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The Return of the Resistance

by: Dahr Jamail, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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In Baghdad's al-Fadel district, Iraqi Special Forces troops round a corner. (Photo: Getty Images)

    At least 20 US soldiers have been killed in Iraq in May, the most since last September, along with more than 50 wounded. Iraqi casualties are, as usual - and in both categories - at least ten times that number.

    Attacks against US forces are once again on the rise in places like Baghdad and Fallujah, where the Iraqi resistance was fiercest before so many of them joined the Sahwa (Sons of Iraq, also referred to as Awakening Councils), and began taking payments from the US military in exchange for halting attacks against the occupiers and agreeing to join the fight against al-Qaeda in Iraq. In early April I wrote a column for this website that illustrated how ongoing Iraqi government and US military attacks against the Sahwa, coupled with broken promises of the Sahwa being incorporated into the government security apparatus or given civilian jobs, would likely lead to an exodus from the Sahwa and a return to the resistance.

    Slowly, but surely, we are seeing that occur. While US liaison Col. Jeffrey Kulmayer has called this idea, along with the ongoing controversy from the Iraqi government - led by US-pawn Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki - not paying most of the Sahwa members, while continuing government arrests of and attacks on Sahwa members "overblown," this does not change reality. Let us recall the telling words of the reporter Caud Cockburn, father of journalist Patrick Cockburn, "Never believe anything until it's officially denied."

    Not surprisingly, in direct contradiction to Kulmayer's comment, the Sahwa have warned the Iraqi government not to disregard its commitments to the fighters as far as providing them jobs and payment. On May 28, the independent Saudi-owned United Kingdom-based newspaper, al-Hayat, reported:

"A number of the leaders of the awakening councils called on the Iraqi government to honor its commitments towards the members of the awakening councils by paying their salaries which are three months late. They warned that their fighters might rebel against the government if their demands for their financial rights continue to be disregarded which might have an adverse effect on the security situation. Sheikh Masari al-Dulaymi, one of the leaders of the council in Falahat al-Taji to the north of Baghdad, announced that the committee supervising the national reconciliation process warned the leaders of the councils in and around Baghdad that their salaries would be paid and that a form of cooperation will be agreed upon with the tribes to preserve the security in Baghdad."

    The paper added that al-Dulaymi also pointed out that many council fighters abandoned their duties in protecting their areas because of the delays in receiving their salaries, and "we don't want the crisis to grow any worse because the council members already distrust government promises." Al-Hayat also reported that Sheikh Khaled Yassine al-Janabi, a leader of the council in al-Latifiyah in southern Baghdad, warned that the "government's disregard for the issue of the councils and their demands will have an adverse effect on the security situation."

    Simultaneously, the Iraqi Resistance, whose ranks are growing with disenfranchised Sahwa along with other Iraqis joining for the usual reasons: their countrymen and women being detained, tortured, and raped by occupation forces and their Iraqi collaborators, the destroyed infrastructure and the suffering that accompanies this, among a myriad of other reasons (like the fact that one in four Iraqis lives in poverty), are, at least verbally, preparing to resume full operations.

    The Los Angeles Times recently reported that a commander in the Iraqi Resistance, who is also a member of the currently besieged Sahwa, said, "If we hear from the Americans they are not capable of supporting us ... within six hours we are going to establish our groups to fight against the corrupt government. There will be a war in Baghdad."

    Having relied on the US military to fulfill their promises of assisting the Sahwa into the Iraqi political system, as well as for protection from ongoing attacks from the Maliki government security apparatus, their patience has just about run out.

    A former military intelligence general, a resistance commander who heads a group called the Iraqi Liberation Army, and who is also a member of the Sahwa, told The Los Angeles Times in the same article, "If the Americans leave Baghdad in 24 hours, the street belongs to the resistance and the people. The people are boiling."

    Violence has been escalating since January. April was the deadliest month for Iraqis in over a year. Daily we are watching Sahwa members leave their security posts. Rather than safeguarding the areas where they worked as security, many of them, in protest of government attacks and lack of payment, are rejoining the resistance. Simultaneously, they have effectively ceased targeting al-Qaeda operations in Iraq, which was also what the US had created the Sahwa for in the first place. Thus, when al-Janabi warns that the "government's disregard for the issue of the councils and their demands will have an adverse effect on the security situation," the "adverse effect" is two-fold. And this does not account for the future ramifications of having 100,000 fighters, who were allied with the occupation forces, turn completely against them again. Today, as aforementioned, we are getting a small, very small, taste of what that might look like.

    Rivers of blood continue to flow in occupied Iraq. On May 25 a suicide bomber drove a car packed with explosives into a US patrol in Mosul, killing eight people and wounding another 26. The same day, in Hilla, 60 miles south of Baghdad, a gunman killed a Sahwa fighter who was manning a checkpoint.

    On May 21, suicide bombers struck in two cities, killing three American soldiers and nearly two dozen Iraqis in a spasm of violence that took at least 66 lives in two days. That same day saw more attacks against the Sahwa, who in addition to being attacked by Iraqi government forces, are being attacked by al-Qaeda. Seven Sahwa members were killed in Kirkuk on May 21 as they waited in line at a military base to receive their salaries.

