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Zarqawi's Demise

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  • Zarqawi's Demise

    ZARQAWI'S DEMISE

    AZG Armenian Daily
    16/06/2006

    There is a lesson for us all in the sudden, violent death of terrorist
    leader Musab al-Zarqawi in Iraq on Tuesday. It is this: Never call
    a meeting.

    Osama bin Laden probably hasn't called a single meeting since 9/11,
    so he's still alive and kicking almost five years later. He sends out
    inspirational video or audio tapes from time to time, but he's not
    actually running anything, because that would require him to be in
    daily touch with lots of people -- and if he were, he would be dead by
    now. They'd spot him using a satellite phone and drop a missile on him,
    like the Russians did to the Chechen rebel leader Dzhokhar Dudayev,
    or somebody would just turn him in for the $25 million reward.

    Zarqawi HAD to hold meetings, however. He had to organise atrocities,
    coordinate logistics, talk on mobile phones, and thus expose himself
    to attack on a daily basis, so eventually he ran out of luck. He will
    not be missed, especially by the saner parts of the Iraqi resistance
    movement -- but he has probably already done the state of Iraq
    fatal damage.

    Zarawi was a foreigner, and most of his fighters were foreigners too,
    religious fanatics from all over the Arab world who cared no more
    about the lives of Iraqis than they did about their own lives. The
    more doctrinally pure among them believed that there should not even
    be an Iraqi state; like all Muslim countries, it should be absorbed
    into a single world-spanning Muslim state run according to strict
    Islamist principles.

    It was the US invasion of Iraq that gave Zarqawi and his friends
    the chance to move in, but they never dominated the resistance
    movement. From the start, the great majority of the people fighting
    the American occupation were native-born Sunni Arabs. Some of them,
    mostly former Baathists, were nationalists who simply wanted the
    Americans out. Others were religiously motivated radicals, long
    repressed under Saddam, who also wanted to impose strict Islamic law
    on the country. But none of them wanted to abolish the country. Most
    of them did not even want a civil war.

    That was where Zarqawi's influence was greatest, and worst. His
    gruesome enthusiasm for slowly beheading defenceless hostages and
    circulating the videos was bad enough. Indeed, although bin Laden
    and Zawahiri were eventually persuaded in 2004 to adopt "al-Qaeda in
    Iraq," as Zarqawi named his organisation, they never had any control
    over him, and they worried that his obvious delight in cruelty would
    alienate people from the cause. But Zarqawi's strategy of trying to
    trigger a civil war in Iraq by murdering Shia Arabs in large numbers
    was as infectious as it was effective.

    Logically, Iraq's Sunni Arabs should not seek a civil war because,
    as a mere 20 percent minority in the country, they are almost certain
    to lose it. But there is no other strategy that is likely to restore
    the Sunnis' former dominance over Iraq either. When no good strategy is
    available, people will often opt for bad strategies rather than accept
    defeat -- and Zarqawi offered the Sunnis the strategy of civil war.

    Like many religious fanatics, he hated people of his own religion
    whom he saw as heretics even more than he hated infidels, so he had
    no compunction about blowing Shia Arabs up in large numbers simply
    because they were Shia. He saw a Sunni-Shia civil war as the best way
    of destabilising the government that the US occupation was trying to
    install in Baghdad, but also as the best way to ensuring the emergence
    of a permanent base for Islamist radicals in the Sunni Arab parts
    of the country, which would probably end up beyond Shia control even
    after a eventual American withdrawal.

    It was Zarqawi's people who carried out all the early atrocities
    against Shia civilians -- the bombing of the Najaf shrine in August
    2003 (85 dead), the coordinated attack on Shia mosques during Ashoura
    ceremony in March 2004 (181 dead), the car bombs in Najaf and Karbala
    in December 2004 (60 dead) -- and they had the desired effect. Death
    squads from Shia militias began killing Sunnis in retaliation,
    the mainstream Sunni resistance started to fight back with the same
    methods, and Iraq was trapped in the same spiral of violence that
    doomed Lebanon to fifteen years of civil war.

    Zarqawi is dead, but he has probably achieved his purpose. Baghdad
    central mortuary is now receiving close to fifty mutilated bodies each
    day, almost all of them victims of sectarian killings, and every month
    the number rises. It's probable that two or three times as many dead
    end up in other mortuaries or are simply found and buried by their
    relatives without any official record. The situation in Iraq will
    probably get much worse, but it is already past saving.

    By Gwynne Dyer, a London-based independent journalist whose articles
    are published in 45 countries.
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