THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (Full Version)

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azinorum -> THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (1/19/2007 2:15:56 PM)

Wonder if Sadr's involvement with the executions and the international condemnation that followed will lead to a split between Maliki and Sadr? I'm pretty sure the Americans are putting pressure on Maliki to do just that. If it leads to a successful government crackdown against the Militias then Sadr's morons will have actually done us all a big favor by turning the executions into a media circus. Regards Azinorum

Top al-Sadr aide arrested by US and Iraqi forces by Devika Bhat

[image]http://images.thetimes.co.uk/images/trans.gif[/image]
US and Iraqi forces have arrested one of the top aides of the radical Shia cleric, Hojatoleslam Moqtada al-Sadr, as the Iraqi Government prepares to launch a crackdown on militias accused of enflaming the sectarian violence which has plagued the country.

The pre-dawn arrest, which came as US Defence Secretary Robert Gates embarked on his second trip to Iraq in less than a month, highlighted the tensions between the two nations, with an adviser to the Iraqi Prime Minister insisting that the Government had received no prior notice of the raid.

"Coordination with Iraqi political leadership is needed before conducting such an operation that draw popular reactions," said Sadiq al-Rikabi, adding that the arrest was not part of the government’s latest initiative to put an end to the militia-driven bloodshed.

Sheikh Abdul-Hadi al-Darraji, Hojatoleslam al-Sadr's media director in Baghdad, was captured in the early hours in a mosque in the eastern neighbourhood of Baladiyat, according to the cleric’s aides, who said that a guard was killed in the "cowardly" raid.
The US military did not name the detained man but said special Iraqi army forces operating with coalition advisers had captured a high-level, illegal armed group leader in Baladiyat. It added that two other suspects were detained by Iraqi forces for further questioning.

The comments from Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s adviser appeared to show the divergence between the US and Iraqi authorities on how best to deal with the Shia militias which have been blamed for many of the killings that have left dozens of bodies, often showing signs of torture, on the streets of Baghdad.

Mr al-Maliki, whose Shia-led government counts Hojatoleslam al-Sadr and his followers as crucial allies, has been criticised for his apparent reluctance to confront the influential cleric and to disarm his powerful al-Mahdi Army.

But with his latest pledge of a crackdown widely viewed as a last-ditch hope, the Prime Minister has been under increasing pressure to act. Earlier this month, he said that 400 members of the militia had been arrested – a claim confirmed by Hojatoleslam al-Sadr in a newspaper interview.

US forces accused the arrested suspect of having ties with the leaders of Shia death squads. One such figure is said to be Abu Diraa, a militia commander who has gained a reputation outstanding brutality and is accused of killing Iraqi and US soldiers as well as several Sunnis.

"The suspect allegedly leads various illegal armed group operations and is affiliated with illegal armed group cells targeting Iraqi civilians for sectarian attacks and violence," said a US military statement.

Abdul-Razzaq al-Nidawi, an aide to Hojatoleslam al-Sadr in the Shia holy city of Najaf, demanded that Mr al-Darraji and other detainees be released and called for demonstrations after the weekly Friday prayer services.

"America is playing with fire and our patience is beginning to fade," he said. "This savage barbarian act will not pass peacefully."

Mr al-Maliki today came under further criticism from Washington, as Mr Gates, who met earlier with the leaders of Saudi Arabia and Qatar, said they had expressed concern about whether the Prime Minister could deliver on his promises to rein in the violence.
"Quite frankly, these are reservations that have been expressed in Washington, and we will be watching," he warned.




azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (1/20/2007 2:33:17 AM)

Iraq troops 'seize Shia militant'
BBC News - 20 January, 2007
 
Security forces in Iraq have seized a high-level militia leader in a raid in Baghdad, the US military has said.
 
It comes as coalition and Iraqi forces prepare for a full-scale crackdown against insurgents in the capital.
A spokesman for radical Shia cleric Moqtada Sadr said one of Mr Sadr's aides was arrested.
Iraq's Prime Minister Nouri Maliki is under increasing US pressure to dismantle Mr Sadr's Mehdi army, blamed for scores of sectarian killings.

The BBC's world affairs correspondent Mike Wooldridge says the Shia-dominated Iraqi government's willingness to take on Shia militia is widely seen as a litmus test of President Bush's new security plan.

It appears that operations against the militia are being stepped up, our correspondent says.
 
'Assassinations'

The US military says Iraqi special forces backed by US troops seized the as-yet unidentified man in a pre-dawn raid in eastern Baladiat district, close to the Mehdi army's stronghold of Sadr City.

Mr Sadr's office said its Baghdad media director, Sheikh Abdel Hadi al-Duraji, was arrested
"He was arrested at midnight [2100 GMT] with two cousins," Abdel Mehdi al-Matiri, a spokesman for Mr Sadr, told Reuters news agency.

"We are angry. This is a kind of revenge. Sheikh Duraji deals with the media. He is not a military man," he said.

The arrest comes a day after Mr Maliki said 400 members of the Mehdi army had been detained across southern Iraq.

But analysts say the prime minister is politically dependent on Mr Sadr's support, and some members of his party favour keeping him inside the political tent - rather than provoking him by trying to push him out.




azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (1/20/2007 5:11:05 AM)

 

Gates returns home after road testing new Iraq, Iran strategy
by Jim Mannion – yahoo news

WASHINGTON (AFP) - US Defense Secretary Robert Gates has returned home with assurances that so far Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki is living up to his pledge to support a renewed crackdown on sectarian violence.

Three Iraqi divisions are lining up to go to Baghdad as promised and US forces have swooped down on suspected Iranian agents and death squad leaders, including an official of Shiite leader Moqtada al-Sadr's militia, without government interference.

"So far so good," General George Casey, the top US commander in Top of Form told reporters Friday at Tallil Air Base in southern Iraq after a lightning tour of military installations in Basra and Tallil with Gates.

In an intense weeklong trip, Gates road tested his ideas for strengthening a badly weakened US position in Iraq and the region, placing a clear emphasis on flexing US military and diplomatic muscle despite the strains of a long war.

He met with:


NATO allies in Europe, endorsed commanders requests for more US troops in

Afghanistan, and conferred with rulers of Saudi Arabia and the Gulf on his concerns that regional rival

Iran is riding high on US difficulties in Iraq.

