American Nabbed In Iraq
A U.S. businessman was abducted from his hotel in the southern city of Basra by kidnappers disguised as policemen, Basra police chief said Friday.
Col. Khalaf al-Maleki said the abduction of the American, who was of Jordanian origin, took place Thursday night. He had no further details.
Also Friday, Denmark's Foreign Ministry said a Danish businessman was believed kidnapped, while a Sunni leader said a Chinese citizen was released.
At least 21 foreigners have been abducted over the past week in a wave of kidnappings coinciding with intense violence around the country.
Meanwhile, there were some signs that clashes between U.S. troops and militants might be averted in the flashpoint cities of Najaf and Fallujah.
An Iraqi leader said he saw "flexibility" on the side of an anti-American cleric based in Najaf.
U.S. AC-130 Spectre gunships were in action before dawn Friday over Fallujah, raking militant hideouts with machine gun fire. Hospital officials tell CBS News Reporter Lisa Barron that 15 people were killed. Militants also fired mortar shells at U.S. positions overnight.
But U.S. military and civilian officials planned to meet Friday with leaders from the besieged city.
In other developments:
The government envisioned by Lakhdar Brahimi would be led by a prime minister, and there also would be a president as head of state and two vice presidents. Also, a conference would be called after the June 30 end of the U.S. occupation to create a consultative assembly that would have no legislative powers.
State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said it was premature for the administration to endorse the outline. The New York Times reported in Friday editions, however, that the administration had accepted the outlines of the proposal.
Brahimi has warned that security must be improved greatly for elections to be held early next year.
Violence has spiked in recent weeks as U.S. troops battled a Shiite militia in southern cities and Sunni gunmen in Fallujah, west of Baghdad.
U.S. commanders have vowed to "kill or capture" the militia leader Muqtada al-Sadr, but have so far limited their actions to small skirmishes on the outskirts of Najaf.
Iranian envoy Hossein Sadeghi was in Najaf Friday, but representatives of al-Sadr said the envoy had no meetings with the anti-American cleric. Sadeghi's visit was arranged by Britain and appeared to have the approval of the United States, reflecting an eagerness to find a solution that would avert a U.S. assault on the city.
Shiite Governing Council member Ibrahim al-Jaafari said he saw "flexibility from al-Sadr's side" and called on the Americans to show "similar flexibility."
While bitter enemies, both Iran and the U.S. want to avoid a U.S. attack on Najaf, site of the holiest Shiite site — the Imam Ali Shrine, only yards away from the office where al-Sadr is located, surrounded by armed gunmen.
Some 2,500 U.S. troops are ringing the city. But U.S. Maj. Neal O'Brien said the units at Najaf "will not complete this operation" and will likely be replaced by other troops — a rotation that suggests that an assault on the city is not imminent.
Al-Sadr on Monday withdrew his militiamen from police stations they had occupied in Najaf, Kufa and Karbala last week — meeting a key U.S. demand.
Negotiations now appeared focused on dissolving the al-Mahdi Army — a demand al-Sadr has refused — and how to deal with al-Sadr himself. U.S. officials want him put to trial on charges he was involved in the assassination last year of a rival Shiite cleric.
Meanwhile, Iraq's top U.S. administrator, L. Paul Bremer, was involved in "multiple channels" to try to negotiate an end to the standoff in the south and in Fallujah, said U.S. Gen. Richard B. Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
But Myers warned there was a limit as to how long the U.S. Marines can wait. "At some point somebody has to make a decision on what we're going to do, and we certainly can't rule out the use of force there again," he told a news conference.
A U.S. soldier was killed Wednesday in the central city of Samarra, north of Fallujah — raising to 88 the number of U.S. soldiers killed in April, the deadliest month so far for the Americans in Iraq.
As of Thursday, April 15, 687 U.S. troops have died in Iraq.
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said he did not expect so many recent American casualties.
"I certainly would not have estimated that we would have had the number of individuals lost that we have had lost in the last week," Rumsfeld said in answer to questions at the Pentagon on Thursday.
Rumsfeld announced that about 20,000 troops will stay in Iraq longer than they had been told to help quell the violence.