THE CONFLICT IN IRAQ: U.S. PRESENCE DECRIED; PALESTINIANS IN DANGER
Iraqi clerics call for end to hostilities
Sunni and Shiite leaders say the U.S. is at
the root of continuing violence and should withdraw its troops.
By Solomon Moore
Times Staff Writer
November 26, 2006
BAGHDAD — Shiite and Sunni clerics, among the last vestige of authority
in a country rapidly losing faith in politicians, charged Saturday that
Iraq's plight was the result of U.S. mistakes and pleaded with their
faithful to stem the bloodshed that followed a devastating attack on a
mainly Shiite Baghdad neighborhood.
In
interviews Saturday and in recent sermons, clerics articulated one
message that appears to be gaining traction on both sides of Iraq's
civil war: The U.S. presence is making matters worse, and the Americans
should go home.
"The roots of our problems lie in the mistakes
of the Americans committed right from the beginning of their
occupation," said Sheik Ali Merza, a Shiite cleric in Najaf who is a
leader of the Islamic Dawa Party.
Iraq's most prominent Sunni
cleric expressed a similar viewpoint. At a Cairo news conference,
Harith Dhari demanded that American troops withdraw.
"Since the
beginning, the U.S. occupation drove Iraq from bad to worse," said
Dhari, who became a fugitive this month after the Shiite-led government
issued a warrant for his arrest on allegations that he has supported
terrorism.
The increased focus by the clerics on the U.S.
presence in Iraq comes as U.S. officials review a broad range of
options to address the increasing violence and dwindling domestic
support for the war. Options range from a short-term increase in the
number of troops — which stands at 144,000 — to a phased withdrawal.
Vice
President Dick Cheney made a quick visit Saturday to Saudi Arabia, a
neighbor of Iraq and a regional power. Saudi Arabia also is a source of
funds for Sunni Arab insurgents in Iraq.
President Bush is scheduled to meet with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri
Maliki in Jordan this week.
The
clerics appealed for an end to retaliatory killings and kidnappings in
the wake of a series of bombings Thursday in the Sadr City neighborhood
of Baghdad that killed more than 200 people.
"The explosions
we are witnessing and this series of attacks and killings only aim at
triggering a sectarian war, which neither Shiites nor Sunnis will win,"
Sheik Abdul Aziz Mohammed, a Shiite cleric in Kirkuk, said in his most
recent sermon. "The prophet Muhammad said religious strife is dead, and
condemned anyone who attempts to resurrect it."
Khalil Maliki, a Shiite cleric based in the southern port city of
Basra, also blamed the United States.
"We have all concluded that the primary party responsible for all these
massacres is the American occupation," said Maliki, a representative of
anti-U.S. cleric Muqtada Sadr.
Most here expect Iraq's civil war
to deepen as the government lifts curfew restrictions today, and it is
unclear whether the clerics' appeals for calm are being heard.
Some
prominent religious and political leaders accuse the U.S. military of
conspiring with their enemies. Sunni Arabs say U.S. troops are raiding
their communities in coordination with Shiite militias.
And
Shiites say that U.S. forces are working with Sunni terrorist groups to
conduct strikes such as the devastating car bomb barrage in Sadr City.
U.S.
troops seeking a missing American serviceman believed to be held by
Muqtada Sadr's Al Mahdi militia raided Sadr City only hours before
Thursday's insurgent car bomb attack. Some Shiite clerics and
politicians cited those raids as evidence of American involvement in
the attack.
"Recently, it has become obvious that there is
cooperation between the occupation forces, Al Qaeda and the Baathists,"
said Sahib Amry, a Sadr representative in Najaf.
Although U.S.
military officials acknowledge that they have increased attacks in
Shiite areas in Baghdad in pursuit of Army Spc. Ahmed Qusai Taei, they
dismiss the conspiracy theories as ridiculous. But the fact that so
many influential Iraqis find them credible complicates U.S. efforts to
stop the bloodletting.
Sadr, whose representatives make up a
key element in Maliki's Shiite coalition, threatened Friday to stage a
walkout and bring down the government if Maliki went ahead with his
meeting with Bush. U.S. and Iraqi officials said Saturday that there
were no plans to cancel the meeting.
Iraqi President Jalal
Talabani canceled a trip to Tehran today, where he had planned to
discuss an Iranian proposal for a three-way summit with Syria.
Reports
emerged Saturday that Sunni Arab gunmen, using tactics usually
attributed to Shiite militiamen, donned Iraqi army uniforms and
kidnapped 21 men from a Shiite neighborhood in Balad Ruz, about 45
miles northeast of Baghdad. Police later found their corpses. Eleven of
the dead were men from the same family.
In west Baghdad, where
most of Friday's sectarian fighting took place, at least two dozen
mortar shells pounded a single block in the Sunni Arab-dominated
Ghazaliya neighborhood, where residents remained inside their concrete
and brick houses. One person was killed.
After the mortar barrage, U.S. forces swept into the neighborhood and
arrested at least 10 people, a resident said.
Projectiles
also hit Sadr City and the neighborhood of Mustansiriya, crashing into
a house and an open-air market; 14 people were injured.
The U.S.
military announced that it had killed 22 suspected insurgents in the
north Baghdad area in three separate incidents, which included an
airstrike on a suspected bomb construction site.
A pregnant woman and a male teenager were injured in one fight, the
military said.
"It
is always a shame when terrorists hide among civilian women and
children, putting them in harm's way," the military said in a statement.
Police in Baghdad found 17 bodies, all of them stripped of
identification papers and riddled with bullet holes.
In Baqubah, gun battles between Iraqi police and suspected insurgents
left at least 30 dead.
In
the northern city of Kirkuk, Iraqi police said they had killed two
insurgents who were attempting to plant a bomb, and that four police
officers were injured by a roadside explosive.
The U.S. military announced that a Marine was killed by enemy fire in
the western province of Al Anbar.
Many Iraqis said they expected violence to increase in the coming days.
"I
don't think these attacks against Sadr City will be the last," said
Diyadhin Fayadh, a Shiite cleric in Baghdad. "There will be more
explosions."
"What happened in Sadr City is a very grave
development, and I think the real reaction to it has not started yet,"
said Adnan Abo-Shabbot, 52, a Najaf supermarket owner. "I think that
Baghdad will become an open battlefield. The worst is yet to come."
"The
clerics and political leaders are insisting that people must be quiet
and patient, because the consequences will be dire if the Muslim is
killing his brother," said Ibrahim Hassan, 26, an engineering student
in Sadr City. "But if someone loses two or three family members, he
will never stay peaceful. Nobody can stop him. Not the clerics nor the
politicians."
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times