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[Marxism] Cops claim Sadr militia in Najaf surrender; Allawi prepares to declare martial law; fighting spreads across country
Following are three news articles that may aid getting a grip on the
struggle gripping Iraq.
I think our attention needs to make a sharp shift from the elections --
not one of the central moving forces in world politics today to the
struggle between the US military and the Iraqis who are struggling to
defend and reconquer their independence and sovereignty. In addition, I
think any antiwar protests, however small, are better than none at
present. It also means organizing on the ground to make the August 29
demonstration a genuine antiwar demonstration against Bush with the
broadest united front character possible.
I think Gary Maclennan may well be right when he posted:
"The struggle then is to spread Allawi's writ beyond the Pale
of the Green Zone. What I am suggesting is that there has
been a change or shift in USA policy. The upcoming
presidential election tends possibly to obscure that same
shift...."
That is, the US has launched a surprise offensive to smash the militant
wing of the Shiite community and kill its leaders -- hence the crowing
about massive slaughter, even if exaggerated -- and to go on to break
the Sunni resistance in Fallujah. The fact that Sistani left the
country now has a political meaning, even though I am sure the medical
requirements are not imaginary. He will be better able to resist
pressures to take sides or call the Shia people to action from that
distance.
For the Bush administration, this gamble -- if it succeeds -- would
register a US military victory over the resistance and stabilize and
extend the Allawi puppet dictatorship. Virtually all the fighting is
being done by US troops. The Iraqi forces are essentially non-existent.
Electorally, this would trump Kerry's election campaign aimed at
presenting himself to the ruling class as one who, unlike Bush, can
handle these problems. Bush could present them with a big US victory
and a more stabilized Iraq -- however temporarily -- the US would have a
freer hand to carry out the initial objectives of the occupation
(takeover of Israel, bringing down the Syrian regime, pressure on Iran,
strengthening Israel, and crushing the Palestinian struggle). Thus
the "October Surprise" may be a prolonged campaign that is starting now.
Whether the US imperialists have the strength to conquer or the Iraqi
insurgents to hold them off or set them will be decided in struggle, not
by predictions.
These articles were distributed by Professor Mark Jensen of United for
Peace of Pierce County (Seattle, Washington).
Fred Feldman
SADR MILITIA SURRENDER IN NAJAF: IRAQI POLICE
Agence France-Presse
August 6, 2004 - 6:49 a.m. AEST [Aug. 5, 8:49 p.m.GMT]
http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200408/s1171087.htm
More than 1,200 militiamen loyal to radical Shiite cleric Moqtada
al-Sadr have
surrendered following fierce clashes with US and Iraqi forces in Najaf,
the
police general directorate said.
"Over 1,200 criminals have surrendered to Iraqi forces," it said in a
statement, adding that the holy city of Najaf had been "secured."
It said most of the captured militiamen were criminals who were released
from
Iraqi prisons by ousted president Saddam Hussein before last year's
US-led
invasion.
The statement accused Sadr's Mehdi Army of wanting to "destabilise the
country," and vowed "this operation will continue until this illegal and
cruel
violence has been quelled".
No one in Sadr's Najaf office was immediately available for comment on
the
statement.
The US military said on Friday that 300 militiamen were killed in Najaf
since
Thursday's fighting, while the province's coalition-appointed governor
Adnan
al-Zorfi said the number was as high as 400.
The military said also three US soldiers were killed and 12 wounded.
Sadr's spokesman Sheikh Ahmed al-Shaibani said only nine militiamen were
killed in fighting and 20 wounded.
Battles have raged in several Iraqi cities in the past two days between
fighters from Sadr's Mehdi army and foreign forces.
The fighting appears to have shattered a two-month-old cease-fire
between US
forces and the Mehdi militia.
Clashes between British troops and fighters loyal to the radical cleric
also
broke out on Friday evening in the southern city of Basra, a Reuters
witness
said.
He said residents took shelter as British troops fought with members of
the
Mehdi militia in the center of the city.
Automatic weapons fire echoed from the area, along with the sound of
mortars
or rockets, he said.
A British military spokeswoman said the clash occurred when a British
foot
patrol came under attack near Sadr's Basra office.
