Many Uses Of Al Baghdadi: Why Did They Kill Him?
Saeed Naqvi
In these dark
days when terrorism has become a strategic asset, to bump off a superior practitioner
like Abu Bakr al Baghdadi has implications. Had he begun to serve the interests
not of his original handlers but, possibly, their rivals? Has he been
eliminated at all? Does his disappearance leave unprotected those oil wells,
which his gang or his patrons profited from? Is the drama in murky light, a
bait to drag President Trump back to the West Asian arena which he is
militarily withdrawing from? From the very beginning, Syria was at the heart of
the conflict between Trump and the Deep State which is now accepted even by the
New York Times.
In fact, NYT’s
Establishment columnist Thomas Friedman, while applauding the killing of the
ISIS, reveals which side he is on in the Trump-Deep State conflict. He notes,
satirically, how “effusive Trump was of the intelligence agencies who found and
tracked al Baghdadi to the lair in Syria where he blew himself up to avoid
being captured.”
Friedman then gives
vent to the bile he has accumulated against Trump for having been at cross
purposes with the Deep State Friedman so obviously adores. “Well, Mr.
President, those are the same intelligence agencies who told you that Russia
intervened in our last election in an effort to tip the vote to you and against
Hillary Clinton.” What does this line of reasoning mean?
When history
is written, Trump will be faulted on a hundred counts, and severely. But it
would be uncharitable not to note one truth about him: Trump is the only
President in recent history who tried to end military conflicts the US was
involved in and who did not start a conflict. There have been 13 military
conflicts in recent decades costing $18 trillion, by some estimates.
The Baghdadi
image did have its uses. The last time his photograph appeared on front pages
of newspapers was after the Easter Sunday massacre in Colombo, Sri Lanka on
April 21. On TV too Baghdadi was shown claiming the massacre as “revenge” for
attack on a mosque in New Zealand. French experts, among others, soon
established that it was a fraudulent clip – a voice had been super imposed on
his visage.
Which outfit
would like to stir up a conflict between Sri Lanka’s two frail minorities –
Muslims and Christians? New Delhi alerted Colombo as early as April 4, that a
major terrorist attack can be expected. How did New Delhi know?
At this time
Sri Lanka was sharply divided between two camps: President Maithripala Sirisena
had embraced China’s Road and Belt Initiative; Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe
was in convulsions to sign the (SOFA) Status of Forces Agreement with the US before
the next general elections.
A puzzle
remains. The island nation is at the centre of fierce competition between a
rising China and a retreating US for influence in the Indian Ocean. Over 300
people are killed; 500 injured. Among those killed are Chinese Marine engineers.
Hotels attacked have Chinese links. Whodunit?
There were
stories about Saudis leaving because they had advance knowledge. Supposing the al
Baghdadi clip claiming the massacre had been borne out by facts, which direction
would the needle of suspicion point to? Islamic terror? What purpose would that
narrative serve?
Looking for
simple answers would not help. A small island nation, just recovering from a
vicious civil war, would be shaken up by the sheer scale of the massacre,
warranting the appearance of intelligence agencies from everywhere – US, UK,
Israel, Australia, India. An initial pooling in of intelligence would lead to a
penetration of systems until the benefactors achieve their hallowed goal: place
roadblocks in the way of the Road and Belt project.
That may or
may not have been the plan but police sniffer dogs found something extraordinary
while walking through the Jaic Hilton hotel. The dogs stopped in front of an
apartment and would not stop barking.
The management
cited some difficulties in opening that apartment, national security or no
national security. After considerable time had lapsed, two persons claiming to
be with the US embassy turned up. In the room were two “explosive detectors”. The
detectors, said the two men, were for their personal security. Just look at the
cockiness of this stance. They ignored the obvious fact: dogs would only bark
if the detectors had been in touch with explosives. These details are part of
the investigations conducted by Dr. Michael Roberts of the University of
Adelaide.
Those who
tried to foist the tragedy on al Baghdadi were obviously embarrassed. But even
a fraudulent use of the ISIS chief was possible when he was still theoretically
alive. He may be missed. Even NYT’s Friedman, I have quoted earlier, had
recommended that al Baghdadi can be creatively used in the American interest. He
advises Trump not to waste his time fighting the ISIS. He wants “Trump to be
Trump – utterly cynical and unpredictable.” He continues, “Trump should let
ISIS be Assad’s, Iran’s, Hezbullah’s and Russia’s headache.”
Friedman has
not cooked up the theory of terrorism as a strategic asset on his own. He has
acquired this wisdom from leaders, including US Presidents like Barack Obama. In
the course of a lengthy interview in August, 2015, he asked Obama a very
pertinent question. When ISIS first reared its head in Mosul a year ago, why
did the President not immediately bomb it out of existence?
Obama stated
quite plainly: “we did not just start taking a bunch of air strikes all across Iraq
because that would have taken the pressure off Iraqi Prime Minister, Nouri al
Maliki.” Obama’s priority was not the elimination of the founder of the Caliphate.
His priority was to exert pressure on Nouri al Maliki to vacate the Iraqi Prime
Minister’s office. Why? Because Maliki was “brazenly” pro Shia and had refused
to sign the Status of Forces Agreement with the US. Obama’s “one-two” (to use a
term from boxing) worked. US pressure, and al Baghdadi’s menacing presence at
the gates of Iraq’s capital, helped ease Maliki out.
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