"Whatever one's views on how we got to this point here in Iraq, at this pivotal moment there is widespread agreement that failure would be a calamity for America's national interests and those of many other countries," Gates said as he ended the trip.

With only one month on the job, he said he was looking for "ground truth" on the situation in Iraq and Afghanistan and the larger Gulf region.

Polite skepticism appeared to be the reaction from allies and other friendly countries who wished him well but offered no tangible commitments to the new policy.

In London, the United States' closest ally in the Iraq war told Gates they planned to proceed with the withdrawal in the coming months of several thousand troops from Iraq, a good chunk of 7,000-strong British contingent.

The United States is sending an additional 20,000 US troops to try to put out the sectarian fire in Baghdad, but the British said the situation in the predominantly Shiite south is quieter and therefore different.

In Riyadh, Saudi King Abudullah listened to Gates' pitch for more reconstruction and development aid for Iraq but made no commitments and expressed nervousness about the Maliki government, US officials said.

During Gates' visit to Qatar, the site of the regional headquarters of the US Central Command and a huge air base used by the US air force, reporters were kept at an air base "somewhere in Southwest Asia" while the secretary met with the emir.

Because of the host nation's sensitivities, reporters traveling with Gates were required to sign secrecy agreements forbidding them from saying what base in what country Gates flew to for the Qatar leg of his trip.

In the Gulf, Gates' theme was deepening US concern over Iranian expansion.
Just two years ago, he said, Iran was playing a more constructive role in Iraq and Afghanistan. With US forces on their eastern and southern borders the Iranians weren't sure what would come next, he said.

Now, he said, the Iranians "believe they have the United States at some disadvantage because of the situation in Iraq."

"We need some leverage, it seems to me, before we engage with the Iranians," he told reporters during a stop in Bahrain.

"I think until the Iranians have some sense that the United States is in fact a formidable adversary, that there's not much advantage for us for engagement."

The United States is sending a second aircraft carrier battle group to the Gulf region as well as Patriot missile defense batteries, building the US military's presence in the Gulf to its highest level since the US invasion of Iraq in 2003.

However, no major change in the posture of Iranian naval forces in the Gulf has been detected over the past year, said Commodore Keith Winstanley, deputy commander of a combined coalition maritime force based in Bahrain.

Iranian activities in Iraq have also remained elusive.

In Basra, British army Major Chris Ormond told reporters Iranian agents are suspected of hiring "rogue elements" of Shiite militias to attack coalition forces, but no hard evidence has been found that it is smuggling in advanced weaponry for the attacks.

US forces, however, have detained Iranians in at least two recent raids.




azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (1/22/2007 2:38:45 AM)

Baghdad boosted as US losses grow
BBC News Website - 22 January, 2007

US and Iraqi forces are preparing for a security drive in Baghdad

More than 3,000 US troops have arrived in Baghdad, the first deployment of extra forces promised for the Iraqi capital by US President George W Bush.

As the deployment began, the US military said four soldiers and one marine had been killed in the restive western province of Anbar.

It took to 25 the number of US deaths in Iraq on Saturday - one of the worst days for US troops since the invasion.

In the latest violence in Baghdad seven people were killed in two blasts.

A bomb on a minibus killed six people in Karrada, a mostly Shia district. The second bomb hit central Baghdad.

In the south of the country, a British soldier was killed by a roadside bomb near the city of Basra.
The 3,200 extra troops sent to Baghdad are the advance guard of a 21,500-strong deployment ordered by President Bush earlier this month.

Saturday was the deadliest day for US troops in Iraq since January 2005, when 36 service members were killed. In addition to the deaths in Anbar:
  1. Twelve US troops were killed in a helicopter crash near Baghdad
  2. Five US soldiers were killed in a clash with militants in the Shia holy city of Karbala
  3. Three other soldiers were killed in separate attacks across the country

The extra US troops being sent to Baghdad are meant to bolster Iraqi efforts to combat the continuing bombings, killings and sectarian violence.

Mr Bush has admitted that the battle for Baghdad will prove crucial to the outcome of the conflict in Iraq, but his plans are opposed by political rivals in the US.

Meanwhile the political movement headed by radical Shia cleric Moqtada Sadr has said it is ending a two-month boycott of Iraq's parliament and government.

The boycott was called in protest at a meeting between Prime Minister Nouri Maliki and President Bush and to press for the withdrawal from Iraq of US troops.

Mr Maliki is politically dependent on support from Mr Sadr's bloc, but he has vowed to crack down on Mr Sadr's Mehdi Army as part of the planned security drive in Baghdad.




azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (1/25/2007 2:18:59 AM)

Latest on the Haifa Street operation from the BBC:

New push to control Baghdad area Thursday, 25 January 2007 Iraqi forces backed by US helicopter gunships have fought insurgents in the Sunni-dominated Haifa Street area of the capital, Baghdad.  The US said it was part of the new plan to restore security to the capital.
 
The area was cleared after a day-long offensive in which up to 30 militants were killed. One US soldier also died.
 
The battle came hours after President George W Bush urged the US to give his new strategy a chance to work, warning of "grievous consequences" of failure.

In his annual State of the Union address to Congress, Mr Bush said that if the US stepped back before Baghdad was secure, "the Iraqi government would be overrun by extremists from all sides".
 
The new US strategy is to take control of insurgent strongholds and hold them, rather than withdrawing and allowing the areas to be re-taken by militias - Haifa Street is the first test.
An advance guard of 3,200 troops arrived in Baghdad on Sunday, part of President Bush's plan to send an extra 21,500 troops to Iraq.
 
Machine-gun fire
 
Haifa Street is a major Baghdad thoroughfare lined with high-rise buildings.
 
The BBC's Mike Wooldridge in Baghdad says Iraqi and US troops moved in before dawn, meeting mortars, grenades and machine-gun fire. Apache attack helicopters provided air support during two prolonged spells of fierce fighting.
 
The Iraqi government said up to 30 insurgents were killed and another 27 - from several Arab countries - were detained.
 
A statement from the US military said that one soldier was killed and two others injured in a combined security operation in Baghdad.
 
Earlier, a resident of Haifa Street, Naseer, told the BBC Arabic Service that Iraqi civilians were trapped in the area.
 
