lead to a deadly release of radiation or even a meltdown."
Yet the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in 1986 refused to authorize
the emplacement of vehicle barriers to protect nuclear-power installations
and made no move to alter an obsolete security plan designed to
thwart a few terrorists infiltrating on foot.
Indeed, Washington
seemed unwilling to learn any of the obvious lessons of either its
Beirut defeat or its secret successes in Afghanistan. The Reagan
and Bush administrations appeared to regard the Hezbollah bombings
as flukes, not as a powerful new threat that would replicate rapidly
in the "blowback" of imperial misadventure and anti-Soviet escapades.
Although it was inevitable that other insurgent groups would soon
try to emulate Hezbollah, American planners although partially
responsible largely failed to foresee the extraordinary "globalization"
of car bombing in the 1990s or the rise of sophisticated new strategies
of urban destabilization that went with it. Yet by the mid-1990s,
more cities were under siege from bomb attacks than at any time
since the end of World War Two, and urban guerrillas were using
car and truck bombs to score direct hits on some of the world's
most powerful financial institutions. Each success, moreover, emboldened
groups to plan yet more attacks and recruited more groups to launch
their own "poor man's air force."
Beginning
in April 1992, for example, the occult Maoists of Sendero Luminoso
came down from Peru's altiplano to spread terror throughout
the cities of Lima and Callao with increasingly more powerful coche-bombas.
"Large supplies of explosives," the magazine Caretas pointed
out, are "freely available in a mining nation," and the senderistas
were generous in their gifts of dynamite: bombing television stations
and various foreign embassies as well as a dozen police stations
and military camps. Their campaign eerily recapitulated the car
bomb's phylogeny as it progressed from modest detonations to a more
powerful attack on the American embassy, then to Bloody-Friday-type
public massacres using 16 vehicles at a time. The climax (and Sendero's
chief contribution to the genre) was an attempt to blow up an entire
neighborhood of "class enemies": a huge ANFO explosion in the elite
Miraflores district on the evening of July 16 that killed 22, wounded
120, and destroyed or damaged 183 homes, 400 businesses and 63 parked
cars. The local press described Miraflores as looking "as if an
aerial bombardment had flattened the area."
If one of
the virtues of an air force is the ability to reach halfway around
the world to surprise enemies in their beds, the car bomb truly
grew wings during 1993 as Middle Eastern groups struck at targets
in the Western Hemisphere for the first time. The World Trade Center
attack on February 26 was organized by master al-Qaeda bomb-maker
Ramzi Yousef working with a Kuwaiti engineer named Nidal Ayyad and
immigrant members of the Egyptian group, Gama'a al-Islamiyya, headed
by Sheikh Omar Abdul Rahman (whose U.S. visa had reputedly been
arranged by the CIA). Their extraordinary ambition was to kill tens
of thousands of New Yorkers with a powerful lateral blast that would
crack the foundations of one WTC tower and topple it on its twin.
Yousef's weapon was a Ryder van packed with an ingenious upgrade
of the classic IRA and Hezbollah ANFO explosive.
"The bomb
itself," writes Peter Lange in his history of the bombing, "consisted
of four cardboard boxes filled with a slurry of urea nitrate and
fuel oil, with waste paper as a binder. The boxes were surrounded
by four-foot tanks of compressed hydrogen. They were connected by
four 20-foot-long slow-burning fuses of smokeless powder wrapped
in fabric. Yousef balanced on his lap four vials of nitroglycerine."
The conspirators had no difficulty parking the van next to the load-bearing
south wall of the North Tower, but the massive explosive proved
too small excavating a four-story deep crater in the basement,
killing 6 and injuring 1,000 people, but failing to bring the tower
down. "Our calculations were not very accurate this time," wrote
Ayyad in a letter. "However we promise you that next it would will
[sic] be very precise and the Trade Center will be one of our targets."
