Now that the recent
publicized beheadings of two Westerners has the Obama Administration taking
action against ISIS/IS, it is interesting to look back at testimony given in
early February 2014 to the House Foreign Affairs Committee by Deputy Assistant
Secretary of State and former Senior Advisor to the United States Ambassador to
Iraq, Brett McGurk about the ramping up of activity by ISIS in Iraq as far back
as late 2012 and early 2013. In this posting, I will provide you
with some quotes from his testimony of February 4, 2014 that is available
on the House website showing how long ago the Obama Administration knew that
ISIS was becoming a major obstacle to stability in the Middle East.
Let's open this posting
with two maps. The first map shows the sectarian divisions within Iraq:
This map shows the areas
controlled by ISIS in June 2014:
Mr. McGurk begins his
testimony by noting that in 2011 and 2012, Iraq remained a very violent country
with 4400 Iraqis killed each year in attacks led by al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) and
that the insurgency situation in Iraq was at a "low boil" level where
there was no serious risk of state collapse. He goes on to note that the
escalating civil war in Syria attracted terrorist groups looking to take
advantage of the loss of state authority in the border region between Syria and
Iraq. One of these groups was ISIL, a franchise of AQI which had the
agenda of carving out an Islamic caliphate from Baghdad to Lebanon. As a
result of ISIL's involvement in the area, Iraq saw an increase in suicide
attacks, rising from an average of 5 to 10 attacks per month in 2012 to 30 to
40 attacks by the summer of 2013. Not only were the number of attacks
increasing, the sophistication of the methods used during the attacks showed
that ISIL was quite capable of launching sophisticated military-style
operations. By November 2013, Iraq witnessed 50 suicide attacks compared
to only three in November 2012. During the summer of 2013, it was noticed
that ISIL was building a series of training camps in western Iraq;
unfortunately, Iraq's security forces were unable to destroy these camps
because they lack armoured helicopters which made ISF pilots vulnerable to ISIL
anti-aircraft platforms that protected the camps.
Here is a quote from his
testimony:
"Indeed, the violence may appear
indiscriminate – but it is not. From what we are now seeing, ISIL attacks are
calculated, coordinated, and part of a strategic campaign led by its
Syria-based leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. This campaign has the stated
objective to cause the collapse of the Iraqi state and carve out a zone of
governing control in the western regions of Iraq and eastern Syria (an area
known as the “Jazeera”). To do this, they are now using three primary tactics:
First, attacking Shia civilians with an aim to
re-ignite a civil war and cause ordinary people to look to militias, not the
state, for protection. Adherents to ISIL’s extreme ideology believe Shia
should be killed based on their sect alone, and the suicide bombers seek
populated areas to murder as many innocent people as possible. These are the
vast majority of ISIL attacks.
Second,
contesting territory in Sunni areas to assert dominance over local Sunni
officials and tribes. Targeted assassinations and attacks increased in these
areas as ISIL focused its resources inside Iraq. In one 30-day period between
September and October of last year, for example, more than a dozen suicide
bombers were used in assaults on three towns in Anbar province (Rawa, Rutbah,
and Haditha).
Third, attacking the Iraqi Kurdistan Region (IKR) and
disputed boundary areas in northern Iraq to stoke ethnic tensions and conflict.
The thriving capital city of the IKR, Erbil, faced an attack in September
similar to attacks seen in Baghdad earlier in the year: multiple suicide
bombers followed by an infantry assault to temporarily control a government
building.
By the end of 2013, suicide and vehicle-borne attacks
initiated by ISIL returned to levels not seen since the height of AQI’s power
(its earlier incarnation) in 2007. Overall levels of violence, however, remain
far below 2007 levels, demonstrating that reprisal attacks from Shia militias
have been restrained, though the risks of such reprisals continue to rise as
ISIL continues to attack Shia civilian areas.
In summary, ISIL’s strategy is sophisticated, patient, and
focused. It will take a similar combination of sophistication, patience, and
focus to combat it, and I will explain shortly what this strategy should look
like, and how we intend to help the Iraqis increase the chances that they can
arrest these 2013 trend-lines in 2014.”
Deputy Assistant
Secretary McGurk goes on to outline the reasons why ISIL has been so successful
at infiltrating Iraq. He notes that protests in the Sunni areas of Iraq
began after the Iraqi domestic forces detained the bodyguards of Minister of
Finance al-Issawi. Protests against the decade-long process of
de-Ba'athification (Saddam Hussein's political party) from the Sunni community
continued throughout 2013 and the black flags of ISIL began to appear during
protests as ISIL took advantage of the anger between the Sunni and Shi'a
populations. At a protest on April 23, 2013, Iraqi forces stormed a demonstration
at al-Hawija with tanks and helicopters along with water trucks using extremely
hot water to hose down demonstrators killing at least 50
demonstrators, wounding 150 and arresting 400.
