AP: Iraqi Prime Minister Left Politically Battered And Humbled

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ROBERT H. REID | March 31, 2008 11:12 PM EST | AP

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Men clean up the al-Qaim mosque after it was damaged in an airstrike, in Basra, Iraq, Monday, March 31, 2008. One person was killed in the airstrike, police said. (AP Photo/Nabil al-Jurani)

BAGHDAD — Rockets fell on the Green Zone and random machine gun fire rang out Monday in the southern city of Basra as Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr sought to rein in his militia after a week of battles that claimed about 400 lives.

The peace deal between al-Sadr and Iraqi government forces _ said to have been brokered in Iran _ calmed the violence but left the cleric's Mahdi Army intact and Iraq's U.S.-backed prime minister politically battered and humbled within his own Shiite power base.

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki had promised to crush the militias that have effectively ruled Basra for nearly three years. The U.S. military launched air strikes in the city to back the Iraqi effort.

But the ferocious response by the Mahdi Army, including rocket fire on the U.S.-controlled Green Zone and attacks throughout the Shiite south, caught the government by surprise and sent officials scrambling for a way out of the crisis.

The confrontation enabled al-Sadr to show that he remains a powerful force capable of challenging the Iraqi government, the Americans and mainstream Shiite parties that have sought for years to marginalize him. And the outcome cast doubt on President Bush's assessment that the Basra battle was "a defining moment" in the history "of a free Iraq."

With gunmen again off the streets, a round-the-clock curfew imposed in Baghdad last week was lifted at 6 a.m. Monday, except in Sadr City and two other Shiite neighborhoods. Streets of the capital buzzed with traffic and commerce.

Several rockets or mortars slammed Monday into the Green Zone, the nerve center of the American mission in Iraq. But the U.S. Embassy said there no reports of serious injuries. At least two Americans working for the U.S. government were killed in Green Zone attacks last week.

An American soldier was killed Monday by a roadside bomb in northeastern Baghdad, the U.S. military said without specifying whether the attack occurred in a Shiite or Sunni area. The military also said a U.S. soldier wounded south of Baghdad on March 23 died Sunday in Germany.

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U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said in Copenhagen, Denmark that the violence in Shiite areas had not changed American plans to withdraw more combat forces this spring.

Republican Sen. John McCain, who has linked his presidential campaign to the conduct of the war, said he was "surprised" that al-Maliki had ordered an operation in Basra rather than keeping the focus on fighting al-Qaida in Iraq in the northern city of Mosul.

Fighting in the south helped make March the deadliest month for Iraqis since last summer, according to figures compiled by The Associated Press.

At least 1,247 Iraqis, including civilians and security personnel, had been killed as of Monday, according to figures compiled from police and U.S. military reports. The figure was nearly double the tally for February and the biggest monthly toll since August, when 1,956 people died violently.

In ordering his militia to stop fighting, al-Sadr also demanded concessions from the Iraqi government, including an end to the "illegal raids and arrests" of his followers and the release of all detainees who have not been convicted of any offenses.

Sadrists in Basra complained police were still conducting raids in the area Monday night and that their followers might start carrying weapons again for self-defense.

Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh welcomed al-Sadr's decision but told reporters Monday that no political group was above the law. Al-Sadr's supporters believed the security crackdown in Basra was aimed at weakening their movement before provincial elections this fall.

U.S. and Iraqi officials insisted the operation was directed at criminals and rogue militiamen _ some allegedly linked to Iran _ but not against the Sadrist movement, which controls 30 of the 275 seats in the national parliament.

But well-informed Iraqi political officials said the Iranians played a key role in hammering out the peace deal, boosting the Islamic Republic's influence among the majority Shiite community. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the information.

According to one Shiite official, the deal was struck after hours of negotiations in the Iranian holy city of Qom involving key figures in Iraq's major Shiite parties and representatives of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard.

Two of the Iraqis present _ Ali Adeeb and Hadi al-Amri _ presented documents and photos which they claimed proved that al-Sadr's militia was receiving Iranian weapons, the official said.

Shiite-dominated Iran is believed to supply weapons, money and training to most Iraqi Shiite factions _ a charge the Iranians deny.

The Iraqi officials would not elaborate on Iran's role, and efforts to contact Iraqi representatives who took part in the Qom meetings were unsuccessful.

