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Hizbullah's Iraqi
campaign, By Caroline Glick -
9.April.2004
This week it finally happened. Hizbullah has come
out of the closet and launched a full-scale
military campaign
against US-led forces in Iraq. Two weeks after the
US shelved its sanctions against
Hizbullah sponsor Syria, and as the US
remains silent in the face of increased Iranian
assertiveness in
advancing the mullocracy's Manhattan Project, the
cat jumped out of the bag.
Ushering in his fight against the US, Hizbullah-Iranian
front man Moqtada al-Sadr told his
followers last Friday, "I am the striking
arm for Hizbullah and Hamas in Iraq because the
fate of Iraq and
Palestine is the same." Under the spell of Sadr's
call to "terrorize" the Americans, Shi'ite
militiamen launched
attacks in several cities at once. Militarily, the
results have been mixed but have
served to cause a political maelstrom by
spooking US coalition partners into reconsidering
their involvement in
Iraq. Hizbullah's appearance in Iraq is not a
surprise. Although
Sadr's offensive has been sudden, it followed a
year-long buildup of Hizbullah's organizational,
propaganda, and military apparatuses in
Iraq. In the weeks before the US-led invasion last
March, Hizbullah chief
Hassan Nasrallah was already calling for suicide
bombings against US forces in the event
that they went through with the invasion.
Shortly after the fall of Saddam's regime,
Hizbullah opened offices
in Basra and Safwan.
While press coverage of Sadr has portrayed him as
a young firebrand who acts autonomously, his
connections to Hizbullah
and to Iran are long-standing. Nasrallah is
personally tied to Sadr's family. In 1976, he
studied under Sadr's father Muhammad Baqir
al-Sadr in Najaf. Back in Lebanon, Nasrallah
joined the Shi'ite Amal
militia when it was led by its founder, Sadr's
uncle Musa. Aside from his personal ties to
Nasrallah, Sadr takes
his direction from Ayatollah Henri, one of the
most ardent extremists in Iranian ruling circles.
And on the family level,
Sadr's aunt is reportedly the first lady of Iran,
Mrs. Muhammad Khatami. Iranian
Revolutionary Guards reportedly comprise
the backbone of Sadr's fighting force.
At the same time that Hizbullah, like Sadr, was
establishing itself in post-Saddam Iraq,
mysterious terrorists
were systematically killing moderate Shi'ite
clerics who were working with the US. First
came the April 2003 assassination of Abdul
Majid al-Khoei and Haider Kelidar in the Ali
Mosque in Najaf. Sadr is
the chief suspect in Khoei's murder. Then in
August, Ayatollah Muhammad Bakr al-Hakim was
murdered outside the same mosque. Both
Khoei and Hakim were considered moderates who
wished for a secular,
multiethnic Iraq to succeed Saddam's dictatorship.
Interestingly, each time another pro-coalition
Shi'ite leader has been
killed, Nasrallah has studiously called for civil
war between Sunnis and Shi'ites to be
averted at all cost. This message became
almost hysterical in the aftermath of the attack
on Shi'ite worshipers in
Karbala and Baghdad during the Ashoura holiday in
early March; 140 worshipers were killed in
the bombings. The day of the bombings,
Nasrallah took to the airwaves on Hizbullah TV's
Al-Manar satellite network
and called for calm at all costs. Referring
to Shi'ite-Sunni sectarian strife as "a strategic
danger," he alleged a "conspiracy" to sow
hatred between the two groups and insinuated that
the Mossad had something
to do with the bombings. In the same address,
Nasrallah attacked the Sunni
Taliban, claiming they had killed more
Sunnis than Shi'ites during their period in power
in Afghanistan.
He argued that because of their murderousness
towards fellow Muslims, the Taliban were
responsible for the US
takeover of the country and the establishment of a
pro-American government that stands opposed to
jihad. A similar event,
he argued, must be prevented from occurring in
Iraq.
Michael Ledeen, an Iran expert at the American
Enterprise Institute in Washington, explained that
defeating US-led forces in Iraq is the top
priority for Teheran and, by extension, its
terrorist proxies. "For
Iran, the struggle against the US in Iraq is an
existential struggle." Echoing Nasrallah's speech,
Ledeen said, "If Iraq is
able to achieve stability under a democratic,
secular government, after the same has happened in
Afghanistan, the Iranian regime is
finished." The main reason that Hizbullah
constitutes a danger of
a new order to the US-led occupation forces is
because it has succeeded in a way that no other
group has in unifying
the terrorist forces operating in Iraq in the
common cause of defeating coalition forces. It is
in this vein that Sadr's
call for unity between Palestinian and Iraqi
terror groups becomes
understandable. The Palestinians, as Saddam's
favorite cause, were historically despised by the
Iraqi Shi'ites whom
Saddam brutally oppressed. Indeed, immediately
after Saddam's downfall last spring, the Iraqi
Governing Authority
threw Palestinians out of their state-supplied
apartments throughout the country as
punishment for their support for Saddam .
