New Marine Ops Targeting Smugglers

November 14th, 2007 Posted By Pat Dollard.

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by Richard Tomkins
Camp Ripper, Iraq (UPI) Nov 13, 2007

As insurgent and terrorist violence in western Anbar province continues to fall, a small band of U.S. Marines at Al Asad Air Base are increasingly drawing their beads on bands of oil smugglers who nip across the border to Syria to sell purloined oil or who hawk refined fuel from Syria on the Iraqi black market.

They’re called Aero-Scouts. And though their operations in the area known as AO-Denver may not be counter-insurgency warfare in the narrowest sense, they’re an important element in the broader strategy to help bring security and stability.

First, smuggling of oil and refined fuel undercuts Iraq’s central government. Second, it may also be helping fund insurgent and terrorist operations. A classified U.S. government report disclosed by The New York Times last year estimated insurgents raked in a minimum of $25 million annually as a result of the activity nationwide.

In western Anbar province, Maj. Bob Brodie from South Carolina is the man smugglers have to reckon with. Nearly every day he and a group of 40 Marines, together with a handful of Iraqi army personnel, scour the desert by helicopter and swoop down on encampments and suspect vehicles. It’s a multitasked effort: part policing, part counter-insurgency, part reconnaissance.

“I’ve been doing it for about 10 months now, and we’ve interdicted oil pirates, found insurgent camps, weapons caches and an IED (improvised explosive devices) factory,” he said. “These days, we’re finding oil pirates more and more.”

On Monday, Brodie’s “package” consisted of four helicopters — one of them a Cobra gunship — a 30 Marine assault force, four Iraqi soldiers and an interpreter. Within minutes of being airborne and heading north from Al Asad, the first target was sited — an encampment containing 13 men. No oil or weapons were found and the Marines withdrew. But 20 minutes later things changed. Two small flatbed trucks were spotted in a wadi with what seemed to be oil drums.

The helos circled, two dipped and then set down. Marines raced out the back, quickly set a security perimeter and then raced forward to surround the trucks, which had come to a stop.

“Be careful but very aggressive,” Brodie had told his men the night before in a pre-mission briefing. “Be professional, but very aggressive. It’s all about money (for those involved in smuggling). For the moment, they just put up their hands but it’s inevitable that it’s going to change.”

In a different area of operation last month, Brodie had said, smugglers hauling a big rig opened fire on Marines with semiautomatic weapons.

The men stopped Monday were firmly taken aside, searched, papers checked, retinas scanned into a database for checking against wanted terrorists, and then questioned by the Marines and Iraqis as their vehicles were searched.

It was a good stop. Their cargo was 24 55-gallon drums of diesel fuel for which they had no documentation. The Iraqi troops tied plastic restraint bands around their wrists and put them on a helicopter for further questioning in the rear and possible detention.

In 15 minutes it was done. Brodie and his Marines were airborne again, the trucks left behind for later pickup. But the Marines relaxed only for a few minutes. Another target was sited — two more flatbed trucks with drums. The result: four more detentions and more confiscated fuel.

And so it went for nearly four hours.

“It feels good,” one Marine said. “It’s not combat against insurgents, but you know you’re doing something worthwhile. And there’s a tangible result to what you’re doing.”

Brodie’s missions are particularly suited for AO-Denver. The area of responsibility for the Marines is about 30,000 square miles, roughly the size of Southern Carolina, and sparsely populated. Its vast desert, some of which borders Syria and Jordan, is full of wadis in which vehicles can travel undetected from the ground.

A major town in the AO is Haditha, the hiding place of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian-born leader of al-Qaida-Iraq who was killed by U.S. aircraft in 2006.

An alignment with U.S.-led coalition forces by tribal sheiks has led to a sharp drop in terrorist and insurgent violence in recent months. Marine Col. Stacy Clardy, the commander of the 2nd Marine Regimental Combat Team at Al Asad, told United Press International there’s been a 75-percent reduction in violence in AO-Denver since January — from an average of 95 attacks, including IED incidents, a week to about 24 weekly. Al-Qaida, however, is still using parts of western Anbar province as a transit point and remains a threat.


2 Responses

  1. Jim

    In another case demonstrating the confluence of officials, oil smuggling, and the insurgency, insurgents bribed government officials in order to access oil routes. Hazem al-Shaalan, who served as defense minister during the interim administration of Ayad Allawi, tasked Mish’an al-Juburi, a former parliamentarian and leader of an influential tribe in Iraq, to secure oil pipelines between Baiji and Kirkuk, an area which falls within the Al-Juburi tribal territory. Subsequently, Juburi was indicted for theft of several million U.S. dollars. Iraqi officials also suspect that he knowingly hired insurgents to infiltrate oil pipeline protection forces and shared profits with the insurgents. It appears likely that Juburi, insurgents, or both bribed Shaalan to offer the original contract. The Iraqi government subsequently accused him of both massive corruption and provision of Saddam loyalists with intelligence and requested that Interpol arrest both Shalaan and Juburi.

    The profits insurgents reap from the oil trade are significant. Some estimate that insurgents pocket 40 to 50 percent of oil smuggling-generated revenue. Government complicity in oil smuggling has continued. “Oil and fuel smuggling networks have grown into a dangerous mafia, threatening the lives of those in charge of fighting corruption,” the former oil minister, Ibrahim Bahr al-Ulum, told reporters. Saying that Iraq is losing at least a billion dollars each year to corruption, Ulum did not deny that corruption has inflicted SOMO as well. ‘‘It’s clear that corruption funds the insurgency,” a U.S. official added. In mid-2005, the Oil Ministry fired 450 employees on suspicion they were stealing fuel and selling it abroad

    Much of the oil smuggled from southern Iraq ends up in Iran. On January 16, 2006, Iranian naval vessels attacked two Iraqi coastal guard ships that had seized a steamer smuggling oil. The Iranian captain of the steamer had summoned Iranian assistance upon his contravention. The mayor of Basra, Muhammad al-Wai’ili, complained of several dozen similar incidents in which Iranian coast guardsmen protected Iranian smugglers in exchange for payment. New Iraqi oil minister Hussein al-Shahristani blamed the Iranian coast guard for allowing Iraqi smugglers to seek refuge in Iranian waters. A Basra customs officer said, “This is the main obstacle to our work,” adding that corruption among Iraqi police exacerbates the problem.[39] Iran is not the only destination. Boat smuggling operations take Iraqi oil as far away as the United Arab Emirates.

  2. Sandy K.

    “Maj. Bob Brodie from South Carolina is the man smugglers have to reckon with. Nearly every day he and a group of 40 Marines, together with a handful of Iraqi army personnel …

    …The area of responsibility for the Marines is about 30,000 square miles, roughly the size of Southern Carolina, and sparsely populated. Its vast desert, some of which borders Syria and Jordan, is full of wadis in which vehicles can travel undetected from the ground.”

    That is a huge amount of area they are covering with great results. Outstanding work that is most definitely having an impact.

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