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#15 - JRL 7133
Online Journal
http://www.onlinejournal.com/
Grozny and Baghdad: disturbing parallels
April 7, 2003
By Tristan Ewins
Online Journal Contributing Editor
Tristan Ewins resides in Melbourne, Australia, and is a writer, and a long
time member of the 'Socialist Left' grouping of the Australian Labor Party. He
can be reached at: tristane@bigpond.net.au
Today in Chechnya, the city of Grozny-formerly the home of almost half a
million people-lies in ruins: utterly devastated. The fate of Grozny thus stands
as a testament to the brutal and terrible cost of modern urban warfare.
In the wake of the collapse of the Soviet Union, separatist ambitions
previously repressed in the overwhelmingly Muslim republic once again bubbled to
the surface to provide the greatest crisis faced by the Russian Federation since
that fateful (some would say disastrous) moment.
As the separatist movement rose to challenge the authority of the Kremlin,
intense and bloody battles erupted in Chechnya between 1994 and1996. During this
period, and the later conflict, beginning in 1999, it is estimated that over
2,500 Russian troops paid with their lives. Unofficial estimates suggest an even
higher price was paid. The price paid by the Chechens themselves was even more
onerous: with an estimated 80,000 casualties, and the virtual leveling of
habitations and infrastructure. Heating, water, electricity: were all
devastated. Guerilla resistance continues to this day, providing an ongoing
nightmare for Russian occupation forces who continue to grapple with regular
ambushes.
Like the current war in Iraq, the war in Chechnya also concerned what US
commentators like to refer to as 'resource security': that is, the control of
oil. In the case of Chechnya, at stake was one of the most oil and natural gas
rich regions of the former USSR, including refineries and a major oil pipeline.
The risk of losing control of this pipeline, in particular, posed a major
strategic dilemma for the Kremlin. White House strategists, however, seem to be
far more ambitious than successive Kremlin leaders, apparently aiming for
nothing less than domination of the world's oil supplies via the Persian Gulf.
Containment of Iran and Syria will prove to be a useful byproduct of this
process.
There are important differences, however, between the nightmare confronted by
Russian forces, and the ordeal currently facing Anglo-American forces in their
attempt to take Baghdad. The Kremlin invaded Chechnya originally with a force of
some 45,000 troops: this in an entire region of barely over one million.
By comparison, Anglo-American forces in Iraq number over 300,000, but are
attempting to subdue a nation of some 22 million. Baghdad itself comprises a
sprawling metropolis of over 5 million; a potential nightmare for Anglo-American
troops facing a hostile populous and vicious house-to-house fighting over a huge
urban landscape.
Furthermore, while Chechen fighters were able to retreat to neighbouring
Dagestan to reorganise, one suspects that Syria would not dare provide a base
for such a movement in a post-B'aathist Iraq under long term US occupation.
Additionally, as compared to the mountainous terrain of Chechnya and
neighbouring Dagestan, used by rebels as a base from which to continue an
ongoing guerilla war, Iraqi forces in the North confront overwhelming
Anglo-American airpower, and the further obstacle of Kurdish forces.
Some military aspects of the two conflicts, however, will seem disturbingly
familiar to Anglo-American commanders. Suicide bombings have been employed in
Chechnya, as in Iraq, to devastating effect. In one such period the Kremlin
admitted to having lost 37 soldiers to 'suicide trucks.' Chechen rebels claimed
the figure to be more in the vicinity of 200. As Anglo-American troops penetrate
Baghdad in greater numbers and concentration, vulnerability to such attacks will
increase exponentially.
And while Baghdad, a city boasting a fairly low and level skyline, does not
provide the same ambush opportunities as some cities, this certainly ought not
be taken as cause for complacency on the part of the invaders. Russian armour,
for instance, often faced devastating ambushes in the streets of Grozny.
Boasting extensive smuggling and organized crime links, Chechen rebels were able
to secure potent anti-tank weaponry to wreak havoc upon Russian formations. One
Russian soldier recalled the horror of Chechen ambushes on Russian armoured
columns in Grozny during the period of the initial invasion:
"According to the well-developed tactics, the first and the last
vehicles in the convoy are destroyed first. Then, the rest of the column is
methodically eliminated. Reliable tactics. Very few ever escape.."
Baghdad, also, developed a sprawling worldwide smuggling network with the
intent of evading sanctions, and preparing for invasion. Who knows, then, what
surprises might await invading forces in Baghdad?
Aaron Zitner, Elizabeth Shogren and Paul Richter, writing in the Los Angeles
Times, detail the horror of house-to-house fighting in Grozny, as Russian troops
attempted to clear out Rebel strongholds, "Russian troops would toss
grenades into basements, hoping to kill snipers or other rebels. But the
practice would also wipe out entire families at a time."
A similar horror, no doubt, awaits in Baghdad.
Houses and other buildings could also be booby-trapped, making high
casualties inevitable. Such traps were widely employed in Grozny, amidst rubble,
and recently vacated buildings. These unconventional fighting tactics turned out
to be the bane of the Russian military. If Saddam's Republican Guard use similar
tactics, they will inevitably take their toll.
While the Russians ultimately resorted to the virtual leveling of Grozny in
2000 to deprive Chechen rebels of cover, or opportunities for ambush, the
Coalition will have no such option in Baghdad for the immediate future. This
will remain the case at least so long as the city continues to house millions of
Iraqi civilians. The fear here is that of a massive public opinion backlash
which could send shockwaves through the Arab world.
One possibility discussed amongst some quarters, however, is that of knocking
out what remains of Baghdad's basic civilian infrastructure: water, electricity,
sanitation. Presuming sufficient care had been taken to prepare for the flow of
refugees, this would free Anglo-American forces to take for advantage of
superior firepower, including total air superiority. In such an instance, we
could expect the ancient and beautiful city of Baghdad to be devastated: much is
the same way that Grozny was reduced to ruins by Russian airpower and artillery.
No matter what happens, it is unlikely that anything can deter the likes of
Bush and Rumsfeld from following this war through to its brutal, hideous
conclusion. While anti-American feeling will, no doubt, reach fever pitch
throughout the Arab world as any assault on Baghdad unfolds, much of the Western
media has proven to be pliant and uncritical in the face of the Pentagon's
orchestrated campaign of spin and propaganda. At home, at least, government
strategists "have the information war in the bag." In the US, as
elsewhere, dissent will be contained through spin and misinformation, as well as
a hysterical appeal to nationalism.
Presuming, however, that the invaders are not able to destroy the B'aathist
regime's underground intelligence networks, the end of the conventional war
could only be the beginning. Once again, the parallels with the Russian campaign
in Chechnya are poignant. Any new client regime could be haunted by the spectre
of assassinations, while any US occupation force will live under the cloud of
possible Lebanon-style suicide truck-bomb attacks, the likes of which claimed
the lives of 241 Marines in 1983. While the scale of the US occupation, it must
be noted, will go some way towards reducing this risk, Iraq could become a
nightmare which haunts the US for many years to come.
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