In his testimony, Mr. McGurk
also outlines the successes that ISIL had experienced in January 2014:
"On January 1, 2014, convoys of approximately
70-100 trucks with mounted heavy weapons and anti-aircraft guns, flying the
black flag of al-Qa’ida, entered the central cities of Fallujah and Ramadi.
They deployed to key objectives, destroyed most police stations, and secured
vital crossways. The police in both cities nearly disintegrated. The Iraqi
army, deployed in camps outside the cities, engaged some armed vehicles but
generally chose not to get drawn into urban fighting.
The domination of these
central cities was a culmination of ISIL’s 2013 strategy to govern territory
and establish 7th-century Islamic rule. Across the border in Syria, ISIL has
governed the city of Raqqa (with a population of 220,000) for most of the past
year. In Iraq, ISIL sees Ramadi and Fallujah as their new Raqqa. In Fallujah,
days after seizing central areas, ISIL declared the city part of an Islamic
caliphate. This message, however, is not popular in Anbar – and has bred fierce
resistance.”
Mr. McGurk also testified
that ISIS was a direct threat to the United States as shown here, quoting a
January 21, 2014 audio statement issued by ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi:
"Were there any doubt, moreover, of the
threat Baghdadi and his network – now with approximately 2,000 fighters in Iraq
– presents to the United States and our interests in the region, his statement
said this in its concluding paragraph:
“Our last message is to the Americans. Soon we will be in
direct confrontation, and the sons of Islam have prepared for such a day. So
watch, for we are with you, watching.””
Here are two paragraphs
from McGurk's testimony, outlining his recommendations:
"The danger at this moment is that these
hardened cores of militancy, which must be isolated from the broader population
and defeated, become fused with a sense of despondency and grievance in Sunni
areas of the country. It is therefore critical and incumbent upon the
Government of Iraq (GOI) to help mobilize the people in Sunni areas against
ISIL and JRTN through a combination of aggressive political outreach and
targeted intelligence-driven security operations.
This responsibility for political outreach and inclusion
rests on all Iraqi leaders, but most prominently on Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki. He is under tremendous political pressure from the Shia population,
which faces a near daily threat of car and suicide bombs; but it is incumbent
upon the head of state to act in a manner that advances stability in all parts
of Iraq. In all of our engagements with Maliki, accordingly, including a
November meeting with the President, and regular calls from the Vice President,
we have continued to press the urgency of working with local Sunni leaders to
draw the population into the fight against ISIL.”
The Government of Iraq
responded to the fighting in early 2014 by funding reconstruction and
humanitarian needs in the areas damaged by fighting and is attempting
to supply its troops with much-needed weaponry and other materiel.
Let's summarize the
impact of ISIS on Iraqi civilians. From IraqiBody Count, here is a graph showing the growth in the
number of civilian casualties from 2012 to 2014:
In 2012, 4,620 Iraqi
civilians were killed. This is comparable to the levels seen in the years
from 2009 to 2011. The number of civilians killed rose to 9,656 in 2013
and in the first nine months of 2014, the count has risen to 11,190.
It is interesting to look
back at testimony to the House Foreign Affairs Committee from early 2014 and see how it was quite clear that ISIS was becoming a very significant threat to the stability of both Syria and Iraq and a threat to the civilian population of Iraq. As far back as
mid-2013, it was clear that the degree of chaos in Iraq was increasing, yet,
very little attention was paid to the growing number of Iraqi civilian
casualties who died as a direct result of ISIS attacks. It wasn't until
two American journalists lost their lives in a rather gruesome and very public
way that the White House paid any more than lip service to the problems
that were created as a direct result of Washington's policy of state
destruction and rebuilding.
Oh, the complexities that result from geopolitical interference!
Haha, the members of congress who voted for funding the Syrian opposition should be given to the dogs.
ReplyDeleteI never can understand why it matters how someone dies. I mean it’s not like they were slowly tortured over days or even hours. Yes no one like the idea of their head being separated from their body. But is that any worse than getting shot in the chest multiple times and dying that way? Death is pretty quick its all over in a less than 30 seconds or so. It's not a fast has being directly being hit with a drone missile but its faster than having a house land on you after the missile collapsed the building and your buried in debris and slowly fade away. One more point that most of us don't think about basically the way this whole thing looks to those outside of the US is kill all the people you want however you want to do it but if cut the heads off a couple of Americans we will come after you then. But we won't do much even if you kill thousands of non-Americans. So one life is worth more than another apparently….
ReplyDeleteEver notice how much of what Obama does ends up supporting the goals of the MB? Is anyone writing a book about this or is there a website dedicated to it?
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