"I've got wounded all around me - there are 15 wounded and I don't know how many are dead. We can't share information because we can't go out because of the snipers," he said.
In other developments:



  • Details emerged about Tuesday's downing of a private US security company helicopter, with US and Iraqi sources saying four of five Americans who died were shot execution-style

  • Two US Marines died in combat in Anbar province on Tuesday, the US military said in a statement

  • Police retrieved the bodies of 33 tortured people that were found in separate locations in Baghdad

  • Four policemen were killed when a bomb struck their patrol in western Baghdad, police said

  • A well-known professor and economist, Diya al-Meqoter, was shot several dead by gunmen




  • azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (1/25/2007 4:19:09 AM)

    This is part of the reason why this government of ours doesn't want to really disband Militias. Its too profitable!

    Iraq militias take millions in oil thefts
    Earth Times - [19/01/2007]
     
    A top Iraqi official said militias have been able to steal millions of dollars from the oil ministry, funding their organizations and creating a fuel crisis.

    Deputy Prime Minister Barham Saleh said the militias are those fighting the U.S. coalition and Iraq troops, the Arabic daily newspaper Azzaman reports.

    He said they have been able to steal $1.5 million a year from the Baiji refinery, the largest refinery in Iraq serving oil coming from fields in Iraq's north.

    Iraq oil production hasn't recovered from the March 2003 invasion and subsequent violence. It was already suffering under U.N. sanctions and misuse and mismanagement by Saddam Hussein.

    More than three-quarters of the 2 million barrels per day production comes from fields in the south, controlled by Shiites but relatively nonviolent.

    In the north, attacks on the refinery and the Kirkuk-to-Ceyhan, Turkey, pipeline have virtually shut down most production and all exports from the region.

    Iraq suffers from lack of oil production, low refining capacity and a refined fuel products shortage, forcing it to import fuel such as gasoline and kerosene.

    Crime is behind the fuel crisis, Saleh said. We have a regime and an administration that encourages corruption.




    azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (1/25/2007 6:34:09 AM)

    The report is self explanatory.

    Sadr City mayor says he has presented agreement with armed groups to keep weapons off streets to U.S. officials
    The Associated Press - Published: January 25, 2007
     
    BAGHDAD, Iraq: The mayor of Baghdad's Sadr City says he has reached agreement with political and religious groups to keep weapons off the streets of the heavily populated Shiite militia stronghold and has presented the deal to U.S. and Iraqi government officials in an apparent attempt to avoid a military crackdown on the area.
     
    Rahim al-Darraji said Iraqi troops will be in charge of security in the sprawling district in eastern Baghdad. His comments come amid fears that Sadr City, the main headquarters of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army militia that has been blamed in much of the rising sectarian violence in recent months, could be a major target in a planned U.S.-Iraqi security crackdown.
     
    Iraq's Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has promised the operation will focus on militia violence as well as Sunni insurgents amid criticism that his reluctance to confront his political backer al-Sadr contributed to the failure of previous attempts.
     
    Asked if the Mahdi Army militia was among the groups that promised not to carry arms, al-Darraji said, "all the groups with no exception."
     
    Al-Darraji said the Iraqi government and the U.S. military had been informed about the agreement during a meeting held last week. He added that he met with British Army Lt. Gen. Graeme Lamb, deputy commander of coalition forces in Iraq, to discuss the agreement on Jan. 15.
     
    "We told them (the Iraqi government) there will be no armed presence but you should guarantee security in the city," he said. "We told the Americans that Sadr City is a heavily populated neighborhood and currently has a very small number of police and army forces. We want more recruitment from the neighborhood in order to reduce unemployment."
     
    Lamb's office declined to confirm or deny the meeting, saying only the general meets with many Iraqi officials, including military, government and civilians.
     
    The mayor also said the Iraqi government should confiscate all unlicensed weapons and release some prisoners as a confidence-building measure.
     
    He added that he also held a meeting on Jan. 14 with al-Maliki. He told the prime minister that they back his security plan in which thousands of Iraqi and U.S. troops are expected to carry neighborhood-to-neighborhood sweeps to try to secure Baghdad.
     
    Sadr City has been targeted by a large number of explosions that killed hundreds of people in the past months, including Nov. 23 bombings that killed at least 215 people. The Mahdi Army had been almost in full charge of security in the area, checking cars and suspicious people, but their military presence dropped sharply recently after reports that they might be targeted by the security plan.
     
    U.S. and Iraqi troops have been carrying raids in the neighborhood against Mahdi Army commanders and members who have been accused of carrying sectarian killings against Sunnis. Last week, U.S. troops detained a chief al-Sadr aide Abdul-Hadi al-Darraji, but the mayor said they were not related.
     
    "We confirm that Sadr City will work in order to make the security plan successful and in order to reach a free and democratic Iraq and we confirm that weapons will only be in the hands of the state and security forces," he said.
     
    Al-Maliki has said that more than 400 Mahdi Army members have been captured by U.S. troops in recent weeks.
     
    The U.S. military also announced earlier this week that U.S. and Iraqi forces captured 16 high-level Mahdi Army members and 33 key Sunni insurgents in a 45 day timespan, in addition to six other militia leaders who have been captured since the start of October.
     
    It said more than 600 Mahdi Army members were in jail awaiting prosecution by the Iraqi government.




    al ani -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (1/31/2007 4:44:25 PM)

