The Muslim pilgrims' road to the holy city of Karbala was a
highway of bullets and bombs for Shiites on Friday. Drive-by
shootings and roadside and bus bombs killed or wounded 19 people,
ratcheting up the sectarian tensions gripping Iraq.
Security forces, including US armored reinforcements, girded for
more bloodshed leading up to Monday's Shiite holiday. And north of
Baghdad, in the Sunni Triangle, a two-day-old operation involving
1,500 US and Iraqi troops swept through an area near Samarra in
search of insurgents.
It was in Samarra that the insurgent bombing of a Shiite shrine
last month ignited days of violence between Shiite and Sunni
Muslims. More than 500 people died.
Authorities had feared new attacks as tens of thousands of
Shiites, many dressed in black and carrying religious banners,
converge on Karbala, 50 miles south of the capital, for Monday's
40th and final day of mourning for Imam Hussein, the Prophet
Muhammad's grandson.
The US military announced this week it was dispatching a fresh
battalion of the 2nd Brigade, 1st Armored Division, about 700
troops, to Iraq from its base in Kuwait to provide extra security
for Shiite holy cities and Baghdad during this period.
Friday's bloodshed in Baghdad began as groups of faithful, many
of them parents with children in tow, trekked down city streets
headed for the southbound highway to Karbala.
At about 7:30 AM, a BMW sedan driving alongside pilgrims in the
western district of Adil opened fire, killing three young men and
wounding two other people, police Lt. Thair Mahmoud said. Police
later reported a second shooting, also in western Baghdad, in which
men riding in a car fired on pilgrims near Um al-Tuboul Square,
wounding three.
Then, about midday, a bomb left in a plastic bag of vegetables
exploded on a minibus, killing two passengers and wounding four in
a Shiite district of Baghdad, police reported. Later in the day, a
roadside bomb went off as a crowd of pilgrims passed in Mahmoudiya,
south of Baghdad, wounding five people.
Elsewhere, police in a Shiite area of east Baghdad late Thursday
found the bodies of four Sunni men who had been seized from a taxi
by masked gunmen the day before in western Baghdad. And police
reported that six mortar rounds landed on six houses Friday in a
mixed Sunni-Shiite area of Khan Bani Saad, 10 miles north of
Baghdad, killing one person and wounding three.
In the western city of Ramadi, US forces again exchanged fire
with attackers. The clashes between US troops and insurgents began
about 6:30 p.m. Friday around the US base at the provincial
government headquarters, according to a doctor at Ramadi hospital,
Dheya al-Duleimi. He had no immediate information on
casualties.
Iraqi troops killed one attacker in a firefight with insurgents
in nearby Fallujah, police Lt. Omer Ahmed reported.
In the big helicopter-borne operation north of Baghdad, only
light resistance was reported as some 1,500 troops from the US
101st Airborne Division and Iraq's 4th Division swept through a
100-square-mile area in search of insurgents and weapons.
Lt. Col. Edward Loomis, 101st Airborne Division spokesman, said
about 40 suspects were detained, 10 of whom were later released,
and six weapons caches were found.
The only casualty reported was a 101st Airborne soldier shot and
killed Thursday while manning an observation post in Samarra. At
least 2,312 members of the US military have died since the
beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to an Associated
Press count.
"Operation Swarmer," described as the largest air assault
operation in three years, was focused on an area of Salahuddin
province that was a stronghold of Sunni support for Saddam
Hussein's ousted regime.
Speaking by video conference with Pentagon reporters, the US
second-in-command here, Lt. Gen. Peter Chiarelli, stressed that the
majority of troops in the operation were Iraqi. He said the goal is
to have Iraqi security forces in control of 75 percent of Iraq by
this summer.
The US command has sought to spotlight development of Iraqi
military potential. As Iraqi forces improve, American officials
say, US forces in Iraq can be reduced.
Iraqi political leaders, meanwhile, met in another round of
talks to break the Sunni-Shiite logjam over the makeup of a new
government. They emerged after two hours with no breakthroughs to
report.
Minority factions are trying to prevent majority Shiites, the
biggest bloc in the new parliament, from dominating the major jobs
— prime minister and defense and interior ministers.
Representatives of the Shiite, Sunni and Kurdish blocs said that
on Friday they discussed formation of a National Security Council,
a compromise proposal for a joint body to oversee the defense and
interior ministries.
More meetings are needed, they said. Tarek al-Hashimi, of the
Sunni bloc's Iraqi Accordance Front, said the country faced "a
dangerous political dilemma." His Kurdish counterpart, Barham
Saleh, said the sectarian crisis runs "much deeper" than the
dispute over a Shiite effort to name acting Prime Minister Ibrahim
al-Jaafari as the future government chief.
US ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad told The Associated Press on
Friday that talks were under way about when he would meet with
Iranian officials to discuss the Iraqi political situation. The
talks should be held in Baghdad, Khalilzad said.
Iran's Shiite leadership has considerable influence among Iraq's
Shiite groups.
(Chinadaily.com via agencies March 18, 2006)