Sadrists Accuse Sunni Politicians of Ties to Terror
86 Dead in Political Violence
The Sadr movement is calling for removal of some Sunni Arab cabinet ministers of the Iraqi Accord Front IAF) after a bodyguard of IAF leader Adnan Dulaimi was implicated in a plot to set off a string of car bombs in Baghdad, including in the Green Zone. Dulaimi denies involvement in the plot and challenges the arrest of his bodyguard and several other Sunni suspects on Saturday.
Al-Zaman reports [Ar.] that MP Baha' al-A`raji (Shiite Sadrist) said on Sunday that the banned Baath Party had prepared a coup plot aimed at overthrowing the government of PM Nuri al-Maliki. He attacked Iraqi Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi and Vice Premier Salam al-Zawba`i-- both from the Sunni fundamentalist Iraqi Accord Front--accusing them of involvement in terrorism. Al-A`raji said at a news conference on Sunday that the coup was plotted by Saddamists and radical Sunnis who believe Shiites are infidels, as a way of saying to the government "We are still here."
Al-Zaman says that internet sites close to the banned Iraqi Baath Party had carried rumors last week of an impending coup attempt against the al-Maliki government.
Al-A`raji maintained that Prime Minister al-Maliki lacks confidence in his vice premier, Salam al-Zawba`i, without mentioning the latter's name. Al-A`raji said, "As you know, one of the vice premiers of al-Maliki recently attempted to bring a car bomb into the Cabinet meeting." He said of Tariq al-Hashimi that he had a big conflict with a member of parliament and that some persons had attempted to protect the vice president with terror operations, which led to the killing of his sister, the MP Liqa' Al Yasin. (This is a government? It sounds like competing Mafia families!)
Ammar Wajih, a leader of the Iraqi Accord Front, denied any link to the alleged coup plot. He told al-Zaman, "We are a party to the current government of national unity, which we consider, despite its flaws, better than any revolutionary government." He said that any coup that targetted the Maliki government would lead to a civil war and ignite sectarian violence. He said that VP Tariq al-Hashimi and the secretary general of the Iraqi Accord Front would reply to the charges at a news conference later on Monday.
Wajih also said that there had been unannounced clashes between the Mahdi Army and US troops in Baghdad, which had created a crisis for the Sadr leadership, which it was trying to resolve by attacking Sunni Arab parties. He called for the Shiite militias to be dissolved, saying that they had attacked dozens of Sunni mosques since the fasting month of Ramadan began.
Nancy Youssef of the McClatchy News Service reports that Shiite clerical leader Muqtada al-Sadr has ordered his Mahdi Army militiamen to lay down their arms at least for now. His order, delivered in secret last Friday, said to commanders:
' • Reduce the size of units to 75 fighters, from as many as 400, to make the units more manageable.
• Issue new identification cards to Mahdi army members to replace IDs that have been forged.
• Send every member to an orientation course that would outline the group's mission.
• Lay down weapons temporarily. '
She also reports that a Sadrist preacher threatened Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and his American "masters" with Mahdi Army weaponry, saying that "our patience has limits." He was demanding that al-Maliki intervene to stop Sunni Arab death squad killings of Shiites, the corpses of which are arriving in bulk at cemeteries in Najaf and Karbala from Baghdad.
The LA Times reports that a raid at 2 am on Monday by US troops on a wanted figure from the Mahdi Army in largely Shiite Sadr City went bad, with the US troops taking heavy gunfire and departing, and a woman and a child killed in the crossfire. Reuters says that the US forces arrested 4 persons before leaving.
Reuters reports on political violence, including the unconventional civil war, on Sunday, saying that some 86 persons were killed or announced dead. Two GIs were killed in al-Anbar Province on Saturday. Other major incidents:
' BAGHDAD - A total of 50 bodies were recovered by Baghdad police in various parts of the city over the 24 hours to Sunday evening, an Interior Ministry official said. Many had been tortured and most were bound and shot in the head. . .
FALLUJA - A car bomb in a vegetable market killed four civilians and wounded six in Falluja, 50 km (35 miles) west of Baghdad, police said.
SUWAYRA - Police retrieved five bodies, including that of a schoolgirl, from the river Tigris in the town of Suwayra, 40 km (25 miles) south of Baghdad, police said. All bodies were shot in the head and chest.
MAHMUDIYA - The bodies of four people, bound and blindfolded, were found with gunshot wounds to the head in the town of Mahmudiya, just south of Baghdad, police said. . .
There were also clashes in Ramadi between guerrillas and US troops last week, which were only now being reported. What I hear is that these clashes in Ramadi are an almost daily matter, but typically neither they nor their casualties get reported in the US press.
The NYT adds that "On Sunday evening in Al Amel, a neighborhood in western Baghdad that is largely Sunni Arab, 26 workers were taken from a store that sells sandwiches and meat pastries, Iraqi officials said."
This article raises the question of what in the world the US military learned from screening "The Battle of Algiers". My suspicion? The only part that sank in was when Col. Mathieu told the press corps that victory depended on them and their willingness to accept torture without question.
Excerpts from translations of the Iraqi press and paraphrases of articles done by the USG Open Source Center:
' Al-Sabah on 30 September publishes on page 4 a 200-word report entitled 'Looting of Cables and Transformers Causes Blackout in Several Districts in Basra.'
Al-Zaman on 30 September carries on the front page a 260-word report entitled 'Eight Mortar Rockets Injure Citizens, Including Children, in Samarra.'
