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Arrest deals 'fatal blow' to al-Qaida
in Iraq
Baghdad -
The Iraqi government yesterday claimed to have dealt "fatal
blows" to the al-Qaida operation in Iraq with the capture of its
deputy commander, Hamed Jumaa Farid al-Saeedi, and the arrest or
killing of 11 other leading al-Qaida jihadists.
Mr
Saeedi's arrest was announced by the national security adviser,
Mouwaffak al-Rubaie, who said that the al-Qaida militant was
responsible for attacks on Shia Iraqis aimed at provoking civil war,
including the bombing of a shrine in Samarra in February, and the
organisation of death squads.
Mr
Rubaie said that after his arrest, Mr Saeedi provided information that
led to the capture or killing of 11 other leading figures from the
group, al-Qaida in Iraq, whom Mr Rubaie did not identify.
Al-Qaida in Iraq is affiliated to
Osama Bin Laden's jihadist network, and was founded by a Jordanian
militant, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who was killed in a US airstrike in
June. Mr Rubaie said Mr Saeedi had been operating out of the same area
and was seized at a house in the course of "a very precise" Iraqi
military operation.
Mr
Rubaie said: "Al-Saeedi carried out al-Qaida's policies in Iraq and
the orders of the slain al-Zarqawi to incite sectarian violence in the
country, through attempting to start a civil war between Shias and
Sunnis - but their wishes did not materialise.
"We believe that al-Qaida in Iraq
suffers from a serious leadership crisis. Our troops have dealt fatal
and painful blows to this organisation," he said
However, it is unclear how big a role
al-Qaida plays in the insurgency or in sectarian killings, and despite
the recent successes in targeting the group's leadership in Iraq, US
military leaders are increasingly pessimistic about what they see as
an accelerating slide towards civil war.
In its quarterly report to Congress
on the situation in Iraq, the Pentagon said Iraqi casualties had
increased by 50% in the past three months. Around 2,000 Iraqi
civilians are dying each month in sectarian violence, many of them
shot by death squads.
The report quotes the Baghdad
coroner's office as saying that 90% of the bodies of 1,800 victims of
violence it received in July had been executed. While the death toll
has been highest in the capital, the Pentagon reported that the
"retaliatory cycle of violence" is spreading.
The report's authors argued that
current conditions did not meet "stringent international and legal
standards" that define civil war, but warned: "Conditions that could
lead to civil war exist in Iraq."
It is the most pessimistic report the
Pentagon has delivered to Congress on the war in Iraq, and officials
made little attempt to soften it.
"It's a pretty sober report this
time," Peter Rodman, the assistant secretary of defence for
international security, told reporters. "The last quarter has been
rough. The level of violence is up. Sectarian violence has been
particularly acute and disturbing."
The report found that pessimism was
also taking root among ordinary Iraqis. The report cites polling data
collected by the International Republican Institute which showed that
as recently as April, almost 80% of Iraqis thought their general
situation would be better in a year. By June less than half were
optimistic about their future. "In general, Iraqis have had an
optimistic outlook," the Pentagon report said. "However, as time has
passed, their optimism has eroded."
In Baghdad and other areas, Iraqis
are relying increasingly on sectarian militias to protect them,
further undermining the influence of government forces.
The US military leadership in Baghdad
was reported last week to have invited bids for a two-year $20m (£11m)
public relations contract to monitor US and Middle Eastern media as
part of an effort to promote more positive news from Iraq.
However, better public relations seem
unlikely to lift the deepening gloom among American voters about Iraq
and the "war on terror". In a poll published yesterday by Time
magazine and the Discovery Channel, 69% of Americans said they believe
the "war on terror" will not be won in the next decade. --
Guardian News
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