She said it was unclear if there were any casualties, adding the patrol
later
withdrew from the area.
IRAQ SET TO USE MARTIAL LAW IN TERROR FIGHT
By Donald MacIntyre
Independent (UK)
August 6, 2004
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/story.jsp?story=548354
BAGHDAD -- The interim Iraqi government last night looked increasingly
prepared to impose martial law on sections of the country as coalition
and
Iraqi forces fought fierce battles with armed insurgents loyal to the
radical
Shia cleric Muqtada Sadr.
There were strong hints that Iyad Allawi, the interim Prime Minister,
could
for the first time apply his emergency powers when he announces plans
for
tackling the spreading insurgency tomorrow.
An American UH-1 helicopter crash-landed after being hit in the holy
Shia city
of Najaf during fighting that Falah al-Nakib, Iraq's Interior Minister,
said
yesterday had claimed the lives of eight insurgents. Iraqi medics said
seven
civilians were killed.
Mr Nakib told a swiftly convened news conference yesterday that he and
Mr
Allawi had taken "the necessary decisions to confront these challenges"
and
charged that the fresh uprising in Najaf and Wednesday's fighting in
Mosul, in
the north, were part of an "organised plan to dismember Iraq and kill
the
Iraqi people... All of these terrorists and killers are working for the
same
organisation regardless of which banners they carry or which hats they
wear".
The hints followed a declaration in yesterday's Iraqi media by Sheikh
Ghazi
al-Yawar, the interim President, that "it is the time to use the new
national
safety law" to protect the country against insurgents. The battles in
Najaf,
the worst since a conditional truce two months ago, ended several weeks
of
fighting between Sadr and US forces, and triggered further violence when
gunmen took control of parts of the Shia Baghdad suburb of Sadr City and
wounded seven US soldiers.
In the south of the country, British soldiers were said by a spokesman
for
Sadr's forces to have killed one insurgent and injured three after they
ambushed an Army patrol.
In Amarah, in the British military zone, insurgents fired at government
buildings after Mehdi Army leaders appealed through mosque loudspeakers
for
its members to mobilize.
Mr Nakib and a senior US officer were adamant yesterday that the
fighting in
Najaf had started because Mehdi Army insurgents had attacked a police
station
in the city with mortars, rocket-propelled grenades and gunfire. The US
military source said that Iraqi forces had called in US forces after
repelling
two attacks by the insurgents.
While Mr Nakib said Iraqi forces were ready to arrest "all criminals
including
him [Sadr]," the senior US officer here said its forces had not been
pursuing
the detention of Sadr, wanted in connection with the killing of a rival
Shia
cleric. The US military has denied that it deliberately surrounded
Sadr's
house during engagements on Tuesday.
Striking a bellicose note, Mr Nakib said the Iraqi police and supporting
forces had gained "glorious victories" in the continuing fighting, and
blamed
Iraq's neighbours for fuelling the insurgency. He said Lebanese and
Iranians
were among those captured. He also criticized Arab television networks
for
their coverage of the insurgency. Mr Nakib said the transmission of
hostage-takers' videos depicted Iraqis to the world as "savages."
There have been hints from Mr Allawi's allies that censorship could be
imposed
and even threats to close down al-Jazeera's Baghdad bureau unless its
coverage
is changed. Later, a spokesman for Mr Sadr said the cleric wanted to
restore
his truce.
* The Ministry of Defence said last night that a British soldier died in
Iraq.
Pte Christopher Gordon Rayment, 22, who was serving with the 1st
Battalion,
The Princess of Wales' Royal Regiment, died yesterday in "a tragic
accident"
at Amarah.
5.
FIERCE CLASHES RAGE THROUGHOUT IRAQ
Aljazeerah.net
August 6, 2004 - 0:56 GMT
** From Hilla to Balad, Falluja to Najaf, Iraq was rocked by intense
clashes
as Muqtada al-Sadr's forces vowed resistance against the US and British
occupation of the country. **
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/E5CCC59E-3B3A-4363-A1B6-8EAD5C086
247.htm
Fighting raged unabated in and around Najaf on Thursday and early Friday
between Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi Army militia and US troops who were
called in
to support Iraqi national guardsmen.
