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Iraq: clashes mount between US forces and Sadrist militia
By James Cogan
9 May 2007
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US and Iraqi government troops launched further attacks on
the Shiite movement loyal to cleric Moqtada al-Sadr in its Baghdad
stronghold last weekend. The Sadrist movement, which has a broad
base of support in the Shiite working class, demands the withdrawal
of US forces, and has a large armed militia, is viewed in Washington
as a threat to the long-term US domination of Iraq.
One of the primary reasons for Bushs surge
of additional US troops was to destroy or at least substantially
weaken the Sadrist militia, particularly in Baghdad. With four
of the five additional brigades now in position, and the last
scheduled to be in place by June 1, US commander General David
Petraeus and the Iraqi government are escalating operations against
the Sadrist political leadership and its armed wing, the Mahdi
Army.
The US military carried out attacks against the Sadrists last
Friday and on Sunday. The homes of some of the movements
leaders in the predominantly Shiite working class suburb of Sadr
City were raided in the early hours of the morning.
According to the US military, the raids were against an alleged
secret cell terrorist network bringing explosively
formed penetrators (EFPs), a type of remotely detonated
bomb that can pierce armour, into Iraq from Iran and using them
against American troops. During Fridays raid, 16 alleged
terrorists were detained.
Sundays raid sparked a firefight in the streets of Sadr
City. Militiamen engaged the attacking forces with small arms
and rocket-propelled grenades. US helicopter gunships were called
in to strafe buildings where the defenders were believed to be
located.
As many as eight people were killed and hospitals reported
at least 20 wounded. Some 40 families who lived in the neighbourhood
fled to a displacement camp on the outskirts of the district.
According to Major General William Caldwell, US and Iraqi forces
later found 150 mortar rounds, ammunition, components
to make roadside bombs and what appeared to be a torture
room in one of the homes. He told the press: Intelligence
reports indicate that the secret cell has ties to a kidnapping
network that conducts attacks across Iraq, as well as interactions
with rogue elements throughout Iraq and into Iran.
The house was subsequently blown up, ostensibly due to concerns
about moving the captured munitions. At the same time, the demolition
conveniently ensured that US claims could not be independently
verified.
Sadrist spokesmen immediately rejected the US allegations that
the people detained were Iranian-linked terrorists
and operating torture chambersclaims that have been published
uncritically throughout the American and international media.
Alwan Hassan, a Sadrist parliamentarian, told the newspaper
Azzaman: The operations by the occupation troops
in Sadr City, which have resulted in the arrest of many of our
members, and US allegations that there are armed and violent groups
in the Sadr City, have not a grain of truth. The occupation troops
are targeting the movements leaders under the pretext that
they are heading death squads and kidnapping gangs. This is an
attempt to distort the image of the Sadr movement, which represents
the national trend of rejecting the occupation.
Ahmad al-Sharifi, a Sadrist leader in Sadr City, denounced
the Shiite United Iraqi Alliance (UIA) coalition, which dominates
the government, for collaborating with the attacks on the Mahdi
Army. The Sadrists are still formally part of the UIA, though
Moqtada al-Sadr instructed the six members of his movement to
quit the cabinet of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki over the governments
failure to demand a date for the withdrawal of all foreign forces
from Iraq.
Sharifi singled out the rival Supreme Council for the Islamic
Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) for criticism. SCIRI and the Sadrists
are engaged in a struggle for political control in a number of
Shiite population centres across the south of the country. Azzaman
reported that the Iraqi security forces participating with the
US troops in the Sadr City operations were members of SCIRIs
militiathe Badr Organisation.
Sharifi declared: These clashes are a result of the contrast
between the local [Iraqi] agenda of the Sadrist current and SCIRIs
agenda, which is supported by foreign parties... The UIA has become
an alliance rife with incompatibilities. Every party in it is
waiting for an opportunity to destroy the other.
These comments and the resistance to Sundays raid are
further signs of rebelliousness among the Sadrist rank-and-file
over Moqtada al-Sadrs instructions not to challenge or be
provoked by US or government troops. The detention of dozens of
Sadrist leaders and hundreds of young men on suspicion of being
Mahdi fighters has provoked outrage, especially as Sunni extremists
have continued to carry out a wave of horrific suicide bombings
against Shiite civilians and mosques.
Militiamen had already begun to fight back prior to Sunday.
On April 29, Mahdi fighters drove off an attempt by US and Iraqi
government forces to dislodge them from their defensive positions
around a revered Shiite mosque in the Kazimiyah suburb of Baghdad.
Eight militiamen and one Iraqi soldier reportedly died in the
clash.
Both Iraqi and American sources told Associated Press that
some government troops ordered to take part in the attack mutinied
and joined the Shiite fighters. The following day, thousands of
Shiites demonstrated in the streets and Sadrist legislators successfully
moved a motion in the Iraqi parliament banning foreign troops
from coming within one kilometre of the sacred site.
The response to the incursion forced the US military to leave
the mosque in Sadrist hands for the time being. Lieutenant Colonel
Steve Miska, the American commander in the area, told Associated
Press on the weekend: There are a lot of people affiliated
with JAM [the Mahdi Army] and if we made them all enemies, wed
be in trouble.
In Najaf, the site of the countrys most important Shiite
shrine and the base of the Shiite clerical establishment, Mahdi
Army militiamen temporarily seized control of the city centre
on May 4. The mobilisation was in response to a rumour that government
security forces had killed Najafs leading Sadrist cleric,
Salah al-Ubaidi, when he attempted to enter the city. Militiamen
reportedly surrounded and disarmed Iraqi soldiers and the personal
bodyguards of Ammar al-Hakim, the son of the SCIRI leader Abdel
Aziz Hakim. A tense standoff between government reinforcements
and the Mahdi Army was only ended after negotiations between the
local Sadrist office and the Najaf governor.
Since the weekend, the Iraqi press has reported that government
forces have come under attack in Diwaniyah, to the east of Baghdad,
and in the major southern cities of Basra and Amarahall
areas where the Sadrist support is growing. Far from stabilising
the US occupation, the Bush administrations targeting of
the Mahdi Army is only inflaming the Shiite masses and setting
the stage for a further expansion of its bloody, neo-colonial
war.
See Also:
Pentagon survey exposes deep demoralization
of US occupation troops Support for torture, routine abuse
of Iraqi civilians
[9 May 2007]
Iraq war "surge" claims lives
of 12 more US soldiers
[8 May 2007]
International conference on Iraq: bitter
antagonisms on display
[7 May 2007]
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