Iran has been eager to maintain unity among Iraq's factious Shiites, believing that is the best way to ensure a pro-Iranian government in Baghdad.

"By all reports, Iran's role is not good," said Michael O'Hanlon, foreign policy expert at the Brookings Institution. "They're arming all groups. ...They want influence with everyone."

A day after al-Sadr's call, Iraqi officials sought to present his decision as a victory for the government, despite the failure of U.S.-backed Iraqi forces to dislodge Mahdi fighters from Basra strongholds.

Al-Dabbagh said security operations in Basra would continue until the city "reaches a secure and acceptable situation" where residents can live "without threats or terrorism from any side."

Maj. Gen. Abdul-Karim Khalaf said that as of Monday, Iraqi forces had killed 210 "criminals" in Basra, arrested 155 others and seized large quantities of rockets and roadside bombs.

Nonetheless, the outcome of the Basra crisis dealt a blow to the credibility of al-Maliki, who flew to the city last week to oversee the crackdown personally.

On Saturday, al-Maliki had promised "a decisive and final battle" and gave assurances he would remain in Basra until the militias were crushed. A key adviser to al-Maliki, Sami al-Askari, said the prime minister was expected to return to Baghdad this week.

With tensions easing, Iraqi government television reported that a high-profile official was released Monday evening four days after he was seized by gunmen from his east Baghdad home.

Tahseen al-Shiekhly serves as the civilian spokesman for the Baghdad military command and regularly appears before reporters to tout improvements in security.

In Basra, residents said by telephone that the city, headquarters of Iraq's vital oil industry, was generally calm except for sporadic explosions and machine gun fire.

Some residents, however, estimated that only about a quarter of the shops and businesses opened Monday because any people were apprehensive that the truce would hold.

"The whole situation is a big farce," said one resident, who gave his name only as Abu Mohammed, or father of Mohammed. "I think the situation will return to normal again but the problem will never be solved. Gangs, smugglers and corrupt people will go back to doing what they were doing before."

___

Associated Press writers Qassim Abdul-Zahra, Bushra Juhi and Sinan Salaheddin in Baghdad and Carley Petesch in New York contributed to this report, as did the AP News Research Center.

BAGHDAD — Rockets fell on the Green Zone and random machine gun fire rang out Monday in the southern city of Basra as Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr sought to rein in his militia after a week of ...
BAGHDAD — Rockets fell on the Green Zone and random machine gun fire rang out Monday in the southern city of Basra as Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr sought to rein in his militia after a week of ...
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THIS INCIDENT SHOWS WHO IS BOSS IN THE MIDDLE EAST. AND THAT'S EXACTLY WHAT
IRAN WANTED TO SHOW. IRAN CAN TURN THE WAR OFF AND CAN TURN IT ON AGAIN. AND NEITHER BUSH OR HIS PUPPETS CAN DO A THING ABOUT IT. HE IS LEAVING THIS MESS
FOR THE NEXT PRESIDENT. AND WE DON'T HAVE ONE CANDIDATE WHO IS FORCEFUL
ENOUGH TO END THIS GRAP WITH VICTORY. MCCAINE IS TO SET IN HIS WAYS AND TO OLD.
HILLARY WILL SLAP THEM ON THE WRIST WITH CRATER BOMBS, ALTHOUGH ARABS DON'T LIKE THOSE BIG METAL BIRDS WHO CRAP FROM THE SKY ON THEM AND MAKE HUGE CRATERS, AND OBAMA , ALL HE WANTS IS THE PRESIDENTIAL RETIREMENT SALARY SO HE CAN DO HIS OWN THING AFTER 4 YEARS, AND CAN KEEP HIS 1,6 MILLION MANSION. HE IS SO NAIVE THEY WILL BEAT THE HECK OUT OF HIM, WHEN HE PULLS THOSE TROOPS OUT, THEY WILL GIVE THEM
A GO AWAY PRESENT THEY WON'T FORGET SO SOON. AND AFTER THAT THE SAUDIS WILL FALL, JORDANIAN WILL FALL LIKE THE SHAH DID , AND IRAN WILL REIGN IN THE MIDDLE EAST WITH THE HELP OF CHINA AND RUSSIA, AND YOU ALL BETTER FIX YOUR BICYCLES BECAUSE THAT'S THE WAY YOU WILL HAVE TO GO TO WORK WHEN THE TROOPS ARE HOME AGAIN.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:50 AM on 04/01/2008
- Paul I'm a Fan of Paul permalink

