Paper
no. 1198
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22.
12. 2004
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IRAQI TALIBAN STRIKES IN MOSUL
by B.Raman
Nineteen US troops and three others were reportedly killed on
December 21, 2004, in an attack on an improvised dining hall of an
American military base at Mosul in northern Iraq. An organisation
called Jaish Ansar al-Sunnah (JAAS) has claimed responsibility for
the attack.
2.While the JAAS has projected it as a suicide bombing
thereby giving the impression that it has been able to penetrate
the US military base, local US army spokesmen have described it as
a mortar attack, similar to the mortar attacks on the Green Zone
in Baghdad, which one witnesses frequently.
3. The JAAS, which came to notice for the first time in February,
2004, for a major terrorist strike in the Kurdish areas, has
claimed the responsibility for many killings of kidnapped
hostages, including 12 Nepalis, and a number of daring
attacks---not only in and around Mosul, but also in different
areas of the Sunni Triangle. The incidents outside Mosul show that
it has a wide reach in the Sunni majority areas of Iraq.
4. It advocates a hardline fundamentalism, similar to that of the
Afghan Taliban. It describes its objectives as not only the
defeat of the US-led occupation troops and the liberation of Iraq
from their subjugation, but also as the establishment of an
orthodox Islamic rule in Iraq after its liberation. It says that
those Iraqis, who had willingly sacrificed their lives in the
jihad against the occupiers, would have died in vain if a secular
government was to be restored in Iraq after the defeat of the
occupying forces.
5. In a statement of December 6,2004, attributed to it, it said:
"It is known that jihad in Iraq has become the obligatory
required duty of every Muslim after the infidel enemy fell upon
the land of Islam. It was the followers of the Prophet’s Sunnah
and Jamma`h, the people of unification and following of ancestors,
who raised the blessed banner of jihad and acted in groups, each
in their area but spontaneously, receiving the directions and
orders for their jihad from the Book of Allah and the Sunna
of His Noble Prophet. They included clerics, sheikhs, and military
fighters. The task is great and the situation is momentous. It
concerns the nation's fate and does not terminate by the end of
the occupation. The aim does not end with their defeat, but with
the upholding of Allah’s religion and the application of
the shari'ah of Allah to rule this Islamic land. What is the use
of shedding of Muslim Mujahdeen’s blood to throw out the
forces of occupation if after that, the fruits are enjoyed
by a secular Iraqi or a puppet agent of the Americans
working to fulfill their plans and programs? Then, we return
to the control of a puppet government that rules with the
laws of infidels in the name of Islam and is, in fact, controlled
by the Jews and the Christians . A faithful does not get
bitten twice. Because of this, a group of resistance
fighters and knowledgeable people, who have the political and
military savvy and who have the record in managing the Islamic
struggle against the enemies of Islam, have brought together
a number of divided groups and platoons of resistance that
operated in the field from the north to the south to make up a
huge army that comes under a unified command. A command that will
establish a locally devised unimported practical plan based on
their knowledge of the battlefield and on the basis of the
shari'ah in the Koran and the Sunnah. We called it the Ansar al-Sunnah
Army. We call on our brethren in faith and jihad to come together
under the banner of this army to fulfill the hope of an Islamic
nation that honors Islam and Muslims. Allah's hand is with
the group; the devil is in the company of the single. The wolf
attacks the straggler sheep."
6. Its projection of itself as "a group of resistance
fighters and knowledgeable people, who have the political and
military savvy and who have the record in managing the Islamic
struggle against the enemies of Islam" is significant. This
seeks to show that it is a mixed group of local resistance
fighters and others who had participated in jihad elsewhere.
However, it also projects itself as an indigenous organisation
carrying on a jihad against the occupation troops on the
basis of a "locally devised unimported practical plan."
7. Its statements generally refer to one Abu-Abdullah al-Hassan
Bin-Mahmud as its Amir. Not much is known about him except that he
is an Arab, who used to be a member of the Ansar al-Islam
till October last year. It is said that he broke away from the
organisation in October last year and formed the Ansar al-Sunnah.
The reasons for the split are not known.
8. Before their invasion of Iraq last year, the Americans, without
credible evidence, had projected the Ansar al-Islam, an
anti-US group operating in the Kurdish areas of Iraq, as the local
branch of Al Qaeda. Some reports also projected it as aided by
Iran, again without any credible evidence.
9. On February 1,2004, 105 persons were killed when an Arab and a
Kurd carried out simultaneous twin suicide bombings directed
respectively at the offices of the Patriotic Union of
Kurdistan (PUK) and the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP),
both in the Kurdish city of Arbil.This was the terrorist strike
for which the Ansar al-Sunnah had first claimed responsibility.
" Hawlani" , a Kurdish newspaper, had identified
at that time Abu-Abdullah al-Hassan Bin-Mahmud as the Amir of the
organisation.
10. This is apparently his assumed name. His real name is not
known. The newspaper described him as the brother of one
Abdullah Al-Shami, an Ansar al-Islam leader, who, according to it,
was killed last year while fighting against the PUK near the
Iranian border. Kurdish sources describe bin-Mahmud as a
Jordanian, like Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, and not an Iraqi Arab, and
as a close associate of Osama bin Laden. He is assisted by one
Abdullah Shafi, who is also projected by Kurdish sources as an Al
Qaeda operative, who had lived for some time in Afghanistan.
11. After February, the following are some of the terrorist
strikes for which the Ansar al-Sunnah has claimed
responsibility:
- Dec. 5, 2004: A machine gun attack in
Tikrit killing 17 Iraqi civilians working for the U.S.
military.
- Dec. 1:The kidnapping and killing of
three Iraqis working for the U.S. Marines.
- Nov. 25: A mortar attack on
Baghdad's Green Zone that killed four Gurkha security
guards and 12 others.
- Nov. 20: The killing of two hostages
identified as members of a Kurdish political group in Mosul.
- Nov. 4: Beheading of a captured Major of the
new Iraqi Army raised by the Americans.
- Oct. 28: Kidnapping and killing of 11
Iraqi soldiers south of Baghdad.
- Oct. 18: The killing of nine Iraqi policemen
returning after training in Jordan.
- Aug. 31: The kidnapping and killing of
12 Nepalese construction workers.
12. According to knowledgeable Iraqi sources, after
the defeat of Iraq in the first Gulf war of 1991, a group of
fundamentalist Sunni clerics had tried to organise a Salafi
movement in Iraq for the overthrow of Saddam Hussain's
Baathist regime and setting up an Islamic state. On coming to know
of it, Saddam crushed their movement, jailed some leaders while
others managed to escape to Jordan, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Iran and Afghanistan. Amongst
the leaders of this Salafi movement were Omar Hussein Hadid,
reportedly a former electrician turned Mullah; Sheikh
Abdullah al-Janabi, Sheikh Zafir al-Ubaidi, Moyaed Ahmed Yasseen (
reportedly arrested by the Iraqi army on November 14, 2004) and
Abu-Abdullah al-Hassan Bin-Mahmud. These sources claim that these
Salafi elements are in the forefront of the anti-US
insurgency.
(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
)
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