FALLUJA: IRAQ'S
TORA BORA
by B.Raman
( To be read in continuation of my earlier article
titled "AL QAEDA IN SAUDI ARABIA" available at http://www.saag.org/papers11/paper1037.html
)
Since 1995, when the
first incident of jihadi terrorism took place in Saudi
Arabia, there have been 25 acts of terrorism as indicated below:
Year
No of Attacks
Fatal Casualties
1995
1
7
1996
1
19
2000
3
1
2001
3
2
2002
2
2
2003
3
44
2004
11
40
2. Only four of the 25 terrorist strikes, including the one of
December 6,2004, were in Jeddah. The rest of them took place
elsewhere, mostly in Riyadh, in the centre of the country,
or nearby. The first incident of jihadi terrorism in Jeddah
took place in August,2004, when terrorists, suspected
to be from Al Qaeda, opened fire on a vehicle of the US Consulate
without causing any fatal casualties. This was followed by the
murder of a Frenchman in September and an incident of exchange of
fire between the Saudi security forces and a group of terrorists
in November, 2004, in which the security forces claimed to have
killed one.
3. At least nine people were killed in a daring attack by a group
of jihadi terrorists on the beachfront building of the US
Consulate at Jeddah on December 6,2004. According to
official accounts of the incident from the Saudi authorities, the
terrorists followed an official Consulate car into the
complex, firing guns and hurling grenades to force entry. No U.S.
diplomats were killed, but the jihadi terrorists burnt the U.S.
flag and set fire to one of the buildings. A Saudi official was
quoted as saying: "The attackers took a chance while a
consular car was going in, so the door was open. They threw
grenades at the guards at the gate and stormed through. They had
no access inside the Consulate itself as they were kept to the
perimeter."
4.According to the Saudi authorities, five non-American employees
of the Consulate and four of the terrorists, who managed to
penetrate the outer security perimeter of the Consulate, were
killed during the terrorist strike and the subsequent exchange of
fire with the Saudi security forces, who intervened to rescue
those taken hostage by the terrorists. While the Saudi reaction
after the terrorists had penetrated the Consulate was swift and
effective, they were apparently clueless about the presence of the
terrorists in Jeddah and their careful preparations for the
attack.
5.This was the second attack directed against a US diplomatic
mission abroad since the explosions outside the US Embassies in
Nairobi and Dar-es-Salaam in 1998. The earlier one, in the form of
a car bomb explosion, was staged by the Pakistani dregs of
the International Islamic Front (IIF), who had escaped from Tora
Bora in Afghanistan, outside the US Consulate in Karachi in
June,2002, but it failed to cause any damage to the US Consulate
there or any loss of American lives.
6.A Saudi Interior Ministry statement after the incident
said that five members of a "deviant group" -- its term
for Al Qaeda sympathisers -- hurled bombs as a diplomatic vehicle
was driving into the compound, set fire to one of the buildings
and attacked people on the site. The Saudi security forces rushed
to the scene and surrounded the terrorists, killing three on
the spot and wounding two others, one of whom later died in
a hospital.
7. The statement identified three of the slain terrorists as
Fayez bin Awwad al-Jeheni, Eid bin Dakhilallah al-Jeheni and
Hassan bin Hamed al-Hazmi, none of whom was on a most-wanted list
of suspected Al Qaeda sympathizers issued by the authorities a
year ago. "The identity of the fourth, who is wounded, must
not be divulged for the sake of the (public) interest, and
procedures are under way to establish the identity of the fifth
person, who died in the incident," the statement said.
According to it, all the four identified terrorists were Saudi
nationals.
8.The responsibility for the attack has been claimed by Al Qaeda
of the Arabian Peninsula, which had also claimed responsibility
for previous terrorist strikes this year in Saudi Arabia. A
statement disseminated by it through the internet said: "
Your brothers of the squadron of the martyr Abu Annas al-Shami
stormed one of the bastions of the American crusaders
in the Arabian peninsula, in Jeddah. They were able to
withdraw from the Consulate and reach a safe place, after losing
two martyrs, who covered the retreat of the mujahideen , three of
whom were wounded and are being treated. Your brothers managed to
kill nine people in the Consulate, including two Americans and
seven soldiers of the tyrannical (Saudi) regime, and wounded
dozens more."
