On
November 12, insurgents in Iraq used a truck bomb to unleash a devastating
attack on an Italian Carabinieri base in the southern city of Nasiriyah, killing
19 Italians and wounding many more. This latest attack further highlights how
guerrillas in Iraq have been attempting to assault supporters of the US
occupation in addition to assaulting US troops. The purpose of these attacks is
to cause demoralizing losses to supporters and participants of the US occupation
in the hopes of causing them to flee Iraq, further isolating Washington in its
occupation.
In
August, attacks on supporters and participants of the US occupation escalated.
On August 7, a truck bomb exploded outside the Jordanian Embassy compound in
Baghdad, killing more than 10 people. On August 19, a truck bomb demolished the
United Nations headquarters in Baghdad in the worst attack ever committed on a
UN civilian complex in the history of the United Nations; more than twenty
people were killed. A little over one month later, on September 22, a suicide
bomb exploded at a car park next to the UN headquarters in Baghdad, killing only
one, but adding to the general instability in the area.
On
October 12, many people were killed in a blast outside the Baghdad Hotel in the
center of the city. Two days later, a car bomb exploded outside the Turkish
Embassy in Baghdad killing 17 people. On October 27, a series of bombs exploded
in Baghdad killing 35 people and wounding over 200; these attacks were partly
aimed at the international Red Cross building.
What
these attacks share in common is their damage to coalition countries and
international organizations that have been either supporting or participating in
the US occupation of Iraq. Take for example the attack on the UN headquarters in
Baghdad. After the attack, the UN reduced its operations in Iraq. The attack on
the international Red Cross building on October 27 brought similar results, as
the organization pulled some of its staff out of Iraq citing concerns over
instability.
The
most pronounced political effect of an attack took place after the truck bomb
explosion on the Italian Carabinieri base on November 12. One day after the
attack, Japan withdrew an earlier pledge to send troops to Iraq by the end of
the year. Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi’s administration said that
the current instability in Iraq would make any Japanese troop commitment
impossible at this time.
The
government of President Roh Moo-Hyun in South Korea echoed Koizumi’s concerns.
Originally planning on sending 5,000 troops to Iraq, Seoul decided to limit its
commitment to 3,000 troops, completely aware that “the United States expected
the deployment of a bigger contingent.”
These
two decisions are problematic for Washington as it looks to supplement US forces
with troops from other countries. With obligations in a plethora of other
locations around the world, Washington cannot afford to maintain its current
troops levels in Iraq for an extended period of time. But without supplementing
the withdrawal of US troops with other coalition forces, Washington will be
unable to achieve its current objectives in Iraq. For this reason, the decisions
of Japan and South Korea are especially distressing.
There
is also serious concern that other troop-committing countries will follow
Japan’s and South Korea’s example. The Netherlands, for example, responded
to the November 12 truck bomb with a debate over whether to send more Dutch
troops to Iraq in the coming new year. Opposition parties and critics of Italian
Premier Silvio Berlusconi also reacted harshly to the attack on the Carabinieri
base. The attack on November 12 has shaken Italy, a country that hasn’t
experienced a military attack of this magnitude since World War II and one where
the population has always been against US involvement in Iraq and Italy’s
commitment to that occupation. If there are further attacks on Italian troops,
it will not be clear whether Berlusconi will be able to continue to justify his
troop commitment in the war-torn country.
The
political aftermath of attacks on coalition forces has not gone unnoticed in the
guerrilla movement. While the American public may presently have the will to
suffer through losses of US troops, the tolerance of populations in other
coalition countries is much lower. If the guerrillas can continue to raise the
political price of contributing to the US occupation, support for Washington
among its current allies may decrease. If this result were to occur, the Bush
administration would find itself increasingly isolated in Iraq while at the same
time facing an evolving insurgency.
It
is not clear how the Bush administration will be able to solve this dilemma. In
recent weeks, the administration has attempted to overwhelm insurgents by using
massive firepower. In its latest operation, labeled as Operation Ivy Cyclone II,
US troops dropped a pair of 500-pound bombs from F-16 fighter jets on “enemy
targets.” It is not certain whether this show of force will work to intimidate
the resistance. Thus far, attempts by US forces to root out or intensify their
assaults on anti-coalition guerrillas have merely been met with increased
attacks against the coalition.
Regardless,
Washington will have to find a method to weaken the guerrilla movement. If
Washington fails to do so, further attacks will threaten to crumble the
coalition which in turn will greatly reduce the Bush administration’s hopes of
creating a stable Iraqi state that will conform to US interests in the region.
The success of the Bush administration’s invasion will largely depend on
developments in the next six months.