Al-Sadr Calls for Attacks on U.S. Troops!

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Newzboyz99

Losers! My wife has me on lock!
BAGHDAD - The renegade cleric Muqtada al-Sadr urged the Iraqi army and police to stop cooperating with the United States and told his guerrilla fighters to concentrate on pushing American forces out of the country, according to a statement issued Sunday.

The statement, stamped with al-Sadr's official seal, was distributed in the Shiite holy city of Najaf on Sunday _ a day before a large demonstration there, called for by al-Sadr, to mark the fourth anniversary of the fall of Baghdad.

"You, the Iraqi army and police forces, don't walk alongside the occupiers, because they are your archenemy," the statement said. Its authenticity could not be verified.

In the statement, al-Sadr _ who commands an enormous following among Iraq's majority Shiites and has close allies in the Shiite-dominated government _ also encouraged his followers to attack only American forces, not fellow Iraqis.

"God has ordered you to be patient in front of your enemy, and unify your efforts against them _ not against the sons of Iraq," the statement said, in an apparent reference to clashes between al-Sadr's Mahdi Army fighters and Iraqi troops in Diwaniyah, south of Baghdad. "You have to protect and build Iraq."

The U.S. military on Sunday announced the deaths of four American soldiers, killed a day earlier in an explosion near their vehicle in Diyala province northeast of Baghdad. The province has seen a spike in attacks on U.S. and Iraqi forces since the start of a plan two months ago to pacify the capital. Officials believe militants have streamed out of Baghdad to invigorate the insurgency in areas just outside the city.

Separately, a pickup truck loaded with artillery shells exploded Sunday near a hospital south of Baghdad, killing at least 15 people. The blast left a crater 10 yards wide, the Iraqi military said.

Three mortars sailed into houses in eastern Baghdad, sending six people to the hospital with breathing difficulties from a possible chemical agent, police said.

Doctors said the victims' faces turned yellow and they were unable to open their eyes. One hospital official said the chemical was chlorine, and that the victims were expected to recover.

Chlorine has been used in at least nine attacks in Iraq since January, mostly in bombings by al-Qaida in Iraq.

The bombing in Mahmoudiyah involved a pickup truck parked next to the city General Hospital, an Iraqi army officer said. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak about the matter. Other reports said the explosion was a rocket attack.

At least 26 people were wounded, he said.

Hours later, five burned and mutilated bodies remained scattered at the scene. Most of the dead were technicians who worked at auto repair shops nearby, officials said.

The hospital was slightly damaged by flying debris and shrapnel, but shops and residential buildings bore more damage. Many of those wounded were in their homes at the time of the blast.

Mahmoudiyah is 20 miles south of Baghdad.

Also Sunday, Iran's state news agency reported that a spokesman for the country's foreign ministry confirmed that Iran refused to allow Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's plane to fly through Iranian airspace. But the spokesman, Mohammad Ali Hosseini, said the dispute was only a technical issue.

"For all flights there is a need for authorization, for which formalities must have been done in advance," he was quoted as saying.

Members of the delegation traveling with al-Maliki told The Associated Press early Sunday that the plane was diverted to Dubai, United Arab Emirates, where al-Maliki stayed in the airport for more than three hours while his government aircraft was refueled and a new flight plan was filed.

U.S. forces also captured a senior al-Qaida leader and two others in a raid Sunday morning in Baghdad, the U.S. military said.

The al-Qaida figure was identified as "the gatekeeper to the al-Qaida emir of Baghdad" and was linked to several car bomb attacks in the Iraqi capital, the military said in a statement, without naming the captive.

Thousands of Iraqis streamed toward the Shiite holy city of Najaf for a demonstration Monday to mark the fourth anniversary of the fall of Baghdad. Witnesses said thousands of residents of Baghdad's largest Shiite slum, Sadr City, boarded buses and minivans Sunday for Najaf.

On Sunday, Iraqi flags flew from most houses and shops in Sadr City _ as requested earlier in a statement from al-Sadr's office. Drivers and motorcyclists affixed them to their vehicles. Police escorted convoys of pickup trucks overflowing with young boys waving Iraqi flags, en route to Najaf.

