A letter purportedly written to senior al-Qaeda
leaders by a key associate, Abu Mus'ab al-Zarqawi, appears to undermine a major
thesis of hard-core neo-conservatives who led the U.S. drive to war in Iraq.
The letter,
which is essentially an appeal for help in launching a "sectarian war"
against Iraq's Shi'a Muslim population, was circulated by the Pentagon after
it was allegedly seized in a raid on a safe house in Baghdad on Jan. 23 that
netted a prominent courier of the al-Qaeda terrorist group. It was leaked to
the New York Times, which reported on it Feb. 10.
US war planners clearly saw the 17-page letter as confirmation that their strategy
for pacifying Iraq, particularly the so-called "Sunni Triangle," was
working.
Its quick declassification and wide dissemination suggested the message was
one the Pentagon was eager to get out, precisely because it corresponded to
the military's own claims that it was grinding down the armed opposition in
the occupied country.
The writer, identified by the Pentagon as Zarqawi, a Palestinian Jordanian
who the administration has long alleged is closely linked to al-Qaeda
the group led by Osama bin Laden admits that the U.S.-led occupation
is making steady progress.
"There is no doubt that our field of movement is shrinking and the grip
around the throat of the mujahidin has begun to tighten," the letter, which
was found on a compact disc, states. "With the spread of the army and police,
our future is becoming frightening."
The author takes credit for 25 "martyrdom operations" directed against
Shi'a targets and US and other coalition forces, suggesting that foreign Islamist
fighters, rather than indigenous groups, might indeed be responsible for suicide
bombings, as the US military has argued.
The letter writer also reports that his forces are planning to carry out more
attacks against Iraqi military and security forces. Since the letter's date,
suicide attacks against these targets have indeed escalated sharply.
So far so good.
At the same time, however, the letter, excerpts of which were published by
the Project for the New American
Century (PNAC) and the Weekly Standard, tends to debunk several of
the neo-conservatives' own myths.
First, it contains no suggestion at all of any preexisting cooperation or relationship
between ousted Iraqi president Saddam Hussein and either Zarqawi or al-Qaeda,
as the neo-conservatives have long contended.
It expresses great disappointment at the absence of al-Qaeda in Iraq, a disappointment
that undermines the administration's insistence that it is that group that is
behind a growing number of attacks in Iraq.
Indeed, the tone suggests, according to Middle
East expert Juan Cole of the University of Michigan, that the writer, if
it is Zarqawi, has not been in close contact with al-Qaeda for quite some time.
More important, the letter's thrust the necessity for carrying out attacks
against Shi'a Muslims in Iraq serves also to undermine a major neo-conservative
thesis that Islamist extremists work together to accomplish their goals
regardless of their own sectarian affiliation.
This "terror masters" thesis named for the book, The
War Against the Terror Masters, by the theory's foremost Washington
proponent, Michael Ledeen of the American Enterprise Institute (AEI)
argues that western intelligence agencies have been naive to think that Shi'a
groups like Hezbollah and Iran would not work closely with extremist Sunni groups,
like al-Qaeda or Zarqawi's network, because of their sectarian differences.
In Ledeen's view they all form one "coherent terror network" in which
Iran plays the dominant role.
Among others, Richard Perle also based at AEI but better known for his
close ties to Vice President Dick Cheney and the Pentagon's civilian leadership
has publicly propounded this thesis.
"The terror network is more complex, and far more united, than most our
analysts have been willing to accept," he wrote last September in an article
in National Review Online.
"The divisions and distinctions of the past no longer make sense; the
terror mafias are working together, and their missions are defined by the states
that protect, arm, fund and assist them: Iran, Syria and Saudi Arabia."
According to Ledeen, Iran is the "linchpin of the terror network,"
and routinely hosts or organizes meetings of the network's major leaders. Tehran
has strongly denied any connection or support to al-Qaeda or any other radical
Sunni group.
In his September article, Ledeen wrote that Tehran hosted a terrorist summit
last August that included Hezbollah's chief of operations Imad Mughniyah; Zarqawi;
al-Qaeda's number two Ayman al-Zawarhiri; bin Laden's son Saad, and Iranian
intelligence officials.
Zarqawi promptly relocated to Iraq several days later, presumably to begin
carrying out operations of the kind that he reports in the Jan. 23 letter, Ledeen
added.
The problem with that theory is that the letter attributed to Zarqawi fails
to provide even the slightest hint of an Iranian connection, and consistently
refers to the Shi'a population in Iraq to which Iran has long provided
strong support as if it, perhaps even more than Washington, is the ultimate
enemy.
"The Shi'a have declared a subtle war against Islam," the letter
states. "Even if the Americans are also an archenemy, the Shi'a are a greater
danger and their harm more destructive to the nation than that of the Americans."
"They are the most cowardly people God has created. Killing their leaders
will weaken them and with the death of the head, the whole group dies,"
Zarqawi writes of the Shi'as, whose religion he describes as a "perverse
sect."
Such references to Shi'as and the lack of any reference at all to Iran in such
a long letter, Cole told IPS, simply add to the view among most regional specialists
both in and outside the U.S. government that Ledeen's "terror master"
theory is as questionable as the notion of an operational link between Hussein
and al-Qaeda.
"The document undermines all the conspiracy theories about Iranian support
for al-Qaeda or an al-Qaeda-Hezbollah link," says Cole. "The Iranians
would as soon shoot those people (Zarqawi and al-Qaeda) as look at them."
In that respect, the letter and its widespread distribution, particularly by
neo-conservative groups and publications, mark a potentially serious setback
to those in and out of the administration who have adopted Ledeen's view.
Not coincidentally, it is the same group, both within and outside the administration,
which argued before the war that Hussein and al-Qaeda were closely linked.
The same group has been the major obstacle to any steps by Washington to improve
relations with Tehran since talks were suspended last May, after an al-Qaeda
attack on a western compound in Riyadh that US officials charged had been ordered
from somewhere in Iran.