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U.S.-led forces in Iraq stage offensive along the Euphrates

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  • U.S.-led forces in Iraq stage offensive along the Euphrates

    The Militant, NY
    March 5 2005

    http://www.themilitant.com/2005/6910/691003. html

    U.S.-led forces in Iraq stage offensive along the Euphrates
    (front page)

    BY SAM MANUEL

    In late February, the U.S. military opened a new offensive centered
    on the town of Ramadi and several other cities along the Euphrates
    River in the Anbar province, west of Baghdad. The same Marine
    division that led the assault on Fallujah three months ago is also
    heading this offensive, which includes a section of the Iraqi armed
    forces.
    Dubbed `Operation River Blitz,' the Anbar offensive is a continuation
    of the second phase of the Iraq war that began with the November
    Fallujah assault. Its primary objective is to destroy the elite units
    of the Iraqi army from the deposed Baath Party regime of Saddam
    Hussein, which maintained much of their weaponry and cohesion as they
    melted away in the face of the U.S.-led takeover of Baghdad in April
    2003. These Baathist units have been the backbone of the withering
    campaign of bombings, ambushes, kidnappings, and assassinations
    directed at the U.S.-imposed interim government in Iraq and the
    occupation forces.

    A measure of the increasing isolation of the Baathists was the
    response to a February 28 suicide car bombing in the Shiite town of
    Hillah, which killed 135 people and wounded 141. It was the deadliest
    single bomb attack of the war. The blast mainly killed young police
    and Iraqi national guard recruits waiting at a clinic for medical
    checkups. Shoppers in a nearby market, including women and children,
    also died. A statement on the Internet by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's
    al-Qaeda in Iraq took responsibility for the bombing. The statement
    was not immediately verified.

    Associated Press reported that on March 1 more than 2,000 Iraqis held
    a spontaneous demonstration outside the clinic, chanting `No to
    terrorism!' `No to Baathism and Wahhabism!' Wahhabism is a form of
    Sunni Islam adhered to by Osama bin Laden. Some also condemned
    interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi or local officials for failing to
    prevent the attack.

    A black banner hung outside the market offering condolences for
    `innocent martyrs of this rural southern town at the hands of the
    sinful traitorous terrorists during the cowardly attack,' the Los
    Angeles Times reported.

    Meanwhile, several developments highlight further the instability of
    the newly elected Iraqi government and the political space that has
    opened for working people and oppressed groups since the collapse of
    Hussein's party police state. Leaders of the Kurdish slate that won
    the second largest number of votes in the January 30 elections have
    outlined their conditions for entering a bloc with Shiite-led parties
    to form a new government. They include strengthening the Kurd's
    autonomy in northeastern Iraq and Kurdish control of the province
    that contains the oil-rich city Kirkuk.

    `Operation River Blitz'
    U.S.-led forces began operations in late February in the towns of
    Ramadi, Hit, Baghdadi, Haqlaniyah, and Haditha - all in the Anbar
    province west of Baghdad. The Hussein regime had maintained a strong
    base of support in the Sunni Arab population of the province, and
    since Hussein's fall, the Baathist-led insurgency has operated with
    relative freedom. Residents of Ramadi started to flee the city, many
    fearing a repeat of the U.S. assault on Fallujah last November,
    Reuters reported. A curfew is in effect from 8:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m.
    Checkpoints have been set up throughout the city and at least 100
    individuals have been detained, al-Jazeera TV reported. `Unmanned
    drones, their engines buzzing like lawn mowers, regularly scan the
    city's warren of alleys,' the Christian Science Monitor reported
    February 24 from the city of Hit. U.S. Marines have detained all
    former police officers there. Last October the police allowed armed
    insurgents to take over the police station without a fight, the
    Monitor reports. The U.S. military suspects the police of
    sympathizing with the Baathists.

    In Haqlaniyah, U.S. warplanes reportedly dropped 500-pound bombs on
    targets, while an AC-130 gunship fired 40 mm rounds in support of
    U.S. troops.

    At a February 22 Pentagon briefing in Washington, Gen. David
    Rodriguez said the operation is expected to be of a `significantly
    lesser degree' than what took place in Fallujah. In the current
    operation the Marines intend to `ride that fine line...where we don't
    spoil the goodwill that's here...while still having enough force so if
    the enemy decides to fight we can kill them,' said Lt. Col. Steven
    Dinauer. To that end, said the Monitor, in addition to their regular
    complement of tanks, mortars, and grenades, the Marines have also
    brought along a lawyer, $20,000 to pay for damages, and dozens of
    soccer balls.

