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| CONTINUING TURMOIL IN IRAQ | |
April 6, 2004 |
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As the June 30 deadline for the transition of political power in Iraq draws closer, Shiite and Sunni insurgents continue to battle coalition forces in Iraq. A reporter in Iraq assesses the situation. |
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JIM LEHRER: The Iraq story. We begin with a report from Julian Manyon of Independent Television News.
British troops seemed to have been more successful. Today they were patrolling the empty streets of Amara after 48 hours of clashes which cost the lives of 15 Iraqis. Six British soldiers were likely hurt. In other parts of Shiite southern Iraq fighting continued; 11 Italian troops were hurt and one Ukrainian soldier died. In Baghdad today, another American soldier was killed in a rocket grenade attack. American armor rumbled through the streets of Shiite districts as the coalition struggled to reassert its authority.
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| Widespread Shiite & Sunni fighting in Iraq | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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JULIAN MANYON: All around was evidence of the fighting. And some Shiite families were mourning their dead, a sight which promises further revenge attacks. UMM OMAR (Through interpreter): Why did they do this to us? What did we do? If I had a weapon I would fight them. JULIAN MANYON: Muqtada al-Sadr has now issued a statement through one of his aides. It says that the uprising will continue unless the coalition withdrawals it troops from Iraq's town and cities.
JULIAN MANYON: U.S. troops have now launched a major operation in the Sunni town of Fallujah where four U.S. contractors were butchered last week. The Americans are determined to punish the people who did it. But local militants say they will fight to the death. |
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| An uprising taking shape | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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JIM LEHRER: And after that report was filed the Pentagon announced up to 12 marines were killed in the fighting in Ramadi. Terence Smith has more on Iraq. He talked earlier this evening with Alissa Rubin of the Los Angeles Times in Baghdad.
ALISSA RUBIN: Yes, some sense. I think what we saw today was scattered violence across the South, an area that, until the last few days, had been relatively calm with only very, very sporadic violence. This is-- really what we're seeing is elements of a Shiite sort of religious militant uprising that is taking-- gathering force and sort of taking shape in different southern cities: Najaf, Amara, Nasiriyah. We've seen some protest in Basra, but there was no real violence today. It's hard to see how this down scales at all. It feels as if it's building up toward something, but it's hard to know exactly what that is. In Baghdad, there have been some outbursts. There were outbursts over last night in one of the Sunni neighborhoods. There also, just yesterday, there were several more outbursts in Shiite neighborhoods, confrontations with coalition troops and between coalition troops and the followers of the... Muqtada al- Sadr, a young Shiite cleric who is violently anti-American. TERENCE SMITH: And you, Alissa, you were in Najaf today. What was the situation there? |
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| Al-Sadr in control of Najaf | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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TERENCE SMITH: When you say al-Sadr has taken it over, you mean military control of the entire city? ALISSA RUBIN: Well, quite close to that. He moved personally from the shrine where he had been staying in Kufa, which is right near by, about seven to ten miles away, to Najaf last night. And his Mahdi Army, which is a militia of sort of black- uniformed, armed men are surrounding-- posted all around the shrine in Najaf, to the very holy place.
TERENCE SMITH: And was there any opposition to all of that from coalition forces today? ALISSA RUBIN: No, there was none in Najaf. Any operation in Najaf would have to be very, very carefully planned, and it would not be easy. There's been a promise by the coalition not to storm into the holy sites. It's an agreement with the clerics and with the city elders there, and also in Karbala, that the coalition troops would keep their distance and allow the policing to be done by Iraqis. Now, what happens when the Iraqis are not able to police because they've been essentially defanged by the militia of al-Sadr's remains to be seen. I think that's something that will unfold in the next few days. TERENCE SMITH: And it sounds as though that would make it even more difficult for coalition forces to go in and capture al-Sadr as they have said they would like to do. ALISSA RUBIN: It's extraordinarily difficult. The dilemma facing the coalition is that they want, I think, probably with some good reason, to bring al-Sadr under control. But to do so... the only way to do so is with force. And that would mean possibly bloodshed in a holy place-- bloodshed by people certainly perceived as infidels by Muslims here, and with the... an enormously fraught venture from a sort of public relations standpoint. But beyond public relations, it could rally people further against the coalition and kind of create... creating a backlash. So however it's done, it has to be very carefully considered.
ALISSA RUBIN: Well, I think his role has been very much in the background. He is not -- probably doesn't feel terribly safe right now with al-Sadr occupying the shrine that's about a block from his office, and he has been quite silent. He has urged to refrain from bloodshed. He's urged to keep an atmosphere of calm, but he's also said that al-Sadr's demands are reasonable, and therefore he shouldn't need to resort to bloodshed. So it's... he's treading a very difficult line, attempting not to alienate al-Sadr but at the same time, not to approve of his more violent approach to confronting the coalition. TERENCE SMITH: Well, obviously it remains a very tense and unresolved situation. Alissa Rubin of the L. A. Times, thanks very much for filling us in. ALISSA RUBIN: Thank you. |
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