    Meanwhile, the Pentagon is prepared to leave fighting forces in Iraq for as long as a decade, despite an "agreement" between the US and Iraq that would bring all US troops home by 2012. General George Casey, the Army chief of staff, recently stated that the Pentagon must plan for extended US combat and stability operations in both Iraq and Afghanistan, saying, "Global trends are pushing in the wrong direction," he said, "They fundamentally will change how the Army works." It is important to note that at the moment, the US maintains 139,000 troops in Iraq, which is still a greater number than that which existed prior to the so-called "troop surge" of George W. Bush.

    Many of these troops, along with nationalistic US citizens who blindly supported, and/or continue to support the criminal occupation of Iraq, believe it is a mandate from God that justifies the "might makes right" strategy of US Empire. Let us recall one of the better-known authors from the United States, Mark Twain. Better known for Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn, Twain was quite anti-war. I certainly was never instructed to read Twain's "The War Prayer," part of which sardonically reads:

"O Lord our Father, our young patriots, idols of our hearts, go forth to battle - be Thou near them! With them - in spirit - we also go forth from the sweet peace of our beloved firesides to smite the foe. O Lord our God, help us to tear their soldiers to bloody shreds with our shells; help us to cover their smiling fields with the pale forms of their patriot dead; help us to drown the thunder of the guns with the shrieks of their wounded, writhing in pain; help us to lay waste their humble homes with a hurricane of fire; help us to wring the hearts of their unoffending widows with unavailing grief; help us to turn them out roofless with little children to wander unfriended the wastes of their desolated land in rags and hunger and thirst, sports of the sun flames of summer and the icy winds of winter, broken in spirit, worn with travail, imploring Thee for the refuge of the grave and denied it - for our sakes who adore Thee, Lord, blast their hopes, blight their lives, protract their bitter pilgrimage, make heavy their steps, water their way with their tears, stain the white snow with the blood of their wounded feet! We ask it, in the spirit of love, of Him Who is the Source of Love, and Who is the ever-faithful refuge and friend of all that are sore beset and seek His aid with humble and contrite hearts. Amen."

    This is the slaughter and suffering that is being caused by the US occupation of Iraq. This is the death and suffering that is causing the Iraqi Resistance to once again form, gain strength, and prepare to resume full operations.

  

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Dahr Jamail, an independent journalist, is the author of "The Will to Resist: Soldiers Who Refuse to Fight in Iraq and Afghanistan," (Haymarket Books, 2009), and "Beyond the Green Zone: Dispatches From an Unembedded Journalist in Occupied Iraq," (Haymarket Books, 2007). Jamail reported from occupied Iraq for nine months as well as from Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Turkey over the last five years.

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´La Resistance d´Iraq´

´La Resistance d´Iraq´ will overcome us-&anyone or everyone else-they are the sons, they are the daughters, they are the children of the land. So it is.

And at peace with themselves

And at peace with themselves and the visible world around them, American families sit at their tables and consume their plenteous bounty, singularly mindless to the fact that the price of each meal is supplemented by the rivers of blood flowing in each and every warred-upon nation. Tums anyone? Seconds, perhaps?

I am sick to death of the

I am sick to death of the 'Christians' who believe that the world will end with wars in the Middle East (like that's a good thing?). Therefore, they fiercely support as 'honorable' any and all wars we can start in the area. I personally believe that God will end the world (if He so chooses) in his own time and with his own plan, and without our 'help'. Our military system is breaking down and failing our soldiers. They are dying needlessly, wounded to a sickening degree what with advanced weapons technology, and killing themselves in increasingly high numbers. I experience my blind, brain-damaged son's heart wrenching attempts to deal admirably with his devastated life. These 3 wars are contemptible and condemnable on so many levels....

thank you for all your

thank you for all your reporting, DJ....we have brought hell to Iraq and lined the pockets of the evil wealthy at the expense of the Iraqi people and our own loved ones and the generations. we are shame. the Mark Twain "prayer" is so right on here, isn't it?

So much for the surge, so

So much for the surge, so much for General Petreus and self styled expert Kilcullen , so much for neo cons and if Obama does not wake up and get out of the place he will also be history. we voted for change..now change it and stop doing what cheney and bush did for 8 years......please wake up. the Iraqis will be better off sooner we get out.

Israel is hoping for war

Israel is hoping for war against Iran. No country can be honorable with a defence league. Or a powerful country behind it to pin back the arms of anyone Israel can get to attack her.

Eilish, I'm so sorry about

Eilish, I'm so sorry about what has happened to your son. What a heartbreak. Love, Jan

Yes, unfortunately, our

Yes, unfortunately, our sleepy-heads have long overslept. Now, they're in their last dreams now before the morning.... but th e republic is dead, and has been for these many years. Fools! "Neither poppy nor mandragora nor all the drowsy syrups of the world shall 'ere restore thee to that sweet sleep that thou owed'st yesterday."

Iraq has never been defeated

Iraq has never been defeated by a conventional western military power. But then, the Soviets and the Brits never deployed the secret WMD, the Holy Cross of Jesus.

