Truces In Fallujah And Najaf
Najaf Cease-Fire Follows Controversial Fallujah Truce
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The U.S. agreed to halt offensive operations in Najaf after weeks of skirmishes when followers of radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr agreed to lay down arms, Kimberly Dozier reports.
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The top aide of radical Shiite leader Muqtada al-Sadr, Queis Al Kaza'aly, inspects the damage after overnight fighting in Najaf, Iraq, Wednesday. (AP)
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Muqtada al-Sadr launched his uprising after the occupation authority launched a crackdown on his movement. (AP)
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Iraqi Fallujah brigade soldiers collect weapons. Some fought U.S. troops before the cease-fire. (AP)
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The U.S.-led coalition on Thursday agreed to suspend offensive operations in Najaf after Shiite leaders struck a deal with radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr to end the fighting there.
That follows the agreement last month under which a brigade composed of former Iraqi soldiers took over security in Fallujah.
Fallujah and Najaf were the flashpoints in April's violence, during which 126 soldiers were killed in combat. May has been less bloody, but still dangerous, for U.S. troops, with 53 U.S. deaths in hostile action.
Whether those truces hold — and what sort of security they provide — is a key question as the June 30 deadline for the handover of power to Iraqis approaches.
In Najaf, it was unclear if the United States would press its demand that al-Sadr be arrested. A Shiite member of the Governing Council, Abdul-Karim Mahoud al-Mohammedawi, warned that arresting al-Sadr would "complicate the issues" and lead to "an unending revolution."
In Fallujah, observers say a virtual Islamic mini-state now exists: Anyone caught selling alcohol is flogged and paraded in the city. Men are encouraged to grow beards and barbers are warned against giving "Western" hair cuts. Three roadside bombs exploded Thursday near an American convoy south of the city, witnesses said.
In other developments:
Al-Sadr launched his uprising after the occupation authority launched a crackdown on his movement. An Iraqi judge has issued an arrest warrant charging him al-Sadr in the 2003 assassination of moderate cleric Abdul Majid al-Khoei.
The revolt has stirred up violence in formerly peaceful Shiite areas south of Baghdad, further challenging U.S.-led forces who were already battling Sunni Muslim insurgents in central, western and northern Iraq.
American commanders have been eager to quell the violence before they return sovereignty to a new Iraqi government on June 30. Fighting around some of the holiest cities of Shia Islam has angered many Shiites in Iraq and elsewhere and has led to calls for both sides to pull back from the shrines.
On Tuesday, the Imam Ali shrine in Najaf was slightly damaged, and both U.S. and Shiite forces blamed the other.
Mohammed al-Musawi, one of several Shiite figures who have been trying to arrange a peaceful end to the standoff, said the Najaf deal included transforming al-Sadr's militia into a political organization, creating a new security organization to protect the city, delaying prosecution of al-Sadr until an elected government takes office next year, withdrawing U.S. forces from Najaf, and ending the open display of weaponry on the streets.
Al-Sadr said he was making the truce offer because of "the tragic condition" in Najaf after weeks of fighting and the slight damage suffered by the Imam Ali mosque.
Iraqi leaders had urged the Americans to accept the agreement, which was announced by the Iraqi government early Thursday. The agreement does not require al-Sadr immediately to disband militia and turn himself in to authorities to face charges in the April 2003 assassination of a moderate cleric — key U.S. demands to end the standoff.
Instead, the future of al-Sadr's al-Mahdi Army and the status of the arrest warrant will be discussed during talks between the cleric and the Shiite religious and political leaders. That makes it unlikely that either step will be taken until sovereignty transfers from the coalition to a new Iraqi government at the end of next month.
In Fallujah, the Iraqi force has put the United States in the awkward position of depending on officers from Saddam Hussein's former army.
The departure of the Marines under an agreement that ended the three-week siege last month has enabled hard-line Islamic leaders to assert their power in the city 30 miles west of Baghdad.
Some were active in defending the city against the Marines and have profited by a perception — both here and elsewhere in Iraq — that the mujahedeen, or Islamic holy warriors, defeated a superpower.
©MMIV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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