Al-Awda (guerrilla organization)
Al-Awda | |
---|---|
Participant in the Iraq War | |
Active |
June 2003 – 18 December 2011 January 2014 – present |
Ideology | Ba'athism |
Leaders | Mohammed Younis al-Ahmed |
Area of operations | Iraq, Sunni Triangle, Northern Iraq |
Allies | Syria |
Opponents |
MNF-I Iraqi security forces |
Part of a series on | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ba'athism | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Related topics |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Politics portal | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Al-Awda (Arabic: العودة English:The Return) is a secular guerrilla organization in Iraq. Al-Awda's name began appearing in Iraq in June 2003 in anti-occupation graffiti and leaflets in Baghdad and to the north and west of the capital. The group is led by Mohammed Younis al-Ahmed, who is based in Syria.[1]
Organization
The organization was believed to be a network of underground cells, mainly in the key urban areas, composed of former Ba'ath Party officials, intelligence agents, former members of the Iraqi Republican Guard, and Fedayeen Saddam militia. The group was believed to rely on the pre-war organization of the Ba'ath Party and the relationships forged between various individuals and organizations within Saddam Hussein's regime.
Propaganda and goals
The group's propaganda indicated that its goal was to restore the regime of Saddam Hussein to power, as the name indicates, and expel multinational occupation forces from the country. Al-Awda is believed is to be the term coined by the insurgents for the Ba'ath Party following the fall of Saddam Hussein from power. The name was apparently chosen for propaganda reasons to raise the threat of the Ba'ath Party's return to power and to evoke the Palestinian struggle against Israel.
In contrast to the JRTN, Ahmed has focused far more on securing political rehabilitation, amnesties and the repatriation of Baathist exiles than he has the violent overthrow of the Iraqi government and a Baathist return to power.[1]
Ahmed, in his attempts to reunite the party, and built a close working relationship with the Syrian government. Unlike al-Douri, who distrusts the Syrians due to their alliance with the Iranians. The Syrian government is quietly supporting Ahmed in order to gain more control over the Iraqi Ba'ath party.[2]
Ahmed's attempts to recruit support in Syria from former Iraqi Ba'athists is meeting some success, particularly among the poorer Sunni Arab segment of the refugee population, due in part to Ahmed's ability to offer cash incentives and Syrian residency permits due to their closeness to the Syrian government.[2]
The al-Awda group led by Ahmed is believed to contain most of the remaining leading party figures who were not arrested or executed,[3] including Mezher Motni Awad, To’ma Di’aiyef Getan, Jabbar Haddoosh, Sajer Zubair, and Nihad alDulaimi.[3]
It could be said that al-Ahmed has returned to the Ba'ath Party's original ideology of secular pan-Arab nationalism which, in many cases, has proven successful in Iraq's Shi'a dominated southern provinces.[3] However, despite his attempts, al-Ahmed has failed in his goal to overthrow al-Douri.[3] Al-Douri's faction is the largest and the most active on the Internet, and the large majority of Ba'athist websites are aligned to al-Douri.[3] Another failure is that al-Ahmed's faction, which is based in Syria, does not have exclusive Syrian support[3] and, considering that it is based in Syria, the party is susceptible to Syrian interference in its affairs.[3] However, despite the differences between the al-Douri and al-Ahmed factions, both of them adhere to Ba'athist thought.[3]
In contrast to al-Douri's group, al-Ahmad's faction has had success in recruiting Shi'as to the party.[3] While al-Ahmed and the faction's senior leaders are Sunnis, there are many Shiites who are working in the organization's middle level.[3] Upon his election as leader, an al-Ahmed's faction statement said he was "of Shia origins and coming from Shia areas in Nineveh governorate".[4] In contrast to al-Ahmed, al-Douri has stuck to a more conservative policy, recruiting members from a largely Sunni-dominated areas.[3]
History
The guerrillas primarily operated in the Sunni Triangle, north and west of Baghdad, where before the war, the Ba'ath Party was an omnipresent part of society and support for Saddam Hussein was strongest. During the early stages of the insurgency, at the beginning of the summer of 2003, Coalition intelligence believed al-Awda to be the greatest armed threat to the multinational coalition.
Since then, other insurgent groups, especially those with Islamist leanings, have apparently eclipsed al-Awda in the insurgency and the group has not surfaced often in the media since the autumn of 2003. Nevertheless, al-Awda members are still believed to be operating in north-central Iraq, in the Sunni Arab areas between Samarra and Mosul, and playing a supporting role in the insurgency.