    The latest news:
    فالون: تغيير الوضع في العراق ممكن
    دعا مرشح الرئيس الأمريكي جورج بوش لقيادة القوات الأمريكية في الشرق الأوسط لتبني طريقة مختلفة وجديدة للتعامل مع الوضع العراقي .
    وقال الأدميرال ويليام فالون أمام لجنة استماع للكونجرس إن "الوقت قصير" أمام الولايات المتحدة لكي تغير مسار الأوضاع في العراق.
    وجاءت تصريحات الجنرال الأمريكي بعد يوم دموي في العراق، قتل خلاله مايقارب 50 شخصا وأصيب ما لا يقل عن 100 في سلسلة تفجيرات وهجمات  بالهاون تزامنت مع احتفال الشيعة في عاشوراء.
    وعندما يوافق الكونجرس على ترشيح الأدميرال فالون، فإنه سيصبح أول ضابط من البحرية الأمريكية يتولى قيادة القيادة المركزية للقوات الأمريكية في الشرق الأوسط، والتي تعرف اختصارا بـ"سينتكوم".
    كما أضاف فالون إن مقاومة التاثير الإيراني في العراق ستكون من أهم أولوياته إذا ما تولى قيادة سينتكوم
    وسيحل الأدميرال فالون محل الجنرال جون أبي زيد، الذي سيتقاعد بعد أربع سنوات من توليه القيادة.
    وأما لجنة الدفاع في الكونجرس قال فالون إن الإستراتيجية الأمريكية  في العراق لا تعمل وأن الوقت قصير للغاية من أجل إنقاذ الوضع هناك.
    وأخبر الأدميرال فالون لجنة الكونجرس أنه من الممكن تغيير الوضع في العراق غير ان الوقت قصير.
    وقال "لا توجد ضمانات (للنجاح في العراق) لكن يمكنم الاعتماد عليّ من أجل بذل أقصى جهد ممكن".
    سيصبح فالون أول ضابط من البحرية الأمريكية يتولى قيادة "سينتكوم"
    ويقود الأدميرال فالون حاليا الأسطول الأمريكي في المحيط الهادي، وعندما يتولى مهام منصبه الجديد فإنه سيصبح القائد المباشر للجنرال دافيد بيتريوس الذي وافق عليه الكونجرس مؤخرا لتولي قيادة القوات  في العراق.
    صفات فالون
    ويقول المختص في الشؤون الدولية في بي بي سي نيك شيلدز إن الأدميرال فالون يشتهر في أروقة البنتاجون بأنه من أحد أفضل المفكرين الاستراتيجيين في القوات المسلحة الأمريكية ومن أكثرهم دبلوماسية.
    ويضيف شيلدز أن من بين المهام التي ستناط بالأدميرال فالون هي نيل مساندة إقليمية للسياسة الأمريكية في العراق وأفغانستان، وربما التقليل من التهديد الذي تمثله إيران للدور الأمريكي في المنطقة.
    كما يقول مراسل بي بي سي في واشنطن جيمس كوماراسامي إن سمعة فالون كدبلوماسي متمكن ستشكل دعامة هامة لسياسة واشنطن في العراق، كما ان خطابه ذا النبرة الواقعية يعكس توجهات البيت الأبيض  
    وإذا ما تأكد تولي فالون لمنصب قائد السنتكوم، فإنه سيتولى الإشراف على انتشار أكثر من 21 الف جندي يريد بوش دعم جيشه في العراق . 
    وكان العديد من النواب الديمقراطيين في الكونجرس قد عبروا مؤخرا عن رفضهم لخطة بوش الجديدة في العراق، والتي تتضمن إرسال المزيد من القوات هناك
    فقد صوتت لجنة الشؤون الخارجية في الكونجرس بالرفض على خطة الرئيس الأمريكي في العراق الأسبوع الماضي، بعد يوم واحد من خطاب حالة الاتحاد الذي ألقاه بوش.
    وكانت لجنة شؤون الدفاع، والمختصة بالموافقة على تعيين فالون، قد بدأت الاستماع إلى الأدميرال الأمريكي قبل ساعات من موافقة الكونجرس على تعيين جون نيجروبونتي، السفير الأمريكي السابق في العراق والأمم المتحدة، في منصب نائب وزير الخارجية




    azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (2/1/2007 1:41:20 PM)

    More news about the security plan!

    Residents of Baghdad store fuel and food awaiting the new security plan
    Translated by IRAQdirectory.com - 01/02/2007

    Residents of Baghdad are storing fuel and food for fear of losing them due to developments that might occur when applying "Baghdad security plan" which they were waiting for impatiently, hoping to end the turbulent situation.

    Ali Awad (36 years), a Shiite teacher at a school in Assadr City where he live, says: "I purchase from time to time various food items such as sugar and rice to save them for days when it may be difficult to obtain those items in case of curfew and the closure of shops".

    He believes that "security conditions are unstable and it may get worse at any time due to the continuous acts of violence and terrorism (...) We have to think of our children and guarantee them food; that is the least we can do for them".

    On his part, Mohamed Abdel Qadir (45 years), a Sunni businessman from Yarmouk (west of Baghdad) said that "curfews and implementing security plans stand as a barrier in securing the family needs(...) I believe that every family in Baghdad stores enough items for days without having to leave home".

    He pointed out that "the residents of Baghdad are waiting for the implementation of new security plan and this in itself is enough to make heads of families take the necessary precautions in providing enough food and medicine for their children".

    Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said, during presenting the security plan to the Parliament on Thursday, that “it will not be the last; we have benefited from the negative and positive aspects of the previous plans, so if the new plan succeeds in stabilizing security, it would be the last one, but if it didn’t, then we’ll put a third plan, a fourth and so on.”

    Al-Maliki emphasized that the new security plan to impose security in Baghdad will spare no “mosque or Husseinieh” in case they were suspected to harbor outlaws from the law.

    On his part, Abdullah al-Janabi (65 years), a Sunni lives at Ghazaliya district (west of Baghdad), said that the "security situation is not reassuring and we do not know what will happen tomorrow; it is our children’s right to feel safe and secure, in the houses”. He referred to the purchase of “quantities of rice, dried food, canned food and fuel to secure their needs in case of emergency”.

    Naima Aziz (44), a Kurdish lives at Salhiya district in the middle of Baghdad and works in a tourist enterprise, also said “I want to buy food stuff, gas for cooking and fuel for heating, but the scarcity of fuel and its high prices prevent me from doing so”.

    She hoped to achieve “security and stop the violence because it is more important than fuel and food, which can be obtained at any time”.




    azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (2/4/2007 3:33:07 AM)

    Report on latest movements (or none movement) of the Mehdi Army:

    How Sadr Plans to Ride Out the Surge
    By CHARLES CRAIN/BAGHDAD - 4 February, 2007 - TIME MAGAZINE ONLINE
     
    Moqtada Sadr and his Mehdi Army seem to have decided that, for now, the best defense against the American troop surge is no defense. Rather than risk another major confrontation like the battles of 2004 in which they lost thousands of men, the military and political leadership of Sadr's movement is going out of its way to be conciliatory.
     
    Following an American raid last month that netted one of Sadr's lieutenants, some Sadrists threatened to hold up the movement's reconciliation with the national government. Instead, Sadrist ministers who had been boycotting parliament to protest against Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki meeting with President Bush rejoined the government. And this week, the Sadrists even endorsed the deployment of additional U.S. troops to Baghdad and the new security plan. A local official in the Mehdi Army's Sadr City stronghold said that under the terms of a deal with U.S. forces, the Americans would be welcome in Sadr City.
     
