Jama'at al-Tawhid wal-Jihad: Difference between revisions
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For months, it appeared as though two separate wars were being conducted in Iraq. One was a terrorist campaign, largely conducted by foreign [[jihad]]is, of high-profile suicide bombings, assassinations, and kidnappings. The other was a guerilla war being conducted by [[nationalist]]s, indigenous Sunni Islamists, and disenfranchised former [[Ba'ath Party]] members against American troops. Recently, as Zarqawi's network has taken root and grown in Iraq and as the insurgents have become more radicalized and religiously motivated, the distinction between the two has reduced. The [[June 24]] offensive, which combined terrorist, guerrilla, and conventional tactics and in which a number of groups operating under the Zarqawi umbrella participated, was the clearest indication of this shift. Terrorists in this group also have been known to operate with other insurgents in [[Samarra]], where they openly patrolled, enforcing [[Sharia]] law and distributing audiotapes of the [[Qur'an]] before a U.S-led offensive on the city in the beginning of October. |
For months, it appeared as though two separate wars were being conducted in Iraq. One was a terrorist campaign, largely conducted by foreign [[jihad]]is, of high-profile suicide bombings, assassinations, and kidnappings. The other was a guerilla war being conducted by [[nationalist]]s, indigenous Sunni Islamists, and disenfranchised former [[Ba'ath Party]] members against American troops. Recently, as Zarqawi's network has taken root and grown in Iraq and as the insurgents have become more radicalized and religiously motivated, the distinction between the two has reduced. The [[June 24]] offensive, which combined terrorist, guerrilla, and conventional tactics and in which a number of groups operating under the Zarqawi umbrella participated, was the clearest indication of this shift. Terrorists in this group also have been known to operate with other insurgents in [[Samarra]], where they openly patrolled, enforcing [[Sharia]] law and distributing audiotapes of the [[Qur'an]] before a U.S-led offensive on the city in the beginning of October. |
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==Conspiracy Theories== |
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Ever since the [[Nick Berg]] beheading incident, many people inside and outside Iraq (mainly supportive of the resistance), had held a belief that Al-Zarqawi and his Organization is fake, and that he's used as an American propaganda tool to justify accusations against the [[Iraqi resistance]]; after all, what's better than a sadist maniac who speaks in the name of the resistance to distort its image?<br> |
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The rational behind this theory is that [[Al-Qaeda in Iraq]] served only to distort the image of the resistance and divert the support it gets from the Sunni pupolation.<br> |
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Proponents of this theory generall use the following arguments: |
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* If Al-Zarqawi is really in Iraq, why doesn't he release a video tape of himself, like [[Osama bin Laden]] or [[Ayman Al-Zawahiri]]? After all, everybody knows what he looks like, so there's no fear of revealing his identity by doing that. |
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* During the period between May 2004 and November 2004, The city of Fallujah was free from American forces, and several insurgent groups were operating publicly; a council of "Mijahideen" was formed, and was lead by [[Abdullah Aljanabi]]. Why didn't Al-Zarqawi appear to the public in the city during that period? Why did everyone in Fallujah (including Aljanabi) deny the existance of Al-Zarqawi in the city? |
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* His operations often come at the wrong time, in the wrong place, serving only the Americans: |
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:* The beheading of [[Nick Berg]], coming right after the [[Abu Gharib]] scandal, allowed the U.S. Military to divert media attention from the prison scandal to the brutal slaughter of humans, showing the U.S. Military as the "good guys" and the resistance as the "bad guys". |
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* Him and his organization are always used by the U.S. Lead Coalition Forces as an execuse to attack Sunni cities. |
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* The American media generally promotes Al-Qaeda in Iraq as the main insurgent groups, even though there are many other known insurgent organizations in Iraq. This leads to a beliefe that the U.S. ''wants'' Al-Qaeda in Iraq to appear as the main group. |
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==List of attacks== |
==List of attacks== |
Revision as of 11:45, 21 January 2006
- This article is about the group called "Al-Qaeda in Iraq". For the alleged earlier involvement of al-Qaeda in Iraq, see Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda.
