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Today's Top News
Anti-US Cleric al-Sadr Threatens New Uprising in Iraq
BAGHDAD - Anti-American Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr gave a "final warning" to the government Saturday to halt a U.S.-Iraqi crackdown against his followers or he would declare "open war until liberation."
A full-blown uprising by al-Sadr, who led two rebellions against U.S.-led forces in 2004, could lead to a dramatic increase in violence in Iraq at a time when the Sunni extremist group al-Qaida in Iraq appears poised for new attacks after suffering severe blows last year.
Al-Sadr's warning appeared on his Web site as Iraq's Shiite-dominated government claimed success in a new push against Shiite militants in the southern city of Basra. Fighting claimed 14 more lives in Sadr City, the Baghdad stronghold of al-Sadr's Mahdi Army.
Fighting in Sadr City and the crackdown in Basra are part of a government campaign against followers of al-Sadr and Iranian-backed Shiite splinter groups that the U.S. has identified as the gravest threat to a democratic Iraq.
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, also a Shiite, has ordered al-Sadr to disband the Mahdi Army, Iraq's biggest Shiite militia, or face a ban from politics.
In the statement, al-Sadr lashed back, accusing the government of selling out to the Americans and branding his followers as criminals.
Al-Sadr, who is believed to be in Iran, said he had tried to defuse tensions last August by declaring a unilateral truce, only to see the government respond by closing his offices and "resorting to assassinations."
"So I am giving my final warning ... to the Iraqi government ... to take the path of peace and abandon violence against its people," al-Sadr said. "If the government does not refrain ... we will declare an open war until liberation."
Al-Sadr's statements came as al-Qaida in Iraq announced a one-month offensive against U.S. troops. In a new audiotape released on a militant Web site, a man claiming to be the purported leader of al-Qaida in Iraq, Abu Ayyub al-Masri, called on followers to attack U.S. soldiers and members of awakening councils, Sunni Arab tribesmen and former insurgents who changed sides and are now fighting al-Qaida.
A week of violence has raised concerns that suspected Sunni insurgents are regrouping in the north. U.S. and Iraqi troops have stepped up security operations in Mosul, believed to be one of the last urban strongholds of al-Qaida in Iraq.
U.S. officials say the awakening councils and al-Sadr's truce were instrumental in reducing violence last year. But the truce is in tatters after Iraqi forces launched an offensive last month against "criminal gangs and militias" in the southern city of Basra.
The conflict spread rapidly to Baghdad, where Shiite militiamen based in Sadr City fired rockets at the U.S.-protected Green Zone, killing at least four Americans. U.S. officials say many of the rockets fired at the Green Zone were manufactured in Iran.
The Iranians helped mediate a truce March 30, which eased clashes in Basra and elsewhere in the Shiite south. But fighting persisted in Baghdad as U.S. and Iraqi forces sought to push militiamen beyond the range where they could fire rockets and mortars at the Green Zone.
The Americans are attempting to seal off much of Sadr City, home to an estimated 2.5 million people, and have used helicopter gunships and Predator drones to fire missiles at militiamen seeking refuge in the sprawling slum of northeast Baghdad.
At a news conference Saturday, Iran's ambassador to Baghdad said his government supports the Iraqi move against "lawbreakers in Basra" but that the "insistence of the Americans to lay siege" to Sadr City "is a mistake."
"Lawbreakers (in Basra) must be held accountable ... but the insistence of the Americans to lay siege to millions of people in a specific area and then bombing them randomly from air and damaging property is not correct," Ambassador Hassan Kazemi Qomi said.
Qomi warned that the American strategy in Sadr City "will lead to negative results for which the Iraqi government must bear responsibility."
At least 14 people were killed and 84 wounded in Saturday's fighting in Sadr City, police and hospital officials said. Sporadic clashes were continuing after sundown, with gunmen darting through the streets, firing at Iraqi police and soldiers who have taken the lead in the fighting.
The U.S. military said its forces in Sadr City killed seven "criminals" - two in gunbattles and five in two separate airstrikes. The military said it does not engage if civilians are spotted in the area.
According to the Interior Ministry, at least 280 Iraqis have been killed in Sadr City fighting since March 25, including gunmen, security forces and civilians.
In Basra, Iraq's second largest city about 340 miles southeast of Baghdad, Iraqi soldiers backed by British troops pushed their way into Hayaniyah, the local stronghold of al-Sadr's Mahdi militia.
As the operation got under way, British cannons and American warplanes pounded an empty field near Hayaniyah as a show of force "intended to demonstrate the firepower available to the Iraqi forces," said British military spokesman Maj. Tom Holloway.
Last month, Iraqi troops met fierce resistance when they tried to enter Hayaniyah. On Saturday, however, Iraqi soldiers moved block by block, searching homes, seizing weapons and detaining suspects.