    But allowing the Americans to pass unchallenged through Sadr City is not the same thing as embracing the U.S. agenda for Iraq. It may simply make tactical sense to stand down the Mehdi Army temporarily, denying the U.S. military a target. Meanwhile the Shi'ite-dominated Iraqi security forces, which include many Sadr sympathizers and actual members of his militia, continue their fight against Sunni insurgents.
     
    U.S. officials have painted the surge as a temporary step, some hinting that it may last only a matter of months. That's not a long time in the outlook of an organization that must consider its position in Iraq in terms of decades. If political support for the U.S. presence in Iraq collapses, or if the military simply cannot sustain a meaningful increase in troop strength, the Mehdi Army will have won a victory without ever joining the battle.
     
    Ironically, the Americans' greatest hope for success in defeating the Shi'ite militia may be the Sunni insurgency. Despite token attempts at national reconciliation, they are not part of the political process, do not negotiate meaningfully with the government, and are under no illusions about what a "troop surge" means for them. In recent weeks they've faced U.S. air strikes and Iraqi Army raids in downtown Baghdad. And the insurgents have continued to rain terror down on mostly Shi'ite civilian concentrations, in market places, universities and religious gatherings.
     
    So, while Sadr may be able to cut deals with the Americans, Shi'ites in Baghdad and elsewhere face escalating terror attacks from the insurgency. If violence directed against Shi'ites demands a more public show of force by the Mehdi Army, it may be forced to break cover and risk becoming targets of U.S. firepower.
     
    The more immediate concern for the surge strategy is not the maneuvers of militias commanders, but the fact that the loyalty of government security forces is dubious, at best. The Mehdi Army's most important stronghold may not, in fact, be Sadr City as such, but rather its legion of supporters inside government ministries, army units and police stations.




    azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (2/6/2007 5:22:27 AM)

    As we wait for the new security operation to begin another story about how Iraqi citizens have taken to protecting themselves against these criminal Militias.

    On patrol with a Baghdad vigilante By Mike Wooldridge
    BBC News, Baghdad - 5 February, 2007
     
    For several hours each night Abu Abdullah patrols his street in a mainly Sunni northern district of Baghdad - Kalashnikov rifle at the ready - to protect his home and those of his neighbours.
     
    These days, many people in this violent capital do the same thing. Abu Abdullah - not his real name because he prefers anonymity in the growing climate of mistrust - is a 33-year-old Sunni. He got married in 2003, the year of the US-led invasion, and he and his wife have a two-and-a-half-year-old child and another of six months.
     
    'No choice'
     
    His family, like many others in Baghdad, crosses the Muslim sectarian divide. One of his parents is Sunni and the other Shia.
     
    "A few months ago I never thought I would be involved in this," Abu Abdullah says of the neighbourhood guard operation. "We do this to protect our homes from the militias and the illegal forces."
    For him it comes on top of a nine-hour day job.
     
    "It makes me tired. But I have no choice to save my family and my children," he says.
     
    Abu Abdullah has a brother who is 10 years older. In the dark humour of so many places and societies where conflict seems relentless, his brother points to Abu Abdullah's hair - already greying. "Many people," says the brother, "think he is older than me."
     
    Shia militia threat
     
    I went to Abu Abdullah's district last August when US and Iraqi forces were engaged in their latest plan to restore security to Baghdad: Operation Together Forward. It was the first day of cordoning and searching the area. The remains of a car bomb were in the middle of a street as we entered but a local US commander said the house-to-house search was proceeding satisfactorily. The aim was to rid the most volatile areas of the capital of the perpetrators of violence of all kinds so that people like Abu Abdullah and his family would have a better chance of being able to live something approaching a normal life. In various parts of the city people said the violence did dip. But the effect did not last.
     
    So now Abu Abdullah and his family, and six million other people across Baghdad, are waiting to see the impact of Operation Together Forward's successor - the new Baghdad security plan announced by Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Maliki last month and made the cornerstone of US President Bush's new Iraq strategy.
    Does Abu Abdullah believe it will make a difference? "I don't think so," he told me. He identifies the main threat in his district as Shia militias.
     
    He talks of an attack in which seven people were killed and he says the area is prone to mortar fire from the militias. But he says they are not the only problem. His neighbourhood regards the police and army as being in collusion with the militias. "We don't have any trust in them," Abu Abdullah says. And so in his view the fatal flaw in the much-heralded Baghdad security plan is that these same Iraqi security forces will be in the lead.
     
    The only forces he and his community recognise as "real", he says, are the Americans. So, once again it seems, the challenge for the US is to build the public's confidence in the Iraqi forces that Washington is relying on to assume increasing responsibility for security in the battered and bloodied capital. But Abu Abdullah has a message for the Americans and their allies, too. If the Baghdad security plan did not work, I asked him, how did he believe the capital and the country might be pacified?
     
    He said Iraq had to become "free from occupation" and have a "real government of all Iraqis".
    It is one man's view - the view of a man who describes Baghdad as "my home and my city". But he adds: "In this situation I don't like to stay. It is like hell."




    azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (3/5/2007 5:52:02 AM)

    What is Maliki doing? If they raid only Maliki permitted sites they won't find anything. This gy is starting to piss me off. They should just scrap this crackdown and change the government. 

    Iraqi PM condemns 'illegal' raid
    BBC News - 05 March, 2007
     
    Iraq's prime minister has called for an investigation into Sunday's raid by Iraqi and British forces in Basra on an intelligence agency detention centre.
     
    Nouri Maliki issued a statement calling for those behind the "illegal and irresponsible act" to be punished.
    The British military said the raid was part of an operation led by Iraqi counter-terrorist forces who were seeking a "known death squad leader".
     
    It said evidence of torture had been found at the southern Iraqi facility. "The prime minister has ordered a prompt investigation into the incident of breaking into the security complex headquarters in Basra," a statement released by Mr Maliki's office said.
     
    The British military responded with a statement saying the National Iraqi Intelligence Agency headquarters was not deliberately targeted and was only entered because of information gained in preceding raids.
     
    "During the operation, Iraqi forces discovered around 30 prisoners, including a woman and two children, who were being held, and many of whom showed signs of torture and abuse," the statement said.
     
    It went on to say that Iraqi forces broke down locked doors, which led to the escape of a number of prisoners but rejected reports Iraqi forces deliberately released the prisoners.
     