Two weeks
after the WTC attack, a car bomb almost as powerful exploded in
the underground parking garage of the Bombay Stock Exchange, severely
damaging the 28-story skyscraper and killing 50 office workers.
Twelve other car or motorcycle bombs soon detonated at other prestige
targets, killing an additional 207 people and injuring 1,400. The
bombings were revenge for sectarian riots a few months earlier in
which Indian Hindus had killed hundreds of Indian Moslems. The attacks
were reputedly organized from Dubai by exiled Bombay underworld
king Dawood Ibrahim at the behest of Pakistani intelligence. According
to one account, Dawood sent three boats from Dubai to Karachi where
they were loaded with military explosives. Indian customs officials
were then bribed to look the other way while the "black soup" was
smuggled into Bombay.
Corrupt officials
were also rumored to have facilitated the suicide car bombing of
the Israeli embassy in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on March 17, 1993
which killed 30 and injured 242. The next year, a second "martyr,"
later identified as a 29-year-old Hezbollah militant from southern
Lebanon, leveled the seven-story Argentine-Israel Mutual Association,
slaughtering 85 and wounding more than 300. Both bombers carefully
followed the Beirut template; as did the Islamist militant who drove
his car into the central police headquarters in Algiers in January
1995, killing 42 and injuring over 280.
But the supreme
acolytes of Hezbollah were the Tamil Tigers of Sri Lanka, the only
non-Moslem group that has practiced suicide car bombings on a large
scale. Indeed, their leader Prabhaakaran "made a strategic decision
to adopt the method of suicide attack after observing its lethal
effectiveness in the 1983 suicide bombings of the US and French
barracks in Beirut." Between their first such operation in 1987
and 2000, they were responsible for twice as many suicide attacks
of all kinds as Hezbollah and Hamas combined. Although they have
integrated car bombs into regular military tactics (for example,
using kamikazes in trucks to open attacks on Sri Lankan army
camps), their obsession and "most prized theater of operation" in
their struggle for Tamil independence has been the Sri Lankan capital,
Colombo, which they first car-bombed in 1987 in a grisly attack
on the main bus terminal, burning scores of passengers to death
inside crowded buses.
In January
1996, a Black Tiger as the suicide elite are called
drove a truck containing 440 pounds of military high explosives
into the front of the Central Bank Building, resulting in nearly
1,400 casualties. Twenty months later in October 1997 in a more
complex operation, the Tigers attacked the twin towers of the Colombo
World Trade Center. They managed to maneuver through barricades
and set off a car bomb in front of the Center, then battled the
police with automatics and grenades. The following March, a suicide
mini-bus with shrapnel-filled bombs affixed to its sideboards was
detonated outside the main train station in the midst of a huge
traffic jam. The 38 dead included a dozen children in a school bus.
The Tamil
Tigers are a mass nationalist movement with "liberated territory,"
a full-scale army and even a tiny navy; moreover, 20,000 Tiger cadres
received secret paramilitary training in the Indian state of Tamil
Nadu from 1983 to 1987, courtesy of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi
and India's CIA the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW). But
such sponsorship literally blew up in the face of the Indian Congress
Party leadership when Indira's son and successor Rajiv was killed
by a female Tiger suicide bomber in 1993. Indeed, the all-too-frequent
pattern of surrogate terrorism, whether sponsored by the CIA, RAW,
or the KGB, has been "return to sender" most notoriously
in the cases of those former CIA "assets," blind Sheik Rahman and
Osama bin Laden.
The Oklahoma
City bombing in April 1995 was a different and startling species
of blowback, organized by two angry U.S. veterans of the Gulf War
rather than by Iraq or any Islamist group. Although conspiracy theorists
have made much of a strange coincidence that put Terry Nichols and
Ramzi Yousef near each other in Cebu City in the Philippines in
November 1994, the design of the attack seems to have been inspired
by Timothy McVeigh's obsession with that devil's cookbook, The
Turner Diaries. Written in 1978, after Bloody Friday but before
Beirut, neo-Nazi William Pierce's novel describes with pornographic
relish how white supremacists destroy the FBI headquarters in Washington
D.C. with an ANFO truck bomb, then crash a plane carrying a hijacked
nuke into the Pentagon.
