Slaughter and Spin in the Battle for Najaf
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
DIGG THIS
I. Rashomon
in Babylon
It has been
cast as a ferocious battle against a mighty opponent: a fanatical
"apocalyptic cult" storming the holy city of Najaf with
hundreds of warriors led by a self-proclaimed Islamic Messiah, their
frenzy quelled only at the last moment by a massive intervention
of American firepower. But as with so much else in the blood-soaked
annals of the Bush Administration's disastrous Babylonian Conquest,
it appears this neat story masks a far grimmer, grubbier truth:
a mass slaughter of civilians, caught in the toxic fog of hair-trigger
tension, sectarian hatred and violent political ambition unleashed
by the U.S. invasion.
The January
28 clash in Najaf was, the
New York Times proclaimed, the greatest one-day battle
in Iraq since the fall of Baghdad in 2003. Some 200400 "cultists"
were killed by Iraqi troops and the American air and ground forces
that came to their rescue when the apocalyptics whose ranks
included Baathists and al Qaeda terrorists nearly overran
the Iraqi government troops, according to the NYT and other
Western media.
The "bizarre"
and "extraordinary" attack by the obscure but massively
armed "Soldiers of Heaven" Shiite splinter group was an
attempt to kill the leading clerics in the sacred city, including
Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the spiritual leader of millions
of Iraqi Shiites, we were told. This massacre would supposedly usher
in the reign of the Mahdi, the Islamic Messiah-figure which many
Shiites believe is coming to redeem and judge the
world. For hours on end, the outgunned and ill-trained Iraqi government
soldiers held off the swarming zealots until American planes began
bombing raids on the cult's entrenched positions in the groves outside
Najaf and U.S. troops marched in to bolster the flagging locals.
It was indeed
a rousing tale of carnage, courage and fearsome zeal, fit for one
of Mel Gibson's cinematic bloodbaths. Yet in the days following
the attack, it has became increasingly apparent that the story being
presented in the Western media based largely on accounts
from Iraqi government officials and the Pentagon has about
as much historical accuracy as Gibson's ersatz epics.
So what happened
in Najaf? It is of course hard to see anything clearly through the
natural confusions of a nation in chaos and the deliberate manipulations
of the powerful and their sycophants, but there are independent
Iraqi sources non-sectarian, non-aligned, democratic
who have been providing eyewitness accounts and analyses of stories
in the wide-ranging Iraqi press, which is almost entirely ignored
by the Western media. One of these, the blog "Healing Iraq"
written by "Zayed," an Iraqi professional who spent
his childhood in Britain has led
the way in unpacking the Najaf firestorm. (Patrick Cockburn,
one of the most knowledgeable and insightful reporters covering
Iraq, drew heavily on Zayed's work in
a brief report for The Independent which came out as
this story was going to press.)
To be fair,
it's no wonder that Western accounts of the fighting were confused,
as they relied on the "bizarre" and "extraordinary"
and wildly varying accounts from officials of the
Bush-backed Iraqi government. For example, one of the primary sources
for the New York Times' story of the battle which
no Western reporters were allowed to witness was Abdul Hussein
Abtan, the deputy governor of Najaf province, and a member of one
of the Iranian-backed, armed sectarian factions that George W. Bush
has empowered in Baghdad, the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution
in Iraq (SCIRI). During a press conference aired on Al-Iraqiya television,
Abted first claimed that the "foreign-funded" cult was
led by a Lebanese, then later said its leader was an Iraqi. As Zayed
notes, none of the journalists present questioned the contradiction.
In
his latest report, Zayed details the bewildering array of versions
offered up by factions connected with the Iraqi government. It was
followers of controversial cleric Motqada al-Sadr who first identified
the Najaf "attackers" as members of the cult. The Sadrists,
buttressed by spokesmen in the Iraqi Health Ministry, which they
control, also asserted that the group was planning to kidnap, not
kill, Sistani, Sadr and other top Shiite clerics. It was also the
Sadrists who claimed that the attackers were working with al Qaeda
and Saddam loyalists, "and that they received logistical and
monetary backing from Saudi Arabia." They said the sect's leader
was an Iraqi named Dhiaa' Abdul Zahra Kadhim.
Meanwhile,
SCIRI members, buttressed by the Najaf provincial government, which
they control, said that more than 1,000 terrorists were killed in
the battle, and that some 200 "brainwashed women and children"
were detained and "removed to another place," presumably
for deprogramming. SCIRI officials differed on the number of terrorists
captured in the battle; one said 50, another said 16, yet another
said "hundreds" were detained. It was SCIRI that advanced
the notion that the attack aimed to kill the clerics, not capture
them. Various SCIRI officials said the cult's leader was a) the
aforesaid unnamed Lebanese national; b) Dhiaa Abdul Zahra
Kadhim, as in the Sadrist account; c) a renegade Sadrist named Ahmed
Kadhim Al-Garawi Al-Basri; d) another renegade Sadrist named
Ahmed Hassan al-Yamani; e) a self-proclaimed messiah named Ali bin
Ali bin Abi Talib.
