Iraqi leader blasts military raid in Shiite area
Al-Maliki says he wasn't told of plans to go after Al-Sadr militiaman
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BAGHDAD, Iraq - U.S. and Iraqi forces raided the stronghold of a Shiite militia led by a radical anti-American cleric in search of a death squad leader, but the deadly operation was quickly disavowed by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.
Al-Maliki, who relies on political support from the cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, said the strike against a figure in al-Sadr’s Mahdi militia in Sadr City “will not be repeated.”
The defiant al-Maliki also slammed the top U.S. military and diplomatic representatives in Iraq for their Tuesday news conference at which they said his government needed to set a timetable to curb violence ravaging the country. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad said al-Maliki had agreed.
“I affirm that this government represents the will of the people and no one has the right to impose a timetable on it,” al-Maliki told reporters.
Tank cannons boomed out over the city five times in rapid succession Wednesday afternoon, and U.S. F-16 jet fighters screamed low overhead as the conflict in Sadr City continued into the day.
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The U.S. military said Iraqi army special forces, backed up by U.S. advisers, carried out a raid to capture a “top illegal armed group commander directing widespread death squad activity throughout eastern Baghdad,” the military said.
'We will ask for clarification'
Al-Maliki, who is commander in chief of Iraq’s army, heatedly denied he knew anything about the raid.
“We will ask for clarification about what has happened in Sadr City. We will review this issue with the multinational forces so that it will not be repeated,” he said. “The Iraqi government should be aware and part of any military operation. Coordination is needed between Iraqi government and multinational forces.”
As the raid began, Iraqi forces were fired on and asked for U.S. airpower backup. The U.S. said it used “precision gunfire only to eliminate the enemy threat,” according to the military’s statement.
There was no word on casualties or whether the targeted death squad leader was captured.
U.S. and Iraqi forces have largely avoided the densely populated Sadr City slum, grid of rutted streets and tumble-down housing that is home to 2.5 million Shiites and under the control of al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army.
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Karim Kadim / AP Relatives pray over coffins of several men killed in a joint U.S. and Iraqi raid in Baghdad's Shiite enclave of Sadr City on Wednesday. |
Residents near Sadr City said gun fire and airstrikes began late Tuesday night and continued for hours. The district was sealed to outsiders Wednesday.
Groups of young men in black fatigues favored by the Mahdi Army were seen driving toward the area to join the fight.
Explosions and automatic weapons fire were heard above the noise of U.S. helicopters circling overhead and firing flares. Streets were empty and shops closed.
In his comments, al-Maliki also appealed to neighboring states to stop meddling in Iraq’s domestic affairs — an apparent reference to Iran and Syria, which are accused by the U.S. and Iraqi officials of aiding Sunni and Shiite armed groups.
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“I would like to state here that the root of the battle we are fighting in Iraq and the root of the bloody cycle that we are undergoing is the presence of terror organizations that have arrived in the country,” al-Maliki said.
Al-Maliki has repeatedly pledged to deal with the militias but has resisted issuing firm ultimatums or deadlines.
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