Al-Qaeda in Iraq (Template:Lang-ar, Al-Qaa`idatu fii bilaadi r-raafidayn, al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia) is the Mujahideen network of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian-born mujahid believed operating against United States-led coalition forces in Iraq. It is the Iraqi branch of Al-Qaeda.
Before September, 2004 the group was called Jama'at at-Tawhid wal-Jihad (Template:Lang-ar, Monotheism and Holy War Movement) The group's name, which is usually abbreviated as JTJ, purposefully contrasts the strict monotheism of Islam with what it sees as the polytheism of the Christian Trinity. The name change is significant as it uses the archaic name of Iraq used in the Islamic Caliphate era.
Origins
JTJ was started by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian and veteran of the Soviet-Afghan War, during the 1980s at an Islamic militant training camp near Herat in Afghanistan. Zarqawi started the network originally with a focus on overthrowing the Jordanian government, which he considered made up of "hypocrites" and un-Islamic. Zarqawi comes from a school of militant Sunni Islamist and Wahhabi thought, which advocates a return to the laws and practices of the Muslim community immediately following the death of the Prophet Muhammad in the 7th century. After spending five years in a Jordanian prison, for attempting to overthrow the government, Zarqawi later left the country. JTJ likely had loose affiliation with al-Qaeda, but is a separate organization that is to a degree competitive. Eventually, Zarqawi developed a large number of contacts and affiliates in several countries. His network may have been involved in the late 1999 plot to bomb the Millennium celebrations in the US and Jordan. Following the US-led invasion of Afghanistan, it is believed that Zarqawi moved westward into Iraq, where he may have received medical treatment in Baghdad for an injured leg. It is believed that he developed extensive ties in Iraq with Ansar al-Islam, a Kurdish Islamist militant group that was based in the extreme northeast of the country, but there is no evidence that deposed Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein or the Iraqi government was involved in harboring Zarqawi or Ansar al-Islam. Following the U.S-led invasion of Iraq, JTJ was developed as a terrorist network composed of foreign fighters, remnants of Ansar al-Islam, and indigenous Sunni extremists to resist the coalition occupation forces and their Iraqi allies. The group's spiritual advisor is Abu Anas al-Shami.
Goals
The goals of Zarqawi's network have shifted considerably over the years. Originally with a localized goal of overthrowing the Jordanian government, the organization gradually became more globalized and, following the fall of Baghdad to American forces, Iraq clearly became the main focus. The stated goals of JTJ are to force a withdrawal of U.S-led forces from Iraq, topple the Iraqi interim government and assassinate collaborators with the "occupation," marginalize the Shiite Muslim population and defeat its militias, and to subsequently establish a pure Islamic state. Presumably, if and when those goals are achieved, the global jihad would continue to establish a pan-Islamic state and remove Western influence from the Muslim world.
Tactics
JTJ differs from other Iraqi insurgent groups considerably in its tactics. Rather than just using conventional weapons and guerilla tactics, it has relied heavily on using terrorist attacks, including suicide bombings, mostly with vehicles, targeting a wide variety of groups but most especially Iraqi security forces and those facilitating the occupation. U.S and coalition forces, the United Nations, foreign civilians, humanitarian organizations, Shiite and Kurdish political and religious figures, Iraqi police and security forces, and Iraqi interim officials have also been targeted. Zarqawi's terrorists have been known to use a wide variety of other tactics, however, including targeted assassinations, kidnappings and beheadings, the planting of improvised explosive devices, mortar attacks, and in beginning in a late June offensive urban guerilla-style attacks using rocket-propelled grenades and small arms.
For months, it appeared as though two separate wars were being conducted in Iraq. One was a terrorist campaign, largely conducted by foreign jihadis, of high-profile suicide bombings, assassinations, and kidnappings. The other was a guerilla war being conducted by nationalists, indigenous Sunni Islamists, and disenfranchised former Ba'ath Party members against American troops. Recently, as Zarqawi's network has taken root and grown in Iraq and as the insurgents have become more radicalized and religiously motivated, the distinction between the two has reduced. The June 24 offensive, which combined terrorist, guerrilla, and conventional tactics and in which a number of groups operating under the Zarqawi umbrella participated, was the clearest indication of this shift. Terrorists in this group also have been known to operate with other insurgents in Samarra, where they openly patrolled, enforcing Sharia law and distributing audiotapes of the Qur'an before a U.S-led offensive on the city in the beginning of October.