A SCIRI member
of the Najaf governing council also claimed that "the leader
of this group had links with the former regime elements since 1993.
Some of the gunmen brought their families with them in order to
make it easier to enter the city," Associated Press reports.
An Iraqi army officer, sectarian affiliation unknown, added that
Lebanese, Egyptians and Sudanese were taken prisoner in the battle
though none of these foreign fighters have yet been produced.
And just for good measure, Najaf's SCIRI governor, As'ad Abu Gilel,
said the attackers were Sunni insurgents, planning to attack Shiite
pilgrims on their way to mark the festival of Ashura in Najaf.
U.S. military
officials originally picked various items from this dizzying smorgasbord
of spin in cobbling together their own version of the battle, although
in general they hewed more closely to the SCIRI line. But that's
not surprising, given the fact that this violent, extremist Shiite
faction, whose death-dealing militia is deeply embedded in the Iraqi
security forces, is currently in high favor with the Bush White
House.
However, by
mid-week, the Pentagon suddenly reversed course and came out with
a whole new account, one cited by Bush himself, as
the Washington Post reported. Now the battle was depicted
as an exemplary pre-emptive strike by an "aggressive"
and "impressive" Iraqi military, acting on good intelligence
that the cult intended to storm Najaf and kill the leading clerics
because they refused to recognize the claim of the cult's leader
(now known as Samer Abu Kamar, by the way) to be the Mahdi.
Far from having
to rescue the hapless Iraqis, American forces were simply there
in a supporting role, providing "backup ground troops along
with helicopter and fixed-wing aircraft support" in an attack
on the cult's positions in the palm groves and farms of rural Zarqa,
not far from Najaf, the Post said. Bush that seasoned veteran
of combat had this reaction to the battle: "The Iraqis
are beginning to show me something." And indeed, a spokesman
for Iraqi PM Nouri al-Maliki who has been publicly warned
by Bush officials that he will be removed from the sovereign government
of Iraq by the Americans if he doesn't help Bush's "surge"
plan by cracking down on the Shiite militias that back him
pointed to the battle as proof that Maliki can deliver the goods.
Thus, in just
three days time, the battle for Najaf morphed from an eruption of
yet another level of sectarian strife threatening to overwhelm the
tottering Iraqi government into a bravura display of the wonder-working
power of Bush's "New Way Forward." Yet the only certainty
that could really be gleaned from the official accounts ricocheting
around the Western media was that when the smoke finally cleared
from the palms and the fields, the ground was littered with scores
of burnt and mangled corpses.
II. Under
the Crazy Quilt
But the independent
Iraqi sources paint an entirely different picture. Although here
too there is much uncertainty and thickets of impenetrable
Shiite factionalism and secular political maneuvering these
accounts converge in a basic narrative that is far more coherent,
and more grounded on actual reporting from the area, than the crazy
quilt that Iraqi and American government officials, and the U.S.
media, have thrown over the battle.
Based on accounts
from Healing Iraq, the respected daily Azzaman
(also here),
on-scene reporting from Inter
Press Service, and stories from other Iraqi papers and other
media outlets translated by various websites, here is an outline
of what seems to have happened on January 28.
In the early
morning hours, a convoy of some 200 members of the al-Hatami tribe
were making their way to Najaf for Ashura, the highly emotional
commemoration of the martyrdom of Hussein, grandson of the Prophet
Mohammed, at the hands of Caliph Yazid I in 680. This was the instigation
of the centuries-long split between Shiites minority adherents
of Hussein and his father, Ali (Mohammad's cousin and son-in-law),
whom Shiites believe were the Prophet's rightful heirs as leaders
of the Muslim community and Sunnis, the majority who believe
that the early line of non-hereditary caliphs forged the true path
of orthodox Islam.
The al-Hatamis
are Shiites, but have dissented from the Shiite factions now running
the Iraqi government: SCIRI, Maliki's Dawa Party, Motqada al-Sadr's
party and others. Together with an allied tribe, the al-Khazalis,
based near Najaf, the al-Hatamis have opposed the American occupation
and the Iraqi government from the beginning, albeit peacefully so
far. They also reject the spiritual leadership of both Ayatollah
Sistani and his younger rival, Sadr, and any ties with Iran. They
would not necessarily be the most welcome guests in the SCIRI-controlled
province or in Sistani's hometown of Najaf, where tensions were
already high as authorities braced for expected terrorist attacks
on the multitude of pilgrims descending on the city.
Most of the
men in the al-Hatami procession were armed as most men are
in Iraq, especially when traveling by night. At an Iraqi army checkpoint
on the road between Diwaniya and Najaf, there was some kind of altercation.
