Daily Archives: mercredi 14 mai 2008

Al Sadr gagne encore

Avec les médias c’est pile les Américains perdent face leurs adversaires gagnent:

Al-Sadr Wins Another Round

For the first time in weeks Sadr City saw no fighting Sunday, day one of yet another hastily brokered cease-fire between U.S.-backed Iraqi forces and the Shi’ite Mahdi Army militia.

Word of the pact emerged Saturday night, when an aide to Mahdi Army leader Muqtada al-Sadr said a deal had been reached to end roughly two months of street fighting in eastern Baghdad. Soon afterward, U.S. and Iraqi officials endorsed the agreement, which came as Iraqi forces working with U.S. troops were signaling plans for a new push to break from areas where they had remained stuck for weeks. Details of the cease-fire remain largely unclear beyond an immediate end to the battles that have displaced thousands of residents from the Mahdi Army stronghold of Sadr City, a vast slum home to more than 2 million people.

In announcing the deal, al-Sadr aide Sheik Salah al-Obeidi said the agreement, « stipulates that the Mahdi Army will stop fighting in Sadr City and will stop displaying arms in public. In return, the government will stop random raids against al-Sadr followers and open all closed roads that lead to Sadr City. »

Al-Obeidi, who issued a statement from the southern Iraqi city of Najaf, added: « This document does not call for disbanding al-Mahdi Army or laying down their arms. »

The fact that a leading figure in al-Sadr’s ranks announced the deal and pointedly rejected the Iraqi government’s key demand to disarm suggests that the cleric is still controlling the agenda tactically and politically despite the most serious challenge his power the Iraqi government could muster. Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki set out to break the back of the Mahdi Army in March, when he launched an offensive against areas the militia controls in the southern city of Basra. The Mahdi Army fought Iraqi forces to a standstill there while unleashing a daily hail of rockets and mortars on the Green Zone that left al-Maliki’s government effectively the ones under siege. And when U.S. and Iraqi troops tried to press into Sadr City to chase the militia’s mortar men and rocketeers, they barely managed to establish a foothold on the southern edge of the neighborhood before the situation stalemated.

How long this new cease-fire will last is uncertain. Al-Sadr declared a cease-fire unilaterally last year only to see al-Maliki ignore it with the initial strike in Basra. But one thing is clear: the latest pause in the running fight between al-Sadr and the U.S.-backed Iraqi government offers no visible solutions to the problems at the root of the conflict. Al-Maliki wants to disband the Mahdi Army, or at least de-fang it, before provincial elections in the fall. The bloody nose the Mahdi Army gave al-Maliki in the latest crisis shows how unlikely that is. Above all, al-Sadr still wants the Americans to go. But the inability of Iraqi forces to operate independently during the recent fighting shows how unlikely that is – unless a new White House decides to reduce military support for an Iraqi government still unable to face down its toughest foe.

Hé ben, quel tissu de conneries. Pas loin de 600 combattants de l’armée du Madhi sont morts dans le dernier mois:

A total of 593 Mahdi Army fighters have been confirmed killed in and around Sadr City since March 25, according to numbers compiled by The Long War Journal. More than one-quarter of the Mahdi Army fighters killed have been killed in US airstrikes.

Et l‘accord signé par Al Sadr précise que:

• The Iraqi government and the Mahdi Army would observe a four-day cease-fire.
• At the end of the cease-fire, Iraqi forces would be allowed to enter Sadr City and conduct arrests if warrants have been issued, or if the Mahdi Army is in possession of medium or heavy weapons (rocket-propelled grenades, rockets, mortars).
• The Mahdi Army and the Sadrist bloc must recognize the Iraqi government has control over the security situation and has the authority to move security forces to impose the law.
• The Mahdi Army would end all attacks, including mortar and rockets strikes against the International Zone.
• The Mahdi Army must clear Sadr City of roadside bombs.
• The Mahdi Army must close all « illegal courthouses. »
• The Iraqi government would reopen the entrances to Sadr City.
• The Iraqi government would provide humanitarian aid to the residents of Sadr City.

Donc Al Sadr dépose les armes, l’armée iraqienne fait la loi à Sadr City, perd 600 hommes. C’est une victoire ça ? Pour qui ?

Epilogue temporaire

Le gouvernement libanais capitule:

Le gouvernement libanais a annoncé mercredi l’annulation des mesures prises contre le Hezbollah, qui avaient conduit aux pires affrontements intercommunautaires au Liban depuis la fin de la guerre civile dans ce pays en 1990.

« Afin de faciliter les négociations de la délégation de la Ligue arabe et pour préserver l’unité nationale et la sécurité des citoyens, le gouvernement a décidé d’accepter la proposition du chef de l’armée et d’annuler les décisions », a annoncé le ministre de l’Information, Ghazi Aridi, à l’issue d’une réunion du gouvernement.

D’intenses tirs de joie ont éclaté à Beyrouth à la suite de cette décision.

Le gouvernement avait annoncé le 6 mai son intention d’enquêter sur un réseau parallèle de télécommunications mis en place par le Hezbollah, et avait limogé le directeur de la sécurité de l’aéroport, présenté comme un proche du parti chiite.

Ces deux mesures, après 18 mois de crise politique, avaient déclenché une flambée de violences. Des hommes armés de l’opposition chiite avaient pris d’assaut l’ouest de Beyrouth, défendu par des partisans sunnites du gouvernement.

Après deux jours de combats, l’armée avait gelé le 10 mai les mesures gouvernementales et les hommes armés s’étaient retirés des rues.

Le Hezbollah fait donc sa propre loi au Liban.