TIME: Inside an Insurgent
Camp
Monday, May 09, 2005
By MICHAEL WARE
How sophisticated is the insurgency in Iraq? While U.S.
commanders believe the insurgents are growing
desperate, a recent wave of coordinated large-scale
attacks--such as the series of bombings that killed at
least 30 Iraqis in Baghdad in one day last
week--suggests that some rebel groups have become more
organized. Videotapes obtained by TIME from sources
close to the insurgency appear to confirm the existence
of makeshift training camps inside Iraq to teach
recruits guerrilla warfare. The camps are tucked inside
villages and conduct weapons-handling drills in remote
fields. One tape shows four men in uniforms gathered in
a dilapidated barracks facility in western Iraq and
receiving instruction on how to fire a modified missile
launcher. "We ask God to make this weak weapon strong
by his strength," the instructor says. "God save Iraq
from the Jews and the infidel." The second tape shows a
group of 15 uniformed men practicing advancing under
fire in a lush grove of trees and tall grass. In
another scene, recruits navigate an obstacle course
that requires them to climb stairs, crawl under barbed
wire and dive through a flaming hoop.
Are such activities real? A top commander of the group
shown in the first tape says the training camps are
crucial to the insurgency, given that most recruits
lack basic knowledge of the weaponry used against U.S.
forces. The commander, who asked to be identified by
his nom de guerre, Abu Lina, says the training video
was made "to show the other resistance groups in Iraq
that we have grown and developed." He says training
camps are located in "places in Iraq the Americans do
not control, nor can they see"--an assertion a Pentagon
official does not dispute. "I know of no actual
training camps," the official says. "But it's not
outside the realm of possibility that they are there.
We cannot be everywhere in the country."
--By
Michael Ware. With reporting by Sally B.
Donnelly