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D
414 - 14/09/05 - IRAK. A
senior US military officer on Wednesday predicted that al-Qaeda fighters in Iraq
will move to the "vast ungoverned spaces" of the Horn of Africa once
conditions in the country get too tough for them.
The
warning came from Major General Douglas Lute, director of operations at the US'
central command. "There will come a time when Zarqawi will face too much
resistance in Iraq and will move on," he predicted, referring to the head
of al-Qaeda in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian-born Islamist who has
claimed responsibility for numerous attacks, kidnappings and beheadings.
Looking
ahead to a time when he said Iraq would be "stabilised", Lute predicted
that Zarqawi would take the "path of least resistance" and leave for
such countries as Sudan, Ethiopia and Somalia.
But
before that, he suggested, Zarqawi would make a show of force in the run-up to
the Iraqi constitutional referendum and subsequent elections. "He has to
go down fighting," h e said.
Lute
said 90% of what he called the "enemy" in Iraq was domestic. There was
only a "slither" of foreign fighters "sponsored from outside".
He
declined to put a figure on his estimate. Earlier this year, the London-based
International Institute for Strategic Studies said there were between 12 000 and
20 000 hardcore insurgents in Iraq.
In
Iraq on Wednesday, insurgents armed with rocket-propelled grenades and assault
rifles attacked police checkpoints in western Baghdad in some of the heaviest
street fighting in the capital for months.
Explosions
shook the Hay al-Jamia district and at least six police vehicles were set ablaze
as about 40 insurgents, some with faces masked, launched a daylight assault, witnesses
told Reuters. A police source said 13 people had been killed and 31 wounded.
On
Wednesday night 21 Iraqi MPs and three senior government officials allied with
the Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr refused to carry out their duties afte r fighting
broke out between rival Shia militias. At least eight people were killed and dozens
wounded in street battles in Najaf and Baghdad between members of the pro-government
Badr organisation and supporters of Sadr.
Lute
said in London on Wednesday that the dependency of Iraqi security forces on foreign,
notably US, troops had to be broken. "Ultimately, the solution has got to
be a local solution, not one imposed from outside."
But
he refused to be drawn on a timetable for a reduction in US forces -- now about
138 000 -- in Iraq. He said only that if the training of Iraqi forces continued
at its present rate by this time next year the US would be "in a position
to make adjustments".
He
said the US would not "leave a vacuum" in Iraq and would continue to
deploy 10-man "coalition assistant teams" to provide air support, artillery
and medical evacuation for Iraqi forces. The US suffered from an intelligence
gap, however, and had to rely on Iraqis to tel l the difference, for example,
between people from different Arab countries, and between Iraqi Sunnis, Shias
and Kurds.
Britain will
be under heavy pressure to cut back its forces in southern Iraq, now numbering
about 9 000, before it takes over control of Nato forces in Afghanistan in April
next year. Britain will command Nato's allied rapid reaction force, to be based
in southern Afghanistan. Nato will later set up another headquarters to the east
of the country.
"Then
all of Afghanistan will be under the Nato flag," Lute said.
Britain
has also taken on the responsibility for eradicating the country's opium poppy
crop. Lute said US forces would work alongside the British only when they were
available.
There were historic
restrictions on the role of the US in law enforcement activities, he said, adding
that there was no hard intelligence linking the narcotics trade with "extremists".
But he also said there was evidence that the Taliban were still recru iting supporters.
- Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2005
Source:
Globe & Mail

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