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Shiite Leader Al-Sadr Defies Iraq Gov't

ROBERT H. REID   03/29/08 10:21 PM ET   AP

Iraq Violence

BAGHDAD — Anti-American Shiite militia leader Muqtada al-Sadr ordered his followers Saturday to defy government orders to surrender their weapons, as U.S. jets struck Shiite extremists near Basra to bolster a faltering Iraqi offensive against gunmen in the city.

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki acknowledged he may have miscalculated by failing to foresee the strong backlash that his offensive, which began Tuesday, provoked in areas of Baghdad and other cities where Shiite militias wield power.

Government television said the round-the-clock curfew imposed two days ago on the capital and due to expire Sunday would be extended indefinitely. Gunfire and explosions were heard late Saturday in Sadr City, the Baghdad stronghold of al-Sadr's Mahdi Army militia.

The U.S. Embassy tightened its security measures, ordering all staff to use armored vehicles for all travel in the Green Zone and to sleep in reinforced buildings until further notice after six days of rocket and mortar attacks that left two Americans dead.

Despite the mounting crisis, al-Maliki, himself a Shiite, vowed to remain in Basra until government forces wrest control from militias, including the Mahdi Army. He called the fight for control of Basra "a decisive and final battle."

British ground troops, who controlled the city until handing it over to the Iraqis last December, also joined the battle for Basra, firing artillery Saturday for the first time in support of Iraqi forces.

Iraqi authorities have given Basra extremists until April 8 to surrender heavy and medium weapons after an initial 72-hour ultimatum to hand them over was widely ignored.

But a defiant al-Sadr called on his followers Saturday to ignore the order, saying that his Mahdi Army would turn in its weapons only to a government that can "get the occupier out of Iraq," referring to the Americans.

The order was made public by Haidar al-Jabiri, a member of the influential political commission of the Sadrist movement.

Al-Sadr, in an interview aired Saturday by Al-Jazeera television, said his Mahdi Army was capable of "liberating Iraq" and maintained al-Maliki's government was as "distant" from the people as Saddam Hussein's.

Residents of Basra contacted by telephone said Mahdi militiamen were manning checkpoints Saturday in their neighborhood strongholds. The sound of intermittent mortar and machine gun fire rang out across the city, as the military headquarters at a downtown hotel came under repeated fire.

An Iraqi army battalion commander and two of his bodyguards were killed Saturday night by a roadside bomb in central Basra, military spokesman Col. Karim al-Zaidi said.

The fight for Basra is crucial for al-Maliki, who flew to Basra earlier this week and is staking his credibility on gaining control of Iraq's second-largest city, which has essentially been held by armed groups for nearly three years.

In a speech Saturday to tribal leaders in Basra, al-Maliki promised to "stand up to these gangs" not only in the south but throughout Iraq.

Iraqi officials and their American partners have long insisted that the crackdown was not directed at al-Sadr's movement but against criminals and renegade factions _ some of whom are allegedly tied to Iran.

Al-Maliki told tribal leaders that the offensive in Basra "was only to deal with these gangs" _ some of which he said "are worse than al-Qaida."

Without mentioning the Sadrists by name, al-Maliki said he was "surprised to see that party emerge with all the weapons available to it and strike at everything _ institutions, people, departments, police stations and the army."

Al-Sadr's followers have accused rival Shiite parties in the national government of trying to crush their movement before provincial elections this fall. The young cleric's lieutenants had warned repeatedly that any move to dislodge them from Basra would provoke bloodshed.

But al-Maliki's comments appeared to reinforce suspicions that his government failed to foresee the backlash, including a sharp upsurge in violence throughout the Shiite south and shelling of the U.S.-controlled Green Zone, the nerve center of the Iraqi leadership and the U.S. mission.

Two American soldiers were killed Saturday when their vehicle was struck by a roadside bomb in mostly Shiite east Baghdad, the U.S. military said.

The growing turmoil threatens to undermine White House efforts to convince a skeptical Congress and the American public that the Iraqis are making progress toward managing their own security without the presence of U.S. troops.

With the Shiite militiamen defiant, a group of police in Sadr City abandoned their posts and handed over their weapons to al-Sadr's local office. Police forces in Baghdad are believed to be heavily influenced or infiltrated by Mahdi militiamen.

"We can't fight our brothers in the Mahdi Army, so we came here to submit our weapons," one policeman said on condition of anonymity for security reasons.

