From the Los Angeles Times
U.S. General Predicts Intensified Attacks
Coalition leader applauds defense efforts but
says rebels will seek to thwart the new government.
By Louise Roug
Times Staff Writer
April 30, 2006
BAQUBAH, Iraq — The top U.S. general on the ground in Iraq warned
Saturday that a surge in violence was likely in coming months as Iraq's
new government began its full term in office.
Army
Lt. Gen. Peter Chiarelli, commander of U.S.-led troops in Iraq, said
that despite political progress and the growing competence of Iraqi
security forces, troops are still fighting a bloody insurgency.
"There's nothing about this that I would [call] peacekeeping," he said.
"We're in a fight."
At
least 70 U.S. troops were killed in April, the highest toll in five
months. A soldier died Saturday when his vehicle struck a roadside bomb
southwest of Baghdad.
Chiarelli spent Saturday in Baqubah, about
35 miles northeast of the capital, addressing Iraqi and American
troops. In recent weeks, rebels have mounted a series of bold,
large-scale attacks in an effort to gain control of the ethnically and
religiously mixed city, the capital of Diyala province.
On
Thursday, rebels launched mortar rounds at an Iraqi army base and then
simultaneously attacked four police stations. Up to 100 insurgents
battled for hours with Iraqi security forces, using mortar launchers,
rocket-propelled grenades and small arms.
Attacks came in
waves throughout the day. One Iraqi soldier and 17 insurgents were
killed, the U.S. military said, and U.S. commanders called in gunships
to strike rebels hidden in orchards. There was sporadic fighting in
Baqubah on Friday, but authorities then locked down the city, ordering
a curfew that lasted until Saturday.
Despite the need for
American backup, Chiarelli said, Iraqi soldiers and police officers
fought side by side to fend off the rebels and stood their ground.
Traveling
from his Baghdad headquarters to Baqubah in a phalanx of Black Hawk and
Apache helicopters, Chiarelli was accompanied by several Iraqi
generals, including the deputy commander of the Iraqi army, Lt. Gen.
Nasier Abadi.
"By this heroic action, you have written a new
chapter in the book of major exploits of the new Iraqi army," Abadi
told soldiers from Iraq's 2nd Brigade, 5th Division. "You were able to
conquer fear and uncertainty, and demonstrate how the will to win makes
a difference in combat, leading to victory and defeat of the
terrorists."
After the ceremony, Chiarelli addressed the team of
U.S. military advisors who work to support the Iraqi soldiers. "Let us
know if there's anything you need," he told the troops.
"Keep
the helmets coming," answered Capt. John Wayne McFarlin. A sniper's
bullet had hit his helmet during the gun battle and nearly pierced it.
"What
we're seeing now, the upsurge in violence, is all about destabilizing
the government," Chiarelli said in an interview as he traveled back to
Baghdad. "It's a strategy to push up violence to take away the focus
from what the prime minister is doing.
"I'll expect the violence to be high in the first months of the new
government."
Parliament
endorsed a deal on April 22 that designated Shiite politician Nouri
Maliki as prime minister. He has 30 days from the time he was named to
the post to put together a Cabinet, which will be Iraq's first
permanent government since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion.
In the past, violence has surged around key political events such as
elections.
"Zarqawi is starting to run out of events," said Chiarelli, referring
to Abu Musab Zarqawi, the leader of Al Qaeda in Iraq.
Abadi,
seated across from Chiarelli in the Black Hawk, likened a recent video
message from Zarqawi to one of the last appearances by ousted Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein before the invasion of Baghdad. Hussein stood
atop a car, telling the crowd not to surrender.
"That was his grandstand, and it went to the pits after that," Abadi
said. The appearance by Zarqawi, firing a
machine
gun, was intended "to show might, to show power," he said. "We have the
same pattern repeating itself."
Chiarelli's
comments echoed those of President Bush, who in his weekly radio
address from Washington on Saturday warned of "more days of sacrifice
and struggle."
The American casualty count in April, more than
twice the previous month, broke a downward trend begun in November.
Most of the toll came in Baghdad and volatile Al Anbar province, the
western area that is the heart of the Sunni Arab-led insurgency.
Authorities in Baghdad said they found five bodies on Saturday, and two
roadside bombs injured five police officers.
Six
bodies were found in Dora, on the southern edge of the capital. All of
the victims had been handcuffed and blindfolded, and showed signs of
torture.
Near Tall Afar in northwestern Iraq, hospital officials
reported that an adult and two children were killed when a mortar round
hit their house. In Ramadi, clashes continued between U.S. troops and
rebels. A number of rockets hit the provincial government building
downtown, police said. There were no reports of casualties.