Sadr Told To Disband Militia

Team Infidel

Forum Spin Doctor
Washington Post
April 8, 2008
Pg. 8
Elections Are at Stake, Premier Says; Attacks Kill Three U.S. Troops
By Ernesto Londono, Washington Post Foreign Service
BAGHDAD, April 7 -- Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki threatened to block the party of radical cleric Moqtada al-Sadr from upcoming provincial elections as clashes between rival Shiite factions continued Monday in Baghdad.
At least three U.S. soldiers were killed in the capital Monday in two attacks, the military said. Two were killed by rocket-propelled grenades, and one was fatally shot after a roadside bomb struck the convoy in which he was traveling, the military said. News of their deaths came a day after four U.S. soldiers died in other attacks in the country.
The prime minister said in an interview with CNN that Sadr must disband the Mahdi Army, his powerful militia, in order to participate in elections scheduled for October.
Hassan al-Zargani, a top aide to Sadr, said the cleric is willing to disband the militia if his religious leaders sign off on the move, and if the Iraqi government meets certain unspecified conditions. "The government should give a number of guarantees," Zargani said, "because dissolving the army is not an easy thing to do."
Maliki described a bloody offensive targeting Shiite militias in Basra late last month as successful and said the operation had empowered the government to pursue militias elsewhere in the country.
"The state came out with the maximum power, nationalism, popular and national support that expressed itself, and for the first time, the one who is cornered and defeated is this gang," Maliki said, according to a transcript of the interview posted on CNN's Web site.
The Mahdi Army had maintained a low profile in recent months following a cease-fire Sadr declared last August. The cease-fire was broken after the Basra offensive, and the militia has since clashed repeatedly with U.S.-backed Iraqi forces.
Jason Gluck, an Iraq expert at the U.S. Peace Institute who worked in Iraq last year advising the parliament on rule of law and constitutional issues, said disbanding the militia would be a gamble for Sadr. The move could broaden his standing as a national leader and make him an attractive ally for Sunni groups eager to create an opposition bloc. But it could also weaken him.
"Until now, Sadr has enjoyed influence in Iraq that was disproportionate to his popular support because of his militia," Gluck said. "He was able to exist both within and outside the political arena because Maliki permitted him to do so. He cannot, however, survive for long with both Maliki and the Americans going full tilt against him."
Sadr's political base has been at loggerheads with Maliki's Dawa party and its largest ally, the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq, over the U.S. role in the country and the level of autonomy to be accorded the predominantly Shiite southern region.
The security situation in Baghdad remained unsteady Monday. U.S. forces launched at least three airstrikes against suspected teams of rocket and mortar launchers targeting American areas, the U.S. military said.
Americans in Iraq have been on high alert since the Basra offensive triggered a round of rocket attacks on the Green Zone and U.S. military bases in the capital.
Special correspondents Saad Sarhan in Najaf and Naseer Nouri in Baghdad contributed to this report.
 
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