    Earlier in Basra, five people were held on suspicion of involvement in roadside bomb attacks against the multinational forces and Iraqi civilians, as well as kidnaps, torture and murder.
     
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6418303.stm




    Mout Ahmar -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (3/7/2007 5:40:35 AM)

    azinorum, i understand how frustrating you feel. but u have to give it a chance till the end. if after it is finished there are no difference then no one can complain if you change your governmet. better to let a failure be complete so when maliki goes no one can say why.




    azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (3/8/2007 4:37:32 AM)

    I have no other choice but to see it through to the end. I hope it works Mout but everyday that passes more and more Iraqis are dying. Yesterday I learned that the young nephew of a very dear friend of mine was shot and killed by trigger happy IA right in front of his brother while riding his bicycle to buy some bread. He was 19 years old.




    azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (3/8/2007 6:20:53 AM)

    Latest News:

    General urges Iraq militant talks
    BBC News - 08 March, 2007
     
    The top US general in Iraq says the military alone cannot provide a solution to the country's conflict.
     
    Gen David Petraeus, in his first news conference since taking the command last month, said it was "critical" some militant groups be brought into talks. He said the new Baghdad security drive had had some "tough days" but he was confident violence could be reduced. He was speaking after the US defence secretary approved an extra 2,200 military police to aid the crackdown.
     
    'Control the demons'
    Gen Petraeus said: "There is no military solution to a problem like that in Iraq, to the insurgency of Iraq.
    "Military action is necessary to help improve security... but it is not sufficient. There needs to be a political aspect."

    Full report: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6429519.stm




    Mout Ahmar -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (3/9/2007 2:01:19 PM)

    this is what i belive will help iraq. sit,talk,understand and fix!




    azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (3/10/2007 1:36:30 AM)

    More News:

    US attends major Iraq conference
    BBC NEWS - 10 March, 2007
     
    A key international conference opens in Baghdad on Saturday aimed at winning regional support for efforts to stabilise the situation in Iraq.
     
    It will be the first time in a number of years US officials have sat down with those from Iran and Syria, nations the US says are adding to Iraqi strife.
    The key focus will be on how to reduce the violence stemming from the Sunni-Shia divide in Iraq. A second, more senior conference of foreign ministers is planned for April. The others attending the conference are the remaining members of the permanent UN Security Council, the Arab League, the Gulf Cooperation Council and the other neighbours of Iraq.
     
    Bush's message
    The BBC's Jim Muir in Baghdad says that for Iraq this is an important opportunity to bring together neighbours and other powers who have often seemed to be using the country as a proxy battlefield for their own struggles.
     
    In terms of the Sunni-Shia divide, Iran is a key supporter of the Shia majority in Iraq while Saudi Arabia and other Sunni Arab states would like to see a better deal for Iraq's Sunni minority. But our correspondent says Iran and Saudi Arabia have been working closely together recently to help diffuse similar conflicts in Lebanon and the Palestinian Authority and there are hopes that this spirit will give a fair wind to the conference. On his Latin American tour, US President George W Bush was spelling out a tough line ahead of the talks, saying the US message to Syria and Iran was unchanged.
     
    He said: "We expect you to help this young democracy and we will defend ourselves and the people in Iraq from weapons being shipped."
    A key Shia leader in Iraq called on all those attending to work to "enhance the achievements made in Iraq in the last four years".
    Abdul Azziz al-Hakim told thousands of Shia pilgrims in the city of Karbala: "We call on the regional and international countries to support Iraq because we believe it will reflect positively on international and regional peace."
     
    The conference comes amid a new security drive by US and Iraqi forces. Mr Bush has ordered in more than 20,000 additional troops to try to quell the unrest. Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki hosts the talks and on Friday chatted with people on the streets of Baghdad to try to show the new security drive was working. He also visited a power station and said: "The conference is proof that the situation in Baghdad is getting back to normal and that the political process is strong and stable."
     
    BBC diplomatic correspondent Jonathan Marcus says much of the interest in the talks will centre on whether US and Iranian officials try to seek some common ground. US officials have made it clear that if approached directly by Iranian, or Syrian, representatives to talk about any Iraq-related matter they will not turn and walk away. But our correspondent says expectations from such meetings should be limited.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6436561.stm




    azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (3/10/2007 4:57:41 AM)

    Some good news from today. The government needs to show more results like these in order for the public to have faith in the crackdown.

    Insurgent 'leader' held in Iraq
    BBC NEWS WEBSITE - 10 March, 2007
     
    A man described as a "senior leader" of an al-Qaeda-linked insurgent group has been arrested in Iraq, according to an Iraqi military spokesman.
     
    The man was captured on Friday in a raid in Baghdad's Abu Ghraib district, spokesman Qassim Moussawi said.
     
    Earlier reports had suggested that the man was Abu Omar al-Baghdadi, the self-styled leader of the Sunni Arab group the Islamic State in Iraq. But Mr Moussawi confirmed that this was not the case.

    "We captured a figure who was a senior al-Qaeda member and we suspected that he was Abu Omar al-Baghdadi, but after initial investigations it was proven it was not Abu Omar al-Baghdadi," he said.
     
    Al-Baghdadi heads an umbrella group of Sunni insurgent movements fighting the Iraqi government and US troops in Iraq.
     
    His group is believed to be behind a series of attacks in Iraq, including the kidnapping and murder of at least 18 police officers last week. Security sources said he was also among militants who stormed a prison near the northern city of Mosul, freeing some 140 prisoners.
     
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6436569.stm




    Mout Ahmar -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (3/10/2007 5:07:10 PM)

    i am reading that these insurgents have groups with many leaders. the ones who lead the group must first kill 10 people before he become a PRINCE. so this news in good but like u say there must be many more caught to make a big diference. maybe this is the first of many i hope.




    azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (3/10/2007 6:37:01 PM)

    Some media reaction to the emergency sumit being held in Baghdad.

    Media urge action at Iraq talks BBC NEWS ONLINE - 10 March, 2007 
    Observers in the Middle East's media believe regional talks in Baghdad involving the US, Iran and Syria could represent a real chance for a new beginning in Iraq.
     
    An Iraqi journalist, however, warns the participants not to put their own interests first, and several commentators elsewhere in the Arabic world put the onus firmly on Syria and Iran.
     
