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Iraq
Zarqawi emerging as a self-sustained force
2005-09-28
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's network of al Qaeda-linked insurgents is emerging as a self-sustaining force, despite repeated blows by U.S. forces and the reported death of his second-in-command, U.S. intelligence officials and other experts say.

The Zarqawi network, responsible for some of the Iraqi insurgency's bloodiest attacks, has grown into a loose confederation of mainly native Iraqis trained by former Baath Party regime officers in explosives, small arms, rockets and surface-to-air missiles.

Since U.S. counter-insurgency assaults forced many of its operatives to exit Iraq's cities, counterterrorism officials say al Qaeda has been trying to set up a safe haven for training and command operations in western Anbar province.

"The suggestion is that this has shifted from being a terrorist network to a guerrilla army," said Vali Nasr, a national security affairs expert at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California.

"If this were not checked, the insurgents would become not only militarily more powerful, but politically more powerful. We're definitely trying to deny that milestone to Zarqawi."

U.S. military officials on Tuesday said they had killed Zarqawi's No. 2 in Iraq, an operative identified as Abu Azzam. Al Qaeda did not verify the U.S. claim.

But intelligence officials said the death of Zarqawi himself would not mean al Qaeda's defeat in Iraq, partly because he has ceded authority over day-to-day operations to regional commanders and tribal leaders who operate according to his strategic guidelines.

"If he died in the cause, that's huge. That's what everybody wants. Then he's a giant figurehead and everybody can do something in his name," one intelligence official said.

"He has enough force in place to sustain operations," the official added. "Al Qaeda in Iraq ... regenerates very quickly. You knock off a guy who's in charge in a certain area, another person steps into the gap."

Zarqawi's network, believed to consist of 2,000 to 5,000 hardcore fighters and an equal number of active supporters, represents 10-15 percent of the Iraq insurgency in numbers of fighters, officials say.

Defense and counterterrorism officials said Zarqawi's insurgents have recently been joined by elements of Jaish Mohammad, a 4,000-member insurgent group loyal to Saddam Hussein's Baathist regime. The addition gives Zaraqwi new tactical skills inside Baghdad, a defense official said.

Although the Jordanian-born Zarqawi has long been associated with foreign fighters, officials believe 85 to 90 percent of al Qaeda in Iraq's members are Iraqi.

A minority of foreign fighters carry out most of the group's suicide bombings, which has made Zarqawi's network appear more effective than other segments of the insurgency.

While committing only about 2 percent of insurgent attacks, officials say, the Zarqawi network has killed 17 percent of the insurgency's victims, the vast majority of them Iraqis.

Zarqawi, who has a $25 million U.S. bounty on his head, has also surpassed the insurgency's Baathist and former regime elements in part by using the Internet as a propaganda tool for circulating sensational images of attacks on U.S. forces.

With Iraq's constitutional referendum due on Oct. 15, officials say Zarqawi appears to be consolidating his position at the forefront of the Sunni insurgency by declaring all-out war on the country's majority Shi'ite population.

But his main strategic objective remains the expulsion of U.S. forces from Iraq, a goal that officials say has helped him unify support among local Sunni Arab insurgents.

"They're the ones seen to be drawing American blood," said Steven Simon, co-author of the book, "The Age of Sacred Terror" (Random House).

Attacks on civilians have earned Zaraqwi criticism from Sunni political groups such as the Iraqi Islamic Party. Other mainstream Sunni groups have avoided the issue.

But there is growing concern that Sunni political isolation will only deepen if the upcoming referendum vote ends leads to the adoption of the proposed constitution.

"It's almost self-evident that Sunni dissatisfaction is going to increase," said a counterterrorism official.
Posted by:Dan Darling

#9  Self-sustaining? You mean no outside funds, no outside suicide bombing, so need for support from other islamic countries?

yeah right!


Par for the course for Reuters...
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama   2005-09-28 22:55  

#8  The reporter probably meant self licking and got the spell check wrong.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge   2005-09-28 21:03  

#7  Meanwhile the looting and mass murder continues in New Orleans.

We are the MSM, and we have fact checkers!
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2005-09-28 15:45  

#6  Sure, he's self-sustaining.

Ya know, they've got their own rifle manufacturing plant in, oh. Or how about that place where they make their own SAMs? Oh, not there either?

Gee, I guess they aren't so self-sustaining after all.
Posted by: Dreadnought   2005-09-28 12:44  

#5  Have the Syrians and the Iranians take a walk on him and see how "self-sustaining" he is.
Oh, right. That won't happen. So I guess he is "self-sustaining"...
Posted by: tu3031   2005-09-28 11:53  

#4  Tell me, please tell me that this reporter wasn't paid for this crap. Was he?
Posted by: Ebberenter Huperetle1983   2005-09-28 11:49  

#3  TW: I concur. Saw this piece and gave it .15 nanoseconds.
Posted by: Captain America   2005-09-28 07:53  

#2  How much longer will they continue to be self-sustaining with so many men rotating through the Number 3 spot. It isn't as though they're choosing to retire early, after all. The whole premise is just silly.
Posted by: trailing wife   2005-09-28 07:44  

#1  Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's network of al Qaeda-linked insurgents is emerging as a self-sustaining force, despite repeated blows by U.S. forces

Self-sustaining? You mean no outside funds, no outside suicide bombing, so need for support from other islamic countries?

yeah right!

But there is growing concern that Sunni political isolation will only deepen if the upcoming referendum vote ends leads to the adoption of the proposed constitution.

How much more concern can you be? Stupid journelist!
Posted by: Wheque Chavise7647   2005-09-28 00:24  

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