McVeigh carefully
followed Pierce's simple recipe in the novel (several tons of ammonium
nitrate in a parked truck) rather than Yousef's more complicated
WTC formula, although he did substitute nitro racing fuel and diesel
oil for ordinary heating oil. Nonetheless, the explosion that slaughtered
168 people in the Alfred Murrah Federal Building on April 19, 1995
was three times more powerful than any of the truck-bomb detonations
that the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms and other federal
agencies had been studying at their test range in New Mexico. Experts
were amazed at the radius of destruction: "Equivalent to 4,100 pounds
of dynamite, the blast damaged 312 buildings, cracked glass as far
as two miles away and inflicted 80 percent of its injuries on people
outside the building up to a half-mile away." Distant seismographs
recorded it as a 6.0 earthquake on the Richter scale.
But McVeigh's
good-ole-boy bomb, with its diabolical demonstration of Heartland
DIY ingenuity, was scarcely the last word in destructive power;
indeed, it was probably inevitable that the dark Olympics of urban
carnage would be won by a home team from the Middle East. Although
the casualty list (20 dead, 372 wounded) wasn't as long as Oklahoma
City's, the huge truck bomb that, in June 1996, alleged Hezbollah
militants left outside Dhahran's Khobar Towers a high-rise
dormitory used by U.S. Air Force personnel in Saudi Arabia
broke all records in explosive yield, being the equivalent perhaps
of twenty 1,000-pound bombs. Moreover, the death toll might have
been as large as the Marine barracks in Lebanon in 1993 save for
alert Air Force sentries who began an evacuation shortly before
the explosion. Still, the blast (military-grade plastic explosive)
left an incredible crater 85-feet wide and 35-feet deep.
Two years
later, on August 7, 1998, al Qaeda claimed the championship in mass
murder when it crashed suicide truck bombs into the U.S. embassies
in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania, in a replay of the
simultaneous 1993 attacks on the Marines and the French in Beirut.
Located near two of the busiest streets in the city without adequate
setback or protective glacis, the Nairobi embassy was especially
vulnerable, as Ambassador Prudence Bushnell had fruitlessly warned
the State Department. In the event, ordinary Kenyans burnt
alive in their vehicles, lacerated by flying glass, or buried in
smoldering debris were the principal victims of the huge
explosion, which killed several hundred and wounded more than 5,000.
Another dozen people died and almost 100 were injured in Dar-es-Salaam.
Sublime indifference
to the collateral carnage caused by its devices, including to innocent
Moslems, remains a hallmark of operations organized by the Al-Qaeda
network. Like his forerunners Hermann Goering and Curtis LeMay,
Osama bin Laden seems to exult in the sheer statistics of bomb damage
the competitive race to ever-greater explosive yields and
killing ranges. One of the most lucrative of his recent franchises
(in addition to air travel, skyscrapers, and public transport) has
been car-bomb attacks on Western tourists in primarily Moslem countries,
although the October 2002 attack on a Bali nightclub (202 dead)
and the July 2005 bombing of hotels in Egypt's Sharm el-Sheikh (88
dead) almost certainly killed as many local workers as erstwhile
"crusaders."
Form Follows
Fear (the 1990s)
"The
car bomb is the nuclear weapon of guerrilla warfare."
