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Rice in Iraq as al-Sadr warns of new war

Overnight clashes in Sadr City follow 'final warning' by cleric

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Iraqi children in Baghdad's Sadr City district on Sunday look at a car destroyed overnight during clashes between the Mahdi militia and U.S.-Iraqi forces.
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April 20: Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice made an unannounced trip to Iraq to tout recent successes there, even as deadly street fighting continued to plague Baghdad. NBC's Ned Colt reports.

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updated 11:51 a.m. ET April 20, 2008

BAGHDAD - Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice arrived in Baghdad Sunday, just as the military reported an "uptick" in fighting and after new clashes broke out in Baghdad’s Sadr City district. The clashes followed a warning by radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr that he will declare war if a crackdown against his followers persists.

Rice said her trip was intended to promote fresh political gains she sees to be flowing from the government-led assaults on radical militias.

Rice told reporters she sees signs that last month’s assaults on militia forces in Basra have brought sectarian and ethnic groups together in an unprecedented way, and she said she wants to capitalize on that cohesion.

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Loud explosions were heard in central Baghdad as rockets or mortar shells were fired toward the U.S.-protected Green Zone as Rice was meeting with top Iraqi officials there. The area has faced regular shelling since the current tensions erupted last month.

Also Sunday, Iraqi security forces gained control of the last Mahdi Army stronghold in Basra and began setting up bases and checkpoints.

Lt. Gen. Ali Ghaidan, a commander of the operation, said troops had recovered large caches of weapons during door-to-door searches of Hayaniyah, scene of some of the bitterest fighting last month.

Battle at Sadr City checkpoint
The deadliest battle in Sadr City occurred just before 8 a.m. when gunmen attacked a U.S. checkpoint with machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades and mortar shells, a military spokesman said.

The Americans fought back, killing the seven militants, then shot to death two Iraqi snipers firing at them from a nearby rooftop as local nationals arrived to remove the bodies, according to the spokesman, Lt. Col. Steve Stover.

Three other militants were killed while trying to plant roadside bombs at about 6:43 a.m. elsewhere in Sadr City, Stover said.

He added that U.S. troops also clashed with militants elsewhere in Baghdad, but no deaths were reported in those incidents.

Sadr City, a sprawling district of some 2.5 million people in eastern Baghdad, has seen daily clashes between U.S.-backed Iraqi forces who have launched a crackdown against Shiite militias led by al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army militia.

But Stover said the fighting on Sunday was among the fiercest.

“There was an uptick in violence in comparison with the past couple of weeks,” Stover said, although he declined to link it to al-Sadr’s warning, which was broadcast over mosque loudspeakers in the district late Saturday.

“We’re not looking for a fight but what we are doing is protecting the Iraqi people,” Stover said.

The deaths were in addition to seven armed “criminals” reported killed by the military on Saturday in Sadr City — two in gunbattles and five in two separate airstrikes.

Iraqi police and hospital officials also said six civilians — four men and two boys ages 8 and 10 — were killed in fighting in Sadr City after midnight.

The U.S. military insisted it does not engage if civilians are seen in the area and blamed the militants for putting innocent Iraqis at risk by mingling among them.

Militia politics
Internal Shiite rivalries have intensified since U.S.-backed Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki launched the crackdown against militias on March 25. The government also has demanded that al-Sadr disband his Mahdi Army militia or face political isolation, while insisting that military operations are only targeting criminal gangs.

Al-Sadr’s followers believe the campaign is aimed at weakening their movement to prevent it from winning provincial council seats at the expense of Shiite parties that work with the United States in the national government.

However, the U.S. military insists the campaign is not aimed at the Mahdi Army, saying they are only trying to root out criminal elements.

“We’ve made it very clear that the Mahdi Army itself ... is not the enemy,” said Maj. Gen. Rick Lynch, commander of the 3rd Infantry Division, which controls a large region south of the capital. “The enemy is Sunni extremists, Shiite extremists and Iranian influence.”

Sadrist lawmakers, who hold 30 seats in the 275-strong parliament, demanded Sunday that the military operations stop in Sadr City and other Shiite areas and warned that they would continue to resist calls to disband the Mahdi Army.

“Random airstrikes, killings and bloodshed will not help but rather will increase hatred and enmity,” Sadrist lawmaker Fawzi Akram said, reading a statement issued by the bloc.


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