Lt. Gen. Ali Ghaidan said he expected the whole area to be secured by Sunday. He said troops had detained a number of suspects but refused to give details until the area was cleared.
The fighting in both Basra and Baghdad is part of a campaign by al-Maliki, a Shiite, to break the power of Shiite militias, especially al-Sadr's Mahdi Army, and improve security in southern Iraq before provincial elections this fall.
Al-Sadr's followers believe the campaign is aimed at weakening their movement to prevent it from winning provincial council seats at the expense of Shiite parties that work with the United States in the national government.
Tensions between the Sadrists and other Shiite parties have been rising for months before the Basra crackdown and escalated after parliament last month approved a new law governing the provincial elections.
Clashes also broke out near Nasiriyah, a Shiite city about 200 miles southeast of Baghdad, leaving at least 22 people dead, police said. A curfew was clamped on the town of Suq al-Shiyoukh, where the fighting broke out between police and al-Sadr's followers.
Meanwhile, the U.S. military said an American soldier was killed by a roadside bomb while on patrol in Salahuddin province. The military did not release the soldier's name, pending notification of family.
The military also said Saturday that an Army Special Forces soldier was killed by a burst of small-arms fire while trying to capture an al-Qaida leader in an Iraqi town.
Staff Sgt. Jason L. Brown, 29, was killed early Thursday during a combat operation in Sama Village, the U.S. Army Special Operations Command said in a statement.
At least 4,039 members of the U.S. military have now died since the war started in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.
Associated Press writers Sameer N. Yacoub, Bushra Juhi and Hamid Ahmed contributed to this report.
© 2008 The Associated Press.
Comments
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24 Comments so far
Show AllThis is great for the sunnis whose militia sits by and watches the shiites go at each other. The Peshmerga with 100,000 fighters keeps its powder dry, deepens its relation with Israel, and moves the Kurds closer to independance. We now have 5 sides. 3 are using the US side, 1 is not. Expect strange shifting alliances and a long process to sort it out.
I sent an email to the writer of this article asking him to explain why he, and other gonzos, used the term 'anti-us' when talking about people like Sadr... Really, to expect a nationalist to like the 21st century version of a Vichy Gov't...
What will be the new catch phrase after "we're making progress, we're turning a corner, the surge is working, etc. etc. to explain the newest excuse why we need to occupy this foreign land.
No one seems to realize the seriousness of the situation in Iraq. Al Sadr has shown all along he has the necessary prerequistes to do whatever he chooses. And our moron thinks he can put in a puppet and rule the tribes. Get out. NOW. They'll sort it out themselves and then we can pay reparations for years. It's better than what we are doing now.
Gawd, how did we ever get so far in this hole and why do we keep digging?
I'm glad we sent all of our borrowed Chinese money to support sectarian violence.
Although, Sun Tzu said in the Art of War, the object of war was not to fight your enemy, rather to make your enemy fight itself. In that sense, Bush was victorious. Mission Accomplished.
-James
www.thepoliticus.org
I wonder of Bush the younger still believes in the old maxim, "Bring 'em on." War criminal is what Bush is. The trials … 'Bring 'em on.
For some fairly balanced and informative reporting on world news, consider the following link:
http://english.aljazeera.net/English
Despite the time I spent in a Muslim society - Turkey - where I was first introduced to Islam, I have learned a great deal through this site about the history and current dynamics within the Muslim world, which affords a completely different perspective from American MSM.
Salam
"Final Warning" coming from this guy sounds ominous. If he surprise attack storms a base or the green zone with thousands of militiamen, that 4,039 total could double or triple fast.
If Maliki fails, our troops have already spent too many tours there, and its just about to the point where we need the Draft to maintain an effective force (say 500,000?) in Iraq. Its time to let it go.
I see that Bush's Bad Hag has flown to Baghdad to stir the pot of this nascent civil war. Oh joy.
What a mess you've gotten us into now, george, by golly!
It is way past time for the US to pull out of Iraq, apologize to the Iraqi people and the world community, make an attempt at restitutions (we have a moral obligation, after all we destroyed their country), offer our war criminals and terrorists up to the World Court, and reflect on the reasons we went there in the first place, lies, greed, and ideology.
Maybe the next time some lunatic cabal tries something so dastardly, the media will question their actions and the people will be well enough informed to prevent it from happening.
It looks like the doctor is going to prescribe Washington yet another dose of medicine.
"make an attempt at restitutions (we have a moral obligation, after all we destroyed their country), offer our war criminals and terrorists up to the World Court"
What? no... most definitely not. We should leave... call it even and forget about it. Germany has a good model for just such behavior... try and find German history between 1936-1945 in any German student's textbook.
-James
www.thepoliticus.org
Informed Comment, by Juan Cole. Mid-East Commentary Daily.
Again, by Juan Cole.
This just in....
