U.S. and Iraqi troops complete house-to-house sweeps of troubled Baghdad neighborhood
Shaab neighborhood of Baghdad
BAGHDAD, Iraq U.S. and Iraqi troops on Tuesday finished two weeks of building-by-building sweeps in a Shiite section of Baghdad that had been wracked with sectarian violence, part of a campaign launched this summer to try and pacify the capital.
The north Baghdad neighborhoods of Shaab and Ur have been strong supporters of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, whose main center of power in the Sadr City area is just east of them.
In one recent incident in Shaab, Sunni Arab lawmaker Tayseer al-Mashhadani and her bodyguards were grabbed by Shiite militiamen in the area on July 1 on their way into town to attend a parliament session. The incident stoked tensions between the two major Islamic sects before she was freed unharmed nearly two months later.
In another incident, a suicide truck bomb exploded near a Shiite mosque in April in Shaab as worshippers were leaving after evening prayers, killing 10 people and wounding 30 others.
When U.S. troops first entered Shaab and Ur on Sept. 14 as part of Operation Together Forward, children threw rocks at them — sometimes in full view of Iraqi forces. The soldiers found posters of al-Sadr prominently displayed, along with several flowing banners warning "Death to the Infidels."
But after sweeps of more than 36,000 buildings, including 23 mosques, commanders say the situation is now better under control.
Col. Michael Shields, whose 172nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team provided much of the muscle for the operation, said some of the anti-American violence continues, but that sectarian violence and murders are down.
"More importantly, this operation reduced the amount of violence in this specific area," Shields said. "It increased the perception of security within both Ur and Shaab and set conditions for the Iraqi security forces to work with the (neighborhood councils) to improve essential services for the people. It also helped build more trust and confidence between the people and the Iraqi security forces."
Operation Together Forward, a security drive to clear the capital neighborhood by neighborhood was launched this summer after U.S. generals warned escalating sectarian violence was leading toward civil war. Sweeps have been started or completed in about half the neighborhoods of the capital so far.
Sadr City, a sprawling slum of some 2 million and stronghold of al-Sadr's Mahdi Army — the biggest and most dangerous Shiite militia in Iraq — has not yet been entered but will not be avoided, said Iraqi Maj. Gen. Bashar Mahmoud Ayoub, whose 9th Division was involved in the Shaab and Ur operation.
Read the rest at the International Herald Tribune
Related Link:
U.S.: Sadr City Again a Militants' Haven
BAGHDAD, Iraq U.S. and Iraqi troops on Tuesday finished two weeks of building-by-building sweeps in a Shiite section of Baghdad that had been wracked with sectarian violence, part of a campaign launched this summer to try and pacify the capital.
The north Baghdad neighborhoods of Shaab and Ur have been strong supporters of radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, whose main center of power in the Sadr City area is just east of them.
In one recent incident in Shaab, Sunni Arab lawmaker Tayseer al-Mashhadani and her bodyguards were grabbed by Shiite militiamen in the area on July 1 on their way into town to attend a parliament session. The incident stoked tensions between the two major Islamic sects before she was freed unharmed nearly two months later.
In another incident, a suicide truck bomb exploded near a Shiite mosque in April in Shaab as worshippers were leaving after evening prayers, killing 10 people and wounding 30 others.
When U.S. troops first entered Shaab and Ur on Sept. 14 as part of Operation Together Forward, children threw rocks at them — sometimes in full view of Iraqi forces. The soldiers found posters of al-Sadr prominently displayed, along with several flowing banners warning "Death to the Infidels."
But after sweeps of more than 36,000 buildings, including 23 mosques, commanders say the situation is now better under control.
Col. Michael Shields, whose 172nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team provided much of the muscle for the operation, said some of the anti-American violence continues, but that sectarian violence and murders are down.
"More importantly, this operation reduced the amount of violence in this specific area," Shields said. "It increased the perception of security within both Ur and Shaab and set conditions for the Iraqi security forces to work with the (neighborhood councils) to improve essential services for the people. It also helped build more trust and confidence between the people and the Iraqi security forces."
Operation Together Forward, a security drive to clear the capital neighborhood by neighborhood was launched this summer after U.S. generals warned escalating sectarian violence was leading toward civil war. Sweeps have been started or completed in about half the neighborhoods of the capital so far.
Sadr City, a sprawling slum of some 2 million and stronghold of al-Sadr's Mahdi Army — the biggest and most dangerous Shiite militia in Iraq — has not yet been entered but will not be avoided, said Iraqi Maj. Gen. Bashar Mahmoud Ayoub, whose 9th Division was involved in the Shaab and Ur operation.
Read the rest at the International Herald Tribune
Related Link:
U.S.: Sadr City Again a Militants' Haven
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