~
Washington Post columnist Charles Krauthammer
A "billion-pound
explosion"? One meaning, of course, is the TNT yield of three or
four Hiroshima-size atomic weapons (which is to say, only a smidgen
of the explosive power of a single H-bomb). Alternately, one billion
(British) pounds ($1.45 billion) is what the IRA cost the City of
London in April 1993 when a blue dump-truck containing a ton of
ANFO exploded on Bishopsgate Road across from the NatWest Tower
in the heart of the world's second major financial center. Although
one bystander was killed and more than 30 injured by the immense
explosion, which also demolished a medieval church and wrecked the
Liverpool Street station, the human toll was incidental to the economic
damage that was the true goal of the attack. Whereas the other truck
bomb campaigns of the 1990s Lima, Bombay, Colombo, and so
forth had followed Hezbollah's playbook almost to the letter,
the Bishopsgate bomb, which Moloney describes as "the most successful
military tactic since the start of the Troubles," was part of a
novel IRA campaign that waged war on financial centers in order
to extract British concessions during the difficult peace negotiations
that lasted through most of the 1990s.
Bishopsgate,
in fact, was the second and most costly of three blockbuster explosions
carried out by the elite (and more or less autonomous) South Armagh
IRA under the leadership of the legendary "Slab" Murphy. Almost
exactly a year earlier, they had set off a truck bomb at the Baltic
Exchange in St. Mary Axe that rained a million pounds of glass and
debris on surrounding streets, killing 3 and wounding almost 100
people. The damage, although less than Bishopsgate, was still astonishing:
about 800 million pounds or more than the approximately 600 million
pounds in total damage inflicted over 22 years of bombing in Northern
Ireland. Then, in 1996, with peace talks stalled and the IRA Army
Council in revolt against the latest cease-fire, the South Armagh
Brigade smuggled into England a third huge car bomb that they set
off in the underground garage of one of the postmodern office buildings
near Canary Wharf Tower in the gentrified London Docklands, killing
two and causing nearly $150 million dollars in damage. Total damage
from the three explosions was at least $3 billion.
As Jon Coaffee
points out in her book on the impact of the bombings, if the IRA
like the Tamil Tigers or Al Qaeda had simply wanted to sow terror
or bring life in London to a halt, they would have set off the explosions
at rush-hour on a business day instead, they "were detonated
at a time when the City was virtually deserted" and/or attacked
the heart of the transport infrastructure, as did the Islamist suicide
bombers who blew up London buses and subways in July 2005. Instead,
Slab Murphy and his comrades concentrated on what they perceived
to be a financial weak link: the faltering British and European
insurance industry. To the horror of their enemies, they were spectacularly
successful. "The huge payouts by insurance companies," commented
the BBC shortly after Bishopsgate, "contributed to a crisis in the
industry, including the near-collapse of the world's leading [re]insurance
market, Lloyds of London." German and Japanese investors threatened
to boycott the City unless physical security was improved and the
government agreed to subsidize insurance costs.
Despite a
long history of London bombings by the Irish going back to the Fenians
and Queen Victoria, neither Downing Street, nor the City of London
Police had foreseen this scale of accurately targeted physical and
financial damage. (Indeed, Slab Murphy himself might have been surprised;
like the original ANFO bombs, these super-bombs were probably a
wee bit of serendipity for the IRA.) The City's response was a more
sophisticated version of the "ring of steel" (concrete barriers,
high iron fences, and impregnable gates) that had been built around
Belfast's city center after Bloody Friday in 1972. Following Bishopsgate,
the financial press clamored for similar protection: "The City should
be turned into a medieval-style walled enclave to prevent terrorist
attacks."
What was actually
implemented in the City and later in the Docklands was a technologically
more advanced network of traffic restrictions and cordons, CCTV
cameras, including "24-hour Automated Number Plate Recording (ANPR)
cameras, linked to police databases," and intensified public and
private policing. "In the space of a decade," writes Coaffee, "the
City of London was transformed into the most surveilled space in
the UK and perhaps the world with over 1500 surveillance cameras
operating, many of which are linked to the ANPR system."