Why arn't we backing al Sadr? He seems to have the greater political clout and better-disciplined followers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:46 AM on 04/01/2008

let's see. A powerful religous leader with his own army,backed by a foreign goverment and hates America.Gee...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:56 AM on 04/01/2008
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it is because we are spreading FREEDOM and DEMOCRACY throughout the middle east.

if i were president we would be backing al sadr.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 AM on 04/01/2008
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From Bill Raggio
Mar 31:
********

The reasons behind Sadr's call for a cessation in fighting remain unknown, but reports indicate the Mahdi Army was having a difficult time sustaining its operations and has taken heavy casualties. "Whatever gains [the Mahdi Army] has made in the field [in Basrah], they were running short of ammunition, food, and water," an anonymous US military officer serving in South told The Long War Journal. "In short [the Mahdi Army] had no ability to sustain the effort.

TIME's sources in Basrah paint a similar picture. "There has been a large-scale retreat of the Mahdi Army in the oil-rich Iraqi port city because of low morale and because ammunition is low due to the closure of the Iranian border," the magazine reported.
-snip-

The Mahdi Army has also taken high casualties since the fighting began on March 25. According to an unofficial tally of the open source reporting from the US and Iraqi media and Multinational Forces Iraq, 571 Mahdi Army fighters have been killed, 881 have been wounded, 490 have been captured, and 30 have surrendered over the course of seven days of fighting.
****
Read more at:
http://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/2008/03/maliki_security_oper.php

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:11 AM on 04/01/2008
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Yup and the government of Iran is laughing with every American death, they know Bush is an idiot just like the rest of the world, they also know that all they had to do was sit back and wait for the right moment and then step in and of course guide the Iraqi's to a cease fire, after Al Sadar's group grew in strength. But not to worry, the U.S. Govt has helped arm all the factions over there now. So there will be pleanty of guns and ammo for them to keep on killing our soldiers and each other. What a totally usless piece of you know what our Prez is. His entire administration was filled with usless slackers who were either big campaign donors or worked on his campaign or a former or present member of his RICH CLUB BOYS full of CEO'S all whom don't know their asses from a whole in the ground. Who is going to pay the price, well us of course!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:09 AM on 04/01/2008

Now who is really "running" the show in Iraq? Apparently not our team. Al Sadrs' milita showed everyone just how the surge has work out. In 3 days they routed US trained troops and ran Maliki out of his front line bunker. Poof

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:46 AM on 04/01/2008

Al-Maliki is battered and humiliated? He never had pride or leadership skills to lose. He's but our puppet, who hopes he'll be able to establish a quasi-government in Iraq that will give our corporations oil leases and a "treaty" that will allow us to permanently occupy and control them.
It was clear from the start this was the only post-war plan the administration had. There were no WMD's, al-Qaeda, nukes in Iraq. They wanted Saddam out, so we could turn the oil profits to our corporations.
The surge may quell the carnage in one area for a short time, but when we leave or turn elsewhere, the violence erupts again, and we're off to start trying to quell violence in another area. It's a vicious cycle with lives, blood, treasury, and our credibility lost for no gain, reward, benchmark for success.
We outspent the Soviets, and forced them to spend themselves into oblivion between Star Wars and their failed invasion of Afghanistan. Now, rather than learning the lessons from this, we're doing the same thing, and are spending ourselves into oblivion. Right now, the only thing propping up what's left of our economy is that the Chinese are holding our notes. This forces us to continue their most-favored status as traders. It's why we can't object strenuously about their occupation of Tibet, or the dangerous toys and goods they sell here, much less their human rights abuses in their own country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:16 AM on 04/01/2008

I agree100% Not Blind. Great post there. When they talk or write about Malicki they should be refering to George Bush. It's a trick. Propoganda. It is my belief that Bush and Cheney are actually controlling our press behind the scenes without our knowledge under some black ops protocol for intellectual warfare. How else can you explain the hands off status enjoyed by these monsters?

Rumsfeld alluded to just such operations when he used to talk about winning hearts and minds. What he meant was lying your ass off to try and hoodwink the public into supporting this boondoggle.

