From the Los Angeles Times
Crackdown Yields Little Security in Baghdad
The city saw an average of 25 attacks a day
over 35 days of extra searches, patrols and checkpoints.
By Julian E. Barnes
Times Staff Writer
July 21, 2006
BAGHDAD — More than a month after the beginning of a highly publicized
security crackdown and the killing of militant leader Abu Musab
Zarqawi, the number of daily attacks in Baghdad has actually increased.
Iraqi
and U.S. forces began stepping up patrols, creating new checkpoints and
conducting more searches June 14. But the initiative, Operation
Together Forward, has not reduced the number of attacks in the capital,
according to statistics released by U.S. military forces Thursday.
In
the 101 days before the crackdown, an average of 23.8 attacks occurred
daily. In the first 35 days of the operation, the average was 25.2
attacks a day.
The failure of the crackdown to decrease the
violence is yet another sign of the sectarian conflict that has
buffeted this city. Continuing violence across Iraq prompted Grand
Ayatollah Ali Sistani, the nation's highest-ranking Shiite Muslim
cleric, to issue a rare public statement Thursday that urged Iraqis to
stop attacks against civilians.
"I repeat my call today to all
Iraqis of different sects and ethnicities to realize the extent of the
danger threatening their country's future and confront it side by
side," Sistani wrote.
In the statement, Sistani called on those
setting off car bombs and carrying out executions to stop, and to
instead start talking with the government.
Prime Minister Nouri
Maliki and U.S. military leaders have said their priority is securing
Baghdad, increasing residents' sense of safety by eliminating sectarian
militias, death squads and insurgent fighters.
Officials tried
to put the best face on the statistics. Army Maj. Gen. William B.
Caldwell IV, chief spokesman for the U.S. military in Iraq, said at a
news conference Thursday that an upswing in sectarian violence in the
last few days had driven the averages higher. In the first month of the
operation, he said, the number of daily attacks was about the same as
during the previous 101 days, at 23.7 a day.
"While the last
five days or so should not be an indicator of the Baghdad security plan
overall, neither can they be brushed aside," Caldwell said. "And again,
we will do whatever it takes to bring down the level of violence here
in Baghdad."
The June death of Zarqawi, the leader of Al Qaeda
in Iraq, had led some to hope that the power of foreign militants here
would diminish. Although the effectiveness of Zarqawi's organization
after his death has yet to be tested, it is clear that much of the
violence in Baghdad is unrelated to foreign militants. Most of the
recent killing in the capital involves Iraqi Sunni Arab insurgents
trading attacks with Shiite death squads.
On Monday, the
bodies of 32 Sunni Arab men were found in Baghdad, apparently the
victims of Shiite death squads. Those killings were followed by a
suicide bombing that killed 57 day laborers in a Shiite neighborhood of
the southern town of Kufa.
Such fighting has led prominent Sunni Arab and Shiite leaders to say
their country is gripped by an undeclared civil war.
The
violence continued Thursday morning with a car bomb that killed three
and injured 10 in downtown Baghdad. In the afternoon, a second car bomb
killed two people and injured seven in the Shula neighborhood.
Kirkuk,
a northern Iraqi city where ethnic tensions have risen along with the
sectarian fighting in Baghdad, was also the scene of a car bombing. The
device exploded near the government building downtown, killing five and
wounding 19.
The U.S. military confirmed that it had launched a
joint operation with Iraqi security forces in two small cities west of
Kirkuk. Soldiers from the Army's 101st Airborne Division and the Iraqi
security forces surrounded the town of Hawija, while a joint force
entered the market at the center of the city, military officials
announced.
Thirty-one Iraqi soldiers have been killed in Hawija in the last five
weeks, the military said.
Iraqi army officials had announced a joint operation in the Rashad
area, also west of Kirkuk, on Wednesday.
The
U.S. military statistics showed that in the first four weeks of the
security crackdown in Baghdad, attacks had fallen in seven of the
city's 10 districts. Caldwell said much of the recent violence occurred
in a few neighborhoods, which experience about 41% of the city's
killings.
"We should note the extreme concentration of attacks in roughly five
areas around the city," Caldwell said.
"This contrasts to the swaths of Baghdad experiencing somewhat relative
peace. Hundreds of thousands of Baghdadis live a regular life day in
and day out, unmarred by the violent attacks on civilians in the most
troubled areas."
The security operation in Baghdad has taken a
heavy toll on Iraqi police and soldiers. U.S. military officials said
that 92 Iraqi police and soldiers had been killed and 444 injured in
the first four weeks of the operation.
Maj. Gen. Abdul Aziz
Mohammed Jassim, spokesman for the Iraqi Defense Ministry, said that
one of the biggest problems the security operation faced was armed
groups posing as Iraqi police and army units. "Those groups disrupt any
security plan, no matter how good it is," he said.
Caldwell
blamed the increased violence on fighters and weapons being brought
into Baghdad from other parts of Iraq in an attempt to undermine the
security crackdown.
"We have seen the movement of terrorist
elements into the Baghdad area," Caldwell said. "If Prime Minister
Maliki succeeds in Baghdad, he'll be able to succeed in Iraq. So they
will do everything they can to in fact stop that."
Caldwell
suggested that the military was considering incorporating elements of
the strategy used in Ramadi into the Baghdad security plan. U.S. forces
have ringed Ramadi with checkpoints and built combat outposts in
troublesome parts of the city.
However, Ramadi is a city of
400,000, and conducting a similar operation in Baghdad, a city of more
than 5 million, would probably require far more troops. There are about
42,500 Iraqi security troops and 7,200 U.S. military personnel in
Baghdad participating in the operation.
"As far as troop numbers, every option is on the table at this point,"
Caldwell said.
For
Baghdad residents, patience with the new government is already wearing
thin. Many say the security crackdown has created long lines and
checkpoints but done nothing to reduce the threat of being kidnapped or
killed.
"If security cannot be maintained, then there will
never be any stability," said Talib Kadhum Jawad, 60, the owner of a
currency exchange. "Everybody is targeted now."
Times staff writers Shamil Aziz, Suhail Affan and
Raheem Salman contributed to this report.
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times