Since September
11, 2001, this anti-terrorist surveillance system has been extended
throughout London's core in the benign guise of Mayor Ken Livingstone's
celebrated "congestion pricing" scheme to liberate the city from
gridlock. According to one of Britain's major Sunday papers:
"The
Observer has discovered that MI5, Special Branch and the Metropolitan
Police began secretly developing the system in the wake of the 11
September attacks. In effect, the controversial charging scheme
will create one of the most daunting defence systems protecting
a major world city when it goes live a week tomorrow. It is understood
that the system also utilizes facial recognition software which
automatically identifies suspects or known criminals who enter the
eight-square-mile zone. Their precise movements will be tracked
by camera from the point of entry… However, civil liberty campaigners
yesterday claimed that millions had been misled over the dual function
of the scheme, promoted primarily as a means of reducing congestion
in central London."
The addition
in 2003 of this new panopticon traffic scan to London's already
extensive system of video surveillance ensures that the average
citizen is "caught on CCTV cameras 300 times a day." It may make
it easier for the police to apprehend non-suicidal terrorists, but
it does little to protect the city from well-planned and competently
disguised vehicle bomb attacks. Blair's "Third Way" has been a fast
lane for the adoption of Orwellian surveillance and the usurpation
of civil liberties, but until some miracle technology emerges (and
none is in sight) that allows authorities from a distance to "sniff"
a molecule or two of explosive in a stream of rush-hour traffic,
the car bombers will continue to commute to work.
The "King"
of Iraq (the 2000s)
"Insurgents
exploded 13 car bombs across Iraq on Sunday, including eight in
Baghdad within a three-hour span."
~
Associated Press news report, January 1, 2006
Car bombs
some 1,293 between 2004 and 2005, according to researchers
at the Brookings Institution have devastated Iraq like no
other land in history. The most infamous, driven or left by sectarian
jihadists, have targeted Iraqi Shiites in front of their
homes, mosques, police stations, and markets: 125 dead in Hilla
(February 28, 2005); 98 in Mussayib (July 16); 114 in Baghdad (September
14); 102 in Blad (September 29); 50 in Abu Sayda (November 19);
and so on.
Some of the
devices have been gigantic, like the stolen fuel-truck bomb that
devastated Mussayib, but what is most extraordinary has been their
sheer frequency in one 48-hour-period in July 2005 at least
15 suicide car bombs exploded in or around Baghdad. The sinister
figure supposedly behind the worst of these massacres is Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian arch-terrorist who reportedly criticized
Osama bin Laden for insufficient zeal in attacking domestic enemies
like the "infidel Shias." Al-Zarqawi, it is claimed, is pursuing
an essentially eschatological rather than political goal: a cleansing
of enemies without end until the Earth is ruled by a single, righteous
caliphate.
Toward this
end, he – or those invoking his name seems to have access
to an almost limitless supply of bomb vehicles (some of them apparently
stolen in California and Texas, then shipped to the Middle East)
as well as Saudi and other volunteers eager to martyr themselves
in flame and molten metal for the sake of taking a few Shiite school
kids, market venders, or foreign "crusaders" with them. Indeed the
supply of suicidal madrassa graduates seems to far exceed
what the logic of suicide bombing (as perfected by Hezbollah and
the Tamil Tigers) actually demands: Many of the explosions in Iraq
could just as easily be detonated by remote control. But the car
bomb at least in Al-Zarqawi's relentless vision is
evidently a stairway to heaven as well as the chosen weapon of genocide.
But Al Zarqawi
did not originate car bomb terrorism along the banks of the Tigris
and Euphrates; that dark honor belongs to the CIA and its favorite
son, Iyad Allawi. As the New York Times revealed in June
2004:
"Iyad
Allawi, now the designated prime minister of Iraq, ran an exile
organization intent on deposing Saddam Hussein that sent agents
into Baghdad in the early 1990s's to plant bombs and sabotage government
facilities under the direction of the CIA, several former intelligence
officials say. Dr. Allawi's group, the Iraqi National Accord, used
car bombs and other explosives devices smuggled into Baghdad from
northern Iraq… One former Central Intelligence Agency officer who
was based in the region, Robert Baer, recalled that a bombing during
that period ‘blew up a school bus; schoolchildren were killed.'"