I guess General Dynamics and Lockheed and all the other war and weapons manufactures are happy. That's all that counts in america today. Your living under facism. Sorry. Go ahead and vote like an automaton and repeat these words "At least I'm free" or better yet "There's no place like home."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:32 AM on 04/01/2008


I agree entirely.
al-Sadr represents the much larger and more nationalistic Shite faction. Maliki is from a much smaller regional faction with ties to Iran. Bush/Cheney's strategy is based upon a weak government that because it disproportionately empowers the otherwise weakest group is dependent upon us. Hence it cannot resist our taking the boodle and setting up military bases to intimidate other countries.

Since Bush's strategy is based on the viability of the weakest of three factions, he finds himself allied with his enemy Iran in the South and bribing otherwise hostile Sunnis not to fight in the North. al-Sadr must hold his base and physically survive. He can't afford decisive battles, Time is on his side because in the end the Sunnis will prefer him to Maliki.. Thousands of Sunnis and al-Sadr's followers died fighting Iran. Bush is slowing down on the bribes to the Sunnis because it disturbs the balance of power. Only Bush and Cheney could have us bribe people not to struggle against our taking their wealth.

Iran's inflluence is limited. They share no culture, language or ethnicity with Iraq. There is no common history unless you include being at war with each other. Their main interest is not to have a U.S. military base on their border. Hence they support al-Sadr. Along with everyone else in the region they know that when al-Sadr repeatedly states he will ally with the Sunnis to resist the invaders that includes them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 PM on 04/01/2008

And yet no one in the American press is saying the surge didn't really work at all, it was just an illusion. Terrorism and guerilla warfare can be turned on and off just like a faucet.

That's a fact Jack!.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:14 AM on 04/01/2008

And the outcome cast doubt on President Bush's assessment that the Basra battle was "a defining moment" in the history "of a free Iraq."

Everything out of Bush's mouth is a lie. It's lie,lie,lie. All the way to next january when he can slink off the world stage beleagured and abandoned. We've never had this level of failure as a country before. At least Vietnam was a real war. Even though we lost it was a fair fight.

Wow did you hear that Bush get booed yesterday? Man that had to be humiliating. I love that mad odg cur look George gets when he is caught lying or is humiliated by his horrible handling of our country when we needed a strong leader. His forehead gets real tight and his scalp draws back just like a rabid dog.

He's a classic sociopath. He lacks any real emotions. He's been so spoiled and coddled all his life it's caused his soul to be deformed and mutated into an ugly black husk. Could George Bush be the Devil incarnate? Evil distilled into it's purest form? One wonders about such things.

But then how to explain Cheney?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:11 AM on 04/01/2008

"The Iranians played a key role in hammering out the peace deal, boosting the Islamic Republic's influence among the majority Shiite community. Iran has been eager to maintain unity among Iraq's factious Shiites, believing that is the best way to ensure a pro-Iranian government in Baghdad."

BUSH & MCCAIN want to BOMB BOMB BOMB, BOMB BOMB IRAN, believing THAT is the best way to ensure a pro-AMERICAN government in Baghdad?


"The whole situation is a big farce", said one resident. "I think the situation will return to normal again but the problem will never be solved. Gangs, smugglers and corrupt people will go back to doing what they were doing before."

Corrupt people associated with THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION will go back to doing what they were doing before...Because "Basra is the headquarters of Iraq's vital oil industry"!!!


Republican Sen. John McCain said he was surprised that al-Maliki had ordered an operation in Basra rather than keeping the focus on fighting al-Qaida in Iraq in the northern city of Mosul.

It surprises John McCain that the focus ISN'T on fighting AL QAEDA in Iraq? Oh give us a break! McCain knows full well WHY Al Maliki ordered an operation in BASRA¦Because "Basra is the headquarters of Iraq's vital oil industry"!!!

WE are NOT "fighting AL QAEDA in Iraq"!!! IT'S THE OIL, STUPID!!!

NO MORE BLOOD FOR OIL!!! BRING OUR TROOPS HOME!!!

OBAMA '08!
HOPE & CHANGE!

Stay safe, healthy and happy,
Love, Loretta

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:41 AM on 04/01/2008

A fine piece of collaborative journalism. Well done. Thank you.

