TIME: Talking with the
Enemy
Monday, February 28, 2005
Inside the secret dialogue between the U.S. and
insurgents in Iraq -- and what the rebels say they
want
By
MICHAEL WARE
A TIME EXCLUSIVE
The secret meeting is taking place in the bowels of a
facility in Baghdad, a cavernous, heavily guarded
building in the U.S.-controlled green zone. The Iraqi
negotiator, a middle-aged former member of Saddam
Hussein's regime and the senior representative of the
self-described nationalist insurgency, sits on one side
of the table. He is here to talk to two members of the
U.S. military. One of them, an officer, takes notes
during the meeting. The other, dressed in civilian
clothes, listens as the Iraqi outlines a list of
demands the U.S. must satisfy before the insurgents
stop fighting. The parties trade boilerplate
complaints: the U.S. officer presses the Iraqi for
names of other insurgent leaders; the Iraqi says the
newly elected Shi'a-dominated government is being
controlled by Iran. The discussion does not go beyond
generalities, but both sides know what's behind the
coded language.
The Iraqi's very presence conveys a message: Members of
the insurgency are open to negotiating an end to their
struggle with the U.S. "We are ready," he says before
leaving, "to work with you."
In that guarded pledge may lie the first sign that
after nearly two years of fighting, parts of the
insurgency in Iraq are prepared to talk and move toward
putting away their arms--and the U.S. is willing to
listen. An account of the secret meeting between the
senior insurgent negotiator and the U.S. military
officials was provided to TIME by the insurgent
negotiator. He says two such meetings have taken place.
While U.S. officials would not confirm the details of
any specific meetings, sources in Washington told TIME
that for the first time the U.S. is in direct contact
with members of the Sunni insurgency, including former
members of Saddam's Baathist regime. Pentagon officials
say the secret contacts with insurgent leaders are
being conducted mainly by U.S. diplomats and
intelligence officers. A Western observer close to the
discussions says that "there is no authorized dialogue
with the insurgents" but that the U.S. has joined
"back-channel" communications with rebels. Says the
observer: "There's a lot bubbling under the surface
today."
Over the course of the war in Iraq, as the anti-U.S.
resistance has grown in size and intensity,
Administration officials have been steadfast in their
refusal to negotiate with enemy fighters. But in recent
months, the persistence of the fighting and signs of
division in the ranks of the insurgency have prompted
some U.S. officials to seek a political solution. And
Pentagon and intelligence officials hope the high voter
turnout in last month's election will deflate the
morale of the insurgents and persuade more of them to
come in from the cold.
Hard-line Islamist fighters like Abu Mousab
al-Zarqawi's al-Qaeda group will not compromise in
their campaign to create an Islamic state. But in
interviews with TIME, senior Iraqi insurgent commanders
said several "nationalist" rebel groups--composed
predominantly of ex-military officers and what the
Pentagon dubs "former regime elements"--have moved
toward a strategy of "fight and negotiate." Although
they have no immediate plans to halt attacks on U.S.
troops, they say their aim is to establish a political
identity that can represent disenfranchised Sunnis and
eventually negotiate an end to the U.S. military's
offensive in the Sunni triangle. Their model is Sinn
Fein, the political wing of the Irish Republican Army,
which ultimately earned the I.R.A. a role in the
Northern Ireland peace process. "That's what we're
working for, to have a political face appear from the
battlefield, to unify the groups, to resist the
aggressor and put our views to the people," says a
battle commander in the upper tiers of the insurgency
who asked to be identified by his nom de guerre, Abu
Marwan. Another negotiator, called Abu Mohammed, told
TIME, "Despite what has happened, the possibility for
negotiation is still open."
But can such talks succeed? A senior official in the
U.S. embassy in Baghdad says the nationalist insurgents
"want to cut a deal, thinking we get ours and they get
theirs." Any deal with the insurgents would be up to
the new government, but embassy officials say they
believe that reaching an accord should be the new
government's top priority. Behind the scenes, the U.S.
is encouraging Sunni leaders and the insurgents to talk
with the government. A tougher job may be to convince
the leaders of political parties about to assume
power--many of whom were brutalized by Baathists now
coordinating the insurgency--that it's in their
interests to reach a peaceful settlement with their
former tormentors. In the U.S. command, there is
increasing skepticism that the insurgency can be
defeated through military might alone. Says a senior
U.S. officer: "The Iraqis are the solution to the
insurgency, and they are the solution to our
departure."
Insurgent sources say both sides have been feeling each
other out for months. Some of the earliest advances
were made last year through Jordanian intelligence
officers, but insurgents balked at the idea of meeting
in Jordan. U.S. diplomats also initiated contact with
conservative Sunnis known to have influence with the
insurgents, such as Harith al-Dhari, the head of the
Association of Muslim Scholars. Insurgent sources say
that last summer a loose amalgam of nationalist
groups--Mohammed's Army, al-Nasser al-Saladin, the 1920
Revolution Brigades and perhaps even the Islamic Army
of Iraq--met to discuss forging a common political
platform.
Meanwhile, some Americans showed openness to a
dialogue. In meetings with Sunni tribal leaders, Lieut.
Colonel Rick Welch, the senior special-operations
civil-military affairs adviser to the commanding
general of the 1st Cavalry Division in Baghdad, put
word out that the military was willing to talk to
hard-liners about their grievances and that, as Welch
says, "the door is not closed, except for some very top
regime guys." Welch, a reservist and prosecutor from
Morgan County, Ohio, told TIME, "I don't meet all the
insurgent leaders, but I've met some of them." Although
not an authorized negotiator, Welch has become a back
channel in the nascent U.S. dialogue with the
insurgents. Insurgent negotiators confirm to TIME that
they have met with Welch.
What do the insurgents want? Top insurgent field
commanders and negotiators informed TIME that the
rebels have told diplomats and military officers that
they support a secular democracy in Iraq but resent the
prospect of a government run by exiles who fled to Iran
and the West during Saddam's regime. The insurgents
also seek a guaranteed timetable for U.S. troop
withdrawal, a demand the U.S. refuses. But there are
some hints of compromise: insurgent negotiators have
told their U.S. counterparts they would accept a U.N.
peacekeeping force as the U.S. troop presence recedes.
Insurgent representative Abu Mohammed says the
nationalists would even tolerate U.S. bases on Iraqi
soil. "We don't mind if the invader becomes a guest,"
he says, suggesting a situation akin to the U.S.
military presence in Germany and Japan.
As promising as such proffers might sound, it's far too
early for optimism. The new U.S. policy of engagement
is aimed at driving a wedge between nationalist
insurgents and the jihadists. But al-Zarqawi and his
allies have silenced nationalists by threatening to
kill them if they negotiate. The Western observer close
to the discussions says, "Al-Zarqawi keeps pulling the
process away from 'fight and negotiate' to 'pure
mayhem.'"
The engagement strategy faces another obstacle: the new
Iraqi government. Leaders of the victorious political
parties say they have no interest in continuing
dialogue with the insurgents. "The voters gave us a
mandate to attack these insurgents, not negotiate with
them," says Humam Bakr Hammoudi, a political strategist
for the dominant SCIRI party. U.S. negotiators say they
believe the new government will eventually realize that
only a political settlement will subdue the
insurgency--which may soon direct its wrath at the new
Iraqi rulers if it believes its interests are being
ignored. While some in the Bush Administration might
find the idea of backing an accord with archenemy
Baathists distasteful, the Western observer says, "I
think you've got a pretty flexible [U.S.] government."
Now it's up to the others to follow.
--With
reporting by Aparisim Ghosh/Baghdad and Douglas
Waller/Washington