    In his Pentagon briefing General Rodriguez noted that attacks on
    U.S., Iraqi, and civilian targets have been `down a little bit since
    the election.' He also said that although the attacks on Shiites
    during the Muslim Ashura holiday have been bloody they were a third
    less than in the previous year.

    Rodriguez also said that `the noose is closing' around Abu Musab
    al-Zarqawi's al-Qaeda in Iraq. `Over the past several weeks there's
    been several capture-or-kill of several of the key people in his
    network.' With backing and collaboration from the Baathist elements
    financing and leading the insurgency, this group has claimed
    responsibility for numerous beheadings, kidnappings, and assaults on
    Iraqi civilians.

    The Iraqi government announced that a top leader of the group had
    been captured February 20. Talib Mikhlif Arsan Walman al-Dulaymi,
    also known as Abu Qutaybah, was captured that day. Al-Dulaymi was
    responsible for finding safe houses and transportation for members of
    the group, according to the Iraqi government announcement.

    Kurds press to strengthen autonomy
    Nechirvan Barzani, prime minister of the Kurdish regional government,
    said the Kurdish leaders would only agree to a deal on the formation
    of a new national government if they are given control of disputed
    areas in the north of the country, including Kirkuk, a major oil
    center. Since 1991 the main Kurdish parties, the Kurdistan Democratic
    Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), have
    administered three northeastern provinces in Iraq as an autonomous
    region. The area is popularly known as Iraqi Kurdistan.

    Kurds are taking advantage of the election results to press their
    demands for increased autonomy for the region. A unified slate led by
    the KDP and PUK is projected to win 75 seats in the 275-seat national
    assembly. The Kurds are in a strong position to negotiate with the
    Shiite-led slate, which won a slim majority, but far short of the
    two-thirds needed to form the government on its own.

    In addition, the Kurds want to maintain a provision in the interim
    constitution, known as the Transitional Administrative Law, which
    allows a two-thirds majority in any three provinces to block the
    ratification of a new constitution.

    A February 17 report in the Kurdistan Observer, based on an interview
    with KDP leader Massoud Barzani, outlined the Kurdish demands:

    Ownership of any natural resources in the region including oilfields
    and the power to determine how the revenues are split with the
    central government.
    Control of the 100,000-member military force in the region, composed
    mostly of former guerillas of the Kurdish peshmerga militia. No other
    armed forces would be allowed to enter Kurdistan without official
    permission.
    The authority to appoint officials to work in and operate ministries
    in Kurdistan, including overseeing security and the economy.
    Authority over fiscal policy, including how much tax revenue goes to
    Baghdad. The central government would also not be able to raise tax
    revenue in Kurdistan without permission.
    According to the London-based Independent, Kurds also want the right
    of return for Kurdish refugees. In the months leading up to the
    election thousands of Kurds returned to Kirkuk and many others
    throughout the northern regions registered to vote in town. Kurds
    want Kirkuk returned to Kurdish control in order to reverse the
    Arabization campaign carried out by the Hussein regime, which
    brutally removed thousands of Kurds from the region in the 1970s and
    1980s. Kurdish lands and homes were given to Arabs, many of whom were
    also forcibly settled there in order to strengthen the regime's hold
    on the province.

    Iraqi Kurds make up an oppressed nationality that together with
    another 20 million Kurds spans parts of Turkey, Syria, Iran, and
    Armenia. The capitalist rulers in Baghdad, Ankara, Tehran, and
    Damascus fear that any move toward independence or even formal
    autonomy by Iraqi Kurds would inspire national struggles among their
    Kurdish populations.

    Allawi tries to hold post
    Nearly a month after the election, negotiations to form a new
    government continue to drag out. Iyad Allawi, a wealthy Shiite and
    prime minister of the U.S.-backed interim government, has announced
    that he will attempt to hold onto his position in the new government
    even though the slate he headed came in a distant third in the
    voting, with just 40 of the 275 seats.

    The United Iraqi Alliance, a Shiite-led coalition that won a slim
    majority of the votes, has nominated Ibrahim Jaafari for the post.
    Jaafari, a leader of the Da'wa party, served as president of the
    U.S.-appointed Governing Council under the occupation regime headed
    by U.S. overseer of Iraq Paul Bremer and as a deputy president in the
    U.S.-backed interim government.

    At a news conference following his nomination, Jaafari said that
    defeating the insurgency would be the first priority of his
    administration, reported the New York Times. In previous statements,
    the Times said, Jaafari made it clear that an Iraqi government cannot
    accomplish that without the continued presence of U.S. troops.
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