Baghdad, Iraq - The US command announced Saturday that
it was sending 3,700 troops to Baghdad to try to quell the sectarian violence
sweeping the capital, and a US official said more American soldiers would follow
as the military gears up to take the streets from gunmen.
A US Army 1st Battalion, 24th Infantry soldier
walks ahead of an armored Stryker combat vehicle during a foot patrol,
Sunday, Jan. 16, 2005, in Mosul, Iraq. The US top commander in Iraq George
W. Casey Jr. confirmed on Saturday it will send about 3,700 troops of the
172nd Stryker Brigade from northern Iraq to Baghdad to try to quell
violence in the capital. [AP Photo] |
The 172nd Stryker Brigade, which had been due to return home after a year in
Iraq, will bring quick-moving, light-armored vehicles to patrol this sprawling
city of 6 million people, hoping security forces respond faster to the
tit-for-tat killings by Shiite militias and Sunni Arab insurgents.
The US military hopes more armor will intimidate gunmen, who in recent weeks
have become more brazen in their attacks.
"This will place our most experienced unit with our most mobile and agile
systems in support of our main effort," said Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the top
US commander in Iraq. "This gives us a potentially decisive capability to affect
security in Baghdad."
President Bush said this week that he had decided to send more troops to
Baghdad after the surge in reprisal killings began to threaten the unity
government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, which took power May 20.
The wave of violence has dashed administration hopes for substantial
reductions in the 127,000-member US mission in Iraq before the November midterm
elections.
According to the United Nations, about 6,000 Iraqis were killed in insurgent
or sectarian violence in May and June, despite American hopes that the unity
government of Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds would win public confidence and ease the
security crisis.
The US statement did not say when the Stryker Brigade would move to the
capital from its base in Mosul, 225 miles northwest of Baghdad, but the
redeployment was expected soon.
A US military official told The Associated Press that more troops will follow
the Stryker brigade, normally based at Fort Wainwright, Alaska. The official
gave no further details and spoke on condition of anonymity for security
reasons.
Pentagon officials have said plans call for adding military police, armored
vehicles and tanks to the streets of the capital to work alongside Iraq's
US-trained police and army units. Those units are heavily Shiite, and the
presence of Americans is intended to assure Sunnis that the Iraqi forces are not
Shiite death squads in uniform.
US and British officials have said Iraqi units, especially the police, have
been infiltrated by Shiite militias and have lost the confidence of many Iraqi
civilians.
However, the strategy also risks further discrediting Iraqi forces, affecting
their morale and making Americans more vulnerable to attack. US casualties have
eased in recent months as Americans handed over more security responsibility to
the Iraqis and assumed a support role.
But the bitterness of the sectarian conflict and the high stakes at play have
proven too much for the Iraqi force in the capital. The surge in attacks also
pointed to the failure of al-Maliki's security plan for Baghdad, unveiled with
great fanfare last month.
Sectarian strife worsened after the Feb. 22 bombing of a Shiite shrine in
Samarra and threatens to unravel the fabric of Iraqi society.
Last week, US spokesman Maj. Gen. William Caldwell described Baghdad as a
"must-win" not only for al-Maliki's government "but for al-Qaida in Iraq," which
the Americans blame for fanning sectarian hatred.
On Friday, a top Shiite politician allied with al-Maliki said Iraqis, and not
Americans, should be given responsibility for security and called for an end to
"interference in their work", an apparent reference to US efforts to curb abuses
by the Shiite-led police.
In the Shiite town of Suwayrah, 25 miles south of Baghdad, Mayor Hussein
Mohammed al-Ghurabi, said Saturday that more than 500 armed Sunnis had gathered
in a nearby village and were firing on his town daily.
Tens of thousands of people have abandoned their homes in religiously mixed
neighborhoods, either fleeing abroad or to areas where their sect dominates.
They include members of country's elite, physicians, professors and other
professionals.
The Iraqi soccer federation said the country's national coach, Akram Ahmed
Salman, had resigned after receiving a death threat and fled with his family to
the relative safety of the Kurdish-ruled north.
The chairman of Iraq's National Olympic Committee and dozens of other sports
officials were abducted during a meeting this month in Baghdad and most remain
missing. Jacques Rogge, president of the International Olympic Committee,
renewed calls Saturday for their release.
In a bid to curb the violence, US troops have been cracking down on Shiite
and Sunni extremist groups in Baghdad and in cities on major transport routes
leading to the capital.
US and Iraqi troops detained 25 men suspected of a July 17 attack on a market
in Mahmoudiya, the US military said. About 50 people were killed in the attack,
mostly Shiites.
American troops clashed Saturday with gunmen of the Mahdi Army militia, loyal
to radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, in Diwaniyah, 80 miles south of
Baghdad, police said. Seven militiamen were wounded but a local militia leader
sought by the Americans escaped, police said.