    But a Syrian paper dismisses US talk of a "test of seriousness" for Damascus, while a top Iranian cleric believes the conference is merely a fig leaf for continued US influence in Iraq.
     

    SAYYAR AL-JAMIEL IN IRAQ'S AL-JEERAN

    Will the Baghdad conference have the Iraqi question as the backbone of its agenda, or will it simply be just another occasion for exchanging empty speeches? No regional or international conference should be hosted in Iraq that does not put Iraq first, for it would be totally unacceptable for participants to take advantage of Iraqis' plight to settle their own differences or to strike deals at the expense of precious Iraqi blood.

     RAZAN UMRAN IN SYRIA'S TISHRIN

    US President Bush has said that the conference would be a test of Syria's and Iran's seriousness in helping to reduce violence in Iraq. Such talk does not imply that the US Administration is willing to start serious work to extricate Iraq from its ordeal by initiating a comprehensive political process that restores complete sovereignty and ends with an unconditional US pullout. Syria and Iran are not responsible for what is going on in Iraq.

     AYATOLLAH AHMAD JANNATI, HEAD OF IRAN'S HARDLINE GUARDIAN COUNCIL, IN FRIDAY PRAYERS SERMON BROADCAST BY IRANIAN RADIO
    It is called the conference of Iraq's neighbours, but the members of the UN Security Council will be there too, along with the Arab states of the Persian Gulf. Now what do they want to do? They want to take Iraq out of its people's hands and give the control of the government of the country to an American institution - whether Iraqi or non-Iraqi - which is completely at the service of America. They are holding this conference in order to compensate for their defeat in Iraq.

     ILYAS HURFUSH IN INTERNATIONAL ARABIC PAPER AL-HAYAT

    The multilateral meeting in Baghdad, which will bring together Iranian, Syrian and US diplomats is the beginning of the step announced by US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice earlier on. Will Tehran and Damascus respond to the US demands and open doors for a positive future? If they do so, then the hopes of many in the region will be dashed.

     EDITORIAL IN INTERNATIONAL ARABIC AL-ARAB AL-ALAMIYAH

    The results of the Baghdad Conference will be a crucial turning point in the ties between the US on one hand and Syria and Iran on the other. It will also determine in the long run the process of a settlement in Lebanon and Palestine, as well as the state of affairs in the Middle East.

     EDITORIAL IN OMAN DAILY
    The international conference on Iraq, which involves neighbouring countries, especially Syria and Iran, could be the last chance to find a comprehensive solution for the deteriorating security condition in Iraq. The strategic mistakes that have been made in Iraq are many, especially by the US. It is now necessary to correct these mistakes through consultative collective work.




    Mout Ahmar -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (3/11/2007 7:14:57 AM)

    i just hear in the news 2 more boms exploded in baghdad and again many of the killed and injured are pilgrims. this is very bad because mahdi army will say if we were protecting the pilgrims this would not happen. some group is trying to make shiia and suna war and if they continue like this a war will happen.




    azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (3/13/2007 4:28:20 AM)

    This is the standard Jihoosh Al Mehdi rehtoric and they will use it again and again.




    azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (3/13/2007 5:20:08 AM)

    BREAKING NEWS!

    Iraqi PM visits insurgency centre  Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki has made an unannounced visit to Ramadi, a stronghold of the Sunni insurgency. 
    It is the first visit as prime minister by Mr Maliki, a Shia Muslim, to Iraq's western, mostly-Sunni Anbar province, and is being seen as highly symbolic.

    Mr Maliki and his party travelled the 110km (68 miles) from Baghdad to Ramadi by US military helicopter.

    He met Ramadi's provincial governor, as well as local tribal leaders and US and Iraqi military commanders.




    azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (3/19/2007 3:20:18 PM)

    While the new security crackdown takes hold of Iraq, the Iranians are looking at matters from an economic perspective!

    Iran Playing a Growing Role in Iraq's Economy
    Fars News Agency - [18/03/2007]

    While the Bush administration works to stop Iran from having any constructive role in Iraq, Iranian air-conditioners fill Iraqi appliance stores, Iranian tomatoes ripen on the windowsills of kitchens here and legions of white Iranian-made Peugeots sit in Iraqi driveways. 

    In a report published by The New York Times, some Iraqi cities, including Basra, the southern oil center, buy or plan to buy electricity from Iran. The Iraqi government relies on Iranian companies to bring gasoline from Turkmenistan to alleviate a severe shortage. Iraqi officials are reviewing an application by Iran to open a branch of an Iranian bank in Baghdad, and Iran has offered to lend Iraq $1 billion.

    The economies of Iraq and Iran, the largest Shiite-majority countries in the world, are becoming closely integrated, with Iranian goods flooding Iraqi markets and Iraqi cities looking to Iran for basic services.

    After the two countries fought a devastating war from 1980 to 1988, Saddam Hussein maintained tight control over cross-border trade, but commerce has exploded since the American-led invasion of 2003.

    Much of the money is heading in one direction, though: Iraq is becoming dependent on imports because industries here have been ravaged by the economic sanctions of the 1990s and the current sectarian violence.

    Reconstruction and security have lagged so far behind the expectations of ordinary Iraqis that cheap goods from Iran and neighboring countries often provide the only comforts in their lives.

    "What is happening in Iraq at the moment is a lot of trade, but it's almost all one-way trade," Barham Salih, the Iraqi deputy prime minister for finance, said of the country's economic ties with Iran and other neighbors. "If you take oil away, there's a lot of imbalance in this."

    Iraqi leaders from the Shiite bloc currently in power say political and economic ties with Iran, which is governed by Shiite Persians, will inevitably strengthen.

    According to one commonly cited statistic, trade between Iraq and Iran has grown by 30 percent a year since the 2003 invasion. But American officials say no accurate numbers are available because Iran refuses to release complete figures.

    Statistics from the American Embassy's economic section show that Syria accounted for 22 percent of Iraq's imports in 2005, and Turkey 21 percent. Iran, which has the longest border with Iraq, would be likely to fall in that range, officials said. The CIA World Factbook estimates Iraq's total imports in 2006 at $20.8 billion.

    Iran has divulged a few trade numbers. Tehran told the government of Iraq's northern Kurdish region that trade with the region amounted to more than $1 billion in 2006, said Hassan Baqi, president of the chamber of commerce in the Kurdish city of Sulaimaniya.

