WASHINGTON - Iraq's deputy prime 
minister on Thursday said his government would propose a law next month to 
disband militias, but that leaders such as Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, whose 
militia battles Iraqi forces, must cooperate and renounce arms for the plan to 
work. 
Barham Salih, in comments to reporters in Washington, said disbanding 
militias would be a serious challenge and conceded that in some areas militias 
have taken on the role of governing agencies, providing security and services. 
"The militia situation is a very, very serious challenge for Iraqis and for 
the Iraqi government because it touches upon the heart of the accountability of 
the Iraqi government and governing institutions," Salih said. 
"The prime minister has been adamant that this cannot be tolerated and that 
the state must be the sole practicer or holder of weapons as such, and we have 
issued a number of plans in that regard," he said. 
But, Salih said, political leaders must choose to put down their weapons or 
the present situation will continue. Salih singled out Sadr, whose Mehdi Army 
militia acts as the military wing of a political party while continuing to 
confront U.S. and Iraqi government forces. 
"There are discussions with Moqtada al-Sadr and other political leaders in 
the country that they all have to make a choice -- either they are part of the 
political process and renounce arms and integrate into the country's political 
system and governing institutions, or the present situation will not be 
acceptable." 
PRIVATE ARMIES 
Shi'ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's coalition government has promised to 
disband sectarian and ethnic militias and build an army to defend the state. 
Still, private armies have flourished as security problems plague Baghdad and 
other areas of the country. 
Salih, who met with U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on Thursday, did 
not provide details of the militia law that will be proposed in October. He said 
it would be enforced by the Iraqi army with U.S. and coalition support. 
The Iraqi army, trained by U.S. forces, is due to be at its planned strength 
of 130,000 within a few months. While some areas have begun to transition to 
Iraqi security control, many local forces remain unable to operate without a 
measure of American support. 
Salih declined to comment on U.S. troop levels, saying those decisions must 
be made by military commanders. 
Unabated violence has frustrated U.S. efforts to reduce its troops in Iraq 
and raised concerns about civil war. But Salih said progress was being made 
elsewhere. 
He said he expected the parliament by year-end to pass a law on Iraq's oil 
revenues that would consolidate the funds at the federal government and then 
redistribute them "equitably among all components of Iraqi society." 
"Despite the images of carnage on television that focuses on the car bombs, 
day in, day out, there is a lot of work going on," he said. 
"I don't want to tell you that things are rosy in Iraq. They are not. We have 
difficulties. We have grave challenges," Salih said. "The important thing is 
that the mainstream Iraqi leadership are aware of the challenges that are before 
us and are aware of the imperative of rising to that 
challenge."