He said about 40 policemen had defected to the Mahdi Army. The figure could not be confirmed, but AP Television News footage showed about a dozen uniformed police, their faces covered with masks to shield their identity, being met by Sheik Salman al-Feraiji, al-Sadr's chief representative in Sadr City.

Al-Feraiji greeted each policeman and gave them a copy of the Quran and an olive branch as they handed over their guns and ammunition.

Also Saturday, the U.S. military said 16 enemy fighters had been killed in airstrikes supporting Iraqi troops during clashes with Shiite militiamen in Basra. An AC-130 gunship strafed heavily armed militants attacking Iraqi forces from three rooftops, military spokesman Maj. Brad Leighton said.

Iraqi police earlier claimed eight civilians, including two women and a child, had been killed when a U.S. warplane destroyed a house early Saturday. They spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to release the information.

But Leighton said U.S. special operations forces helped identify the militants before the airstrike.

British military spokesman Maj. Tom Holloway also said U.S. jets later dropped two precision-guided bombs on a suspected militia stronghold north of the city, but no casualties were reported.

Iraq's Health Ministry, which is close to the Sadrist movement, on Saturday reported at least 75 civilians have been killed and at least 500 others injured in a week of clashes and airstrikes in Sadr City and other eastern Baghdad neighborhoods.

The U.S. military sharply disputes the claims, having said that most of those killed were militia members.

Meanwhile, Iraqi officials said they had received a phone call from Tahseen Sheikhly, the high-profile civilian spokesman for the Baghdad security operation, who was seized by gunmen two days earlier from at his home in a Shiite area of the capital.

An Iraqi-owned satellite television station, Sharqiya, broadcast what it said was a tape of the conversation, in which a man identifying himself as Sheikhly said he was being held "with a group of officers" at an unknown location.

"Our release depends on the withdrawal of al-Maliki from Basra and the easing of the military operations against the Sadrists in all provinces," he said. "We appeal to the prime minister and the Iraqi government to work with the Sadrist movement, which represents the popular base of society."

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BAGHDAD — Anti-American Shiite militia leader Muqtada al-Sadr ordered his followers Saturday to defy government orders to surrender their weapons, as U.S. jets struck Shiite extremists near Basr...
BAGHDAD — Anti-American Shiite militia leader Muqtada al-Sadr ordered his followers Saturday to defy government orders to surrender their weapons, as U.S. jets struck Shiite extremists near Basr...
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01:18 AM on 03/31/2008
We have been paying Sadr to send his army on R&R so it will look like the surge is working! Sadr, being on old used camel salesman, saw an opportunity to squeeze Dumbya a little harder (or more likely a lot harder) because he knows Betrayus is coming back to tell the Congress what Dumbya wants Congress to hear! Dumbya has to keep up the pretense that the surge is working so he had to knuckle under to Sadr in order to make it look like we are winning! The Iraqi puppet regime will declare a 'great' victory and Betrayus can give Georges report to Congress without Admiral Fallon pointing out all the lies!
10:14 AM on 03/30/2008
aw looks like sadr has given up-
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,343231,00.html
course the dems wont give bush or troops any credit
lets all movon right??
09:52 AM on 03/30/2008
What will John McBomb say when people point to the violence in Iraq? The decline in violence meant the surge was working so the rise in violence must mean the surge has failed. Right??? He won't say that of course but he'll have a hard time spinning it his way.
09:59 AM on 03/30/2008
jarjar murtha said surge is workin long before pres elect MCCain did
http://www.politico.com/blogs/thecrypt/1107/Murthas_comments_on_surge_may_be_a_big_problem_for_House_Democrats.html
10:10 AM on 03/30/2008
murtha was sayin it 4months ago jarjar
see http://www.politico.com/blogs/thecrypt/1107/Murthas_comments_on_surge_may_be_a_big_problem_for_House_Democrats.html
oops huh
09:44 AM on 03/30/2008
Remember "Mission Accomplished" now?
09:35 AM on 03/30/2008
There is only one way we win in Iraq. We have airpower. You have to give the Iraqi's credit for fighting for over five years with small arms and booby traps. Take away our air power and we are sunk. It is their country, we wrecked it . We always talk about being a superpower. How can this be if we are bancrupt?
09:00 AM on 03/30/2008
Why are all 28% Bushies so stupid?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Nyland8
09:25 AM on 03/30/2008
Actually, the United States is not a very educated country. In fact, I think we're listed as 22nd in literacy rate ... behind Kazakhstan and Tajikistan. Just as it is with our current POTUS, expectations should be lowered.