Embracing the Palestinian cause is a way of
building bridges to the
Sunni groups that are battling coalition forces in
Fallujah, Tikrit, and Ramadi. At
least in Ramadi, this unity is further
advanced by the participation of Hizbullah's good
friends the Syrians in
the fighting.
Iran itself is well placed to project pan-Islamic
unity over the issue of Israel. Since 2000, it has
become the largest sponsor of Palestinian
terror groups, surpassing Saddam's largesse by
leaps and bounds even
though the Palestinians are Sunnis. Islamic Jihad
has always been an Iranian group. Even
before the Palestinian terror war began in
September 2000, Iran began making overtures toward
Fatah. They blossomed
into a full-blown sponsorship after the Iranian
arms ship Karine-A was intercepted in January
2002. Iran has also picked up the slack in
Saudi financing of Hamas, and it is now estimated
that it finances at
least half of the group's $30 million annual
budget. No doubt, Palestinian Authority Chairman
Yasser Arafat's decision
to officially bring Hamas and Islamic Jihad into
his government was influenced by
Iranian dominance of all three
organizations. Aside from Hizbullah's ability to
unify the forces
fighting the coalition, it is a threat of a new
magnitude because Nasrallah is the world master of
terrorist warfare. With Syrian and Iranian
military sponsorship, he successfully trapped
Israel into abandoning
the initiative in the fighting in southern
Lebanon. Through a nefarious mix of terror,
propaganda, negotiations, and blackmail, he
forced the government to accept a low-intensity
conflict it could not
shape through offensive strikes.
Nasrallah made brilliant use of psychological
warfare against us. He was able to convince Israel
to cut and
run by playing to our worst fear as a nation: that
we were fighting a pointless and unnecessary war.
He did so by carefully orchestrating terror
attacks at key political junctures and by
convincing influential Israeli constituencies that
our actions in Lebanon
were futile and pointless, and therefore our
losses were self-inflicted. These constituencies
were then galvanized to
act unwittingly as Hizbullah's representatives to
the nation as a whole. The Israeli experience with
Hizbullah, and the fact
that Iran, Syria, Hizbullah, and the Palestinians
are now actively supporting and involving
themselves in operations
against the coalition ought to lead US
policymakers to base their current and future
actions,
both military and political, on an understanding
of Hizbullah's mode of operation and on the
limitations to its
operations. Hizbullah's operations are limited
first and foremost by the fact that it lacks the
ability to defeat
conventional forces militarily. Because of this,
it operates in a manner it believes will induce
demoralization of coalition members.
Militarily this will translate into an attempt to
induce a constant low-level bloodletting that will
lend the impression of chaos and inability
to achieve order and stability.
As Ledeen notes, the US should not expect a sudden
offensive, an "October surprise," immediately
before the presidential
elections. Rather, "the US should expect an April
surprise, a May surprise, a June,
July, August, September surprise, an
October, and a November surprise." By playing on
the US fear that victory is impossible
to achieve, that, as Sadr said, Iraq will
become "another Vietnam," Hizbullah will seek to
convince enough
Americans that staying is pointless to force
George W. Bush out of office and force a retreat
of US forces from Iraq.
This would be achieved to greatest effect if a
sense of chaos and futility can be
conveyed to the American people watching
the violence on their television screens.
To combat this effort, it is vital for the
administration not to lose control of the tone of
the public debate either
in Iraq or in the US. The decision to close Sadr's
newspaper was of crucial
importance for this reason. As Sadr's militia is
publishing its announcements on Hizbullah's Al-Manar
satellite network, arresting Al-Manar
reporters and blocking the station from Iraqi
television would also be
a vital move. Domestically, political opponents,
like Sens. Edward Kennedy and Robert Byrd, should
be placed on the
defensive for buying into Hizbullah's
psychological warfare in repeating the analogy
between Iraq and
Vietnam. Hizbullah also operates under a second
limitation. It cannot fight unless it is clear to
its state sponsors in
Damascus and Teheran that its battle will not
place their national interests in danger. If the
US agrees, as Israel
did, to limit its fight against the terrorists to
the battlefield of their choosing, while
appeasing their sponsors on other fronts,
Hizbullah will fight on forever. Because of this,
US inaction on the issue of Iran's
nuclear weapons program, like its decision
to hold up sanctions against Syria, is
self-defeating. Similarly,
the distinction made by the administration
between the jihad against Israel, which can be
appeased, and the jihad
against the US, which must be defeated, is both
unsustainable and destructive. In Hizbullah, the
US has found a dangerous and cunning
foe.
Hizbullah, together with its state sponsors,
strives to reenact against the US in Iraq its
success against Israel
in Lebanon. The US must make sure not to repeat
our mistakes. In doing so, it will ensure
its eventual success in bringing stability
and freedom to Iraq and score an enormous victory
in the war on terror as
a whole. |