Deja vu all over again. We

Deja vu all over again. We are 'turning the corner," "seeing the light at the end of the tunnel," "winning hearts and minds," "bringing Democracy to (fill in the blank country)." We have lost the fake "wars" in Iraq and Afghanistan/Pakistan the minute we invaded, just as we did in Viet Nam. But the game they play is to string it out as long as possible in order to make the most money before the inevitable withdrawal. Then, another target is identified and ginned up as a "threat" to our "freedoms." It will most probably be Iran, but North Korea could come up a dark horse. More war, more death, more profits, more American Empire! You go, O-BOMB-A!

Mark Twain's war prayer was

Mark Twain's war prayer was so true as to be almost prescient even though atomic and clone bombings, for instance, were unknown in his day. Imagine how far the human race would be had the trillions invested in using the technology of killing each other had gone to alleviating the kind of misery he described, plus new inventions for curing ills and expanding our health care, for non-radiating, clean renewable energy, for maintaining the infrastructure we so casually destroy today, for providing for ALL human needs by sharing and caring--thus no need for resistance. Instead of being the world's largest arms merchant, we should only export food, building materials and medicine plus water if needed. The former Department of War, euphemistically now called "Defense," but still acting aggressively, must be resisted HERE too!

Why does Dahr Jamail insist

Why does Dahr Jamail insist on calling the Iraqi resistance al-Qaeda or continue to blame al-Qaeda for mysterious attacks throughout Iraq that seem to be advantageous only to the occupation forces? It appears as though al Queada has become the new omnipresent boogie man responsible for all evils and designed to clandestinely instill fear into that segment of the population with intelligence sufficient enough to avoid listening to Fox News. Al Quaeda.... Booooooo! Booooo0o! Initially blamed for the destruction of the twin towers and now responsible for the ongoing violence within Iraq. Al Quaeda... The new poison label designed to replace the "evil communists" that kept in-check the glorious goodness of private banking and corporate Capitalism.

One Man Can't make a

One Man Can't make a difference, Obama would be another Kennedy if he was to enact the change that WE want. Only the people standing behind the man can make a difference, to stop the corruption, unfortunately they all seem to be sleeping, rocked gently to sleep through media conditioning, apathy, and being too comfortable. It's time for a change allright, we all need to change at the same time, before it's too late, the water is already at about 200 degrees, soon we will be boiled and not even have realized it.

they only stopped because we

they only stopped because we paid them to. now that thats over.....

HELLO!!! The "surge"was a

HELLO!!! The "surge"was a sham exposed here a week or so back when it was made known that the ONLY reason violence was down is because ol' bunker Dick & king doofus had been paying off the damn attackers all while LOUDLY proclaiming; " We don`t negotiate with terrorists" riiiigggghhhhttt you slimy pricks just BRIBE THEM & only after Maliki started stuffing the damn cash in his mattress did attacks again commence Mr President enough is too much BRING OUR PEOPLE HOME NOW!!!

There is no force in the

There is no force in the Universe that can defeat those who want to be free. German Nazis were defeated, Anglo-American Nazis will meet same fate.

Jamail has been consistently

Jamail has been consistently correct about Iraq. We came for the oil, destroyed the country andwe'll only leave when the oil is gone or the US economy tanks further. Obama, like presidents before him -simply reads the script Wall Street and the Pentagon gives him.

Of course Jamail has been

Of course Jamail has been consistently correct but only on issues that are rather obvious to the more informed reader. The best propaganda is almost entirely true and that obvious truth instills in the reader a sense of trust toward the writer. It is the subtle and seemingly insignificant messages within the text that go unnoticed that are the underlying yet subconsciously potent messages of the article. In this article a couple of the indirect subtle mesage are: somebody is bumping off the leadership of those the U.S. has been bribing. The bumper of course, being that boogie man al-Qaeda. A second subtle message is that it is al Maliki who is stealing the funds used to pay the bribes to former resistance fighters. The more likely facts are that it is U.S. Special Ops teams who are knocking off the leadership of the former Sunni resistance and it is probably the same Special Ops that is intentionally holding back the promised bribes. The strategy being: lets bribe the Sunni while we neutralize the Shea and after the Shea are neutralized, let's then betray the Sunni and then neutralize them too. And we'll blame the new conflict on Al-Qaeda whose specialty according to the former administration used to be blowing up tall buildings. But that detail is minor... I suppose the current administration believes that al Qaeda probably went to school and now has new subversive skills. Meanwhile justification are announced for defering the promised troop withdrawals because that nasty al Qaeda has undermined the pacific intentions of a new and more moral administration.

As a Vietnam veteran, I have

As a Vietnam veteran, I have no illusions of what America is doing in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. By the time I left Vietnam, America had destroyed that country. Forty years later, and a return to Vietnam in 1994, and I wound up in a psychiatric facility when I got back. The best one liner I can spew out about Vietnam, was that our government was killing innocent civilians as fast as we as a nation could. Most of the killing was done by air strikes, artillery, and Navy ships that were putting out enormous firepower. Geneva Convention Rules were a joke, to give the American people the illusion that there are rules in war. The U.S. government is the most violent country in the world. Mike