High Percentage of Foreign Fighters in Iraq Coming From Libya; Family
Members Speak of Young Men With Bleak Lives, Searching for Redemption,
Driven by Personal Factors, Not Global Ideology
NEW YORK, April 20 /PRNewswire/ -- Late last year American soldiers
raided an insurgent headquarters in the northern Iraqi town of Sinjar.
Inside they found some papers with the letterhead "Mujahedin Shura
Council." As they analyzed them, one thing struck the American
investigators. Of the 606 militants cataloged in the Sinjar records, almost
19 percent had come to Iraq from Libya reports Newsweek Jerusalem Bureau
Chief Kevin Peraino in the April 28 cover, "The Martyr Factory" (on
newsstands Monday, April 21). Previous intelligence estimates had always
held that the bulk of Iraq's foreign fighters come from Saudi Arabia.
Indeed, the largest number of militants in the Sinjar records -- 244 of
them -- were Saudi nationals. But in per capita terms, Libyans represented
a much higher percentage. Perhaps the most startling detail: of 112 Libyan
fighters named in the papers, an astoundingly large number -- 52 -- had
come from a single small town of 50,000 people along the Mediterranean
coast, called Darnah.
(Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080420/NYSU002 )
Peraino traveled to Darnah earlier this month to try to figure out why
it was contributing such a large portion of its young men to fight
Americans in Iraq. Libya's economy is dominated by the oil and gas sector,
which accounts for 90 percent of the country's revenues, but little of that
wealth has ever trickled down to Libya's eastern province. Still, economic
desperation alone doesn't fully explain the readiness of Darnah's young men
to join the insurgents in Iraq. In their interviews with Newsweek, family
members of the recruits from Darnah spoke of young men with bleak lives in
search of redemption. Far from being universally motivated by one global
ideology, the jihadist recruits often seem to have been driven by personal
factors like psychological trauma, sibling rivalry and sexual longing,
Peraino reports.
When Peraino visits the office of Saddik Afdel, the co-chairman of the
town's People's Committee -- the Libyan equivalent of a mayor -- at first
he denied that his town was sending a significant number of its young men
to Iraq. "We don't know exactly the number," he tells Peraino. "Here in
Darnah, not more than 10." When he's shown the stack of documents, some of
which include small photos of the fighters, the chairman grew quiet. "We
have no idea about that," he began, speaking through an interpreter. "They
have no reason to go." He took a drag on his cigarette. "Look, this is a
huge number," he eventually conceded. "If this number is true, it's very
bad. It's bad for politics. But it's not bad for Muslims to do their duty.
America said that this war is for freedom. And it's not. What we see on
Al-Jazeera is not what we've been told by the Americans. I can't stop them
from going. What we've been taught by the Qur'an is jihad." When Peraino
asks about the town's history of rebellious militants, Afdel couldn't
suppress a grin. "Those are the people who used to stand up and fight for
their land," he says. "We have to remember them."
Peraino reports that one man, Abd al-Salam Bin-Ali, would watch
Al-Jazeera as the war in Iraq dragged on. Nobody in the family had
supported the American invasion, but Abd al-Salam was particularly affected
by the bloody images he saw on the Arabic cable news channel. His brother
says he was always talking about going to Iraq. "I was sure he would go,"
Abd al-Hamid recalls. "He was always talking about it." Abd al-Salam was
also growing more devout. According to his brother, he spent most of his
time at the mosque.
Then one day in late September 2006, Abd al-Salam simply disappeared.
Shortly after, the telephone rang in Darnah. "I'm in Ramadi," the voice on
the other end said. "I'm in Iraq." When the American soldiers raided the
insurgent headquarters in Sinjar, one of the documents they found was
perhaps an application form that Abd al-Salam had filled out on his way
into the country, on the letterhead of the "Mujahedin Shura Council."
Shortly after Abd al-Salam's first call home, the young recruit called
again from Ramadi to say he was on his way to an "operation." When the
phone rang four days later, Abd al-Hamid didn't recognize the voice on the
other end of the line. "Abd al-Salam is a martyr," the caller said.
(Read cover story at http://www.Newsweek.com.)
SOURCE Newsweek
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