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Lieutenant General
Lloyd Austin to Sadr: Halt Attacks
24 April 2008 A
top U.S. general in Iraq has urged radical Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr
to do more to halt attacks by his militiamen on security forces.
Lieutenant
General Lloyd Austin
Lieutenant General Lloyd Austin told
reporters in Baghdad Wednesday that he hopes Sadr chooses the road of
peace.
Fierce battles between Sadr's Mahdi Army militia and Iraqi government
forces have killed more than 300 people in the predominately Shi'ite
Sadr City area in the past month.
The U.S. military also said troops
killed 15 militants overnight in clashes in Sadr City.
Officials say the fighting also killed at least seven civilians,
including two women, and wounded about 20.
The commander of
Multinational Corps Iraq said today he is “absolutely encouraged” by the
progress he has seen during his first two and a half months in the
country.
But, in his first
news conference as Multinational Corps Iraq commander, Army Lt. Gen.
Lloyd J. Austin III told reporters in Baghdad today that Iraqi forces
are standing up to the country’s enemies and said Iraqi security forces
are in control of Basra.
Austin reminded reporters that Iraq has seen a 60 percent drop in
violence from the summer of 2007. “While this change is significant, we
understand our progress is fragile,” he said. “Our major objectives
remain securing the population, developing the Iraqi security forces,
expanding civil capacity and helping the Iraqi government to extend
civil services throughout the country.”
These are not independent efforts, he said. The goals must be
synchronized across the spectrum of activity.
Austin specifically spoke about his impressions of operations in
Baghdad, Basra and Mosul, Iraq’s three largest cities. Baghdad has
always been regarded as the center of gravity in the country, he said.
In the Iraqi capital, coalition units partner with Iraqi army and police
units. Both are operating against Sunni extremists, Iranian-backed Shiia
“special groups” and criminal elements that threaten the fragile
progress in the city.
“The Iraqi security forces and coalition forces are aggressively
pursuing these criminal elements that are launching rockets against the
seat of the Iraqi government located in the International Zone,” Austin
said.
Coalition forces pinpointed the launching point for the mortar and
missile attacks as being in and around Sadr City, the Shiia-dominated
eastern portion of the city. “Iraqi security forces are determined to
eliminate the criminal threat,” he said.
The general contrasted the approach of these criminal and extremist
groups with that of the coalition and Iraqi forces. “While our forces
attack confirmed criminals using very precise techniques, these
criminals haphazardly launch rockets that indiscriminately kill innocent
civilians and destroy private property,” Austin said. “They have
demonstrated that they are a threat to the population.”
Iraqis living in Sadr City are tired of the violence, he said. The
coalition and Iraqi goals in Sadr City, he said, are to eliminate the
criminal element, to enforce the rule of law and to improve the
citizens’ quality of life. “The special groups criminals who continue to
hurt the people with their violence and irresponsible and violent
actions must be brought to justice,” Austin said.
Iraqi government-led operations in Basra point to a much-improved Iraqi
security force, the general said. “While they do not have all the
components to be self-sustaining, they have improved considerably from
where they were just a year ago,” he said. “They are in control of the
city, which is allowing humanitarian assistance to reach the citizens.
Iraqi security forces are taking the fight to these criminals, and I’m
very optimistic of what I’ve seen first-hand in my visits down there.”
Al-Qaida continues to be the major problem in and around Mosul, Austin
said. The actions of the coalition surge pushed al-Qaida out of Baghdad,
and the terrorist group is attempting to regroup and consolidate in the
north.
“We’ve seen al-Qaida alienate itself from the population because of
their extreme and brutal methods,” he said. “They know that they have
lost the support of the people. However, al-Qaida remains our primary
security threat because of their potential for high-profile attacks.”

Coalition and Iraqi forces have relentlessly attacked al-Qaida in the
north. “We will continue to pursue them, and they will not regain any
ground that they have given up in the past months,” Austin said.
Overall, coalition forces will work to expand the reach of the Iraqi
government by leveraging the capabilities of provincial reconstruction
teams. Coalition forces will also work to improve the logistics
capabilities of Iraqi security forces.
Austin said he sees a tremendous amount of potential for the Iraqi
security forces. “They continue to operate in Baghdad, Basra and Mosul
as well as many other areas of the country, and they are fighting very
hard to provide security,” he said. |