Al-Zarqawi Death: Myth vs. Reality
By Ramzy Baroud
The convenient emergence and sudden disappearance of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi signals an end of an era. Though Washington
and London insist on telling us that the ‘good news’ don’t necessary mean an end to Iraq’s bloodshed, the giddiness in
British Prime Minister Tony Blair’s voice, profusely conveys the greater hope that Iraq’s occupiers pin on the killing
of this obscure character.
As a young man, Al-Zarqawi’s joined Afghanistan’s Mujahidin militias against the Russian occupation in the 1980’s.
Following the Russian defeat, Al-Zarqawi returned to Jordan. He, like other returnees of various Arab countries clashed
with his government and was sentenced to many years in prison for conspiracy charges to achieve a regime change. An
amnesty by late King Hussein set him free after spending seven years in prison.
As odd as it may seem, certainty over the man’s life, legacy and death ends right here. The rest, concluded with his
dramatic demise is shrouded with inconsistencies, state propaganda and half-truths, for reasons that will become
obvious.
It has been argued that al-Zarqawi took serious issues with al-Qaeda’s ideological, tactical or other preferences. Most
accounts seem to suggest an initial conflict between the two groups, a claim further validating by an alleged letter
uncovered by the US military in Iraq in 2005. In the letter, addressed to al-Zarqawi, Bin Laden’s deputy, Ayman
al-Zawahiri warned al-Zarqawi of carrying out more sectarian attacks against the Shia population, saying that such
violence was eroding support for al-Qaeda.
By unveiling the letter, the Americans were hoping to establish their early claim that al-Zarqawi was in fact al-Qaeda’s
man in Iraq. Once again, both al-Qaeda and al-Zarqawi audio recordings popped up, almost stimulatingly to suggest that
such an alliance was in fact struck.
Again, if true, this further undermines earlier allegations made by top US officials that such an alliance had always
been there. Murky ‘evidence’ presented by former US Secretary of State Colin Powell to the United Nations in February
2003 was the first to propose such a connection, as if the man was foretelling the future. Powell concluded – in what
was later widely recognized as ‘hyped’ if not altogether concocted US intelligence in the US administration’s desperate
attempt to find its proverbial ‘smoking gun’, thus justifying the war and invasion of Iraq – that Zarqawi was an
associate of Bin Laden who sought refuge in Saddam Hussein’s Iraq.
Powell’s case for war had omitted as seemingly immaterial the reports that al-Zarqawi left Afghanistan in 2001 to join
Ansar al-Islam, a Kurdish Sunni group – fighting its own battles in northern Iraq. Al-Zarqawi apparently chose northern
Iraq to avoid an immanent clash with Iraq’s security forces under Saddam Hussein, as secularist Saddam has historically
clamped down on Islamic activists and had no room, nor need to accommodate them. Linking al-Qaeda to al-Zarqawi, then to
Saddam’s government was one of the most forceful arguments that the US administration used to sell their unwarranted war
to the public. In retrospect, such an argument was yet another lie; like others, notwithstanding WMDs, and proved to be
a concoction of the ever lucid imagination of US neoconservative zealots and their media allies.
But not that al-Zarqawi, or his myth has yet outlived its usefulness. To the contrary, the plot thickens when al-Zarqawi
– that once petty criminal of the al-Zarqa town in Jordan – made his official entry to the Iraqi scene, turning almost
immediately into a mythical menace, along with a few armed men battling two of the world’s greatest forces: beheading
foreigners, slaying Iraqi police recruits, assassinating government officials, blowing up religious shrines, attacking
worshipers in Shia festivals, detonating up to three intricate car bombs stimulatingly, always managing to escape at the
last minute, almost always unscathed. One of those miraculous escapes reportedly took place in the town of Falluja,
where he was apparently hiding. Only after destroying most of the town and butchering thousands of its people, did Iraqi
police, at the behest of their US commanders declare that al-Zarqawi managed to evade capture just minutes before a raid
on his hideout.
Al-Zarqawi was the leader of ‘Tawhid wal Jihad’, an Islamic military group incepted specifically to battle Americans in
Iraq. The group officially merged with Bin Laden’s in 2004. Bin Laden named him the Prince of al-Qaeda in the Land of
the Two Rivers, and business carried on as usual with the world’s most active terrorist now representing the world’s
most notorious terrorist group, joining hands in a relentless war against “Shia, Christians and Jews”, as simplistically
worded by BBC International world affairs analyst.
Al-Zarqawi or his myth, whether incidentally or by design, has perhaps served as the greatest propaganda tool ever
utilized by the Americans, months before the invasion of Iraq and most likely long after his passing. He successfully
alienated many anti-war camps throughout the world, notwithstanding many Arabs and Sunni Muslims who, rightfully,
believed that his tactics were savage, un-Islamic and self-defeating. He gave rise to the widely circulated argument
that the US’ war is that between forces of civilization and forces of darkness, with an Arab Muslim male flawlessly
representing the latter. He concurred the shaky allegation that the source of instability in Iraq was the presence of
foreign Arab fighters, which helped sever inner-Arab ties and focused the pressure against Syria, accused of allowing
such movement of fighters across its borders. He helped widen the chasm between Iraqis forces and sects, even those who
believe in the legitimacy of their struggle against occupation.
While his death may indeed signal an end to various pretexts used and abused by the US administration, military and
media, his absence nonetheless will have its rewards, however, temporary. One of which is the very rare opportunity that
allowed Bush, Blair and US-installed Iraqi Prime Minister al-Maliki to declare the full formation of the ‘first
democratic Iraqi government’ and the death of a menace, or a myth called al-Zarqawi, both at the same time: Western TV
analysts happily jumped at the opportunity to analyze the relations between the two innocently timed declarations; US
military generals displayed to journalists - for the sake of transparency of information - how al-Zarqawi was blown up;
Iraqi police too put on a dancing and firing in the air show for the cameras; the oil market stabilized a bit and sighs
of relief poured in from various world capitals.
Al-Zarqawi, or his myth has apparently outlived his usefulness. The Iraq conflict seems to be going in a new direction,
though its success or failure is unknown. A new media menace will have to be concocted to suit new US policies in Iraq
and around the region. Al-Zarqawi is dead; another al-Zarqawi is being born.
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-American-Arab journalist Ramzy Baroud is the author of The Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People’s
Struggle (Pluto Press, London).