October 15, 2007

NOT THAT THEY WERE EVER HALE:

Al-Qaeda In Iraq Reported Crippled: Many Officials, However, Warn Of Its Resilience (Thomas E. Ricks and Karen DeYoung, 10/15/07, Washington Post)

There is widespread agreement that AQI has suffered major blows over the past three months. Among the indicators cited is a sharp drop in suicide bombings, the group's signature attack, from more than 60 in January to around 30 a month since July. Captures and interrogations of AQI leaders over the summer had what a senior military intelligence official called a "cascade effect," leading to other killings and captures. The flow of foreign fighters through Syria into Iraq has also diminished, although officials are unsure of the reason and are concerned that the broader al-Qaeda network may be diverting new recruits to Afghanistan and elsewhere.

The deployment of more U.S. and Iraqi forces into AQI strongholds in Anbar province and the Baghdad area, as well as the recruitment of Sunni tribal fighters to combat AQI operatives in those locations, has helped to deprive the militants of a secure base of operations, U.S. military officials said. "They are less and less coordinated, more and more fragmented," Lt. Gen. Raymond T. Odierno, the second-ranking U.S. commander in Iraq, said recently. Describing frayed support structures and supply lines, Odierno estimated that the group's capabilities have been "degraded" by 60 to 70 percent since the beginning of the year.

Lt. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, head of the Joint Special Operations Command's operations in Iraq, is the chief promoter of a victory declaration and believes that AQI has been all but eliminated, the military intelligence official said. But Adm. William J. Fallon, the chief of U.S. Central Command, which oversees Iraq and the rest of the Middle East, is urging restraint, the official said. The military intelligence official, like others interviewed for this report, spoke on the condition of anonymity about Iraq assessments and strategy.

Senior U.S. commanders on the ground, including Gen. David H. Petraeus, the head of U.S. forces in Iraq, have long complained that Central Command, along with the CIA, is too negative in its analyses. On this issue, however, Petraeus agrees with Fallon, the military intelligence official said.

For each assessment of progress against AQI, there is a cautionary note that comes from long and often painful experience. Despite the increased killings and captures of AQI members, Odierno said, "it only takes three people" to construct and detonate a suicide car bomb that can "kill thousands." The goal, he said, is to make each attack less effective and lengthen the periods between them.

Right now, said another U.S. official, who declined even to be identified by the agency he works for, the data are "insufficient and difficult to measure."

"AQI is definitely taking some hits," the official said. "There is definite progress, and that is undeniable good news. But what we don't know is how long it will last . . . and whether it's sustainable. . . . They have withstood withering pressure for a long period of time." Three months, he said, is not long enough to consider a trend sustainable.


AQI is a good lens through which to see how feeble a threat this last ism is--at their healthiest all they could do was blow things up. They could never establish political control of a significant portion of territory. Consider how different this is than the various Marxist groups of the 20th century.

Posted by Orrin Judd at October 15, 2007 8:15 AM
Comments

All the more reason to go on the offensive and crush it. Procrastination is always a bad thing.

Posted by: Mikey [TypeKey Profile Page] at October 15, 2007 9:17 AM

OK, totally off-topic, but let's give a big shout out to Orrin here for setting the entire National Review staff (including Marvelous Mark Steyn) out on a tear, via its 'Corner' Blog.

http://corner.nationalreview.com/

Note OJ's line here:

"To the extent that Kennan was responsible for our not settling Soviet hash in the late 40s, he (and we) enabled the repression and mass murder of a significant portion of the human population for a disturbingly extended period of time."

Do a word search on "hash" or "soviet" over at The Corner and you'll see a collection of great minds (well, good ones at least :-) chewing over it big time.

Nice work OJ. Must be fun to drop a stone into a fairly sizeable pond like that.

Posted by: Andrew X at October 15, 2007 9:43 AM

As others have pointed out, the correct analog for AQ is less the Nazis than the Anarchists of the late 19th/early 20th century.

Posted by: Mike Earl at October 15, 2007 11:39 AM
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