According
to one of the Times' informants, the bombing campaign, dead
school kids and all, "was a test more than anything else, to demonstrate
capability." It allowed the CIA to portray the then-exiled Allawi
and his suspect group of ex-Baathists as a serious opposition to
Saddam Hussein and an alternative to the coterie (so favored by
Washington neoconservatives) around Ahmed Chalabi. "No one had any
problem with sabotage in Baghdad back then," another CIA veteran
reflected. "I don't think anyone could have known how things would
turn out today."
Today, of
course, car bombs rule Iraq. In a June 2005 article entitled, "Why
the car bomb is king in Iraq," James Dunnigan warned that it was
supplanting the roadside bomb (which "are more frequently discovered,
or defeated with electronic devices") as the "most effective weapon"
of Sunni insurgents as well as of Al Zarqawi, and thus "the terrorists
are building as many as they can." The recent "explosive growth"
in car ownership in Iraq, he added, had made it "easier for the
car bombs to just get lost in traffic."
In this kingdom
of the car bomb, the occupiers have withdrawn almost completely
into their own forbidden city, the "Green Zone," and their well-fortified
and protected military bases. This is not the high-tech City of
London with sensors taking the place of snipers, but a totally medievalized
enclave surrounded by concrete walls and defended by M1 Abrams tanks
and helicopter gunships as well as an exotic corps of corporate
mercenaries (including Gurkhas, ex-Rhodesian commandos, former British
SAS, and amnestied Colombian paramilitaries). Once the Xanadu of
the Baathist ruling class, the 10-square-kilometer Green Zone, as
described by journalist Scott Johnson, is now a surreal theme park
of the American way of life:
"Women
in shorts and T-shirts jog down broad avenues and the Pizza Inn
does a brisk business from the parking lot of the heavily fortified
U.S. Embassy. Near the Green Zone Bazaar, Iraqi kids hawk pornographic
DVDs to soldiers. Sheik Fuad Rashid, the U.S.-appointed imam of
the local mosque, dresses like a nun, dyes his hair platinum blond
and claims that Mary Mother of Jesus appeared to him in a vision
(hence the getup). On any given night, residents can listen to karaoke,
play badminton or frequent one of several rowdy bars, including
an invitation-only speakeasy run by the CIA."
Outside
the Green Zone, of course, is the "Red Zone" where ordinary
Iraqis can be randomly and unexpectedly blown to bits by car bombers
or strafed by American helicopters. Not surprisingly, wealthy Iraqis
and members of the new government are clamoring for admission to
the security of the Green Zone, but U.S. officials told Newsweek
last year that "plans to move the Americans out are ‘fantasy.'"
Billions have been invested in the Green Zone and a dozen other
American enclaves officially known for a period as "enduring camps,"
and even prominent Iraqis have been left to forage for their own
security outside the blast walls of these exclusive bubble Americas.
A population that has endured Saddam's secret police, U.N. sanctions,
and American cruise missiles, now steels itself to survive the car
bombers who prowl poor Shiite neighborhoods looking for grisly martyrdom.
For the most selfish reasons, let us hope that Baghdad is not a
metaphor for our collective future.
This article
a preliminary sketch for a book-length study will
appear next year in Indefensible Space: The Architecture of
the National Insecurity State (Routledge 2007), edited by Michael
Sorkin.
April
15, 2006
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel and The
End of Victory Culture. Mike Davis is the author most recently
of The
Monster at Our Door: The Global Threat of Avian Flu (The
New Press) and Planet
of Slums (Verso). He lives in San Diego.
Copyright
© 2006 Mike Davis
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Engelhardt Archives
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