From the Los Angeles Times
Blast could derail a key Iraqi alliance
Sunni and Shiite tribal leaders who had hoped
to overcome sectarian warfare are killed in the Baghdad hotel bombing.
By Ned Parker
Times Staff Writer
June 26, 2007
BAGHDAD — Five sheiks and a political official supporting the arming of
Sunni Arab tribes to fight against Al Qaeda in Iraq were among 12
people killed Monday in a massive bomb blast at a heavily guarded
Baghdad hotel.
The early afternoon attack risked derailing an emerging alliance
between Sunni Muslim tribal leaders in long-restive Al Anbar province
and the country's Shiite Muslim majority the day after a key round of
negotiations to formalize their relationship with Iraqi Prime Minister
Nouri Maliki's government.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for the bloody bombing.
U.S. and Iraqi government officials said they thought it was the work
of Al Qaeda-linked militants. But in a display of the rancor that the
bombing could engender, two prominent Sunni tribesmen made new threats
against Iraq's Shiites, blaming the blast on Maliki's government or
agents of Shiite-dominated Iran.
The explosion at the fortified Mansour Melia Hotel, home to the Chinese
Embassy, parliament members and prominent national figures, came on a
day that saw at least 48 deaths across Iraq in suicide attacks,
bombings and mortar strikes.
Survivors described being knocked down by the force of the blast,
which various witnesses ascribed to either a suicide bomber or
explosives placed in the hotel's lobby. Those wading through the smoke
said they saw the charred bodies of several Sunni and Shiite tribal
leaders whom they had hoped would help Iraq overcome its fierce
sectarian warfare.
"The target was the national project that even involved Mr.
Maliki," said Sheik Mohammed Daham Fahdawi, whose Sunni tribe has been
fighting foreign Islamist militants around Habbaniya in Al Anbar.
Fahdawi, who said he was unsure who was behind the bombing, said
he escaped death only because he had risen from a seat by the lobby's
television and walked a short distance away when the blast occurred. It
threw him down and he scrambled through the dust to find his colleagues
dead.
Many of them had been in a meeting with Maliki on Sunday in which
they agreed on procedures for enrolling tribesmen into local police
forces.
The dead included a former governor of Al Anbar, Sheik Fassal Guood of
the Albu Nimir tribe; Sheik Abdul-Aziz Fahdawi of the Fahad tribe;
Sheik Tariq Saleh Dulaimi, a commander in the fight against Al Qaeda in
Iraq; Mohammed Awadi, a Shiite cleric from Najaf; Hussein Shaalan, a
Shiite tribal leader who had attended a government conference on
reconciliation; and Shiite politician Aziz Yasseri, an advisor to the
Iraqi Defense Ministry.
Poet Rahim Maliki, who was making a TV program on the Sunni tribes
fighting Al Qaeda, also died in the bombing. Eighteen others were
injured, police said.
Among those touring the blast site later was Shiite politician Ahmad
Chalabi, now a secular advisor to the prime minister.
Amid the broken glass and blood congealed on the floor, Chalabi worried
about the effect of the killings on the Sunni tribes that had reached
out to the government.
"This is a message from the terrorists to all the leaders in Al Anbar,
Abu Ghraib [a town near Baghdad] and Diyala [province, northeast of the
capital] who want to come to terms with the situation and negotiate
with the government; they are vulnerable and in easy reach even when
they are in one of the most secure areas in Baghdad," Chalabi said.
Prime Minister Maliki later pledged his support for the tribes fighting
Al Qaeda.
In the talks Sunday, participants had agreed in principle to guidelines
for forming local police battalions.
Last week, Maliki had warned that the national government wanted
control over the process, which was initiated by the U.S. military in
Al Anbar.
So far, eight tribal police battalions have been created there,
and the U.S. military has tried to incorporate the idea in Diyala.
American officials see it as a way to promote national reconciliation
at a time when Iraq's government remains deadlocked on major
initiatives.
The bombing, however, appeared to have sown new ill will. Sheik
Ali Hatem Sulaiman, an Al Anbar tribal leader, accused Iraqis working
for Iran of carrying out the blast. His words amounted to a veiled
reference to Shiite militias.
Meanwhile, a member of Sheik Guood's family, Sheik Yassin, pointed the
finger at the Iraqi government.
"We know who did this. It's a specific side. It is the Maliki
government," he told the Dubai, United Arab Emirates-based Sharqiya
television channel.
In other attacks Monday, a car bomb targeted two minibuses carrying
police academy recruits in the southern city of Hillah, killing eight
people and wounding 25, police said.
A suicide bomber exploded a fuel truck outside the Baiji police
station, 125 miles north of Baghdad, killing 18 people and wounding 50
others, police said. The U.S. military said 17 of the dead were
policemen.
Seventeen corpses, most bearing gunshot wounds or signs of torture,
were found in Baghdad, all but one of them on the city's western side,
which remains a battleground between Shiite militias and Sunni fighters.
A U.S. soldier from the Multinational Division Center south of
Baghdad died from small-arms fire as he drove in a convoy, the U.S.
military said.
A second soldier was killed and three wounded in a bomb blast in
Baghdad, the U.S. Army announced.
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times