2014 was the year that Iraq’s insurgency was reborn. There
is open fighting in Anbar, and the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) has lost control
of territory in other parts of the country as well. The result is that casualty
figures are climbing ever higher. A comparison of attacks in the first quarter
of 2013 with the first quarter of this year illustrates just how bad the
situation has gotten. The number of security incidents has gone up 60%, while the
dead and wounded have nearly doubled. The first three months of last year were
important as well, because it was when militants first started ramping up their
activities. The contrast between the two highlights how much the armed factions
have grown over the last twelve months.
The beginning of 2013 was when Iraq’s insurgency first took
off. In January and February there were 560 and 517 attacks respectively. In
March that jumped to 707. The first two months had the same level of militant
activity with an average of 18.0 and 18.4 incidents per day, but then went up
to 22.8 in the last month. Casualties climbed as a result. There were 728
deaths in January, 23.4 per day, 685 in February, 24.4, before reaching 937 in
March, 30.2 per day. Wounded went the same way going from 1,453 in January to
1,777 in March, going from an average of 46.8 to 57.3 per day. The major cause
for the increase was more bombings. There were 308 in January, 285 in February,
and 423 in March, jumping from an average of 9.9 per day to 13.6. Car bombs,
which are the deadliest form of attack nearly doubled from 38 in January to 65
in March. Shootings, 226 to 301 and suicide bombs 9 to 19 went up as well. March
was when the insurgency first started ramping up its operations after
re-organizing. By then the Syrian civil war had been going on for nearly two
years allowing the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) to expand and
gain more recruits, material, and fund raising. Ansar al-Sunna became
involved in the fighting next door as well. Protests had also started in
Anbar, Salahaddin, Ninewa, and Kirkuk against the government starting in
December 2012. Towards the end
of January 2013 protesters threw rocks at the security forces in Fallujah
provoking gunfire, which killed
9 and wounded 60. In the aftermath gunmen were seen marching through the
city, some leaders in Anbar threatened to attack the army in
retaliation, and a sniper
killed a soldier. The insurgency jumped on the opportunity to exploit the anger
that followed with both ISIS and the Baathist Naqshibandi issuing internet
statements saying
they stood with the protesters, with the latter setting
up its own protest sites in Tikrit, Hawija, and Ninewa. The security forces
would continue to provoke the demonstrations by arresting
leaders, blocking
people from attending, and shooting
at demonstrators again in Mosul in March. These all opened up more
opportunities for armed groups, which explains why the number of attacks went
up in March.
Security Incidents In
Iraq Jan-Mar 2013
Month
|
Attacks
|
Killed
|
Wounded
|
Shootings
|
Bombs
|
Car Bombs
|
Suicide
Bombs
|
Jan
|
560
|
728
|
1,453
|
226
|
308
|
38
|
9
|
Feb
|
517
|
685
|
1,218
|
188
|
285
|
45
|
9
|
Mar
|
707
|
937
|
1,777
|
301
|
423
|
65
|
19
|
Total
|
1,783
|
2,344
|
4,426
|
715
|
1,015
|
147
|
37
|
Avg. Security
Incidents In Iraq Jan-Mar 2013
Month
|
Attacks
|
Killed
|
Wounded
|
Shootings
|
Bombs
|
Car Bombs
|
Suicide
Bombs
|
Jan
|
18.0
|
23.4
|
46.8
|
7.2
|
9.9
|
1.2
|
0.2
|
Feb
|
18.4
|
24.4
|
43.5
|
6.7
|
10.1
|
1.6
|
0.3
|
Mar
|
22.8
|
30.2
|
57.3
|
9.7
|
13.6
|
2.0
|
0.6
|
Total
|
19.8
|
26.0
|
49.1
|
7.9
|
11.2
|
1.6
|
0.4
|
This all came to fruition in 2014 when open fighting with
government forces started. In the first quarter of 2013 there were an average
of 19.8 attacks per day. That jumped to 32.8 per day by the first three months
of 2014. Likewise shootings went from 7.9 to 14.8, bombs 11.2 to 17.3, car
bombs from 1.6 to 2.4, and suicide bombers from 0.4 to 1.4 per day over that
time period. The results were casualties nearly doubled from 26.0 killed and
49.1 wounded per day in the start of 2013 to 47.3 deaths and 89.5 injured
during the beginning of 2014. These were all signs that Iraq went from a
serious terrorist problem to a full-blown insurgency that is growing and taking
territory from the government.