Al-Zaman on 30 September runs on the front page a 140-word report entitled 'Insurgents Killed and Dozens of People Arrested in Ba'qubah.' . . .

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The idea of an anti-American coup in the Green Zone is quite bizarre. US troops run the place and can simply arrest the plotters in minutes.
As for the Sunni's links with terror. They are correct, but so are the Shiia's and the Kurd's. Ther are all at it to further their influence, not to mention the foreigners.
The US adminstration has taken one last throw of the dice: three months of as much military presence as they can muster to fix Iraq (one month is already gone.) But that is flawed. Time is not the issue. The mostly gangsters Iraqi "elite" will fight until the bitter end. That is what gangsters do!
Good summary of the Azzaman piece on the coup allegations.
However, I would just like to point out that the part on the web-site material referred to considerably more than just "rumors": Here's what that part of the Azzaman article said:
Internet sites close to the banned Baath party gave indications last week of the establishment of a comprehensive military plan consisting of several different axes aiming for the overthrow of the Maliki government. They referred to the leadership of this with nicknames beginning "Abu", as persons of high rank. These sites published code [indicating] calls to the previous [i.e., Baath] security and military units to take up specific tasks upon hearing "the call to commence the struggle". No independent source has confirmed the authenticity of the information on these sites; however, Iraqi authorities said all information appearing on the web is analyzed and dealt with, and there is no way it is just ignored.
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Further to the Baghdad coup allegations: Al-Hayat this morning notes there is significant political timing for this, today being the day scheduled for second reading of the federalism bill. I try and fill in some of the missing links at http://arablinks.blogspot.com
A typical US viewer of "The Battle of Algiers" would find it difficult to identify with the insurgents or imagine that the French should not win or (were it not for the perfidious Left) could not have won. Worst case, they would conclude that the French, as in Vietnam, left the job undone.
Similarly, US conservatives who view the "Hearts and Minds" film about Vietnam tend to feel more ire towards the film maker than about US myopia or errors. Old 'Nam types are now aglow with fond praise for Mark Moyar's "Triumph Forsaken," which argues that noodle-headed civilian policymakers deprived the US military of probable victory.
Military and intelligence peoople want films and books to celebrate a cause, not to question it.
Curious to know whether a single US military academy or war college offers a course with a syllabus that includes "A Savage War of Peace" by Alisdair Horne or "The Casbah War" by Paul Aussaresses. The latter memoir might inspire some avid readers and admirers these days. By their recent legislation to support broad categories of non-lethal interrogation, the US Senate and House have vindicated the old general, at last.
Serious scholars of warfare do exist, but even the best find a more welcoming and profitable audience for "war stories" genre that appeals to the nostalgia and fantasies of aging males, whether warriors or chickenhawks. The books and films evoke the experience of an old war, but seldom convey how to to choose or win the next one. Mostly, the effect is to mesmerize and obscure: just send out "our good boys" so they can "do it again
' BAGHDAD - A total of 50 bodies were recovered by Baghdad police in various parts of the city over the 24 hours to Sunday evening, an Interior Ministry official said. Many had been tortured and most were bound and shot in the head. . .'
Not very subtle. By doing their usual work on a day of total curfew, the cops are providing alibis to all the people they usually blame their kidnap-torture-murders on.
Only cops were free to drive around town and dump these bodies.
These curfews are just a Shiite weapon. Like the ridiculous proposed Baghdad trench, they only seek to stop Sunnis killing while giving Shiite squads free rein.
Even without this latest evidence of Iraqi government instability Tom Engelhardt has posted some metrics on the occupation at George Bush's Iraq in 21 Questions.
It seems American policy is taking Israeli policy as a model, as I watch the paranoia rampant in reports on IBA TV: Israel is in danger of being destroyed by Hizbullah, Hamas, Syria, Iran, etc while we hear the "fight them in Iraq or fight them in New York." Israel builds the Sharon Wall and now our Congress has approved a wall separating us from Mexico. IBA lumps Hamas, the several Hizbullahs, Islamic Jihad, al Qaeda and all other Arab or Muslim groups into a single big terror group while the US media does no better job of understanding the differences in the groups.
Israelis and Americans hear the same mantras from their leaders: we are under siege, in the greatest war of all times. We must relinquish rights in order to have safety, such as in extrajudicial executions. The whole world, especially the UN is against us.
No person can live for long under such a burden of paranoia without losing his mind. In the past five years, it appears that Americans as a nation have gone stark raving mad.
How do we know these charges aren't trumped up?
It's very convenient for the Shia parties to frame a Sunni politician, so they can find a pretext to not cooperate with them. The US is pressing them to work together, and their constituents are likely demanding they cut ties.
Let's see what evidence turns up.
What does denial actually look like? Here's a stunning black and white photograph:
BW photograph of a truly shameless moment. There's a deep sadness here -- layers upon layers upon layers of meaning in this iconic Buffalo News photo that perfectly sums up and symbolizes the whole damn Foleygate scandal, which has rapidly moved beyond the "merely" sleazy, salacious and corrupt. Now it's an utterly surreal, blame-shifting mass abdication of all personal responsibility.
Above all, there's the deep, visible moral rot that anyone can see. Look at the children in the photo. Look at the man (Rep. Reynolds) at the microphone. See the face of a party that uses children to score "family values" points but doesn't give a damn. At all.
And is in total denial of reality -- in Iraq, in Afghanistan, and here at home. It's time for them to go.
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