8
08:55 AM on 03/30/2008
ding ding ding, we have a winner!

'Iraqi authorities have given Basra extremists until April 8 to surrender heavy and medium weapons after an initial 72-hour ultimatum to hand them over was widely ignored.'

Or just hide them, that'll be fine.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Nyland8
08:53 AM on 03/30/2008
I guess the symbols we can post now change from day to day ... or hour to hour. Interesting. We can only assume that Huffpost wants their comments section to be randomized. But why wouldn't they put that in their FAQ section? Some statement like "We reserve the right to be capricious in what we allow to be posted, and following our own posting rules is totally optional".

At least people might know what to expect.

The other obvious problem with so many posts having no review and so many other posts going in for review is that the continuity is lost. By the time some responses are posted, they're on the third page and the person addressed is out walking the dog.

It's hard to imagine why HuffPo prefers that

!!! ??? !!!!

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/comment/policy/

8
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Nyland8
08:41 AM on 03/30/2008
♪ ♬ ♩

8
08:49 AM on 03/30/2008
Would you mind go playing in the sandbox, please...?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Nyland8
08:54 AM on 03/30/2008
??

Sounds like fun, but I'm afraid I don't follow your reference.

8
08:38 AM on 03/30/2008
The surge is working in that it is keeping the war going long enough so that George can leave office and hand the mess he made off to the next President.

He wanted a legacy. I guess he'll get it.
08:44 AM on 03/30/2008
He wants a Legacy....A Suburu.He doesn't understand legacy.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
robodweeb
Havin' Some Fun Tonight
08:47 AM on 03/30/2008
The irony is that in the Frontline documentary "Bush's War" Deferment Dick says they didn't want to leave the Saddam "problem" for future administrations to solve.

Quagmire fiascoes are okay, though.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Nyland8
08:36 AM on 03/30/2008
Czech ... Czech

8
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
editor
My Two "Sense"
08:33 AM on 03/30/2008
Where are the little girls going to school in white shoes flying kites celebrating peace and freedom?
08:04 AM on 03/30/2008
THE SURGE IS WORKING (play as a continuous loop on Fox and MSM.) They really believe the Kool-aid they are drinking.
08:08 AM on 03/30/2008
What is the active ingredient in that Kool-Aid?
07:41 PM on 03/30/2008
Fallacy.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SCG
08:17 AM on 03/30/2008
they have to sell it.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Nyland8
07:51 AM on 03/30/2008
The notion that we can “win” anything in Iraq is preposterous on it’s face. George Bush has refused to even define what “winning” would be. He has stated, for the public record, and in no uncertain terms, that it will fall on some other president to get us out of Iraq. And he said this when he had more than two years to go in office.

Look it up

What this means, for those of you who seem to refuse to get it, is that no matter what happens in Iraq, he intended to stay. Democracy or not, peace or not, civil war or not, placid calm or daily bombings, 100,000 American deaths, it makes no difference to him. He has effectively declared that winning is impossible, AND he has never even defined what winning is.

So stop calling for “victory in Iraq”. Your own commander in chief has declared it impossible. Stop trying to spin all the bad news. It doesn’t matter what the news is … get it? Good or bad makes no difference at all. There can be no victory in Iraq … there can be no “success” in Iraq … Bush has declared that impossible, both by refusing to define what “winning” is, and by stating that he won’t withdraw.

Get it?

Here it is again, closed-captioned for the deaf.

… THERE CAN BE NO VICTORY IN IRAQ WHILE THE REPUBLICANS ARE IN OFFICE …

8
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JohnTalbutt
08:36 PM on 03/30/2008
No we can't win but George and Cheney could never have done so well without the war. Check out Halleburton before Iraq and now.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
robodweeb
Havin' Some Fun Tonight
07:50 AM on 03/30/2008
First McBomb gives a speech telling us that he remembers Bunker Hill and now he's running an ad pointing out that he was a failed pilot.
07:57 AM on 03/30/2008
hey wheres your book report robo
on how dems are differnt from commies??
8wks overdue now
dont ask dont tell huh!!
08:07 AM on 03/30/2008
At least he flew over Vietnam and not Texas during the war. Bush is truly a zero and McCain is an honorable man. He's just not the right person for the White House. Give him some respect!