Security Incidents In
Iraq Jan-Mar 2014
Month
|
Attacks
|
Killed
|
Wounded
|
Shootings
|
Bombs
|
Car Bombs
|
Suicide
Bombs
|
Jan
|
1,012
|
1,379
|
2,634
|
470
|
514
|
78
|
45
|
Feb
|
945
|
1,274
|
2,526
|
444
|
466
|
73
|
43
|
Mar
|
996
|
1,606
|
2,901
|
419
|
579
|
73
|
43
|
Total
|
2,953
|
4,259
|
8,061
|
1,333
|
1,559
|
224
|
131
|
Security Incidents In
Iraq Jan-Mar 2014
Month
|
Attacks
|
Killed
|
Wounded
|
Shootings
|
Bombs
|
Car Bombs
|
Suicide
Bombs
|
Jan
|
32.6
|
44.4
|
84.9
|
15.1
|
16.5
|
2.5
|
1.4
|
Feb
|
33.7
|
45.5
|
90.2
|
15.8
|
16.6
|
2.6
|
1.5
|
Mar
|
32.1
|
51.8
|
93.5
|
13.5
|
18.6
|
2.3
|
1.3
|
Total
|
32.8
|
47.3
|
89.5
|
14.8
|
17.3
|
2.4
|
1.4
|
Tracking attacks also reveals where armed groups are most
active and expanding in Iraq right now. Anbar is the most obvious hot spot
since cities like Fallujah, parts of Ramadi, and the surrounding towns are currently
under militant control. In 2013, insurgents were building off the protests
there. For the first three months of that year there were an average of 44.3
attacks per month, 50.3 killed, and 46.6 wounded. During that same period in
2014 there were 208.6 attacks per month, 237.0 deaths, and 517.0 injured
showing a huge increase in violence. A large proportion of the dead and wounded
currently are the result of government shelling and air strikes however. In
March 2014 for instance, there were 343 killed and 627 wounded, but early a
third of those deaths, 122, and more than half of the injured, 405, were due to
government actions. ISIS has set up bases in northern Babil and fought off
government forces there recently leading to a doubling of violence. In the
first quarter of 2013 there were only sporadic attacks, but there was already
an uptick in activity with car and suicide bombings. In January for example
there were 24 attacks, highlighted by a car bomb
on Shiite pilgrims in Musayib on January 3 that killed 27 and wounded 60.
Then another such attack upon
a checkpoint south of Hillah leaving 10 victims and 20 injured and a car bomb
on pilgrims
in Qasim with 7 dead and 28 wounded on January 17. January 22 a car
bomb on a checkpoint took the lives of 5 and wounded 15, and a suicide
bomber in Mahmudiya
killed 7 and injured 26. By March there were 5 car bombings and one suicide
bombing with a total of 96 deaths and 42 wounded. In February 2014 the security
forces tried to clear insurgents out of the Jurf al-Sakhr area, but failed. The
latter launched a number of retaliatory strikes in the following weeks. That
left 110 killed and 260 injured in February and 117 killed and 269 wounded by
March. A starker contrast is made by the averages going from 44.3 attacks per
month, 50.3 dead, and 46.6 wounded in the first quarter of 2013 to 36.0
incidents, 79.3 fatalities, and 193.3 wounded during the start of 2014. Baghdad
has been the main target of ISIS, which has struck both Shiite and Sunni areas
of the province to try to re-ignite the sectarian civil war. In the first quarter
of 2013 there were an average of 155 attacks per month. That rose to 227 per
month by the first quarter of 2014. Likewise the number of fatalities went from
235 in the beginning of 2013 to 434 in the start of 2014, and the wounded went
from 429 to 995 showing a nearly doubling of casualties there. Violence in
Diyala has actually decreased a small bit between the two time periods. There were
318 incidents from January to March 2013 leading to 379 dead and 740 wounded.
