http://www.realcities.com/mld/krwashington/9595601.htm
Posted on Mon, Sep. 06, 2004
Saddam's Baath Party is back in business
By Hannah Allam
Knight Ridder Newspapers

BAGHDAD, Iraq - By day, Iraqis loyal to Saddam's Hussein's much-feared Baath
Party recite their oath in clandestine meetings, solicit donations from
former members and talk politics over sugary tea at a Baghdad cafe known as
simply "The Party."

By night, cells of these same men stage attacks on American and Iraqi
forces, host soirees for Saddam's birthday and other former regime holidays,
and debrief informants still dressed in suits and ties from their jobs in
the new, U.S.-backed Iraqi government.

Even with Saddam under lock and key, the Baath Party is back in business.

The pan-Arab socialist movement is going strong with sophisticated computer
technology, high-level infiltration of the new government and plenty of
recruits in thousands of disenchanted, impoverished Sunni Muslim Iraqis,
according to interviews with current and former members, Iraqi government
officials and groups trying to root out former Baathists.

The political party has morphed into a catchall resistance movement that
poses a serious challenge to interim Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, a
Baathist-turned-opposition leader.

Allawi has acknowledged he's holding talks with members of the former regime
in hopes of gaining a handle on the violence and political disarray. But
he's up against a force with deep pockets, allies in neighboring countries
and an excuse to fight as long as 135,000 American troops remain on Iraqi
soil.

"There are two governments in Iraq," said Mithal al Alusi, director general
of the Supreme National Commission for De-Baathification, a group overseen
by Iraqi politician and former Pentagon favorite Ahmad Chalabi. "(The
Baathists) are like thieves, stealing the power of the new government. Their
work is organized and strong."

Ostensibly banned since Saddam's ouster, the Baath Party has rebuilt itself
by sending top members of the former regime to safe houses in Jordan and
Syria, Iraqi government officials said. The foot soldiers - mainly from the
vast ranks of mid-level members - remain in Iraq, where they've started Web
sites and formed independent cells and communicate outside the radar of U.S.
forces through a word-of-mouth network known in Baathist parlance as "the
thread."

No one can say with certainty how big the latest Baathist incarnation is.
The secrecy of the organization is evident even on one of its main Web
sites, where a pop-up feature tells users how to erase the Web address from
the computer's memory.

In the Saddam stronghold north and west of the capital, a sprawling area
known as the Sunni Triangle, Baathists freely distribute price lists to
unemployed young men. Burning a U.S. Humvee or detonating a homemade bomb
can earn them a few hundred dollars. Killing an American soldiers brings at
least $1,000.

A political science professor at Baghdad University who's a former Baathist
and has been involved in negotiations between the party and the U.S.-led
coalition said, "The Americans came to Iraq with a foggy picture of what is
going on, including their ideas about the Baathists."

The U.S. military and the U.S. State department declined to comment on the
Baathist resurgence.

The 52-year-old professor, who did not want his name used, said his American
colleagues mistakenly believed that Saddam's capture in December was the end
of the Baathist movement in Iraq. Instead, he continued, that's just when
party members in Iraq started reconciling with powerful Baathists in
Damascus, Syria, and Amman, Jordan.

The result was the return to Iraq of a handful of prominent exiled Iraqi
members, who created a shadowy, neo-Baathist organization called "Al Islah,"
Arabic for "The Reform." The group held a conference in London in early
spring, according to news accounts of the private meeting and sources
familiar with the participants.

"This conference ... stressed one thing: that there is no difference between
the Baath Party and the resistance," the professor said. "They are equal."

Within a year after the fall of the former regime, the Baath Party was
restructured as an umbrella organization for opposition groups that run the
gamut from anti-occupation nationalists to Islamic extremists, said Sabah
Kadhim, spokesman for the Iraqi Interior Ministry.

Kadhim said there is no doubt that Baathists remain active in Iraq,
numbering in "the thousands." The Iraqi government is struggling to track
their activities, he said, because of the U.S.-led dismantling of the old
intelligence apparatus and the fact that former Baathists are much better
trained and organized than the Allawi government's fledgling agents.

"(The Baathists) have their weapons and they have their money and they are
still in Iraq," Kadhim said. "Some of them are highly capable and they
resent the fact that they are no longer in charge."

The most brazen announcement of the Baathist resurgence came April 7, the
57th anniversary of the party. A statement posted on the Internet lamented
that the holiday would be celebrated under occupation. It also made clear
members' plans to take back western Iraq's Anbar province, home of the
flashpoint Sunni towns of Fallujah and Ramadi.

"The Baath Party and resistance are to implement a series of military
operations against the U.S. Marines newly situated in western Iraq," the
announcement read.

The same week, the hostility between Fallujah fighters and U.S.-led forces
erupted into a full-scale uprising and a bloody, monthlong siege on the city
by the Marines. By the time it was over, the Marines had effectively ceded
control of Fallujah to a loosely connected band of Islamic extremists and
former Baathists. The entire province is now a no-go zone for foreigners,
particularly Americans.

Neo-Baathists describe the Fallujah ending as a victory, and they're using
the model to recruit new members or woo former Baathists back into the fold.
Several former members who've now distanced themselves from the party told
Knight Ridder they've received late-night visits from their former comrades,
asking for donations or reminding them of the privileges they enjoyed under
Saddam.

Qusai, a middle-aged former Baathist who did not want his full name
published, said he was approached by a former comrade at a marketplace in
Ameriyah, a Saddam-friendly neighborhood in Baghdad. The man asked him to
rejoin the party, Qusai recalled, and told him members had "already started
to get reorganized."

"I asked him, `Are you kidding?"' Qusai said, recalling that he was
"sweating with fear."

The man clearly wasn't kidding. That meeting was in February, and the
incident so disturbed Qusai that he instructed his family to tell other
former Baathists who came calling that he was out of town on business. Still
not comfortable that he was out of reach for the party, Qusai eventually
gave up his home and now lives in another district of the capital.

"It meant only one thing for me: troubles ahead," Qusai said. "I had to make
a difficult decision to evade the situation."

De-Baathification officials arranged a meeting last week between Knight
Ridder and a young man who is still active in the Baath Party. The man, most
likely an informant for the de-Baathification commission, still carried his
old identification card marking him as a member of Saddam's dreaded
intelligence force, the Mukhabarat.

He confirmed what government and military officials said: Baathists are a
highly structured political and armed resistance force. But he emphasized
that returning to the party was a one-way route. He told the story of a man
from a powerful cell of fighters north of the capital who regretted his
decision and tried to leave.

"He couldn't take the pressure and he fled," said the Baathist, who would
not reveal his name. "We found his body in the Tigris River."

© 2004 KR Washington Bureau and wire service sources. All Rights Reserved.
http://www.realcities.com

Reply via email to