The Sunni Arabs, about 20% of Iraq's population, make up the
core of the insurgency. But the most deadly fighters are suicide bombers
belonging Salafi groups, who are mostly non-Iraqi volunteers led by the
Jordanian/Palestinian terrorist Abu Mus'ab al-Zarqawi. This group
is desperately trying to disrupt the political process. Leading
al-Qaeda's Iraq branch, Zarqawi has vowed repeatedly that he will
ignite a civil war between the Sunni and Shiite Arabs.
The Salafis are the most radical, most fanatic fringe of Sunnism.
Worse than the fascists, they apply the medieval concept of tattarrus
which allows them to kill even innocent Sunnis, as well as Shiites and
non-Muslims - be they military or civilian, women and children, Arabs or
Kurds, and so forth. They are gaining their own momentum in Iraq, where
they include Iraqi Kurds and Turkomans, as well as volunteers from
Syria, Saudi Arabia, other Arab countries, Europe and other parts of the
world (see news1cIraqSalafJul4-5). Salafi insurgents in Iraq are
connected to such suicide bomber cells as those who hit in London on
July 7 and those who hit in Sharm el-Shaikh on July 23 (see
news5cWorldTerroAug1-05).
Some of Iraq's Sunni Arabs actively fight while others provide
aid or look the other way. Even the Association of Muslim Scholars
(AMS), which claims to control over 3,000 Sunni mosques across Iraq, has
access to the Salafi terrorist groups. The AMS continues to maintain
links to Zarqawi's group. This is despite Zarqawi's recent
warnings that his al-Qaeda Organisation for Jihad in Mesopotamia will be
executing any Sunni Arab who takes part in drafting the constitution and
in the Shiite/Kurkish-led political process.
Yet recently there has been progress in luring a relatively large
group of the Sunni Arabs to participate in politics, including the
constitutional process. Some who urged an election boycott just six
months ago now want their fellow Sunni Arabs to vote in upcoming
elections, and a core group has helped draft the constitution. A Sunni
Arab walkout ended in late July.
Nevertheless, the Salafi insurgents are going full throttle,
stepping up attacks against Iraqi civilians and security forces. May was
the most violent month for Iraqi civilians since the US-led invasion to
remove Saddam in March 2003, said Lt. Gen. John R. Vines, commander of
the US-led Multinational Force (MNF) in Iraq. Iraqi officials say 434
civilians were killed in May, up from 299 in April, and that another 151
Iraqi police and 85 Iraqi soldiers were killed - both figures up sharply
from April.
A Pentagon report to Congress says the insurgents "remain
capable, adaptable and intent on carrying out attacks". The
Pentagon conceded that the insurgency's Salafi fringe allied with
Zarqawi has a big impact through its propaganda and the dramatic nature
of its attacks. The top US commander in the Middle East, Gen. John
Abizaid, told Congress recently the insurgents' strength had not
fallen in the last six months.
Even more troubling, there are signs that long-standing
Sunni-Shiite Arab tensions are on the rise, if not yet reaching a
long-feared civil war, as Shiite Arabs continue to bear the brunt of the
suicide attacks. And US officials have expressed high-level concerns
about Sunni Arab complaints of Shiite-led police abuse.
US officials are so intent on keeping the political momentum -
citing it as one of Iraq's few bright spots - that they are
pressing for the Aug. 15 constitution deadline even if that means
leaving out key points. Marr said there remained only one way to defeat
the insurgents "and that's to get enough Sunnis...to turn
against them". But she did not hide her pessimism, saying: "I
think we have to prepare ourselves for a rather long process here. ...
I'm sorry to have to say that, and I hope I'm wrong. But
that's the way it looks to me from Baghdad".
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