Insurgency continues targeting civilians
The fighters doing battle with U.S. troops have made up a new set of deadly rules — with Iraqis as victims
BY MOHAMAD BAZZI
MIDDLE EAST CORRESPONDENT
August 5, 2005
BEIRUT, Lebanon -- As Iraq's insurgents score one success after another, they are rewriting the rules of modern guerrilla warfare.
They have ignored the lessons that guided most rebellions of the 20th century: Try to win broad public support; create a political wing; present an alternative system of governing; and build international legitimacy. The Iraqi insurgency also has no charismatic leader, no clear chain of command, and not even a cohesive ideology.
Still, the guerrillas have managed to spread chaos across Iraq. They have nearly halted reconstruction, hamstrung the country's fledgling security forces, and squeezed the most powerful military in the world. The insurgents have shown a remarkable ability to adapt their tactics to inflict maximum damage against both civilian and military targets.
U.S. officials say guerrillas are using a variety of mechanisms to trigger bombs, applying large amounts of explosives and experimenting with new techniques to penetrate U.S. armor. In the latest example, 14 Marines were killed Wednesday by a powerful roadside bomb in western Iraq.
<snip>
But while the guerrillas are skilled at modifying their military tactics, they seem indifferent to the political models of past insurgencies. Most successful rebellions in the past century shared two traits: They had widespread public support and a well-articulated political agenda, which usually appealed to nationalist sentiment. In Iraq, the insurgents have neither.
It could be a new kind of insurgency, one that does not have enough support or a clear political program to rule Iraq but is also difficult to defeat because it does not care about civilian casualties and destroying the country's infrastructure. In this context, past experience in Vietnam and elsewhere would offer the United States few lessons about how to fight back.
<snip>
http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/world/ny-worebe0805,0,501541.story?coll=ny-top-headlines