The Salvador Option
By Scott Ritter
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/ADCA48CC-9307-466B-BA18-82724CAA7484.htm
By any standard, the
ongoing American occupation of Iraq is a disaster. The highly vaunted US
military machine, laurelled and praised for its historic march on Baghdad
in March and April of 2003, today finds itself a broken force, on the
defensive in a land that it may occupy in part, but does not control. The
all-out offensive to break the back of the resistance in Falluja has
failed, leaving a city destroyed by American firepower, and still very
much in the grips of the anti- American fighters.
The same is true of
Mosul, Samarra,
or any other location where the US military has undertaken "decisive"
action against the fighters, only to find that, within days, the fighting
has returned, stronger than ever.
And yet, it now
appears as if the United States, in an effort to take the offensive
against the fighters in Iraq, is prepared to compound its past mistakes in
Iraq by embarking on a new course of action derived from some of the
darkest, and most embarrassing moments of America's modern history.
According to press
accounts, the Pentagon is considering the organisation, training and
equipping of so-called death squads, teams of Iraqi assassins who would be
used to infiltrate and eliminate the leadership of the Iraqi resistance.
Called the Salvador
Option, in reference to similar US-backed death squads that terrorised the
population of El Salvador during the 1980s, the proposed plan actually has
as its roots the Phoenix assassination programme undertaken during the
Vietnam war, where American-led assassins killed thousands of known or
suspected Vietcong collaborators.
Perhaps it is a sign
of the desperation felt inside the Pentagon, or an underscoring of the
ideological perversity of those in charge, that the US military would draw
upon the failed programmes of the past to resolve an insoluble problem of
today.
The Salvador Option
would not be the first embrace of assassination as a tool of occupation
undertaken by the United States in Iraq.
In the months
following Paul Bremer's taking over of the Coalition Provisional Authority
(CPA) in June 2003, the streets of Baghdad crawled with scores of
assassination squads.
Among the more
effective and brutal of these units were those drawn from the Badr
Brigade, the armed militia of the Shia political party known as the
Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in
Iraq,
or SCIRI.
Although not publicly
acknowledged, the role played by the various anti-Saddam militias in
confronting the residual elements of Saddam's former ruling Baath Party
offered a glimpse into what was, and is, an unspoken element of the US
policy regarding de-Baathification - let the Iraqis do the dirty work.
SCIRI's efforts to
exterminate Baath Party remnants still loyal to Saddam Hussein, or who
stand accused of committing crimes against SCIRI or its sympathisers,
attracted the attention of the "black" side of the CPA-run de-Baathification
efforts - covert operations run by the CIA and elite Special Operations
units of the United States military.
Of all the various
players in this deadly game, the Badr militia stood out as the most
willing and able to take the fight to the Baathist holdouts.
Tipped off by the
CPA's covert operatives, the Badr assassination squads killed dozens of
Baathists in and around Baghdad.
But the assassination
of former Baathists did nothing to pacify Iraq.
The ongoing
resistance to the American occupation of Iraq was not founded in the
formal structure of the Baath Party, but rather the complex mixture of
tribal and religious motivations which had, since 1995, been blended into
the secretive cell structure of the Baath Party.
While the Americans
and their SCIRI allies focused on bringing to heel former Baathists, the
resistance morphed into a genuine grassroots national liberation movement
where strategic planning may very well be the product of former Baathists,
but the day-to-day tactical decisions are more likely to be made by tribal
shaikhs and local clerics.
The increasing
success of the resistance was attributed in part to the failure of the
CPA-ordered de-Baathification policy. In an effort to reverse this trend,
Bremer rescinded his de-Baathification programme, and ordered the Badr
assassination squads to stand down.
This change of policy
direction could not change the reality on the ground in Iraq, however.
The Sunni-based
resistance, having been targeted by the Badr assassins, struck back with a
vengeance.
