Ocnus.Net
Sadr Offensive Shows Failure of Petraeus Strategy
By Gareth Porter, IPS 26/3/08
Mar 27, 2008 - 10:55:07 AM
Petraeus reacted immediately to Sunday's rocket
attacks on the Green Zone by blaming them on Iran. He told the BBC the rockets
were "Iranian provided, Iranian-made rockets", and that they were
launched by groups that were funded and trained by the Quds Force of Iran's
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). Petraeus said this was "in
complete violation of promises made by President [Mahmoud] Ahmadinejad and
other most senior Iranian leaders to their Iraqi counterparts".
Petraeus statement was clearly intended to
divert attention from a development that threatens one of the two main pillars
of the administration's claim of progress in Iraq -- the willingness of Sadr to
restrain the Mahdi Army, even in the face of systematic raids on its leadership
by the U.S. military and its Iraqi allies.
The rocket attacks appear to have been one of
several actions by the Mahdi Army to warn the United States and the Iraqi
government to halt their systematic raids aimed at driving the Sadrists out of
key Shiite centres in the south. They were followed almost immediately by Mahdi
Army clashes with rival Shiite militiamen in Basra, Sadr City and Kut and a
call for a nationwide general strike to demand the release of Sadrist
detainees.
Even more pointed was a strong warning from Sadr
aide Abdul-Hadi al-Mohammedawi to the United States as well as to the Islamic
Supreme Council of Iraq (ISCI), whose Badr Organisation militiamen, in the
uniforms of Iraqi security forces, have targeted the Madhi Army throughout the
south. "They don't seem to realise that the Sadrist trend is like a
volcano," he told worshippers Friday in Kufa. "If it explodes, it
will crush their rotten heads."
The signs that the Madhi Army will no longer
remain passive mark a major defeat for the U.S. military command's strategy
aimed at weakening the Mahdi Army.
When he took command in Iraq in early 2007,
Petraeus recognised that the U.S. occupation forces could not afford to wage a
full-fledged campaign against the Mahdi Army as a whole. Instead it adopted a
strategy of dividing the Sadrist movement.
Petraeus and the ground commander in Iraq, Lt. Gen.
Ray Odierno, hoped that there were leaders in the Sadrist movement who would be
willing to give up further military resistace and accept the U.S. occupation
and the existing government.
For months, the command tried to generate a
"dialogue" with "moderates" in the Sadrist camp. It issued
a series of statements hailing Sadr's willingness to change the purpose of his
movement. Most recently, on Jan. 17, Odierno said, "I believe he is trying
to move forward with more of a religious organisation and get away from a
militia type-supported organisation." But he admitted, "That could
change."
Meanwhile, Petraeus targeted selected elements
of the Mahdi Army in raids in Sadr City and the Shiite south, portraying its
targets as "criminals" and "rogue elements" which had
broken away from Sadr and were armed, trained and financed by Iran. Odierno
suggested in his Jan. 17 press briefing that such renegade groups were causing
"the majority of the violence".
But the "moderate" Sadrists who would
be willing to make a deal with the U.S. never materialised. Last July, a U.S.
commander in Baghdad claimed that Sadrist representatives had initiated
"indirect" talks with the U.S. military. But in January, Odierno
would say only that they had been meeting with "local leaders" in
Sadr City, not with representatives of the Sadrist movement.
The Mahdi Army's blunt warnings of military
countermeasures followed months of raids against Sadr's political-military
organisation by both U.S. forces and the Badr Organisation. According to a
senior Sadrist parliamentarian, between 2,000 and 2,500 Mahdi Army militiamen
had been detained since Sadr declared a ceasefire last August.
The raids have been aimed at weakening the Madhi
Army's political hold on Shiite cities in anticipation of eventual provincial
elections.
During 2007 there were signs of strong support
for Sadr in Najaf, Basra and Karbala, as Sudarsan Raghavan reported in the
Washington Post last December. In Najaf, portraits of Sadr and his father,
Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Sadiq Sadr, who was assassinated by Saddam Hussein's
security forces in 1999, had "mushroomed defiantly in the streets".
Sadr's image had also been "pervasive"
in Karbala, according to Raghavan, until security forces loyal to the ISCI
arrested more than 400 of Sadr's followers in an obvious effort to destroy its
organisation in the city.
For months Sadr had refrained from authorising a
full-fledged response to such attacks on his forces. But Tuesday an officer at
Sadr's headquarters in Najaf said the Mahdi Army should be prepared to
"strike the occupiers" as well as the Badr Organisation.
Revealing the contradictions built into the U.S.
position in Iraq, even as it was blaming Iran for the alleged renegade units of
the Mahdi Army, the U.S. was using the Badr Organisation, the military arm of
the ISCI, to carry out raids against the Mahdi Army. The Badr Organisation and
the ISCI had always been and remained the most pro-Iranian political-military
forces in Iraq, having been established, trained and funded by the IRGC from
Shiite exiles in Iran during the Iran-Iraq war.
It was the ISCI leader Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim who
had invited two IRGC officers to be his guests in December 2006, apparently to
discuss military assistance to the Badr Organisation. The Iranian officials
were seized in the home of home of Hadi al-Ameri, the leader of the Badr
Organisation and detained by the U.S. military. The Bush administration
continued throughout 2007 to cite those Iranian visitors as evidence of the
IRGC's illicit intervention in Iraq.
But the Badr Organisation had become the
indispensable element of the Iraqi government's security forces, who could be
counted on to oppose the Mahdi Army in the south. And in a further ironic
twist, it was the leaders of the ISCI and of the Nouri al-Maliki government,
which depended on Iranian support, who insisted last summer and fall that the
United States should credit Iran with having prevailed on Sadr to agree to a
ceasefire. The close collaboration of the U.S. command with these pro-Iranian
groups against Sadr appears to be the main reason for the State Department's
endorsement of that argument last December.
The Petraeus assertion that the rocket attacks
on the Green Zone were Iranian-inspired strongly implied that Iran is still
providing arms to Shiite militias. However, Odierno told a press briefing in
mid-January, "We are not sure if they're still importing [sic] weapons
into Iraq."
That admission came only after many months in
which U.S. officers in the border provinces were unable to find any evidence of
arms coming across the border from Iran.
Those officers also found no trace of the
alleged presence of the IRGC personnel in Iraq. Last November, the French
weekly news magazine Le Point quoted Maj. Scott A. Pettigrew, the military
intelligence chief in Diyala province on the Iranian border, as saying, "I
have never seen any activity or presence of the Quds Force. I see nothing here
that resembles a proxy war with Iran."
Source: Ocnus.net 2008