9.It also said that they seized "telecommunications
equipment, light arms, sophisticated electronic equipment and
important documents," and promised to release more details
of what it called "Operation Conquest of
Fallujah"."This operation is one of the series of
operations carried out by the Al Qaeda organization in their war
against the crusaders and the Jews to chase the infidels out of
the Arabian peninsula," it said.
10. Abu Annas al-Shami is the kuniyat ( assumed name) of Omar
Youssef Jumah, a Jordanian cleric reportedly of Chechen origin,
who was reportedly killed in an American air strike in the Baghdad
region on September 22,2004.He was projected as the spiritual
guide of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and his Tawhid wal Jihad
(Unity And Jihad) group, which was active in the Fallujah area
till November,2004. He had entered Iraq from Jordan last
year and had in a fatwa justified the beheading of hostages by the
members of the group.
11.From time to time, the Saudi authorities have been claiming to
have broken the back of the terrorists. Despite this, the
anti-regime and anti-US motivation of the terrorists remains as
strong as ever. As in Pakistan, in Saudi Arabia too, there have
been reports of sections of the intelligence and security
establishment being sympathetic to the jihadi terrorists.
12. The terrorists look upon Saudi Arabia as the rear base for
their operations against the US-led occupation troops in Iraq. The
immediate priority of all jihadi terrorist groups in the
Afghanistan-Pakistan-Saudi Arabia triangle is the continued
bleeding of the Americans in Iraq. As the Lashkar-e-Toiba
leaders keep pointing out during their recruitment and fund
collection campaign for Iraq in the mosques and madrasas of
Pakistan, Iraq has provided them with an opportunity of defeating
the only super power in the world just as they had defeated the
erstwhile USSR, the other super power, in Afghanistan in the
1980s. They keep stressing that they should not miss this
opportunity and that till they succeed they should focus all their
attention on Iraq. Even though the overthrow of the Saudi regime
and the capture of power in Saudi Arabia continues to be an
important aim of theirs, they give it second priority after Iraq.
13.The Jeddah incident indicates that Falluja has become the Tora
Bora of Iraq. Towards the end of 2001, the US troops thought they
had cornered Osama bin Laden and his followers in Al Qaeda and the
International Islamic Front (ISF) in the Tora Bora mountainous
area of Afghanistan. After having asked the Pakistan Army to seal
the Pakistan-Afghanistan border effectively to prevent their
escaping into Pakistan, they mounted an air and ground offensive
to wipe out the jihadi terrorists.
14. The operation was unsuccessful. While some Pakistani and
South-East Asian members of the IIF were killed in the American
air strikes, most of the Arab members of Al Qaeda, including Osama
bin Laden and his No.2 Ayman al-Zawahiri, and a large number of
the Pakistani and South-East Asia members of the IIF managed to
slip across the border into Pakistan, with the connivance of the
Pakistani troops. The South-East Asian survivors escaped by sea to
Bangladesh and the Pakistani and Arab jihadis dispersed into small
groups and scattered across Pakistan. Some of the Arabs moved
across to Iran, Saudi Arabia and Yemen. The Uzbek, Chechen and
Uighur members took shelter in the South Waziristan area of
Pakistan adjoining the border with Afghanistan.
15. The dispersal of these dregs across Asia led to a prairie fire
of jihadi terrorism across a wide arc in Asia, including many acts
of terrorism in Pakistan territory--- three of them directed
against Americans, one against the French, three against Pervez
Musharraf and one each against his Corps Commander in Karachi and
his Prime Minister, Shaukat Aziz.
16. Just before the US-led invasion and occupation of Iraq in
March-April last year, many of these dregs---including Pakistanis
belonging to the Harkat-ul-Mujahideen (HUM), the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi
(LEJ) and the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET), Arabs belonging to Al Qaeda
and other Arabs of Chechen origin who were fighting in Afghanistan
as members of the Taliban-- moved across to Iraq via Saudi Arabia
and Iran and took up position to start a jihad against the US and
allied troops ---sometimes in tandem with the Iraqi resistance
fighters and more often, independently.