The most prominent member of al-Awda, Sheikh Abdul Sattar Abu Risha, has since helped to form the Anbar Salvation Council, a group allied to the Americans and the Iraqi government.
Saddam's death and party split: 2006–2011
The al-Awda party has schismed from the wider party, led by al-Douri. Following al-Douri's succession as the Regional Secretary of the Ba'ath Party, Younis al-Ahmed, called for a General Conference of the Iraqi Ba'ath party in Syria to elect a new leadership.[3] This move caused a significant amount of controversy within the party, with al-Douri issuing a statement criticizing Syria for what al-Douri claimed was an American-supported attempt to undermine the Iraqi Ba'ath party, although this statement was later downplayed.[3] The conference elected al-Ahmed as secretary-general, and al-Ahmed issued an order expelling al-Douri from the party, resulting in al-Douri issuing a counter order expelling al-Ahmed and 150 other party members.[3] These events led to the existence, in effect, of two Iraqi Ba'ath Parties: the main party led by al-Douri, and the splinter al-Awda party led by al-Ahmed.[3]
Attempts at reconciliation
According to leaked Wikileaks cables, in March 2009 several members of the former Ba'athist government claiming to represent the Mohammed Younis al-Ahmed led faction of the Ba'ath party approached Coalition Forces and the Provincial Reconstruction Team in Saladin Province. The figures met with representatives of the Coalition, instead of representatives of the Iraqi Government, because they claimed the Iraqi government was under Iranian influence, and might seek revenge against any Ba'ath Party members.[5]
The representatives claimed that the Younis-led faction were dissatisfied with the present government of Iraq, which they claimed was both sectarian and also failing to provide infrastructure and public services. The representatives claimed that the Younis led faction wasn't opposed to democracy, and instead wished to peacefully participate in the democratic process. They also claimed that unlike the al-Douri led faction, they recognized that the pre-2003 Ba'athist government had made many mistakes, and that Iraq could not return to that system of government.[5]
Government crackdowns
In December 2008 some 25 security officials were arrested for membership of Awda and attempting to restore the Ba'ath party, with some claiming they were planning a coup.[6][7] The actual number of those involved may have reached 35, and included both Sunnis and Shiites and high ranking generals at the Interior Ministry, some of whom Awda had allegedly recruited through bribery.[8]
An Awda party senior official was arrested in a crackdown on the organisation in Baaquba, Diyala, on 2 July 2010.[9]
In October 2011 Iraqi security figures announced that they had detained 350 members of the Awda party, in a large operation across several provinces. The government claimed the group had been trying to reorganize the Ba'ath party, and work to undermine stability in the country, with a mind to seizing power following the US withdrawal the following year.[10] The group appeared to be quite active in Nasiriyah, with 36 Ba'ath party leaders arrested there.[11]
References
- 1 2 "The next insurgency: Baathists and Salafis pool resources to fight Iraqi government" (PDF). Gulf States Newsletter. Washington Institute. 34 (885). 2010. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
- 1 2 Hugh Naylor (7 October 2007). "Syria Is Said to Be Strengthening Ties to Opponents of Iraq's Government". New York Times. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Ali, Fadhil (5 January 2007). "Reviving the Iraqi Ba'ath: A Profile of General Muhammad Yunis al-Ahmad" (PDF). Jamestown Foundation. Retrieved 10 February 2009.
- ↑ al-Lami, Alaa (18 January 2012). "Sectarian Divisions Plague Iraqi Baath Party". Al Akhbar. Retrieved 19 June 2013.
- 1 2 "Salah Ad Din: Yunis Ba'ath Faction Seeks Reconciliation; Says It Can Split Al Duri's Faction". WikiLeaks. 2009-3-19. WikiLeaks cable: 09BAGHDAD759. Retrieved 2011-MM-DD. Check date values in:
|access-date=, |date=
(help) - ↑ Robert H. Reid (18 December 2008). "Up to 25 Iraqi Officials Arrested For Plotting To Revive Baath Party". Huffington Post. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
- ↑ "Suspected Baath Party affiliates arrested in Iraq". Baltimore Sun. 19 December 2008. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
- ↑ "Iraqi Officials Arrested on Baath Party Suspicions". PBS. 18 December 2008. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
- ↑ Hawar Berwani (2 July 2010). "Baathist detained in Diala". Iraqi News. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
- ↑ Ahmed Rasheed and Suadad al-Salhy (25 October 2011). "Iraq rounds up Baathists ahead of U.S. pullout". Reuters. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
- ↑ "Measures need to be taken against Awda Party". Aswat al-Iraq. 25 October 2011. Retrieved 31 August 2013.