    Hoshyar Zebari, the Iraqi foreign minister, who is a Kurd, said that provincial governments had been making their own commercial deals with Iranian interests, but that lately he had started ordering them to go through the Foreign Ministry.

    "We have a number of agreements with Iran on energy, on trade, on oil, on visitors - that is, pilgrims - which is very important to them,"" he said.

    Here in the Shiite religious heartland in the south, Iraqis have profited handsomely from the new economic ties with Iran. This is particularly noticeable in the holy cities of Najaf and Karbala, where shrines draw Iranian pilgrims by the thousands each month.

    The headquarters here of revered Shiite clerics like Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani collect enormous dues from satellite offices in Iran. That money, too, ends up in the local economy.

    The Iranian government gives Najaf $20 million a year to build and improve tourist facilities for pilgrims, said Asaad Abu Galal, the governor of Najaf. Mr. Abu Galal, a member of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, an influential Iraqi political party founded in Iran, said Karbala got roughly $3 million a year. In addition, each Iranian pilgrim spends up to $1,000 on hotels, food and souvenirs.

    Provincial tourism officials estimate that more than 22,000 Iranian pilgrims visit Najaf each month and that at least 10,000 travel to Karbala. Most come on package tours.

    Officials would like to see more, but they say many are being held back by visa restrictions and security concerns. "We must increase the number of pilgrims," Mr. Abu Galal said.

    The close ties with Iran in the south have drawn scrutiny from the United States, Iraqi officials say. At one point, Najaf Province came close to hiring an Iranian company to build an airport, but the deal was scuttled at the last minute by the Transportation Ministry in Baghdad, officials with the Supreme Council said. They suspect the United States of putting pressure on the ministry.

    "The Americans don't want to bring Iranians to Najaf," Mr. Abu Galal said. "The Americans want to control the sky."

    A senior American official in Baghdad declined to comment specifically on the Najaf airport project, but said the Americans did look carefully at major business exchanges with Iran. "We pay a lot of attention," he said.

    Tensions between the United States and Iran have increased tremendously in recent months. The White House, saying Iran wants to develop nuclear weapons, has urged the United Nations to impose harsh sanctions. It has also accused Iran of exporting deadly explosives to Shiite militias in Iraq. Tehran has rejected both allegations vehemently.

    But the senior American official said the growth in trade between Iraq and Iran was generally positive. "I wouldn't link the rise in trade with Iran with Iranian political influence," said the official, who requested anonymity, following diplomatic protocol. "As long as this is normal economic activity that doesn't have security implications, it's a good step."

    Speaking of Iraq's Shiite leaders, he added, "I think there's a little bit of a tendency for them to want to deal with Iran. For many of these individuals Iran is more or less a frame of reference. I think that's something we have to accept."

    Border cities have turned to Iran to help alleviate chronic electricity shortages. If construction on transmission wires is finished by the summer, Basra, the country's second-largest city, will soon have the capacity to draw 250 megawatts of power from Iran at 5.2 cents per kilowatt-hour, said Karim Wahid, the Iraqi electricity minister.

    Diyala Province, which borders Iran east and north of Baghdad, already imports 120 megawatts at 5.4 cents per kilowatt-hour, he said.

    Halabja, a Kurdish city, has spent $1.8 million to develop the infrastructure to import electricity from Iran but has not begun receiving power, Kurdish officials say.

    Iranian goods have proliferated throughout Iraq. White Peugeot sedans that began rolling out of Iranian factories in 2005 are sold everywhere in Iraq. In the far south, Basra imports $45 million worth of goods from Iran each year, including items as varied as carpets, construction materials, fish and spices, said Muhammad al-Waeli, the governor of Basra Province. Each day, 100 to 150 commercial trucks drive from Iran to Iraq at the nearby Shalamcha border crossing.

    In downtown Baghdad, piles of Iranian air-conditioners with brand names like Sona, Jahan and Asan Khazar sit next to Chinese television sets on sidewalks outside appliance stores.

    The blue-and-white air-conditioners use a water-cooling technology and can run on generator power, making them popular with electricity-starved Iraqis. They cost $60 to $140 and came on the market only after the fall of Saddan Hussein.

    Mahmoud Abu Amir, the owner of a shop called Diamond of the Gulf, sat at his desk sipping chai, a spiced tea, one afternoon as men unloaded Iranian air-conditioners from a truck. Mr. Abu Amir said he had more than 2,000 in stock. "The transportation fees from Iran are much cheaper than from, say, China," he said.

    Books published in Iran now fill the shelves of bookshops across Iraq. The books are cheap because the Iranian government subsidizes printing costs by up to 60 percent, said Safaa Dawood Salman, the owner of a cramped bookshop on Baghdad's famous Mutanabi Street, which was devastated by a suicide car bombing on March 5.

    "The books are cheaper than before," said Shayma Said, 29, as she handed over a 10,000-dinar note - about $8 - to Mr. Salman to pay for a hardcover Iranian-printed book on the teachings of the Prophet Muhammad. "I want to buy the three other books in this collection when I save up enough money."

    Facing a severe shortage of doctors, because so many have fled the country, Iraqis increasingly look to Iran for medical care. Iraqis run hotels in Tehran for incoming patients, and Iraqis able to speak Persian offer their services as translators for $5 a day.

    A resident of Baghdad named Afrah said her mother had been going blind, so the family packed and flew to Tehran, where her mother had surgery to mend her badly damaged retina. Afrah received medical treatment for her own eye problems.

    "We have friends who went there and had successful operations, and that encouraged us to go there," said Afrah, 47, allowing only her first name to be printed because of security concerns. "We were very comfortable. There were so many Iraqis there."




    azinorum -> RE: THE LATEST CRACKDOWN AGAINST THE MILITIAS! (3/20/2007 2:39:10 PM)

    General Abdul Hussein Al Saffe is a very brave man to say this so publicly. I hope he doesn't get killed for his bravery. As if further proof was needed that Iraq cannot function as a working government as long as these Militias are allowed to ply their trade.

    Iraqi police disloyal, says chief BBC NEWS ONLINE - 20th March 2006 An Iraqi police chief has told the BBC he cannot trust one third of his officers because they are loyal to illegal militias. 
    General Abdul Hussein Al Saffe, head of policing in Dhi Qhar province, told BBC correspondent Paul Wood that many of his officers were disloyal. They could not be sacked because they had political protection, he added.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6472153.stm




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