Posted by
Mark Eichenlaub on Wednesday, December 12, 2007 5:22:36 PM
Al Douri documents, suicide bombings involving use of aircraft reveals continued Baath - al Qaeda cooperation
Baathist - al Qaeda collaboration extends beyond borders of Iraq
A recent Treasury Department designation and an October arrest in
Italy appear to indicate that Baathist and al Qaeda members in both
Europe and the Middle East have discussed and attempted various forms
of suicide attacks on coalition forces which include the use of
aircraft in suicide attacks.
As first pointed out the Counter Terrorism Blog, on December 6 the U.S. Treasury Department announced
the designation of 7 individuals for their support of the insurgency in
Iraq and/or their support of former regime officials. The designations
named Fawzi Mutlaq Al-Rawi (al Rawi pictured at right via Terrorist Scorecard)
in the release and cited his leadership of the Iraqi branch of the
Syrian Baath Party, material support for al Qaeda, supporting Muhammad Yunis Ahmad's
network in Iraq, meeting with the former commander of Saddam Hussein's
Army of Muhammad and attending a meeting in Ar Ramadi, Iraq, with other
senior AQI representatives "where they discussed financing, unifying AQI forces, (and) conducting airborne improvised explosive device attacks."

Al-Rawi's contacts include both members of the former Iraqi regime
and leading members of al Qaeda in Iraq, providing further example that
not only will followers of Baathism and al Qaeda cooperate but have
done so at top levels of each organization.
In October, another member of a plot involving Baath Party remnants, al Qaeda members and air craft was quietly squelched. According to Adnkronos International,
Italian police arrested Saber Fadhi Hussien "a former member of late
Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein's disbanded Baath Party" and allegedly "the
head of an al-Qaeda cell" when he was in route to Syria for "planning
attacks using suicide bombers, anti-tank weapons and ultra-light
helicopters, according to investigators. They said Hussien was
intending to travel to Syria and meet a contact for al-Qaeda in Iraq."
Hussien is said to have been in contact with aides of Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi, prior to his death and had been supplying money for al
Qaeda attacks in Iraq "for some time." Italian police "also turned up
the names of Hussien's contacts in Iraq, which they said would be
relayed to Iraqi police and US authorities." Whether or not that
information contributed to the arrest of al-Rawi or the designations by
the Treasury Department has not yet been announced and the Treasury
Department could not provide further details on this topic when reached
for comment due to the sensitivity of the subject.
In a related note, former Iraqi Vice President and "deputy chairman of the Iraqi Revolutionary Command Council" (who has also reportedly spent time operating from Syria) was recently almost caught near Saddam Hussein's former hometown of Tikrit. Despite eluding capture, and contrary to stories of turning against al Qaeda, al Douri's recovered possessions revealed details on al Qaeda , including a detailed plan of a March attack on Mosul's Badush prison that freed over 100 al Qaeda members.
As was mentioned by IWPR's Hiwa Osman over two years ago in the Washington Post Baathist - al Qaeda cooperation was not only one of the players in the Iraq insurgency but
The backbone of the insurgency appears to be an alliance
between the die-hard Baathists and the network of terrorists mostly
under the command of Abu Musab Zarqawi.
Whether or not the collaboration is being led by Zarqawi's successor or
someone else, Osman's description of Syria as a base of this
cooperation appears to have been noticed by U.S.,
Iraqi and Italians officials, as evidence by the recent reports. The
continued extent of that cooperation and its extent can likely be
determined by the arrest of the individuals listed as wanted
individuals by Iraq, those listed by the Treasury Department who continue to reside in Syria
and those discussed in al Douri's recovered documents though that
information will likely remain kept from public eyes until it is fully
utilized.
Mark Eichenlaub is a freelance writer and manager of http://regimeofterror.com