During those same months a year later the number of attacks went down to 206
with 341 deaths and 447 injured. Kirkuk province has seen a slight drop in attacks
as well. There were 42 incidents in January 2013, 44 in February, and 61 in
March versus 50 in January 2014, 71 in February and 51 in March. Militants have
slightly picked up their activities in Ninewa going from 123 attacks per month
in the 1st quarter of 2013 to 183 in the beginning of 2014. Salahaddin
on the other hand, has seen a large increase with 87 attacks per month
initially in 2013 to 100 in the beginning of 2014. That led casualties to jump
from 332 in the 1st quarter of 2013 to 767 in the 1st
quarter of 2014. ISIS has also maintained its capabilities to carry out
bombings in the south. In January 2013 there was 1
car bomb in Karbala, one in Wasit
and Karbala
each in February, and then two in Qadisiyah
and three
in Basra
in March. In contrast there were no car bombs in southern Iraq in January 2014,
but one in Wasit
in February, and three
in
Wasit,
one in Karbala
in March. These statistics show that the militants have re-established
themselves in the central part of Iraq where they were based before the Surge
in 2007. Anbar, northern Babil, Salahaddin, eastern Diyala, Mosul in Ninewa,
and parts of Kirkuk are all insurgent strongholds. They are expanding from
there into new areas taking advantage of the Iraqi army and police being
overcommitted to Anbar.
Security Incidents In
Iraq By Province Jan-Mar 2013
Province
|
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
|
Anbar
|
53 Attacks
39 Killed
67 Wounded
|
32 Attacks
16 Killed
31 Wounded
|
48 Attacks
96 Killed
42 Wounded
|
Babil
|
24 Attacks
71 Killed
178 Wounded
|
13 Attacks
25 Killed
64 Wounded
|
18 Attacks
45 Killed
60 Wounded
|
Baghdad
|
128 Attacks
139 Killed
189 Wounded
|
155 Attacks
276 Killed
537 Wounded
|
184 Attacks
291 Killed
561 Wounded
|
Basra
|
2 Attacks
2 Killed
|
-
|
5 Attacks
12 Killed
45 Wounded
|
Dhi Qar
|
-
|
1 Attack
2 Wounded
|
1 Attack
|
Diyala
|
112 Attacks
162 Killed
248 Wounded
|
101 Attacks
99 Killed
254 Wounded
|
105 Attacks
118 Killed
238 Wounded
|
Karbala
|
8 Attacks
13 Killed
67 Wounded
|
1 Attack
7 Killed
24 Wounded
|
3 Attacks
3 Killed
11 Wounded
|
Kirkuk
|
42 Attacks
46 Killed
224 Wounded
|
44 Attacks
69 Killed
111 Wounded
|
61 Attacks
34 Killed
371 Wounded
|
Maysan
|
1 Attack
|
1 Attack
1 Wounded
|
-
|
Muthanna
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Najaf
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Ninewa
|
101 Attacks
108 Killed
106 Wounded
|
111 Attacks
145 Killed
108 Wounded
|
159 Attacks
151 Killed
185 Wounded
|
Qadisiyah
|
-
|
-
|
1 Attack
15 Killed
71 Wounded
|
Salahaddin
|
86 Attacks
147 Killed
374 Wounded
|
55 Attacks
45 Killed
68 Wounded
|
120 Attacks
170 Killed
192 Wounded
|
Wasit
|
2 Attacks
1 Killed
|
3 Attacks
3 Killed
18 Wounded
|
2 Attacks
2 Killed
1 Wounded
|
Security Incidents In
Iraq By Province Jan-Mar 2014
Province
|
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
|
Anbar
|
240 Attacks
184 Killed
487 Wounded
|
173 Attacks
184 Killed
437 Wounded
|
