THE STRATFOR WEEKLY
18 December 2003

by Dr. George Friedman

Saddam Hussein and the Dollar War 

Summary

The capture of Saddam Hussein is an intelligence success for the 
United States. It represents a massive effort to improve U.S. 
intelligence capabilities in Iraq following a period of 
intelligence failure. Hussein's capture, therefore, is important 
not only in itself or in its implications for the guerrillas, but 
also because it represents a massive and rapid improvement in 
U.S. intelligence capabilities. It demonstrates that poor 
intelligence is not inherent in U.S. guerrilla war-fighting; the 
United States overcame it by identifying the central weaknesses 
of its opponents. In this case, the central weakness was money -- 
and this was not only a financial weakness, but also a cultural 
one.

Analysis

For once, the media have got it right. The capture of Saddam 
Hussein is a major event in the war. Its importance does not rest 
on whether he was in operational command of the guerrillas; he 
wasn't. Nor does it hinge on whether his capture will destroy the 
morale of the guerrillas; it won't. The importance of Hussein's 
capture is that it happened at all: It signals a major 
improvement in U.S. war-fighting capabilities in general and in 
American intelligence in particular.

The greatest intelligence failure of the Iraq war did not concern 
weapons of mass destruction. It concerned the failure of U.S. 
intelligence to understand the Iraqi war plan, which in hindsight 
was obvious. The Baathists knew the United States would rapidly 
defeat Iraq's conventional forces. Therefore, they prepared a 
follow-on plan that would begin after Baghdad was occupied. This 
plan was a guerrilla war, manned by troops drawn from trusted 
elite forces, with an installed infrastructure of arms caches, 
safe houses and secure -- nonelectronic -- command and control 
systems suitable for such a war.

The guerrilla war began within weeks of the fall of Baghdad in 
April. U.S. intelligence about the war was so poor that until 
late in June, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and the rest of 
the administration were denying that the attacks on U.S. troops 
were being staged by an organized force. They viewed them simply 
as random attacks by unconnected dead-enders and criminals. It 
was not until summer that the administration conceded that it was 
facing a concerted guerrilla war.

Throughout the summer, the United States had trouble defining the 
nature of the guerrilla force, let alone developing a coherent 
picture of its order of battle or command structure. Therefore, 
the United States, by definition, could neither engage nor defeat 
the guerrillas. Washington remained in an entirely defensive 
posture during this period; the guerrillas had the initiative. 
There never was a danger that the guerrillas would actually 
defeat the United States. Still, the continual drumbeat of 
attacks and the U.S. forces' inability to launch effective 
counterattacks created substantial political problems, as it was 
intended to.

The problem for the United States was that the Iraqis understood 
the strengths and weaknesses of U.S. intelligence. The United 
States is extremely strong in technical means of intelligence, 
including image and signal intelligence. The guerrillas avoided 
electromagnetic communications and were difficult to distinguish 
with aerial reconnaissance. They were essentially invisible to 
the preferred U.S. intelligence methods.

Late in the summer, the United States began to increase its human 
intelligence capability in Iraq substantially, particularly the 
number of CIA officers on the ground. It began a systematic 
program of penetrating the guerrillas. It was not an easy task: 
Recruiting agents able to infiltrate the guerrilla ranks was hard 
to do; getting them into the ranks was even harder. The 
guerrillas understood that recruitment was a risk and relied upon 
existing forces or recruited from well-known and reliable 
reservoirs. The ranks of foreign jihadists who entered the 
country also were difficult to penetrate. To add to the 
complexity, they operated separately from the main force.

The guerrillas did have one major vulnerability: money. The 
Baathist regime long ago lost its ideological -- and idealistic -
- foundations. It was an institution of self-interest in which 
the leadership systematically enriched itself. It was a culture 
of money and power, and that culture permeated the entire 
structure of the Iraqi military, including the guerrilla forces 
that continued to operate after the conventional force was 
defeated. Indeed, the guerrillas substituted money for 
recruitment. In many cases, they would pay people outside their 
ranks to carry out attacks on U.S. troops as a supplement to 
attacks by the main guerrilla force. 

The culture of money made the guerrillas vulnerable in two ways. 
First, they relied on support from an infrastructure fueled by 
money. Whatever their ideology, they purchased cooperation with 
money and intimidation. Second, much of the money the guerrillas 
had was currency taken from Iraqi banks prior to the fall of 
Baghdad. A great deal of it was in U.S. dollars, which continued 
to have value, but most of it was in the currency of the old 
regime. One of the earliest actions of the U.S. occupation forces 
was to replace that currency. Over time, therefore, the resources 
available to the guerrillas contracted.

