Iraqis Set For Operation Lightning
Two of Iraq's most influential Shiite and Sunni organizations agreed Saturday to try and make peace as the government prepared to take its war against the insurgency to Baghdad's violent streets.
The new effort to ease sectarian tensions, which threaten to plunge Iraq into civil strife, came as attacks killed a U.S. soldier and at least 43 Iraqis over the past two days — including three suicide bombers and three men killed when a roadside bomb they planted exploded prematurely.
An al Qaeda affiliate, the Ansar al-Sunnah Army, also announced the death of a Japanese contractor it abducted earlier this month. Another affiliate, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's al Qaeda in Iraq, allegedly claimed responsibility on the Internet for twin suicide car bombings in Sinjar. The attacks, 75 miles northwest of Mosul city, killed five Iraqis at the entrance to an Iraqi military base.
Iraqi police and army units prepared to launch a massive crackdown Sunday in Baghdad they have codenamed "Operation Lightning," according to defense and security officials.
"The Defense Ministry's mission for Operation Lightning will begin," Col. Hussam Mansour of the defense ministry said.
He said it includes helping cordon off the city and erecting hundreds of checkpoints in and around the capital. The operation was expected to intensify during the week.
In other developments:
Lightning, which was announced last Thursday, will see more than 40,000 Iraqi soldiers and policemen, supported by U.S. troops, deploying to man the new checkpoints and later begin street-to-street sweeps.
They hope to catch or flush out the insurgents responsible for a wave of violence that has left more than 690 people dead since the country's new Shiite-led government was announced April 28, according to an Associated Press count.
In an effort to mitigate escalating sectarian tensions, officials from the Sunni Association of Muslim Scholars, considered close to some insurgent groups, met with representatives from the Badr Brigades — the military wing of Iraq's largest Shiite party, the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq.
Organized by virulently anti-American Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, a Shiite, the gathering aimed to smother heated accusations that began earlier this month when the association's leader, Harith al-Dhari, accused the Badr Brigades of killing Sunnis and executing their clerics. A number of Shiite clerics were also killed.
The brigades not only denied the charges, they accused the Sunni association of failing to condemn the insurgency and of trying to "push Iraq into a sectarian conflict."
"We are all Muslims, and usually problems happen between one family. We want to solve them on the basis of Islamic brotherhood," association official Isam Al Rawi said. "There are still some differences that are not settled yet ... there are still some differences in points of view."
Large portraits of the burly, black-bearded cleric al-Sadr adorned the walls inside the building, located in a narrow back alley in northern Baghdad's suburb of Kazimiyah, a Shiite stronghold.
"We overcame many obstacles. The two parties agreed to serving Iraq and to preserve its unity," al-Sadr official Abdul Hadi Al Daraji said. "The brothers from the Sunni scholars received proposals from the Badr Brigades and the Badr Brigades also received proposals from the Sunni scholars."
He said another meeting would be held during the week and a large national gathering would be called once the crisis between the two organizations was resolved.
Japanese contractor Akihiko Saito, 44, was among a group of five foreign workers — four of them earlier confirmed dead — who were ambushed in the vast Anbar province west of Baghdad.
More than 200 foreigners have been abducted, and at least 30 killed, in Iraq during the raging two-year insurgency, which U.S.-led forces and the new Shiite-led government have struggled to eradicate.
Iraqi confirmation of Saito's death followed Friday's Internet release of a video showing the bloodied body of an Asian man, apparently Saito, lying on his back. An Ansar statement said he died after being wounded during clashes after the ambush.