Posted on 04/19/2008 7:45:12 PM PDT by MinorityRepublican
BAGHDAD Iraqi soldiers took control of the last bastions of the cleric Moktada al-Sadrs militia in Basra on Saturday, and Irans ambassador to Baghdad strongly endorsed the Iraqi governments monthlong military operation against the fighters.
By Saturday evening, Basra was calm, but only after air and artillery strikes by American and British forces cleared the way for Iraqi troops to move into the Hayaniya district and other remaining Mahdi Army militia strongholds and begin house-to house searches, Iraqi officials said. Iraqi troops were meeting little resistance, said Maj. Gen. Abdul-Karim Khalaf, the spokesman for the Iraqi Interior Ministry in Baghdad.
Despite the apparent concession of Basra, Mr. Sadr issued defiant words on Saturday night. In a long statement read from the loudspeakers of his Sadr City Mosque, he threatened to declare war until liberation against the government if fighting against his militia forces continued.
But it was difficult to tell whether his words posed a real threat or were a desperate effort to prove that his group was still a feared force, especially given that his militias actions in Basra followed a pattern seen again and again: the Mahdi militia battles Iraqi government troops to a standstill and then retreats.
Why his fighters have clung to those fight-then-fade tactics is unknown. But American military and civilian officials have repeatedly claimed that Mahdi Army units trained and equipped by Iran had played a major role in the unexpectedly strong resistance that government troops met in Basra.
Whether to counter those allegations or simply because, as many Iraqis have recently speculated, Mr. Sadrs stock has recently fallen in Iranian eyes, the Iranian ambassador, Hassan Kazemi Qumi, on Saturday expressed his governments strong support for the Iraqi assault on Basra. He even called the militias in Basra outlaws,
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
bttt
A concession, is something that is given.
The Iraqi Army *took* Basra away from the criminals.
Yes, it was.
We had the chance to stop this problem when we cornered him in a mosque with 600 followers several years ago, but let the Iraqi leaders attempt to show nice and let him go. All someone needed to do was call in a B-52 and just explain it was a mistake but everyone was following Georgy Bush's cockeyed orders to go along with the pretend government.
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