The United States brought its financial resources into play, 
purchasing information. As U.S. money surged into the system and 
guerrilla money began to recede, the flow of information to the 
United States increased dramatically. Obviously, much of the 
information was useless or false, and it took U.S. intelligence 
several months to tune the system sufficiently that operatives 
could evaluate and act upon the intelligence. Over time, the very 
corruption of the Baathist system was turned against it. Indeed, 
it happened in a surprisingly short period, made possible by a 
Baathist organization in which political loyalty and business 
interests tied together so blatantly that reversals of loyalty 
did not necessarily appear as betrayals.

This process was speeded up dramatically during the November 
Ramadan offensive. This offensive, we now know, was a surge 
operation rather than a sustained increase in operational tempo. 
Two things happened during the Ramadan offensive: First, the 
guerrillas increased their consumption of resources dramatically, 
burning through men and money very quickly; second, the rapid 
tempo of operations required the guerrillas to expose their 
assets far more than in the past. Whereas previously a combat 
team would attack, disperse and remain dispersed for an extended 
period, the tempo of Ramadan required that the same team carry 
out multiple attacks. This meant that they could not disperse and 
therefore could be more readily identified. This led to a greater 
number of prisoners and further opportunities to purchase 
information.

The United States moved from being almost blind during the summer 
to having substantially penetrated the guerrillas by the end of 
November. By that time, Washington had a clearer idea of the 
guerrilla order of battle and command structure. It had created a 
network of informants that was prepared to provide intelligence 
to the Americans in exchange for money, amnesty and future 
considerations. 

Hussein, therefore, was betrayed by the culture he created. He 
was found with no radio -- no surprise, since the guerrillas 
tried not to use them. Rather, he was found with his two most 
important weapons: a pistol and $750,000 in cash. His pistol 
could not possibly outfight the troops sent to capture him. He 
did not have enough money to buy safety. The Americans had him 
outgunned and outspent. 

The importance of Hussein's capture is not only its symbolism -- 
although that certainly should not be underestimated. Its 
importance is that it happened, that U.S. intelligence was able 
to turn a debacle into a success by identifying the core weakness 
of the enemy force and using it for the rapid penetration and 
exploitation of the guerrilla infrastructure.

The guerrillas understand precisely what happened to Hussein: 
Someone betrayed him for money. They also understand that even 
though attacks on U.S. troops can be purchased for dollars, the 
Americans have far more dollars than they do. That is why, in the 
week prior to Hussein's capture, the guerrillas twice attacked 
banks: They desperately needed to replenish their cash reserves. 
In one case, they even went so far as to engage in a pitched 
battle with U.S. armor, a battle they couldn't possibly win. 

The threat to the guerrillas is snowballing betrayal. The 
guerrillas must be increasingly paranoid. At the prices the 
Americans are paying, the probability of betrayal is rising. As 
this probability rises, paranoia not only eats away at the 
guerrillas' effectiveness, it also raises the temptation to 
betray. Better to betray than to be betrayed. 

The guerrillas can arrest this process only by ruthlessly 
punishing betrayers. If the people who betrayed Hussein can't be 
identified -- or can't be publicly killed -- then the guerrillas' 
impotence will become manifest and a self-fulfilling prophecy. 
Indeed, as other insurgencies have controlled betrayal by public 
retribution, the guerrillas, unable to compete financially, would 
have to respond with a wave of public executions. However, with 
each public execution, they would expose themselves to capture 
and revenge.

The capture of Hussein, regardless of whether he commanded anyone 
or knows anything, is critically important. It is inconceivable 
that the guerrillas would want him captured, since it inevitably 
hurts their credibility. Like him or not, he was theirs to 
protect. Their inability to protect Hussein creates a massive 
crisis of confidence among the Baathist guerrillas.

This does not mean the guerrilla movement in Iraq is dying. It 
means that the leadership of the movement is going to shift away 
from the Baathists who launched the guerrilla war to the mostly 
foreign jihadists, who joined the war for very different motives. 
These guerrillas are not motivated by money and are unlikely to 
betray each other for cash. They fight because they believe -- 
and that makes it more difficult to penetrate their ranks.

At the same time, most of them are foreigners. They do not know 
the country as well as the Baathists, they don't have family and 
tribal connections there, and they don't have their own 
infrastructure. They were separate from the Baathists, but relied 
upon them for their support structure. If the Baathists are taken 
down, the jihadists will fight on. However, just as they are less 
vulnerable to money, they are less invisible than the Baathists. 

The capture of Hussein does not, in other words, end the war. 
However, the process that led to his capture is broader and more 
subversive than simply the capture of the former president. It is 
eating away at the infrastructure of the Baathist guerrillas. It 
is possible for them to reverse this, but as their financial 
resources decline, they will have to respond with brutal 
suppression to betrayers. That might not do the trick. 

Still, the war is far from over. Washington now faces a more 
substantial challenge -- one that has proven difficult to 
overcome in the broader war. It must penetrate the jihadists in 
Iraq. Given the experience with al Qaeda, this might well prove 
difficult.
.................................................................



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