In a campaign of
targeted assassinations using car bombs and ambushes, the resistance has
engaged in its own campaign of terror against the Shia, viewed by the
Sunni fighters as being little more than collaborators of the American
occupation.
Having started the
game of politically motivated assassination, the US has once again found
itself trumped by forces inside Iraq it does not understand, and as such
will never be able to defeat.
The Salvador Option
fails on a number of levels. First and foremost is the moral and ethical
one.
While it is difficult
at times to understand and comprehend, let alone justify, the tactics used
by the Iraqi resistance, history has shown that the tools of remote
ambush, instead of a direct assassination, have always been used by
freedom fighters when confronting an illegitimate foreign occupier who
possesses overwhelming conventional military superiority.
As such, history
celebrates the resistance of the French and the Russians when occupied by
the Germans during the second world war, the Chinese resistance to
Japanese occupation during that same time, or even the decades-long
national liberation movement in Vietnam which defeated not only the French
and the Americans, but also the illegitimate government these two
occupiers attempted to impose on the people of South Vietnam.
History, on the other
hand, treats harshly the occupying power which resorts to the use of the
tools of terror to subdue an occupied people. Thus, while it is fine for a
French resistance fighter to blow up a German troop train, it is not
acceptable for the Germans to burn a French village in retaliation.
History will eventually depict as legitimate the efforts of the Iraqi
resistance to destabilise and defeat the American occupation forces and
their imposed Iraqi collaborationist government.
And history will
condemn the immorality of the American occupation, which has debased the
values and ideals of the American people by legitimising torture, rape and
murder as a means of furthering an illegal war of aggression.
Ethics aside, the
Salvador Option will fail simply because it cannot succeed. In an effort
to confront a Sunni-based resistance, the Pentagon proposes that special
assassination squads be recruited from the ranks of "loyal" Kurds and Shia.
In the 30 years of
Saddam's rule, the Baathist government and its security organs were very
successful in infiltrating the ranks of Kurdish and Shia opposition
movements.
The Shia and Kurds,
on the other hand, have no history of being able to do the same to the
Sunni. If anything has emerged as the undisputable truth in post-invasion
Iraq, it is that the Iraqi resistance knows Iraq infinitely better than
the American occupiers.
If implemented, the
Salvador Option will serve as the impetus for all-out civil war. In the
same manner that the CPA-backed assassination of Baathists prompted the
restructuring and strengthening of the Sunni-led resistance, any effort by
US-backed Kurdish and Shia assassination teams to target Sunni resistance
leaders will remove all impediments for a general outbreak of ethnic and
religious warfare in Iraq.
It is hard as an
American to support the failure of American military operations in Iraq.
Such failure will bring with it the death and wounding of many American
service members, and many more Iraqis.
As an American, I
have hoped that there was a way for America to emerge victorious in Iraq,
with our national security and honour intact, and Iraq itself a better
nation than the one we "liberated". But it is far too late for this to
happen. We not only invaded Iraq on false pretences, but we perverted the
notion of liberation by removing Saddam and his cronies from his palaces,
replacing them with American occupiers who have not only kept open
Saddam's most notorious prisons, but also the practice of torture, rape
and abuse we were supposed to be bringing to an end.
Faced with our
inability to come to grips with a popular-based resistance that has grown
exponentially over the past year, the best the American policy planners
can come up with is to embrace our own form of terrorism, supporting death
squads we cannot control and which will only further debase the moral
foundation of our nation while slaughtering even more Iraqis.
As an American, I
hope and pray that common sense and basic morality prevail in Washington
DC, terminating the Salvador Option
before it gets off the ground. Failing that, I hope that the programme of
US-backed death squads is defeated. That is the most pro-American
sentiment I can muster, given the situation as it currently stands.
Scott Ritter was a
senior UN arms inspector in Iraq
between 1991 and 1998. He is now an independent consultant. Posted by
Bulatlat
Jan. 20, 2005
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