Conspiracy Theories
Ever since the Nick Berg beheading incident, many people inside and outside Iraq (mainly supportive of the resistance), had held a belief that Al-Zarqawi and his Organization is fake, and that he's used as an American propaganda tool to justify accusations against the Iraqi resistance; after all, what's better than a sadist maniac who speaks in the name of the resistance to distort its image?
The rational behind this theory is that Al-Qaeda in Iraq served only to distort the image of the resistance and divert the support it gets from the Sunni pupolation.
Proponents of this theory generall use the following arguments:
- If Al-Zarqawi is really in Iraq, why doesn't he release a video tape of himself, like Osama bin Laden or Ayman Al-Zawahiri? After all, everybody knows what he looks like, so there's no fear of revealing his identity by doing that.
- During the period between May 2004 and November 2004, The city of Fallujah was free from American forces, and several insurgent groups were operating publicly; a council of "Mijahideen" was formed, and was lead by Abdullah Aljanabi. Why didn't Al-Zarqawi appear to the public in the city during that period? Why did everyone in Fallujah (including Aljanabi) deny the existance of Al-Zarqawi in the city?
- His operations often come at the wrong time, in the wrong place, serving only the Americans:
- The beheading of Nick Berg, coming right after the Abu Gharib scandal, allowed the U.S. Military to divert media attention from the prison scandal to the brutal slaughter of humans, showing the U.S. Military as the "good guys" and the resistance as the "bad guys".
- Him and his organization are always used by the U.S. Lead Coalition Forces as an execuse to attack Sunni cities.
- The American media generally promotes Al-Qaeda in Iraq as the main insurgent groups, even though there are many other known insurgent organizations in Iraq. This leads to a beliefe that the U.S. wants Al-Qaeda in Iraq to appear as the main group.
List of attacks
The following is a list of some of the most notable attacks believed to have been perpetrated by Zarqawi's network:
- Aug. 7, 2003: A truck bombing of the Jordanian embassy, which killed 19.
- Aug. 19: A truck bombing of UN Headquarters in Baghdad that killed 22, including top U.N. envoy Sergio Vieira de Mello.
- Aug. 29: A car bomb in Najaf that killed more than 85, including Mohammad Baqr al-Hakim, the leader the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq.
- Oct. 27: Four car bombings at Baghdad police stations and the Red Cross headquarters killed 35 and wounded 220.
- Nov. 12: A suicide truck bombing at the headquarters of Italy's paramilitary police in Nasiriyah that killed more than 30.
- Dec. 27: An attack on coalition bases and governor's office in Karbala that killed 19.
- Jan. 18, 2004: A car bombing at the gates of the Green Zone which killed 31.
- Feb. 10 & 11: Two car bombs at a police station and recruiting center kill 100.
- March 2: A series of bombings in Baghdad and Karbala kill at least 181 people and injure hundreds more during the Ashoura, a Shiite holiday.
- March 17: A car bomb detonated outside Baghdad's Mount Lebanon hotel, killing seven people. On April 6, a Web site linked to Kurdish group Ansar al-Islam carried audiotape from a speaker who identified himself as al-Zarqawi and claimed responsibility for the bombing.
- April 21: Bombings in Basra killed 74.
- April 24: Suicide bombers in boats ram oil pumping stations in the Persian Gulf. Three U.S. servicemen are killed in the attack, which cost Iraq some $40 million in lost revenues.
- May 2: The group claims responsibility for a mortar attack that killed six marines in the Ramadi area.
- May 11: Kidnapped American businessman Nicholas Berg is beheaded while videotaped, and voice of knife-wielder is identified as al-Zarqawi's.
- May 18: A car bomb assassinates Iraqi Governing Council president Abdel-Zahraa Othman, better known as Izzadine Saleem.