Whether by design or perhaps more likely through a misunderstanding
of the sort that has left countless Iraqis dead at government and
Coalition checkpoints, the Iraqi troops opened fire on the car carrying
the tribe's elderly chief, Haj al-Hatemi and his wife, who were
riding because they were too frail to join the others in the march.
Seeing their chief cut down, the al-Hatamis retaliated with gunfire.
They were driven back into the palm groves near Zarqa as Iraqi forces
gave pursuit.
At this point,
the al-Khazalis intervened, coming to support their tribal allies
while reportedly trying to negotiate with the Iraqi forces to end
the shooting. But the government forces had already called for heavy
reinforcements. Within minutes, Iraqi ministers in Baghdad were
claiming that Najaf was under attack by al Qaeda terrorists. Muaffaq
al-Rubaii, the Iraqi National Security Adviser who is, curiously
enough, paid by the Americans and not the Iraqis, said that hundreds
of "foreign fighters" had been killed and that the Shiite
splinter group Jund As-Sama was behind the attack, aiming to kill
the clerics of Najaf.
There was indeed
a cult group living in the palm groves of Zarqa. They were apparently
part of the Mahdawiya, "a very small fringe Shia movement with
scattered followers in major urban centres in the south," led
by Sayyid Ahmed al-Hassan, who once followed Motqada al-Sadr's father
(a revered Shiite cleric murdered by Saddam) but now claims to be
the Al-Yemanni, a forerunner of the coming Shiite messiah, as Healing
Iraq notes. This cult too opposes the occupation as well
as the Iraqi and Iranian governments, which al-Hassan considers
apostates.
The movement
has only a few hundred followers. And indeed, the Washington
Post's latest report relaying the Pentagon's admiration
for the Iraqi Army's derring-do now says that only some 700
cultist were encamped at Zarqa, instead of the 5,000 or more cited
in earlier reports. Oddly enough, the cult's offices in Najaf had
been raided by the Scorpion Brigade of the SCIRI-controlled Interior
Ministry only days before the battle. As Zayed reports, "the
same happened to [the cult's] offices in Basra, Amara and Karbala,
days ago. Al-Hassan himself was placed under house arrest in Tannumah,
Basra, by the Iraqi government some months ago."
Despite repeated
attempts by the tribesmen, or at least some of them, to halt the
fighting, the Iraqis quickly called in American air support and
troops. American planes dropped leaflets on the grove, calling on
all "terrorists" to surrender. Then the bombing began.
According to tribal leaders, at least 120 Hatamis and more than
30 Khazalis were killed in the attack. They provided lists with
the names and occupations of the dead. Local Iraqi hospitals reported
women and children among the dead and wounded.
Meanwhile,
from eyewitness accounts of reporters from Western papers who were
at last allowed into the area, it is apparent that U.S. and Iraqi
forces also devastated the cult's compound. One reporter for the
Post saw at least 10 ambulances carting away the dead from
the area. He was also shown a video of what Iraqi officials said
were the cult's entrenchments and its large arsenal, including anti-aircraft
guns, mortars, and rocket-propelled guns.
But although
the outline of the incident is beginning to arise from the murk,
much is still unclear. Did the cult launch an attack on the Iraqi
forces that had driven the tribespeople into the grove, sparking
a vicious firefight that required U.S. bombs and troops to put down?
Or, as the Pentagon now claims, was the assault on the cult compound
a carefully planned, already scheduled strike by crack Iraqi troops?
Did the tribes blunder into the middle of this operation? Is that
why the guards at the checkpoint were so quick on the trigger?
Many such questions
still remain. However, it is now obvious that the original stories
fed to the media about the attack were untrue and that almost
all of them were deliberate untruths, not just the usual "fog
of war" uncertainties. Indeed, there was no uncertainty at
all in the ever-shifting official claims; each variant was offered
up as an undeniable assertion of fact.
It is also
now apparent that the battle however it originated, either
through the escalation of a shooting incident or by the deliberate
design of Iraqi and American forces is being used by both
Baghdad and Washington as a vindication of their disastrous policies.
Bush gets to tout a "victory" by Iraqi forces (not against
the real insurgents, true, but any port in a PR storm will do);
while Maliki gets to pretend that he is even-handedly cracking down
on Shiite militias not by touching the death squads of his
political supporters, which operate with impunity outside and inside
the government, but with blunderbuss assaults on tiny fringe groups
and recalcitrant tribes that, conveniently enough, oppose his collaboration
with both the Americans and the Iranians.
The incident
in Najaf will soon be forgotten, drowned out by the Administration's
beating of war drums against Iran. But in its cynical deceptions
and its murderous chaos, it is yet another microcosm of the overarching
hell that Bush has made of Iraq.
This article
originally appeared on Truthout.org.
February
8, 2007
Chris
Floyd [send him mail]
is the author of Empire
Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime.
Copyright
© 2007 Chris Floyd
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