US soldiers kill 22 in attack on Baghdad mosque
US forces killed 22 people and wounded eight at a mosque in east Baghdad in an incident likely to lead to increased tensions with the Shia community. Police said the US troops had retaliated after coming under fire.
Videotape showed a heap of male bodies with gunshot wounds on the floor of the imam's living quarters in what was said to be the Al Mustafa mosque. There were 5.56mm shell casings on the floor, which is the type of ammunition used by US soldiers.
Iraqi police said some of the casualties were at the office of Dawa, the party of the prime minister, Ibrahim al-Jaafari. Haidar al-Obaidi, a senior Dawa official, said: "The lives of Iraqis are not cheap. If the American blood is valuable to them, the Iraqi blood is valuable to us."
The US military would neither confirm nor deny the incident but the US army in Iraq has been strongly criticized over the past week for killing Iraqi civilians and falsely claiming that they were insurgents or caught in crossfire.
The shooting took place in a neighborhood dominated by the Mehdi Army militia of the nationalist cleric Moqtada al-Sadr and some of those who died may have belonged to his movement. Salam al-Maliki, an official of the Sadr bloc, said that a hospital to which the wounded had been taken was later surrounded by US troops.
Hazin al-Araji, an aide to Sadr, claimed: "The American forces went into the Mustafa mosque at prayers and killed more than 20 worshippers. They tied them up and shot them."
The killings may mark another step in the deteriorating relations between the US and Iraq's Shia community, 60 percent of the population. Shia leaders fear that the US is trying to rob them of the fruits of their success in the election on Dec. 15 when the Shia coalition won 130 out of 275 seats. Another US military move likely to be resented was a raid on Mar. 26 on a building of the Interior Ministry, controlled by Shias, in the mistaken belief that it was a torture center. It turned out to contain 17 Sudanese legally detained for breach of residency laws who had not been mistreated.
The US is desperately pressuring Iraqi politicians into forming a national unity government to reverse the country's slide into sectarian civil war. The US ambassador to Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad, asked the Iraqi leadership to "overcome the strife that threatens to rip apart Iraq." Forty bodies, some beheaded, were found on Mar. 26 in Baghdad and Baquba.
The prolonged failure to form a government underlines the deep fissures dividing the Shia, Sunni and Kurdish communities and makes it unlikely that a national unity government would be effective. The Shia coalition has resented the campaign by President Jalal Talabani, supported by the US and UK, to get rid of Jaafari as prime minister. The US and UK want Sunni politicians, as well as Iyad Allawi, to be members of a new administration.
"The US and UK were shocked that the Shia coalition did so well," said a participant in the negotiations to form a government. "Since then they hoped it would split. But the Shia parties have stuck behind Jaafari... Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani and the Hawza [Shia religious hierarchy] are for Shia unity and the Iranians want the coalition to stay together."
The present government, formed following the election in January of last year, is a Shia-Kurdish alliance. One Kurdish observer said: "For the Kurds it would be suicidal to side with the Sunni and Iyad Allawi because they would alienate 60 percent of the population."