- May 22: A suicide car bomb wounds Iraqi Deputy Interior Minister Abdul-Jabbar Youssef and kills at least four others.
- June 14: A car-bomb attack on a vehicle convoy in Baghdad kills 13 people, including three General Electric employees. A Web site posting purportedly written by the "military wing of Monotheism and Jihad," also believed to be led by al-Zarqawi, claims responsibility.
- June 22: Kidnappers behead South Korean hostage Kim Sun-il, who was last shown alive with his captors in a videotape on Arab satellite TV channel Al Jazeera. Al Jazeera says the execution was carried out by Monotheism and Jihad, a group believed to be led by al-Zarqawi.
- June 24: Coordinated insurgent attacks on Iraqi police and government buildings in Mosul, Baquba, Ramadi, Fallujah, and Baghdad kill roughly 100 people, including three U.S soldiers, and wound several hundred more. JTJ is suspected of playing a major role, and many guerillas participating in the attacks wore headbands with the group's name.
- July 8: Militants linked with Zarqawi decapitated Georgi Lazov, 30, and Ivaylo Kepov, 32, Bulgarian truck drivers.
- September 16: Americans Jack Hensley and Eugene Armstrong and Briton Kenneth Bigley were kidnapped from their Baghdad home. The JTJ threatened to behead them in 48 hours unless Iraqi women are released from Umm Qasr and Abu Ghraib prisons. On September 20, the group published a video showing the decapitation of Eugene Armstrong. U.S. Officials say that his body has been found and identified. On September 21, Hensley is beheaded as well.
- October 8: Kenneth Bigley is beheaded.
- October 15: Bombers in the Green Zone kill six people, including 4 American civilians, in the first serious penetration of that area.
- November 3: Shosei Koda is beheaded.
- December 19: Car bombs in Karbala and Najaf kill 60 people.
- Jan. 30, 2005: About 40 people are killed in attacks during the Iraqi legislative election.
- Feb. 28: A car bomb killed 125 people outside a clinic in Hillah in the deadliest single insurgent attack.
- April-June 2005: A series of attacks throughout May following the April 28 formation of the National Assembly kills upwards of 800. Many of these attacks are credited by the al-Tawhid.
- July 16: A suicide bombings in Mussayib which killed at least 98.
- September 14: A car bomb kills 112 in Baghdad, amidst other attacks.
- September 29: Bombings in Balad kill more than 100.
- October 24: Coordinated car bombings outside the Sheraton Ishtar and the Palestine Hotel in Baghdad leave at least 17 Iraqis dead.
- November 18: Two truck bombs explodes outside the Hamra Hotel in Baghdad, killing six; in Khanaqin, near the Iranian border, bombers in two mosques kill at least 74.
- Jan. 4 & 5, 2006: Around 180 Iraqis are killed in suicide attacks across Iraq.
U.S Campaign against Zarqawi's Forces
The American effort against Zarqawi's network remained largely stagnant due to a lack of credible intelligence. Protecting "soft targets" against bombings conducted by an elusive force is a nearly impossible task. In late June, U.S. forces began a campaign of missile strikes against suspected JTJ safehouses in Fallujah, a stronghold of insurgents and radical clerics and the supposed focus of Zarqawi's terrorist network. In April 2004, U.S. Marines invaded Fallujah killing several hundred militiamen and civilian residents of the city before withdrawing. Between June 18 and June 25, over 60 people were killed in three separate air raids conducted by the U.S military in Fallujah. Civilians and officials in Fallujah charged that civilian targets were hit. Zarqawi himself was said to have narrowly escaped the June 25th attack, although there have been conflicting reports as to whether he is within Fallujah. Iraqi civilians, militiamen, policemen, and members of the Iraqi and U.S. military have suffered several hundred deaths and injuries in subsequent months during an escalating series of duels between anti-coalition terrorists employing car bombs and U.S. forces employing airstrikes. The Euphrates River region between Baghdad and Ramadi is the focus of the search for Zarqawi and his followers.
On October 15, 2004, the U.S. State Department announced its designation of JTJ as a Foreign Terrorist Organization and a Specially Designated Global Terrorist under Executive Order 13224. Press release.