An Iraqi flag was hoisted over a military base in Basra, Iraq's second-largest city, as Iraqi troops took control of the facility Sunday from British forces. The Shat al-Arab base is the second base transfered to Iraqi control in Basra over the past month.

The Iraqi military ordered a 24-hour vehicle ban in Baghdad on Monday for the anniversary, state television reported Sunday. Al-Iraqiya TV said Brig. Qassim al-Moussawi, spokesman for the Baghdad security operation, disclosed the vehicle ban, which includes motorcycles.

Such bans have been put in place before in an attempt to prevent vehicle bombings.

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MaddenNFL64 said:
Pretty much, but as dicey as the situation is, you can't go blowing his head off from that statement.


Why not? Isn't wishing for the deaths of American soldiers in Iraq a bad thing and punishable by death?
 
Well it's about time
that Iraqis stopped killing each other

but maybe stopping killing in general would be a better idea
 
Fight for Freeform said:
Well it's about time
that Iraqis stopped killing each other

but maybe stopping killing in general would be a better idea

When did they stop killing each other again?

Al-Sadr needs to be arrested already. I don't know what the hesitation is all about. Sure he has allies, but having him around does more damage in the long run.
 
But that's all the more reason to do it when they're a small and easily-marginalized force, and not make them into a powerful and seen-as-legitimate political movement.
 
The US rather see sectarian violence between powerful groups killing hundreds a day than a unified group that would reduce the civil strife within & concentrate on the occupation.
 
Yamaha98 said:
The US rather see sectarian violence between powerful groups killing hundreds a day than a unified group that would reduce the civil strife within & concentrate on the occupation.
Uh no, of course not; that's a completely mindless and shallow assessment.
 
UltimaKilo said:
When did they stop killing each other again?

Al-Sadr needs to be arrested already. I don't know what the hesitation is all about. Sure he has allies, but having him around does more damage in the long run.
Al Sadr is pretty much the most powerful Shiite in Iraq. Asking them to arrest him is similar to asking someone in Italy to arrest the Pope. Only Shiite more powerful in Iraq is al Sistani, and he doesn't have an army behind him.

Arresting al Sadr would be a nightmare scenario for the war and pretty much the final nail in the coffin for the obvious outcome. It'd piss off more people than it'd appease. I mean, there's a reason he hasn't been arrested yet.
 
APF said:
Uh no, of course not; that's a completely mindless and shallow assessment.

You seem to forget how the public can make things tough for a administration policy to continue on. A few KIA a day is more feasible than hundreds from a unified enemy.
 
"...encouraged his followers to attack only American forces"

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whytemyke said:
Al Sadr is pretty much the most powerful Shiite in Iraq. Asking them to arrest him is similar to asking someone in Italy to arrest the Pope. Only Shiite more powerful in Iraq is al Sistani, and he doesn't have an army behind him.

Arresting al Sadr would be a nightmare scenario for the war and pretty much the final nail in the coffin for the obvious outcome. It'd piss off more people than it'd appease. I mean, there's a reason he hasn't been arrested yet.

He's good. VERY good. Assassinated an influential moderate Shiite cleric mere days after the invasion to snuff organized resistance and has a boot on al-Maliki's neck. Might even have Iran as an arms sugar daddy. The last time we battled him he had his militia swarm over southern Iraqi cities forcing street fighting till they took sizable casualties, but even then he promised to behave (which lasted all of the time it took the ink to dry).

I'm not sure how one would go at him from without; maybe a schism within his circle would assassinate him, but no sign of that, they seem to be enjoying the power trip.
 
well it's also debatable how much control Al Sadr has over the myriad number of armed militias patrolling the streets. there's some reason to believe that Al Sadr's initial compliance to the surge was in part to purge within his ranks these erstwhile followers, leaving himself with more tactical and ideological control.
 
In Washington, Sen. Joseph Lieberman, an independent of Connecticut, said al-Sadr's words showed the American troop surge was working.

"He is not calling for a resurgence of sectarian conflict. He's striking a nationalist chord. We're going to have to watch him closely. He's not our friend. ... He's acknowledging that the surge is working," the senator, a strong backer of the war, said on CNN's "Late Edition with Wolf Blitzer."

Awesome. Hey, as long as we're uniting them somehow, right?
 
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