213 Attacks
343 Killed
627 Wounded
|
Babil
|
27 Attacks
11 Killed
51 Wounded
|
41 Attacks
110 Killed
260 Wounded
|
40 Attacks
117 Killed
269 Wounded
|
Baghdad
|
252 Attacks
557 Killed
1,187 Wounded
|
204 Attacks
363 Killed
851 Wounded
|
233 Attacks
384 Killed
947 Wounded
|
Basra
|
4 Attacks
3 Killed
1 Wounded
|
7 Attacks
6 Killed
|
7 Attacks
7 Killed
|
Dhi Qar
|
2 Attacks
1 Killed
1 Wounded
|
1 Attack
1 Killed
4 Wounded
|
1 Attack
1 Killed
|
Diyala
|
70 Attacks
156 Killed
150 Wounded
|
65 Attacks
72 Killed
138 Wounded
|
71 Attacks
113 Killed
159 Wounded
|
Karbala
|
-
|
2 Attacks
5 Killed
5 Wounded
|
1 Attack
4 Killed
15 Wounded
|
Kirkuk
|
50 Attacks
37 Killed
151 Wounded
|
71 Attacks
40 Killed
85 Wounded
|
51 Attacks
29 Killed
102 Wounded
|
Maysan
|
3 Attacks
2 Killed
|
2 Attacks
2 Killed
|
1 Attack
1 Killed
|
Muthanna
|
1 Attack
1 Killed
|
-
|
-
|
Najaf
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
Ninewa
|
185 Attacks
183 Killed
197 Wounded
|
184 Attacks
206 Killed
277 Wounded
|
180 Attacks
192 Killed
260 Wounded
|
Qadisiyah
|
1 Attack
1 Killed
|
-
|
-
|
Salahaddin
|
172 Attacks
239 Killed
401 Wounded
|
193 Attacks
283 Killed
466 Wounded
|
192 Attacks
406 Killed
508 Wounded
|
Wasit
|
6 Attacks
4 Killed
8 Wounded
|
2 Attacks
2 Killed
3 Wounded
|
5 Attacks
9 Killed
14 Wounded
|
Security Incidents In
Iraq Monthly Avg. Comparison 2013 vs. 2014
Province
|
2013 1st Qtr
Monthly Avg.
|
2014 1st Qtr
Monthly Avg.
|
Anbar
|
44.3 Attacks
50.3 Killed
46.6 Wounded
|
208.6 Attacks
237.0 Killed
517.0 Wounded
|
Babil
|
18.3 Attacks
47.0 Killed
100.6 Wounded
|
36.0 Attacks
79.3 Killed
193.3 Wounded
|
Baghdad
|
155.6 Attacks
235.3 Killed
429.0 Wounded
|
229.6 Attacks
434.6 Killed
995.0 Wounded
|
Basra
|
2.3 Attacks
4.6 Killed
15.0 Wounded
|
6.0 Attacks
5.3 Killed
0.3 Wounded
|
Dhi Qar
|
0.6 Attacks
0.6 Wounded
|
1.3 Attacks
1.0 Killed
1.6 Wounded
|
Diyala
|
106.0 Attacks
126.3 Killed
246.6 Wounded
|
68.6 Attacks
113.6 Killed
149.0 Wounded
|
Karbala
|
4.0 Attacks
7.6 Killed
34.0 Wounded
|
1.0 Attacks
3.0 Killed
6.6 Wounded
|
Kirkuk
|
49.0 Attacks
49.6 Killed
235.3 Wounded
|
57.3 Attacks
35.3 Killed
112.6 Wounded
|
Maysan
|
0.6 Attacks
0.3 Wounded
|
2.0 Attacks
1.6 Killed
|
Muthanna
|
-
|
0.3 Attacks
0.3 Killed
|
Najaf
|
-
|
-
|
Ninewa
|
123.6 Attacks
134.6 Killed
133.0 Wounded
|
183.0 Attacks
193.6 Killed
244.6 Wounded
|
Qadisiyah
|
0.3 Attacks
5.0 Killed
23.6 Wounded
|
0.3 Attacks
0.3 Killed
|
Salahaddin
|
87.0 Attacks
120.6 Killed
211.3 Wounded
|
185.6 Attacks
309.3 Killed
458.3 Wounded
|
Wasit
|
2.3 Attacks
2.0 Killed
6.3 Wounded
|
4.3 Attacks
5.0 Killed
8.3 Wounded
|
The burst in fighting in 2014 is a direct result of the
insurgency re-establishing itself in the beginning of 2013. It was in the
latter period that militants begin re-establishing their networks and
recruiting and first began increasing their operations in the center of the
country. Their ultimate goal is Baghdad, which they are currently aiming for. ISIS
for one is repeating the same strategy it followed from 2004-2007 marching from
Anbar to the Baghdad Belts, the provinces and towns surrounding the capital
