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Iraq
The Rise Of The Iraqi Jihadists
2004-01-24
EFL
More than a month has passed since U.S. forces unearthed Saddam, but the threats facing American forces in Iraq are no less lethal with him in captivity. According to some U.S. and Iraqi officials, that is in part because of the rising influence and activity of Islamic extremists. These militants are assuming a leadership role in the anti-American insurgency as the ranks of Iraqis loyal to the secular Baathist regime dwindle. An Iraqi with close ties to the resistance says that a group of former Iraqi military officers held two meetings with religious militants last fall that established an alliance aimed at coordinating anti-American attacks.

The Iraqi source close to the insurgency says militant groups employ networks of smugglers to take foreign enlistees over the Syrian, Saudi Arabian and Jordanian borders. Afterward the enlistees are ferried through safe houses until they reach a hub city such as Ramadi or Fallujah. A senior U.S. military official in Baghdad says religiously inspired violence will probably replace attacks by former regime loyalists as "the principal threat we face" as the occupation heads into its second year. Says the official: "It’s already starting to shift."

The jihadists are stirring up those sentiments in the one place that generally remains off limits to the Americans: the mosque. U.S. and Iraqi officials say a worrying number of mosques are providing support for insurgents, whether jihadist, Baathist or both. Early this month U.S. and Iraqi troops raided Ibn Taymiyah mosque in Baghdad, arresting the mosque’s imam and 31 suspected militants and uncovering a cache of weaponry. Still, according to a senior military official, U.S. forces in Iraq have conducted relatively few raids inside mosques for fear of offending ordinary Iraqis. Says the official: "You could win the battle and lose the war."

Many of the indigenous jihadists in Iraq practice Salafism, a stringent brand of Sunni Islam that was brutally repressed by Saddam’s regime after it began gaining adherents in Iraq a decade ago. A Salafist who claims to be a "manager" of an insurgent cell based near Balad says his group is part of a resistance movement called Mujahedi al-Salafiyah. The man, who goes by the nom de guerre Abu Ali, says the Salafists model themselves on the mujahedin who drove the Soviets out of Afghanistan in the 1980s and on other international jihad movements. He says the Salafists have forged links with their former nemeses in the Fedayeen Saddam militia on the condition that they renounce their allegiance to the former dictator. An Iraqi close to the guerrillas says Salafists have become decision makers in cells as the strength of the Baathists has waned. A senior military official says the U.S. is paying more attention to the role of Salafists because of their "long-standing relationship to terrorism in other locations." The official mentions Algeria’s violent Salafist Group for Call and Combat.
It doesn't sound like the writer makes the connection between Salafism and Wahhabism. That tends to lessen the value of his opinions.
Posted by:Paul Moloney

#2  yeah i agree,quarantine the fuckers in a large barbed wire ring round thier towns and move in and quash them,i'm betting the locals would grass them in left right and centre.
Posted by: Jon Shep U.K   2004-1-24 8:35:37 AM  

#1  Simple solution,
1)surround the suspect Mosques with troops and barbwire.
2)Search everyone goining in and out.
3)Nothing except a Quran and prayer beads allowed in.

After the Imam,and any fighters hiding in the Mosque get hungry enough,they have the option of inviting Iraqi troops in to search.

This preserves the"sanctity"of the Mosque,makes it real tough on the the Immam,and fighters hiding there and any weapons are for all intents and purposes unusable.
Posted by: raptor   2004-1-24 7:52:28 AM  

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