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Iraq
Iraq’s Shiite Opposition in Show of Force
2003-03-15
Hundreds of fighters from Iraq's main Shiite Muslim opposition faction put on a rare show of military force at their northern Iraqi base yesterday, with their leadership vowing they would act independently of the United States in the battle against Saddam Hussein.
Been conferring with the Ayatollahs, have they? Toldja this was gonna happen...
During a rare public parade by the Al-Badr Brigade, the armed wing of the Iran-based Supreme Assembly of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SAIRI), the group's number two said his well-disciplined army would quickly move to secure areas captured from the Iraqi regime in the hours following a US assault. "We will do it our way. We have our own plans," Abdul Aziz al-Hakim told reporters at the Al-Badr Brigade's recently installed base in a lush green valley near Darbandikhan, in the southeast of the Kurdish autonomous zone close to the Iranian border.
Then why don't you do it without the help of the Great Satan?
"The message is that it is Iraqis who should oust Saddam Hussein. Our role will be real participation, and we do not need outside help," al-Hakim said. "We are not going to sit here and wait, we will be providing on the ground security."
Don't need any outside help, is it? Then we can go home, huh? And save our money and lives. You just take care of it and let us know when you're done, Abdul.
When asked if his group was in any way coordinating its armed operations with Washington, he boasted that "on the level of field actions, there is no specific agreement with any country because we don't need it".
Can't recall having seen you do anything to date, Abdul...
The Al-Badr Brigade, which has up to now been largely kept out of the public eye, is believed to number between 10,000 and 15,000 opportunists fighters. Many of the fighters based here crossed from Iran in recent months in the countdown to an anticipated US-led war aimed at toppling the Iraqi president. SAIRI is also engaged in talks with Iran on allowing more of its fighters to cross into either northern or southern Iraq, officials here said. The parade outside Darbandikhan, 45km south of Sulaymaniya, included some 800 fighters from the militia's Imam Ali unit.
Oooh. I love parades. They're so... so... martial.
They were carrying Kalashnikov assault rifles, rocket-propelled grenades, heavy machine guns and communications equipment. Most of the fighters, who appeared to have been recently equipped with new uniforms and weapons, were in their 30s or early 40s.
Kinda long in the tooth for an effective fighting force. Early to mid-twenties is best — old enough not to be kiddies anymore, still strong and limber and able to function in adverse conditions. Once you hit your mid-30s, your knees start to go...
Dozens of new Japanese-made pick-ups, mounted with recoilless rifles, mortars and rocket launchers also rolled past a podium of SAIRI leaders to the beat of a small military band. Darbandikhan is situated in the southeast of the Kurdish autonomous enclave in an area controlled by the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) of Jalal Talabani. The PUK and the rival Kurdistan Democratic Party of Masoud Barzani have divided control of much of northern Iraq since the aftermath of the 1991 Gulf war.
Precision Guided Munitions have changed the "Correlation of Forces" a bit for the Ayatullah's; if they concentrate their forces, they will be vaporized by the Great Satan. And guerilla warfare ain't exactly a bed of roses on the desert no more, with infrared sensors, C130 gunships and all (it's more like a bed of Sonoran Desert cholla). And then, the Demonstrations in Tehran may not be all that good for the morale of the brigadiers.
Posted by:George H. Beckwith

#5  Yeap!
Everything that lives in the Desert Southwest sticks,stings or bites.
Posted by: raptor   2003-03-16 07:42:13  

#4  These guys are in the NORTH, in Kurdistan. To make an independent bid for power theyd have to go to the Shiite south. By staying in the North they can make mischief on behalf of the Iranians, but they cant be very effective, since they wont have the support of the locals.
Posted by: liberalhawk   2003-03-15 21:31:50  

#3  I'm a little surprised at this. The marsh Arabs may be Shi'a but they're Arabs first. Consorting with the Meades and Persians ain't like 'em. In the Iraq-Iran war the marsh Arabs lined up with Sammy and not with the ayatollahs.
Posted by: Steve White   2003-03-15 19:16:30  

#2  You know, since they haven't allied with us, I see no reason to assume they're not hostile, and would bomb them back to Tehran accordingly
Posted by: Frank G   2003-03-15 17:13:35  

#1  It occurs to me that the Iranian clerics may have figured out part of the game, and are moving to oppose it. They probably don't realize that by doing so, they're drawing a target on their chest.
Posted by: Dishman   2003-03-15 12:10:42  

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