Maliki To Begin New Offensive Against Shiite Militias

April 3rd, 2008 Posted By Pat Dollard.

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BAGHDAD - Iraq’s prime minister pledged Thursday to expand his crackdown on Shiite militias to Baghdad, despite a mixed performance so far against militants in the southern city of Basra.

The U.S. ambassador, meanwhile, said that despite a “boatload” of problems with the Basra operation, he was encouraged that the Shiite- led government was finally confronting extremists regardless of their religious affiliation.

Iraqi forces launched a major operation March 25 to rid Basra of Shiite militias and criminal gangs that had effectively ruled the city of 2 million people since 2005.

Fighting ceased Sunday when al-Sadr ordered his fighters to stand down under a deal brokered in Iran.

Nevertheless, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, himself a Shiite, insisted that the campaign to reclaim Basra was on track and that he would soon go after “criminal gangs” in Baghdad and elsewhere.

Al-Maliki specified two Baghdad neighborhoods—Sadr City and Shula—where the Mahdi militia holds sway and where U.S. and Iraqi forces have clashed with militants in recent days.

Both areas remain under a vehicle ban imposed last week throughout Baghdad but which has been lifted elsewhere in the capital.

“We cannot remain silent about our people and families in Sadr City, Shula and other areas … while they are held hostage by gangs that control them,” al-Maliki said. “We must liberate (them) because we came into office to serve them.”

Residents of Sadr City and other Shiite areas of the capital said many people began stocking up on food and water after al-Maliki’s remarks.

Al-Maliki also said the government would spend $100 million to improve public services in Basra and create 25,000 jobs there—moves aimed at weaning away support for the militias as security forces revamp their tactics to combat the extremists.

The violence erupted as the two top American officials in Iraq were preparing to brief Congress on prospects for further U.S. troop cuts.

U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker, who will appear before Congress on Tuesday with top commander Gen. David Petraeus.

“I had the understanding that this was going to be an effort to get down, show they were serious with additional forces, put the squeeze on, develop a full picture of conditions and then act accordingly,” he told reporters Thursday. “I was not expecting, frankly, a major battle from Day One.”

Crocker said he was encouraged that the Iraqi government was willing to take on Shiite militias, some of which maintain close ties to major political parties in the national leadership.

“Were there problems? There were a boatload of problems, and they still have a long way to go,” Crocker added.

In a statement Thursday, al-Sadr complained that although he had called on his militia to stop fighting, the army and police were continuing illegal arrests and attacks against his followers.

Al-Sadr blamed the attacks on “corrupt elements” and said if the government could not remove them, “we are ready to cooperate … to purge our army and police of such elements.”

The cleric has also called on Shiites to converge on the holy city of Najaf next Wednesday—the fifth anniversary of the U.S. capture of Baghdad—to protest the American military presence in Iraq. Al-Sadr urged for a “million-strong” turnout.

Although major fighting in the south eased last weekend, military operations are continuing in the Basra area.

U.S. and Iraqi officials have maintained that the crackdown was directed at criminals and renegade militiamen but not al-Sadr’s political movement, which holds 30 of the 275 seats in the national parliament and is a major political force.

But the Sadrists believed the operation was aimed at weakening their movement before provincial elections this fall. Resistance was so fierce that the Iraqis had to call in U.S. jets and British tanks and artillery to help in the battle.

On Thursday, the U.S. military said an American F/A-18 jet-fighter fired a missile at a house in Basra the previous night after Iraqi soldiers came under small-arms fire. Two militants were killed in the airstrike, the U.S. said.

(AP)


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3 Responses

  1. Mike Moore age 53 Vietnam Vet

    inane leftist drivel?

    get dead with the rest of your tribe.

  2. deathstar

    Jeeeze, the APs spinning sadrs recent defeat like crazy aint they?

  3. Brian H

    After reading the first sentence, I guessed, “AP?” Hit!

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