InvestorsHub Logo
Followers 165
Posts 17686
Boards Moderated 0
Alias Born 01/06/2003

Re: EBenson post# 283496

Thursday, 08/12/2004 2:26:59 PM

Thursday, August 12, 2004 2:26:59 PM

Post# of 704019
The truth is Bush is the one in need. I believe this is Bush's only hope to get the market back on track. This market needs a big trigger which will be looked at as even bigger then the oil price drama.

==================================================
U.S. Forces Storm Shiite Cleric's House


By TODD PITMAN, Associated Press Writer

NAJAF, Iraq - U.S. forces stormed a Najaf house belonging to a radical Shiite cleric, who has led a deadly uprising against coalition and Iraqi troops for more than a week, as American and Iraqi soldiers launched a major assault Thursday on his militiamen. Explosions and gunfire echoed near the revered Imam Ali shrine and its vast cemetery.






AP Photo



AP Photo

Slideshow: Iraq









Latest headlines:


·
Massive US-Iraqi assault in Najafn
AFP - 24 minutes ago


·
Iraqi National Conference Date Set
AP - 35 minutes ago


·
CACI Internal Probe Finds No Iraq Prisoner Abuse
Reuters - 38 minutes ago


Special Coverage




 


Residents saw U.S. forces break into Muqtada al-Sadr's house without meeting any resistance. Al-Sadr, who has vowed to fight "until the last drop of my blood has been spilled," was not there at the time.



It was not immediately known where he went, but residents reported clashes between Iraqi police and members of his Mahdi Army militia near the house Wednesday, which may have prompted most residents to leave the area.



Also, Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi called on Shiite militants to put down their weapons and leave the shrine, where they have sought refuge.



"These places have never been exposed to such violations in the past," he said, adding that many innocent people have been killed.



"Our government calls upon all the armed groups to drop their weapons and return to society. We also call upon all the armed men to evacuate the holy shrine and not to violate its holiness."



Coalition forces were trying to crush the uprising in Najaf and other Shiite strongholds across the country.



"Major operations to destroy the militia have begun," said Maj. David Holahan, executive officer of the 1st Battalion, 4th Marine Regiment.



Thousands of U.S. troops were participating, he said.



Under U.S. military rules for embedded journalists, reporters are not allowed to reveal exact numbers of U.S. troops, details of planned offensives or other information considered relevant to operational security.



Iraqi National Security Adviser Mouwaffaq al-Rubaie went to Najaf to deal with the situation, his office said without elaborating.



U.S. military Humvees had moved toward al-Sadr's house and fought with militants there, witnesses said. A large fire raged across the street and at least two helicopters flew above the area. U.S. officials said in recent days they had no plans to arrest al-Sadr.



A column of U.S. tanks lined one edge of the huge cemetery sprawling out from the Imam Ali mosque as a helicopter flew overhead. Soldiers crawled on the roofs of single-story buildings to fire at militants.



"It's pretty standard: They'd push up here, fire off a few rounds, fire RPGs, then leave," Capt. Patrick McFall said of the insurgents.



Interior Minister Falah Hassan al-Naqib said militants fired mortars from the shrine compound and planted mines there. He also reiterated that no foreign forces would be allowed to enter the shrine.



"Iraq (news - web sites) is capable ... of repelling any attack," he said.



By afternoon, five civilians had been killed, said Nabil Mohammed, a health worker in Najaf. Two soldiers were wounded by a mortar shell while standing in an intersection on the cemetery's edge, the military said.




 






Meanwhile, fighting between al-Sadr supporters and coalition forces killed at least 72 Iraqis in the southern city of Kut on Wednesday in one of the most intense battles in that city in months. Iraqi forces fought off militants who attacked the city hall, police stations and Iraqi National Guard barracks, the U.S. military said.

Residents in Kut, 100 miles southeast of Baghdad, said U.S. and Iraqi troops fought the militants. The U.S. military said only Iraqi forces were involved.

Violence across Iraq since Wednesday morning killed at least 172 Iraqis and injured 643, the Health Ministry said.

Governments and others across the Muslim world called for a halt to fighting in Najaf. Egypt urged the coalition to rely on dialogue instead of force, and Iran's Foreign Ministry said the international community should intervene to "prevent the massacre of defenseless Iraqi people."

Iraq's top Shiite Muslim cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, who left Najaf for London to undergo medical treatment when the fighting began a week ago, expressed "deep sorrow and great worry" and called on all sides to resolve the crisis as soon as possible and prevent it from repeating.

Al-Sistani said in a statement that his office was "continuing to exert efforts with all sides, Iraqi officials and others, to put a quick end to the current tragic situation."

Lebanon's most senior Shiite Muslim cleric, Grand Ayatollah Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah, criticized Iraq's interim government for allowing the offensive in a city that is holy to the world's 120 million Shiites.

The fighting in Najaf risks enraging Iraq's Shiite majority — including those who do not support al-Sadr's uprising — if it targets the shrine.

U.S. commanders and Iraqi officials said Allawi would have to approve any operation at the shrine itself and any move at the shrine would be conducted only by Iraqi forces.

"There are instructions that the Iraqi forces and the Iraqi National Guard only will enter the compound and secure it, so ordinary citizens can go back and pray at this shrine," Interior Ministry spokesman Sabah Kadhim said.

Nearly 5,000 al-Sadr sympathizers took to the streets in the southern city of Basra on Thursday demanding that U.S. troops withdraw from Najaf and condemning Allawi for working with the Americans.

Al-Sadr loyalists in Basra threatened Wednesday to blow up the oil pipelines and port infrastructure there if an offensive was launched. A similar threat Monday caused oil officials to briefly stop pumping from the southern oil wells.

Allawi said the ongoing violence has cost the country $60 million in recent days.

Al-Naqib called the militants' actions a "conspiracy against the Iraqi people."

"This is a war on Iraq, aiming for the destruction of Iraq," he said. "These groups are trying to destroy the people."

An explosion Thursday killed a British soldier and seriously wounded another in Basra. Britain's Ministry of Defense said it had few details about the incident but believed a British patrol might have been ambushed.

The U.S. military has estimated that hundreds of insurgents have been killed in the Najaf fighting over the past week, but the militants dispute the figure. Five Americans have been killed, along with about 20 Iraqi officers.

Al-Sadr's fighters have been battling coalition forces since Aug. 5 in a resurgence of a spring uprising that was dormant for two months following a series of truces. The cleric exhorted his followers Wednesday to fight on even if he was killed.

Hundreds of people have fled their homes in Najaf, moving in with relatives and friends in quieter neighborhoods or out of the city entirely.

"We have put up with hunger, electricity outages and lack of water, but we cannot put up with death," said Aqil Zwein, 42, who left his home near the cemetery Thursday.
Join InvestorsHub

Join the InvestorsHub Community

Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.