Ignatius: Losing to the Islamic State

AMMAN, Jordan - Jalal al-Gaood, one of the tribal leaders the U.S. has been cultivating in hopes of rolling back extremists in Iraq, grimly describes how his hometown in Anbar province was forced to surrender last week to fighters from the Islamic State.

The extremists were moving Wednesday toward Gaood's town of Al-Zwaiha, the stronghold of his Albu Nimr clan just east of the Euphrates River. The attacking force had roughly 200 fighters and about 30 armed trucks. Al-Zwaiha's defenders were running out of ammunition and food, and wondered if they should make a deal with the marauding jihadists.

Gaood, a 53-year-old businessman in Amman, talked through the night with tribal elders back home. He says he tried repeatedly to reach Gen. John Allen, who is the U.S. special envoy for Iraq and Syria, to plead for emergency help. By the time Allen got the message, it was too late.

In the early hours of Thursday, Gaood advised the local leaders they had no alternative but to negotiate a truce. Before dawn, a convoy left for Haditha, to the north, with 60 cars carrying local police, soldiers and former members of the U.S.-created tribal militia known as the "Awakening." If they had stayed in the town, they would have been massacred when the extremists took control.

"This morning, everything is finished," Gaood told me sadly Thursday at his office here. The Islamic State now controls the town, which straddles a strategic highway.

What makes this story chilling is that Gaood was one of the Sunni leaders the U.S. was hoping could organize resistance in Anbar. He was one of two dozen Iraqi tribal elders whom Allen met when he visited in early October. Gaood says he warned then that without urgent help, "We are going to have to give up the fight."

"Gen. Allen said, 'I will put you in touch with someone in Centcom.' But it never happened," Gaood says.

Military campaigns often start slowly, and that has certainly been the case with President Obama's pledge to "degrade and ultimately destroy" the Islamic State. When Allen visited tribal leaders in Amman, he cautioned that he was in "listening mode" while the U.S. prepared its strategy. "Every time the Iraqis meet with Americans, they just take notes," Gaood says.

Sitting next to Gaood during the interview is Zaydan al-Jibouri, a 50-year-old sheik of another leading tribe. He frankly admits that his fighters have joined ex-Baathists and former military officers in siding with the Islamic State.

"The Sunni community has two options," Jibouri says. "Fight against ISIS and allow Iran and its militias to rule us, or do the opposite. We chose ISIS for only one reason. ISIS only kills you. The Iraqi government kills you, and rapes your women."

Jibouri explains that the Islamic State was able to mobilize so quickly because it had planted "sleeper cells" in the Sunni regions. These hidden agents are mostly under 25; they grew up in the years of the insurgency and American occupation. "These men were brought up in the culture of vendetta and revenge," he says.

Gaood agrees that when the jihadists swept into the nearby town of Hit, 1,000 of these sleepers suddenly appeared, shattering local security.

If there's a ray of hope in the chilling accounts provided by Gaood and Jibouri, it's that even a man who says he's siding with the Islamic State still says he wants U.S. help, so long as it comes with protections for Iraq's Sunni community.

Yet when asked about the U.S. plan to create a national guard for the Sunnis, Jibouri scoffs that it's "wishful thinking" because Iraq's Shiites and Kurds will never agree. Until Sunni rights are respected, he says, "we will not allow the world to sleep."

Washington Post Writers Group

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