WORLD / Middle East |
Iraqi terror group posts tape of killings(AP)Updated: 2007-03-04 09:23 The first meeting, organized by U.S. military officials on Feb. 13, brought together leaders of prominent clans from both sides, said military spokesman Maj. Webster M. Wright III.
At dawn, gunmen stormed the home of two families belonging to the influential Sunni Mashhada tribe, said police 1st Lt. Haider Satar. Two fathers and their four sons were separated from their wives and sisters. They were executed at point-blank range. In the morgue in nearby Mahmoudiya, AP Television News footage showed at least two victims had their hands bound behind their backs. Al-Maliki is under strong pressure from Washington to take a stronger hand against Sunni insurgents and the Shiite militia that forms part of his power base. In an interview with the AP, he said he will reshuffle his 39-seat Cabinet "either this week or next" and pursue criminal charges against political figures ! and even members of parliament ! linked to extremists. He said there has been coordination between Iraqi and multinational forces from the beginning of the year "to determine who should arrested and the reasons behind arresting them." The prime minister did not say how many Cabinet members would be replaced. But some officials said about nine would lose their jobs, including all six Cabinet members loyal to radical anti-American Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, who leads the powerful Mahdi Army militia.
Al-Maliki has won some breathing room in recent days with a notable ! but perhaps temporary ! drop in bloodshed in Baghdad. It comes as a U.S.-led security crackdown concentrates on areas considered staging grounds for Sunni insurgent car bombs and mortar attacks. The Mahdi Army also was strong-armed by al-Maliki to pull back. Its suspected death squads once left dozens of Sunni victims around the city ! a figure that has fallen off significantly. For the second consecutive day, just one major explosion rocked the capital. The latest ! a roadside bomb ! killed three U.S. soldiers on patrol in central Baghdad, the military said. In western Baghdad, meanwhile, a top adviser to Iraq's Defense Ministry was kidnapped in western Baghdad, said an aide to Adnan al-Dulaimi, a leader of the largest Sunni bloc in parliament. Lt. Gen. Thamir Sultan hails from Saddam Hussein's tribe and had been mentioned as a possible defense minister when the current government was organized last year. The aide spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release the information. In U.S. raids north of Baghdad, nine suspected insurgents were captured, including two believed to be responsible for recruiting and helping foreign militants in Baghdad, the U.S. military said. The suspects were also accused of harboring al-Qaida in Iraq leaders, it said, but gave no further details. U.S. warplanes also struck a suspected car bomb factory in Arab Jabour, south of Baghdad, the military said. Seven suspected insurgents were killed when two precision-guided bombs destroyed the structure where they were hiding, the military said.
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