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Iraq PM urges start to Baghdad
crackdown
Baghdad -
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki complained Tuesday the
long-awaited Baghdad security operation was off to a slow start and
warned that insurgents are taking advantage of the delay to kill as
many people as possible.
But he also reassured Iraqis that
security forces will live up to their responsibilities.
The statement came as new
checkpoints were erected and increased vehicle inspections and foot
patrols were reported in some neighborhoods — providing the main
evidence so far that U.S. and Iraqi forces were gearing up for a
major neighborhood-to-neighborhood sweep to quell sectarian violence
in the city of 6 million.
On Wednesday, a female official
with the Census Department was shot to death while she was riding to
work with her husband in northern Iraq, police said.
Gunmen in two cars opened fire on
the woman about 9:30 a.m. as her husband was driving her to work at
the Nationalities and Census Department in Mosul, 225 miles
northwest of Baghdad, police Brig. Abdul Karim al-Jubouri said.
At least five other people were
killed in morning attacks in the Baghdad area as frustration is
mounting over delays in the implementation of a U.S.-Iraqi security
operation to quell the sectarian violence that has left the capital
a battlefield.
Two mortar shells landed on houses
in a mainly Sunni area in northeastern Baghdad, killing one civilian
and wounding seven, police said.
Three people also were killed in a
drive-by shooting as they were driving in the volatile Sunni Yarmouk
neighborhood in a western part of the capital, according to police.
A roadside bomb also struck a joint
U.S.-Iraqi patrol on a highway east of Baghdad, killing an Iraqi
police officer and wounding three others, police said.
Roadside bombs also killed a woman
and wounded two other people in Suwarah, 25 miles south of the
capital, as well as the driver of a private car elsewhere in a
nearby area, police said.
Meanwhile, underscoring the dangers
as the U.S. augments its force by 21,500 as part of the plan, the
U.S. military announced the deaths of two more troops, including a
soldier who was killed Tuesday by small arms fire at a security post
southwest of Baghdad, and a Marine who died Monday in Anbar
province, west of the capital.
At least 51 Iraqis also were killed
or found dead around the country, including eight slain by two car
bombs in Baghdad.
"The operations will unite us and
we will take action soon, God willing, even though I believe we've
been very late and this delay has started to give a negative
message," al-Maliki said in a meeting with military commanders shown
on state TV. "I hope that more efforts will be exerted and more
speed exerted in carrying out and achieving all the preparations to
start the operations."
Al-Maliki urged his commanders to
step up efforts to complete the preparations for the security plan,
saying the delays had allowed insurgents to step up attacks that
have killed hundreds in recent weeks.
"I say again, we have talked much
about the operations, and while the Iraqis are waiting and waiting,
the terrorists in turn have raised the level of the bombing
operations and started killing people in mass numbers," the prime
minister told his commanders, urging them to step up efforts to
complete the preparations. "Our slogan should be 'rest is
prohibited, especially for military men, and day and night should
merge in working to achieve victory.'"
"We should carry out the operation
in good time and should not delay, because the delay will be used
against us by the enemies ... and those who are afraid of them," he
added.
Defense Secretary Robert Gates said
the increase in U.S. forces in Iraq is "not the last chance" to
succeed and conceded he was considering what steps to take if the
buildup fails.
"I would be irresponsible if I
weren't thinking about what the alternatives might be," he told the
Senate Armed Services Committee.
Gates said the operation was to
have started Monday. "It's probably going to slip a few days, and
it's probably going to be a rolling implementation," he said.
In other violence, Iraqi police
found the bullet-riddled bodies of 33 people — 19 in Baghdad —
apparent victims of sectarian death squads.
The Shiite-led Iraqi government has
pledged to go after the mainly Shiite militias largely blamed for
such killings as well as Sunni insurgents suspected in most of the
bombings, including a suicide attack on a Baghdad food market
Saturday that killed at least 137 people.
Al-Maliki, who has seen sectarian
violence rise since taking office May 20, 2006, despite two previous
efforts to secure the capital, declared that Iraqi forces will live
up to their responsibilities and told his commanders they must not
disappoint those "who stand beside us."
"As far as the security issue is
concerned, we should be determined and committed. We should carry
out the operation on time and should not delay because the delay
will be used against us by our enemies," he added.
Al-Maliki also accused other
countries in the region of supporting militants to destabilize Iraq
and prevent democracy from spreading — an apparent reference to U.S.
rivals Iran and Syria.
"We have many times talked about
this interference and said that we will not sit endlessly silent
about those who interfere in our affairs and support terrorism," he
said.
Iran, meanwhile, condemned Sunday's
abduction of an Iranian diplomat as he drove through Baghdad, saying
it held the United States responsible for the diplomat's "safety and
life."
One Iraqi government official said
the Iranian was detained Sunday by an Iraqi army unit that reports
directly to the U.S. military. A military spokesman denied any U.S.
troops or Iraqis that report to them were involved.
"We've checked with our units and
it was not an MNF-I (Multi-National Forces — Iraq) unit that
participated in that event," said Lt. Col. Christopher Garver, a
U.S. military spokesman.
Suspicion also fell on a range of
possible culprits — Iraqi commandos, rogue elements in the security
forces, Sunni insurgents or criminals seeking ransom.
The diplomat was abducted as
tension between Iran and the United States is mounting over alleged
Iranian support of Shiite extremists in Iraq and U.S. efforts to
force Tehran to abandon its nuclear program. Iran says it wants to
use the technology to generate nuclear power. -- Associated
Press
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