!7. Though Abu Musab al-Zarqawi of Jordanian origin has been
portrayed by the US as the leader of the foreign terrorists
operating in Iraq, there is reason to believe that the foreign
terrorists do not belong to a single organic group. There are a
number of autonomous groups of different nationalities operating
under individual leaders of the same nationality, who have
remained unidentified.
18. Periodic American claims of successes in its
counter-resistance operations directed against the Iraqi
resistance fighters and foreign terrorists have been belied by the
impunity and the audacity with which the terrorists and the
resistance fighters have been able to operate all over the Sunni
Triangle and in Mosul. They have a free run of even Baghdad, with
the American troops and the newly-raised Iraqi army watching
helplessly.
19. There has been an average of two suicide car bombs ever day in
different parts of the Sunni Triangle, which is a very large
number. It speaks disturbingly of the continuing high motivation
of the terrorists and resistance fighters and of the unending flow
of volunteers to their ranks for undertaking suicide missions.
20. Well-placed Iraqi sources claim that while most of the
suicide car explosions are being carried out by non-Iraqi
Arabs---the majority of them Saudis, Yemenis and Arabs of Chechen
origin--- most of the ambushes, sabotage operations, mortar
shellings into the green zone in Baghdad and elsewhere and attacks
with hand-held wapons are being carried out by Iraqi resistance
fighters, with the help of Pakistani ex-servicemen belonging to
the HUM, the LET and the LEJ. According to them, there has been no
Pakistani involvement in the suicide bombings.
21. When the Americans invaded Falluja last month, preceded by air
strikes and heavy artillery shellings, they thought they had
cornered a large segment of the foreign terrorists headed by
Zarqawi. They had taken precautions to prevent a repeat of Tora
Bora there. They had asked the authorities of Saudi Arabia, Jordan
and Syria to prevent their taking shelter in their territory and,
with the help of the British and other allied troops, set up
barriers to prevent their scattering across the Sunni Triangle.
22. Falluja is an urban area different from the mountainous
Tora Bora area of Afghanistan which provided many caves and
tunnels for shelter and escape routes across the mountains into
Pakistan. The air strikes and the artillery shellings in Tora Bora
were ineffective against the dregs of Al Qaeda and the IIF.
23. Falluja was tailor-made for successful air strikes and
artillery shellings. Despite this, Zaraqwi and a large number of
Iraqi resistance-fighters and non-Iraqi terrorists managed to
escape. While many spread across the Sunni Triangle, some managed
to find their way to Saudi Arabia to reinforce the ranks of Al
Qaeda there, which had suffered some attrition since the beginning
of the year due to killings by the Saudi security forces, captures
and some surrenders.
24. While the Tora Bora attack was largely improvised at short
notice and was not preceded by publicity of the impending attack,
the Falluja attack was preceded by weeks of publicity about the
impending operation and this too enabled the terrorists and
the resistance fighters to peel off in different directions
even before the US offensive started.
25. A hard-core of indigenous resistance fighters and foreign
terrorists stayed behind to slow down the advance of the US
troops, thereby enabling their jihadi comrades to escape. The
well-placed Iraqi sources mentioned above say that the escape of
some of the Saudi and Yemeni dregs into Saudi Arabia was made
possible by the complicity of Saudi border guards.
26. While the escalation of acts of terrorism and other reprisal
attacks in Mosul, Baghdad and other Sunni areas was expected
consequent upon the dispersal of the dregs from Falluja, the
almost-successful attack on the US Consulate in Jeddah in Saudi
Arabia on December 6, 2004, by the dregs, who had escaped into
Saudi Arabia, was unexpected.
(The
writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt.
of India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute for
Topical studies, Chennai, and Distinguished Fellow and Convenor,
Observer Research Foundation (ORF), Chennai Chapter. E-mail: corde@vsnl.com
)