[Mb-civic] Iraq's Insurgents: Who's Who - Jonathan Finer - Washington Post Sunday Outlook
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Sun Mar 19 03:06:50 PST 2006
Iraq's Insurgents: Who's Who
By Jonathan Finer
Washington Post Sunday Outlook
Sunday, March 19, 2006; B03
Long considered a fragmentary and disorganized collection of groups with
varying tactics and aims, Iraq's insurgency is showing signs of
increasing coordination, consolidation and confidence, those who study
it now say. There is no consensus on the precise number of insurgent
fighters, but estimates range from a few thousand to more than 50,000.
The vast majority of insurgents, probably more than 90 percent, are
believed to be Iraqis from the Sunni minority group that largely ruled
the country before the fall of Saddam Hussein. But U.S. commanders say
that most of the deadliest attacks, and particularly suicide attacks,
are committed by foreigners from a range of neighboring countries,
including Jordan, Syrian, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Sudan.
-- Jonathan Finer
Larger Groups
The formation of the Mujahidin Shura Council , announced on Jan. 21, was
a sign of the once-diffuse insurgency's consolidation around the
leadership of a few large, powerful groups. It brought together the
foreign-backed network of al-Qaeda in Iraq, led by Jordanian Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi, and several smaller, Iraqi-led groups. The council's head
was said to be an Iraqi, a move made to counter the image of al-Qaeda as
dominated by Arabs from elsewhere in the region. This appointment may be
little more than a public relations move. The group's tactics include
attacks carried out with bombs, small arms and mortar against Iraqi and
American soldiers, as well as, increasingly, Iraqi civilians, most of
them Shiites. Two of its "brigades," or affiliates, (the bin Malik and
the Al-Ansar) are devoted solely to suicide attacks. Another, the Omar
Brigade, is said to target only members of the Badr organization, a
feared Shiite militia.
Ansar al-Sunnah , which means "partisans of the law," is an offshoot of
a group called Ansar al-Islam, which was formed in Kurdistan but has not
been heard from in many months. The vast majority of its leaders and
foot soldiers are Iraqi Sunnis who adhere to a strict, fundamentalist
form of Islam called Salafism, which calls for a return to the practices
of early Muslims and has gained radical expression throughout the Arab
world. Their tactics -- including lethal suicide attacks -- and
religious underpinnings are similar to those of al-Qaeda, but the two
groups are considered bitter rivals for influence within the insurgent
community. Among their best-known attacks was a roadside bomb blast that
killed 14 Marines and an interpreter in August, the deadliest such
attack of the war.
The stated goal of the Islamic Army in Iraq is to drive the U.S.
military out of Iraq. Comprised almost entirely of Iraqi Sunnis,
including many still loyal to Saddam Hussein's regime and Baath Party,
it is considered more nationalistic than religious in motivation. As
many as three-quarters of its attacks, which include improvised bombs
and kidnappings but not suicide attacks, are conducted against U.S.
forces and non-Iraqi contractors. It often releases video footage of its
operations. The group publishes a monthly magazine called al-Fursan and
has denied rumors circulating last summer that it was in discussions
with Iraqi officials about laying down its weapons. Its members
reportedly include a sniper named "Juba," who gained a cult following
when he was said to have killed several American soldiers in Baghdad
last summer and fall.
There is some discussion as to whether the Islamic Front of the Iraqi
Resistance , one of the most highly publicized insurgent organizations,
is actually an armed group or something of a public relations organ for
other groups. It maintains a frequently updated Web site and publishes a
magazine called Jami, an acronym composed of its Arabic initials, which
also mean "mosque" or "gathering." It has claimed responsibility for a
number of attacks in and around the northern city of Mosul, Iraq's
third-largest city.
Smaller groups
Mujahidin Army : A group that has released dozens of videos of bomb,
rocket and sniper attacks, most of them directed against U.S. forces.
Along with the Islamic Army in Iraq, it denied reports of rapprochement
talks with the Iraqi government last year. It is one of a few smaller
insurgent groups that called for attacks against Danish troops in the
wake of the publication by a Danish newspaper of cartoons depicting the
prophet Muhammad last fall.
Muhammad Army : A group made up mostly of Iraqi former Baathists and a
few foreign fighters, it claimed credit for the 2003 bombing of the
United Nations headquarters that killed 23 people, including the
organization's chief of mission.
1920 Revolution Brigades : This group, which has claimed responsibility
for a number of high-profile kidnappings of Westerners and Iraqis
working with U.S. forces, is named for the Iraqi uprising against the
British after World War I. The group calls itself the military wing of
the Islamic Resistance Movement, another insurgent organization.
Conquering Army : A new group that has emerged in the past two months
through a series of videos released on the Internet and to regional
television networks showing kidnapping victims confessing to various
"crimes" such as working with American forces.
Swords of the Righteous : A previously unknown group that gained
prominence by claiming responsibility, in videos, for the kidnapping of
four Christian Peacemaker workers, one of whom, Tom Fox of Virginia, was
found dead March 10.
Iraqi Vengeance Brigades : A little-known group that has released videos
showing American journalist Jill Carroll, who was abducted in Baghdad in
early January.
SOURCES: SITE Institute, International Crisis Group, news reports
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/17/AR2006031702087.html?nav=hcmodule
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