By late evening on Thursday, several buildings were on fire in the holy
city,
reported Aljazeera's correspondent Uday al-Katib.
Meanwhile in Baghdad, Aljazeera reported that several loud blasts caused
by
exploding mortar rounds were heard in the city center.
Reuters correspondents said they heard three explosions followed by
automatic
gunfire near the Sheraton and Palestine hotels.
Plumes of smoke were seen rising from the hotels, which house many
journalists
and foreign contractors, Reuters reported.
NAJAF FLARE-UP
According to Aljazeera's correspondent in Najaf, the clashes started
when the
Najaf General Hospital was hit by several mortar rounds killing one and
wounding four others.
The health ministry said the casualties were all hospital staff.
Mahdi Army militia then moved the fight to the vicinity of the city's
cemetery
where a US marine helicopter was shot down by small arms fire.
A US Army spokesman said several members of the helicopter crew were
wounded
but had been evacuated. The helicopter had been transporting a wounded
soldier when it came under small arms fire, the spokesman added.
By nightfall, Aljazeera reported that at least 15 Iraqis had been killed
and
more than 102 wounded in the ongoing clashes.
US forces said one soldier was killed and five others wounded when their
convoy came under attack on the outskirts of Najaf cemetery.
NO NEGOTIATION
Interim Iraqi Interior Minister Falah al-Naquib told reporters that his
government would not negotiate with al-Sadr and would persist in
fighting and
killing members of his militia. Al-Naquib also blamed Arab press for
inciting
violence in the occupied country.
Nevertheless, fighting spread southward to Basra as Shaikh Saad
al-Basri, an
al-Sadr representative in the city, said three of their militiamen were
killed
in clashes with British forces in the city.
"The clashes erupted near Garma Bridge north of the city and Sadr's
supporters
damaged three British military vehicles", he added.
However, a spokesperson for British forces denied they had suffered
casualties
or losses and said only two of Sadr's militiamen were killed.
IRAQ-WIDE VIOLENCE
Elsewhere in Iraq's south, five people were killed and 20 others wounded
when
a car bomb detonated on Thursday morning at a police station in the town
of
al-Mahawil, 70 kilometers south of Baghdad.
In the capital itself, at least one man was killed and a car destroyed
when a
mortar round landed on the road linking the al-Adhamiya and al-Mansour
neighbourhoods in the western part of the city.
Meanwhile, in the northern town of Balad, Aljazeera's correspondent
reported
that three Iraqi national guardsmen were wounded when their convoy came
under
light weapons attack by unidentified armed assailants.
The attack set three of the convoy's vehicles ablaze.
"A US military convoy hit an explosive device that burnt a US military
vehicle
north of Ishaqi. No information about casualties among US forces were
reported," he added.
In Falluja, west of Baghdad, Aljazeera reported that four Iraqis were
killed
and another five wounded in the Karma district after being shot at by US
occupation troops who had been hit by an improvised explosive device.
There was no word on US casualties in Falluja.
MAHDI ARMY ISSUES WARNING
In an interview with Aljazeera late on Thursday, Shaikh Aws al-Khafaji,
one of
al-Sadr's senior aides, said the Mahdi Army will resort to military
operations
if the siege of Najaf by US forces is not immediately lifted.
He also claimed that the Mahdi Army militia were currently deployed in
the
southern city of Nasiriya to "prevent the Italian forces from entering
the
city".
Al-Khafaji denied carrying out any military operations against Iraqi
police
and added that the two had previously agreed on conducting joint patrols
to
defend Najaf's holy sites and maintain security in the city.
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- Thread context:
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Mike Friedman Sat 07 Aug 2004, 04:32 GMT
- [Marxism] US presses anti-Sadr offensive; fighting spreads across Iraq,
Fred Feldman Sat 07 Aug 2004, 03:58 GMT
- [Marxism] Cops claim Sadr militia in Najaf surrender; Allawi prepares to declare martial law; fighting spreads across country,
Fred Feldman Sat 07 Aug 2004, 03:46 GMT
- [Marxism] Re: Tariq Ali on the US election,
Tom O'Lincoln Sat 07 Aug 2004, 02:41 GMT
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