city. This plan was drawn up by then Al Qaeda in Iraq leader Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi and revealed when he was killed in 2006 and a treasure trove of
documents was captured. The Naqshibandi has also talked about “liberating” the
capital. Their collective action shows that they are not far away from
achieving that goal of spreading the fighting to Baghdad. The Iraqi Security
Forces are already strained dealing with Anbar. Threatening the capital will likely
bring out the Shiite militias, which are currently fighting in Syria and are reported
to be involved in Anbar already. The question is how bad will things get in
the near future?
SOURCES
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12 people," 3/18/14
AIN, "Death toll of Basra bombings hit 37 deaths,
injuries," 3/17/13
Aswat al-Iraq, “Fallujah toll reaches to 9 killings and 60
wounded,” 1/25/13
Ghazi, Yasir and Arango, Tim, “Iraq Parliament Votes to Keep
Maliki From Seeking New Term,” New York Times, 1/26/13
Iraq Times, "martyrs and wounded by a car bomb north of
Kut," 3/18/14
Al-Mada, "Killing and injuring at least 15 people,
bombing north of Kut," 2/28/13
- "Killing and injuring at least 18 people in a suicide
bombing targeting a military checkpoint south of Baghdad," 1/22/13
- "Killing and wounding 153 people in bombings coincide
with pilgrimages in February," 2/8/13
- "Person injured by a roadside bomb near a primary
school north of Kut," 3/6/14
Maher, Ahmed, “Iraq Sunnis threaten army attacks after
protest deaths,” BBC, 1/25/13
Al Masalah, "Blast toll rises in bombing of market for
livestock in Diwaniya to 15 dead and 71 injured," 3/1/13
-"Killed three people and wounded 26 by a car bomb and
the fall of three mortar shells north of Karbala," 1/5/13
- "Killing 7 and injuring 10 roadside bombs north of
Wasit," 3/18/14
- "Killing six people, including four soldiers and
wounding 22 others in a car bombing north of Baghdad," 1/22/13
- "Ten dead and 21 injured toll car bombs in
Basra," 3/17/13
NINA, "/3/ Civilians Injured by a Car Bomb North of
Wasit," 2/3/14
- “Army force coming from Baghdad arrested a tribal Sheikh
and his two sons east of Tikrit,” 1/31/13
- “Military force prevents worshipers from access to Ahrar
Square to demonstrate central Mosul,” 2/8/13
- "Northern Babil blast casualties up to 87 killed,
wounded," 1/3/13
Schreck, Adam, “Iraqi insurgents try to harness opposition
rage,” Associated Press, 1/26/13
- “Violence erupts at Iraq rally; 5 protesters killed,”
Associated Press, 1/25/13
- "Wave Of Attacks In Iraq Leaves 22 Dead,"
Associated Press, 1/22/13
Smyth, Phillip, “Selling Sectarianism: Shia Islamist Groups
& Maliki’s Anbar Offensive,” Hizballah Cavalcade, 2/3/14
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pilgrims," Associated Press, 1/17/13
- “Iraqi minister resigns after protesters shot,” Associated
Press, 3/8/13
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This article is based upon more than 6 months of research and reading over 20,000 articles on violence in Iraq.
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