Our dear "so-called Prime Minister" of this "so-called elected democratic government" may be beginning to become dimly aware that, one way or the other, his days are numbered. He is a quisling, a traitor to his own country and to his people. Did he do it for appeasement, for his own ambition, or just because he foolishly trusted a smooth-talking snake named Richard Cheney (as, in fact, we all did)?

He will discover that his countrymen are not weak, are not defeated, and that they possess more than enough strength to attack him, and to neuter the American offensives (at their present levels) so long as they may last. But as his own good-books say, "those who live by the sword die by it." The betrayers are themselves betrayed.

Every American needs to know, as so many citizens on this world's stage already know, that the most evil and bloody sort of chapters of human history are now playing-back in front of our eyes. Until now, Cheney has sought fit to engage in a bit of contretemps; a gentleman's game played with pistols. From the unnoticeable position, the "vice"-captain's chair, he seeks his prize by subterfuge: "a freely elected democratic society asked us to assist, and gave us the prize of their own free will." But patience grows thin. This enormous game was not set-up to be lost ... ...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:33 AM on 04/01/2008

china and russia will not have to lift a finger to destroy us...........we are doing it to ourselves.......our war/ military spending is consuming moneys that should be spent on education and health care....the USA firced the old soviet union to spend its way to its own destruction..........now the USA is being forced into the same abyss.....by the oil-producing ME.....who would have thought the ARABS could bring the mighty USA to is knees?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:09 AM on 04/01/2008

Whenever facts on the ground contradict the fairy tale told by this Administration they seem to just seem to move on to a new improved spin.
Where formerly we were supporting a democracy bravely fighting AlQaeda, now we are watching as the Maliki government takes on Iranian supported "extremists".
While it has become obvious that this is a clash for power amongst various Iranian supported clans, made even more obvious by the fact that mediation is occuring IN IRAN, the Bush administration continues to cheer on their great democratic experiment. One has to wonder when the public, and the media, will finally notice that THE ENTIRE IRAQI GOVERNMENT are nothing so much as IRANIAN BACKED MOSLEM EXTREMISTS. Be they the Dawa Party of Maliki or the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq and it"s leader Al-Hakim, this "government" was given to the Iranians ages ago.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:42 AM on 04/01/2008

John McCain is delusional.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:21 AM on 04/01/2008
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This new political development must be what McCain had in mind when he said that the surge is working.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:34 AM on 04/01/2008

My First thought when i heard I our Kids had put boots down in Afghanistan was - They will be surrounded and slaughtered, Iraq Kicked that Fear Up several notches. the more I hear about arming & payiing extremesit tribes to 'help 'US, and then th elack of Payment to these Tribes- adds more fuel to my fears. Now Iran is the "peace Maker'? Not the Saudi's or the Jordanians....
This Region has Never been one to be Second Guessed- We have , throughout time- been Duped by our own Perceptions- Our own way of thinking which does not apply to theirs. theri cultures are far more Ancient then Ours- Their Strifes far more divisive. But they are still all of the Same 'Family Tree'.
We should have never- nor should ever- disregarde the Innate Cutlural Alliances or characteristics.
Ex- I have always been told I am Irish. Now I find I am Scotch- Irish. I read about the culture and Philosophies of this Group- I am Innately Scotch - High Value to education, Love music, My first Book was Aesops Fables ( translate d1st by a Scotsman) .whether or Not my mother realized what she was passing Down is Doubtful- but she instilled in my many characteristic I am now reading about- along with a HUGE Saopbox and willing to 'Preach' of it regardless of the Consequences. I Confido!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:13 AM on 04/01/2008

It's funny how the media has bowed to the SADR god/idol in this fray. He is in hiding in IRAN, he is given terms of surrender for his forces, he 'demands' concessions from Maliki, then surrenders control of Basra, which we find out was illusionary anyway. Maliki will not let any uncharged Mahdi fighters out of jail AND he will not stop arresting and/or harassing fighters in the streets. What concessions were given then besides SADR's tenuous control of the militia? SADR is still hiding in IRAN.

¦571 Mahdi Army fighters have been killed, 881 have been wounded, 490 have been captured, and 30 have surrendered over the course of seven days of fighting.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:13 AM on 04/01/2008
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