The Scum at the Top
Commentary on the Rats in Washington
Direct Talks - U.S. Officials and Iraqi Insurgents
By Scott Johnson, Rod Nordland and Ranya Kadri
Newsweek
© February 6, 2006
Page 8
American officials in Iraq are in face-to-face talks
with high-level Iraqi Sunni insurgents, NEWSWEEK has
learned. Americans are sitting down with "senior members
of the leadership" of the Iraqi insurgency, according
to Americans and Iraqis with knowledge of the talks
(who did not want to be identified when discussing a
sensitive and ongoing matter). The talks are taking
place at U.S. military bases in Anbar province, as well
as in Jordan and Syria. "Now we have won over the Sunni
political leadership," says U.S. Ambassador Zalmay
Khalilzad. "The next step is to win over the insurgents."
The groups include Baathist cells and religious Islamic
factions, as well as former Special Republican Guards
and intelligence agents, according to a U.S. official
with knowledge of the talks. Iraq's insurgent groups
are reaching back. "We want things from the U.S. side,
stopping misconduct by U.S. forces, preventing Iranian
intervention," said one prominent insurgent leader from
a group called the Army of the Mujahedin, who refused to
be named because of the delicacy of the discussions. "We
can't achieve that without actual meetings."
U.S. intelligence officials have had back-door channels
to insurgent groups for many months. The Dec. 15
elections brought many Sunnis to the polls and widened
the split between Abu Mussab al-Zarqawi's foreign jihadists
and indigenous Sunni insurgents. This marks the first
time either Americans or insurgents have admitted that
"senior leaders" have met at the negotiating table for
planning purposes. "Those who are coming to work with
[the U.S.] or come to an understanding with [the U.S.],
even if they worked with Al Qaeda in a tactical sense
in the past—and I don't know that—they are willing to
fight Al Qaeda now," says a Western diplomat in Baghdad
who has close knowledge of the discussions. An assortment
of some of Iraq's most prominent insurgent groups also
recently formed a "council" whose purpose, in addition
to publishing religious edicts and coordinating military
actions, is to serve as a point of contact for the United
States in the future. "The reason they want to unite is
to have a public contact with the U.S. if they disagree,"
says the senior insurgent figure. "If negotiations between
armed groups and Americans are not done, then no solutions
will be found," says Issa al-Addai al-Mehamdi, a sheik
from the prominent Duleimi tribe in Fallujah. "All I
can say is that we support the idea of Americans talking
with resistance groups."
They have much to discuss. For one, Americans and Iraqi
insurgent groups share a common fear of undue Iranian
influence in Iraq. "There is more concern about the
domination by Iran of Iraq," says a senior Western
diplomat, "and that combination of us being open to
them and the dynamics of struggle for domination of
violence has come together to get them to want to reach
an understanding with us." Contacts between U.S. officials
and insurgents have been criticized by Iraq's ruling
Shiite leaders, many of whom have longstanding ties to
Iran and are deeply resented by Sunnis. "We haven't
given the green light to [talks] between the U.S. and
insurgents," says Vice President Adel Abdel Mehdi, of
the Shiite party, called the Supreme Council for the
Islamic Revolution in Iraq.
Negotiations are risky for everyone—not least because
tensions between Al Qaeda and Iraq's so-called
patriotic resistance is higher than ever. Two weeks
ago, assassins killed Sheik Nassir Qarim al-Fahdawi,
a prominent Anbar sheik described by other Sunnis as
a chief negotiator for the insurgency. "He was killed
for talking to the Americans," says Zedan al-Awad,
another leading Anbar sheik. Al Qaeda, meanwhile,
continues to gain territory in the Sunni heartland,
according to al-Awad: "Let me tell you: Zarqawi is in
total control of Anbar. The Americans control nothing."
Many, on both sides, are hoping that talks could change
that.
Scott Johnson, Rod Nordland and Ranya Kadri
© 2006 Newsweek, Inc.
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Last Modified:
Janaury 15, 2007