The Triangle of Death
The Los
Angeles Times reports the onset of a new American offensive against Sunni
antigovernment forces in the "Triangle of Death", a Ba'ath Party
stronghold and the recent site of the execution of tens
of Iraqi policemen.
U.S. Marines accompanied by Iraqi security forces launched a new offensive
early today aimed at regaining control of northern Babil province, a region
just south of Baghdad beset by kidnappings, shootings and carjackings for more
than a year. ...
Terming it their first major post-Fallouja campaign to regain control of an
insurgent-riddled area outside Baghdad, officials said they would continue a
series of preplanned raids in towns and farming areas largely within a
so-called "death triangle" of cities bordered by Latifiya,
Mahmoudiya and Yousifiya. U.S. troops have also engaged in a series of
counterattacks to quell resistance in Mosul, Baghdad and other towns in the
wake of their offensive to regain control of the rebel stronghold of Fallouja.
"We are going to push the fight back out to the enemy while he's
reeling," said Capt. Tad Douglas, 28, who led an elite reconnaissance
platoon of the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit in the raids. "We've seen
fighters from Fallouja filtering down here, and we're going to take the
offensive while they're still licking their wounds."
Explosives are believed to be plentiful in the area, the site of the Al Qa
Qaa munitions depot and numerous arms caches. "Marines have uncovered
several weapons caches in northern Babil province buried in dirt fields. The
arms include mortars, rocket-propelled grenades and 500-pound bombs. At this
point, though, they believe they have made only a dent in the supply."
Just how much explosive may have been salted away in the months prior to OIF
was underscored in a separate find far to the north, 45 kilometers south of
Mosul when soldiers from the 25th Division found a very
large cache of buried weapons.
During their patrol, Soldiers from 2nd Battalion, 8th Field Artillery
Regiment discovered huge stockpiles of weapons and munitions, including: an
anti-aircraft gun, 15,000 anti-aircraft rounds, 4,600 hand grenades, 144
VOG-17M anti-personnel grenade launchers, 25 SA-7 surface-to-air missiles, 44
SA-7 battery packs, 20 guided missile packs, 21 120mm mortar rounds, two 120mm
mortar tubes, 10 122mm rockets, six 152mm artillery rounds and two 57mm
artillery rounds. Soldiers also discovered a building full of explosive-making
materials. The three-acre site is secure and still under investigation with
more weapons and munitions discoveries expected, Task Force Olympia officials
said.
The "Triangle of Death" has become an obstacle course for Shi'ites
attempting to travel through the belt of Sunni towns to Baghdad. The Washington
Post describes the butchery of Shi'ite travelers by men sometimes described
by the press as 'militants' or 'freedom fighters'.
A particularly militant strain of Sunni Islam within the insurgency,
Wahhabism, has chilled many Shiites. ... Each driver had a story: Abdullah was
following a van carrying a coffin that was stopped at a checkpoint last month,
destined for the vast Shiite cemetery in Najaf. The men at the checkpoint
tossed the body on the street, doused it with gasoline and set fire to it, he
said. ...
They forced the young men to get out, then ordered them to insult Ali (a
figure revered by Shi'ites). Two men refused, he said, and were bundled off
and apparently killed. "They act according to their own religious edict:
If you kill a Shiite, you go to paradise," he said. "It's like
they're bringing chickens from the market and slaughtering them," said
another driver, Haider Abdel-Zahra.
Last week, residents traded stories about a young man with long hair who
was forced into a car by insurgents. His body showed up at his father's house
a few days later, with a gunshot to the chest and some of his hair pulled from
his scalp. A letter left on top of his corpse warned that death was the fate
of those who disobey Islamic injunctions. Residents also spoke of a woman
whose body was left in the street. Though she was wearing a veil, they said,
she was apparently killed for wearing pants, which some deem un-Islamic. In
several Shiite mosques, prayer leaders have denounced the killings in their
sermons, and the bloodshed has unleashed fears of sectarian strife.
The Strategy
Page suggests that the former Ba'athists are somewhat off balance and the US
is pressing its advantage.