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, making a surprise visit to Baghdad on Sunday, praised the Iraqi government's decision to take on Shiite militias in Basra and in Baghdad and said Iraq was making "remarkable progress" toward achieving political unity. - NYT
I guess that means the US has openly declared its support of civil war in Iraq, between the Govt. and the Sadrists.
I'm tired of hearing about it; tired of talking about it and tired of writing about it.
It may sound like a terrible thing to say but I've got to; what we really need is another 9/11 type attack.
After the billions of dollars we've thrown away in Iraq, not to mention over 4000 of our military who died in vain, it is apparent that we are no safer than we were when Dubya got us into this mess.
Each time General Patreaus has been questioned by Congress, I believe it was last September and again last week, he was asked by Sen. John Warner if what we are doing there is making America safer. Each time the general has been UNABLE to give an honest answer.
Our fearless leader has repeated over and again how he listens to his men on the ground (i.e. Patreaus & Crocker) but there is apparently a vast difference between hearing and paying attention.
We've had all this emhasis on airport security, all sorts of illegal means of eavesdropping; for what?
IF I were a foreign terrorist wanting to get into this country to do it harm (and had half a brain), I'd just cross the border from Mexico into Texas where they all but hand out engraved invitations to enter illegally.
Another attack similar to 9/11 would be devastating and I certainly do not welcome the tragic loss of lives that would result but just what the hell is going to shake up this country enough to get rid of this administration and certainly not elect another war-monger like McCain to follow in the steps of Bush/Cheney.
I'm open to suggestions.
Go get'em Mugtada!
Drive those imperialists and their puppets OFF YOUR PRECIOUS IRAQI SOIL!
USAn: I think you spelled that wrong. Did you mean "SOIL" or "OIL". It makes more sense if you drop the "S".
Condi, like other US architects, makes a surprise visit into the valley of corporate sponsored death. A perverse Jack-in-the-Box, Condi springs forth to announce better times and more cooperation. Condi's behavior an unitentional hallmark of the arrogance of the most childishly secretive administration we've seen in our lifetimes. Let's hope there is more cooperation. more peace in the future. The rest of the world probably wants to see the "right" group of gangsters control the oil in Basra.
"Did you mean "SOIL" or "OIL". It makes more sense if you drop the "S"."
Not really...this whole mess was more about keeping most of that-Oil 'in the ground', and thereby oil-worldwide becoming more-expensive/'scarce'...(and, of course, establishing permanent bases/headquarters in the 'heart' of the 'theater' we will continue to create Chaos/"Arcing-Instability" in, for Israel (and 'fun', apparently?), for the next 25-years -- minimum...whilst the next neo-Lib-in-Chief/'soft-power'-Clinton starves/poisons the third-world with Monsanto (while finishing-off our so-called 'Economy' and 'Entitlement-Programs').
Yawn...[it's just ALL so damn-Predictable...!]
Of all the nerve! al-Sadr has the gall to want the foreign invaders-imperialist, criminal war profiteers to stop killing his people and to want them out of his land. He's supposed to be grateful, remember? After all, the U.S. has done Iraqis a favor by killing over a million people (this time around), destroying the country, and taking control of their oil. hehe
OF COURSE U.S. officials are going to lie as usual about rockets being manufactured in Iran. The U.S. is hot to invade Iran over lies just like they did to Iraq, to control the oil. No authentic proof needed, of course.
I suspect there will be lots of blood pouring in Iraq in the next few weeks.
It is a shame we Americans won't do anything but read each others posts. We must be fine with torture, a coming police state and over all repression or we would be organizing a revolution.
Muqtada, give 'em hell!
I LOVE this statment from "Uncle Sam's Converted Rice"
"clearly, the prime minister has laid down some ground rules which any functioning democratic state would insist upon, having to do with, you know, arms belonging to the state, not to -- not in private hands"
-Condilessa Rice, Iraq
I guess the USA's 2nd ammendment means the USA is not a "functioning democratic state"...OK all you US Gun nuts..turn in your weapons to Uncle Sam
Funny how My-Leaky, being against all militias, hasn't lifted a finger against the Badr Brigade, the Sunni "Awakening" militias, or the Kurdish Peshmurga....or what about Blackwater?
Curious how he seems to only be against the militia of his political rival, Sadr....the militia that has been stood down for the last 9 months....
If one were cynical, one could believe that this is a US ordered power grab by the only US friendly political group in Iraq...the one who's pet CIA spook, and provider of all the WMD BS... is running the oil ministry.....how convenient.
The USA is lucky to have such obedient pets.
Here's an "Al Jazeera and agencies" article of April 20th and this one says enough about Condo. Rice's visit to Baghdad.
"UPDATED ON:
SUNDAY, APRIL 20, 2008
15:25 MECCA TIME, 12:25 GMT
Sadr threatens war as Rice visits"
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/8EF4F4FD-64D6-4B8C-8984-287C034AAD0F.htm