Report: U.S. in secret talks with Mahdi Army members
Above: Mahdi Army members parade through the streets of Basra to celebrate last week's withdrawal of British forces.
U.S. diplomats and military officers have been in talks with members of the armed movement loyal to Muqtada Sadr, a sharp reversal of policy and a grudging recognition that the radical Shiite cleric holds a dominant position in much of Baghdad and other parts of Iraq.
The secret dialogue has been going on since at least early 2006, but appeared to yield a tangible result only in the last week -- with relative calm in an area of west Baghdad that has been among the capital's most dangerous sections.
The discussions have been complicated by divisions within Sadr's movement as well as the cleric's public vow never to meet with Iraq's occupiers. Underlying the issue's sensitivity, Sadrists publicly deny any contact with the Americans or British -- fully aware the price of acknowledging such meetings would be banishment from the movement or worse.
The dialogue represents a drastic turnaround in the U.S. approach to Sadr and his militia, the Mahdi Army. The military hopes to negotiate the same kind of marriage of convenience it has reached in other parts of Iraq with former insurgent groups, many Saddam Hussein loyalists, and the Sunni tribes that supported them. Both efforts are examples of how U.S. officials have sought to end violence by cooperating with groups they once considered intractable enemies.
Read the rest at the LA Times
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U.S. diplomats and military officers have been in talks with members of the armed movement loyal to Muqtada Sadr, a sharp reversal of policy and a grudging recognition that the radical Shiite cleric holds a dominant position in much of Baghdad and other parts of Iraq.
The secret dialogue has been going on since at least early 2006, but appeared to yield a tangible result only in the last week -- with relative calm in an area of west Baghdad that has been among the capital's most dangerous sections.
The discussions have been complicated by divisions within Sadr's movement as well as the cleric's public vow never to meet with Iraq's occupiers. Underlying the issue's sensitivity, Sadrists publicly deny any contact with the Americans or British -- fully aware the price of acknowledging such meetings would be banishment from the movement or worse.
The dialogue represents a drastic turnaround in the U.S. approach to Sadr and his militia, the Mahdi Army. The military hopes to negotiate the same kind of marriage of convenience it has reached in other parts of Iraq with former insurgent groups, many Saddam Hussein loyalists, and the Sunni tribes that supported them. Both efforts are examples of how U.S. officials have sought to end violence by cooperating with groups they once considered intractable enemies.
Read the rest at the LA Times
Related Link:
Al-Sadr calls on veterans of battles against Americans to overhaul militia
Related Link:
Odierno: Most members of Mahdi Army obeying freeze on activity
Related Link:
Sadr office warns Maliki over Karbala investigation; Aides say 6-month Mahdi Army suspension to foil U.S. plot to divide Shiites
Related Link:
Analysis: Behind the struggle for Karbala
Related Link:
Sadr Aide: 'The halt can be revoked at any time'
Related Link:
Sadr office warns Maliki over Karbala investigation; Aides say 6-month Mahdi Army suspension to foil U.S. plot to divide Shiites
Related Link:
Analysis: The danger of a Shia civil war
Related Link:
Analysis: Behind the struggle for Karbala
Related Link:
Report: Followers of Iraq's Sadr lay low, follow orders
Related Link:
Reports: Al-Sadr suspends Mahdi Army militia activity
Related Link:
Reports: At least 27 killed, 100 wounded in Karbala festival violence; Curfew imposed; 1 million pilgrims ordered to leave
Related Link:
Analysis: Karbala raises specter of violence to come
Related Link:
Perspective: Rise of the Shia clerics
Related Link:
3 killed, 13 wounded as police fire on pilgrims during clashes in Karbala
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