For the last 18 months, coalition intelligence forces, and Special Forces
units, have been developing informer networks. Tips from informants inside
Fallujah were responsible for the rapid progress of the coalition attack, and
the failure of many of the defenders ambushes and boob-traps. Now the
coalition money is being spent all over central Iraq. With nearly 2,500
anti-government gunmen dead or captured in Fallujah, those who fled are
shorthanded, out in the open, and a source of quick money for sharp eyed
Iraqis.
This view is very similar to that put forward by a Marine spokesman
interviewed by the Los
Angeles Times.
In undertaking the operation, Marine Col. Ron Johnson said the aim was to
squeeze the insurgents by taking territory and freedom of movement from them.
Johnson's 2,200 Marines at Forward Operating Base Kalsu have already increased
their presence in the province through more aggressive patrolling of towns and
back roads. The heightened tempo is aimed at the insurgents or criminals who
had grown accustomed to moving through the province with near-impunity.
Marines have detained more than 600 Iraqis in raids or at roadblocks since
early August. "There are multiple factions competing for power with a
multitude of interests � some of them are no more than thugs � and they
want to take advantage of the chaos," said Johnson, who declared that
"there will be no place my men won't go" in north Babil. ...
"You can't have a functioning country where Shiites cannot drive from
their cities to the capital," said a senior military officer at Kalsu.
"The insurgents know it. And everyone in Baghdad knows it."
The indiscriminate terrorist attacks on Shi'ites and Kurds may be erecting a
counter "Triangle of Death" against them with American firepower and
Shi'ite and Kurdish enmity at the three corners. Many of the Iraqi troops who
fought in Fallujah were of Kurdish extraction. Another story from the LA
Times reports:
Staff Sgt. Adel Ahmed led a reporter to a spot outside a yellow schoolhouse
in central Fallouja. There, he said, his troops had finished off a fighter
carrying Syrian identification. The Iraqis pointed to a protruding mound of
earth behind the school where, they said, the Syrian was buried. "We are
fighting to save our Iraq from foreigners and terrorists," Ahmed
declared. Most Iraqi troops here appear to be either Shiite Muslims or Kurds.
Both groups are rivals of the minority Sunni Muslim Arabs who have long
dominated Iraq and constitute the majority of Fallouja's population. ...
But the preponderance of Shiites and Kurds also points to one of the Iraqi
army's potential weaknesses: The failure to attract sufficient recruits from
Sunni cities, where hostility toward America runs high and many young men
choose to enlist in guerrilla forces instead.
Although the Sunnis are minority in Iraq, they were dominant under Saddam
Hussein and the habit of command among some former Ba'athists may be hard to
break. MSNBC
describes Kurd-baiting baiting by the terrorists.
Insurgents battling U.S. and Iraqi forces in the northern city of Mosul
have been trying to drag the Kurdish minority into their fight and set off a
sectarian war, Kurdish and Arab officials say. ... Violence against Kurds has
escalated in recent days, officials say. The offices -- and officials -- of
Kurdish political parties have been attacked. Insurgents fired on a truck
carrying Kurdish peshmerga fighters. And at least one Kurd was said to have
been beheaded in Mosul, a largely Sunni Arab city. �They are trying to
ignite the flames of sedition between Arabs and Kurds,� Khasro Gouran, Mosul�s
Kurdish deputy provincial governor, said by telephone from Mosul. �They want
the Kurds to react and the peshmerga to come in (from outside Mosul) so there
would be sectarian strife in the city.�
Attempts to inflame the Kurds may eventually succeed.. The Associated
Press reports that two Sunni clerics opposed to elections called by the
interim government have been gunned down.
Sheik Ghalib Ali al-Zuhairi was a member of the Association of Muslim
Scholars, an influential Sunni clerics group that has called for a boycott of
nationwide elections scheduled for Jan. 30. He was shot as he was leaving a
mosque in the town of Muqdadiyah and died in the local hospital, said police
Col. Raisan Hussein. Muqdadiyah is about 60 miles north of Baghdad. A day
earlier, unknown gunmen assassinated another prominent Sunni cleric in the
northern city of Mosul Sheik Faidh Mohamed Amin al-Faidhi, who was the brother
of the group's spokesman. It as unclear whether the two attacks were related.
The former Ba'athists may still have plenty of money, weapons and explosives.
But they have plenty of enemies too.
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