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Main
News; Foreign Desk
Baghdad
sweep shows its face; The troop increase and crackdown unfold in neighborho=
ods
across the Iraqi capital.
Borzou Daragahi
Times
Staff Writer
1416
words
16
February 2007
Home
Edition
A-1
English
Copyright
2007 The Los Angeles Times
BAGHDAD
It was just af=
ter
lunch Thursday when the "surge" arrived at Haidar Karam's doorste=
p.
Out of nowhere,
about 50 U.S. troops appeared and circled his northeast Baghdad neighborhoo=
d.
Half a dozen Humvees arrived 15 minutes later. Snipers took up positions on
rooftops. Troops stopped vehicles from moving.
They were the
leading edge of a Baghdad security plan called Operation Law and Order, par=
t of
what the Bush administration has dubbed a "surge" in U.S. troops =
in
Iraq.
After weeks of
delay, the promised crackdown and troop increase were boldly evident Thursd=
ay
during an hours-long tour of neighborhoods throughout the war-weary capital=
of
6 million people, where sectarian fighting kills an average of 100 resident=
s a
day.
A U.S. officer
approached Karam, handing the government clerk a piece of paper with a phone
number and an e-mail address to contact authorities if there was any troubl=
e in
his Shiite-dominated Shaab neighborhood.
He told Karam
through an interpreter that American and Iraqi forces were going to secure =
the
neighborhood. They were going to install a one-megawatt power generator.
"I told h=
im, 'I
find that difficult to believe,' " Karam said. "Our government al=
ways
lies to us."
At that, the U=
.S.
officer laughed, Karam said.
"We will =
prove
it to you!" he said the American told him.
U.S. and Iraqi
forces conducted raids, searched abandoned buildings and patrolled neighbor=
hoods
as part of the security plan, which officially began Tuesday evening.
At least 3,000
additional U.S. troops and about 2,000 Iraqi counterparts have arrived so f=
ar.
Despite the
crackdown, authorities discovered the bodies of at least 20 men shot dead a=
nd
dumped in west Baghdad. Dozens were killed or found slain around the countr=
y.
Troops to stick
around
Under the secu=
rity
plan, units of U.S. and Iraqi forces will attempt to clear neighborhoods of
unauthorized weapons and insurgents. They will stay rather than returning to
base, in an attempt to halt spiraling sectarian warfare between Shiite Musl=
im
and Sunni Arab gunmen, lure residents back to their homes and rebuild the
economy.
"We are establishing a stronger presence throughout the city," said U.S. Army = Maj. Steven F. Lamb, a spokesman for American forces in Baghdad. "We're goi= ng to have a 24-hour presence, which is going to stem the sectarian violence. = All available troops that we can have on the street are on the streets." <= o:p>
On Thursday, U=
.S.
forces often found themselves back at the small bases they used in the early
months after the 2003 invasion. The facilities were abandoned as U.S.
commanders under the direction of Army Gen. George W. Casey Jr. decided to
lower the American profile in neighborhoods and hand security over to Iraqi
forces.
Since then, a
once-vibrant Baghdad has become a forbidding maze of concrete walls and
concertina wire roamed by mysterious gunmen, where petrified residents rush=
to
their homes before dark.
The Dora distr=
ict in
south Baghdad was among the first neighborhoods targeted by the security pl=
an.
With Humvees and armored vehicles protected by aircraft, U.S. troops swept =
in
Wednesday, setting off stun grenades before storming houses in search of in=
surgents.
By Thursday mo=
rning,
explosions were shaking the district and security forces at newly establish=
ed
checkpoints had begun searching cars.
"Just fou=
r days
ago, gunmen never stopped attacking checkpoints and firing at the Iraqi
army," said journalist Ghesan Jabouri, a Dora resident. "Now that=
's
all over."
Still, two car=
bombs
killed at least four Iraqis and injured 20 in Dora, and by midafternoon the
district's bullet-scarred main streets testified to the enormous challenges
facing U.S. and Iraqi forces. Many of the closed shops were painted with an
encircled X, a warning by insurgents not to reopen. Jittery Iraqi soldiers =
at a
checkpoint stood guard, waving past the smattering of drivers braving the
streets.
In nearby Sadi=
ya, a
violent Sunni neighborhood, U.S. troops stood near the kitchen of a home and
watched Iraqi counterparts search the modest single-story house for weapons=
.
"What,
grandma?" an Iraqi soldier joked to the family's matriarch, a woman in=
her
70s. "Don't you have any rocket-propelled grenades or roadside
bombs?"
"No, son,=
"
she replied, laughing. "What would we do with such cursed things?"=
;
The soldiers s=
eized
a handgun but let her family keep an AK-47.
Numerous check=
points
staffed by Iraqi soldiers and police directed the sparse traffic.
"We are v=
ery
motivated," said a burly young Iraqi army lieutenant standing guard on=
the
outskirts of the Yarmouk district downtown. "This security plan is a
significant turn of events."
Streams of unm=
arked
white SUVs filled with masked security officers pointing assault rifles at
motorists passed by. Blue-and-white police pickups with makeshift plates of
armor slapped to the sides kicked up dust and exhaust as they sped past
motorists.
The heavy poli= ce and army presence, as well as the advance publicity, may have scared off many of the gunmen. Few shops were open, and traffic was scant along the once-glitt= ery 14th Ramadan Street in the Mansour district of west Baghdad, the site of frequent battles over checkpoints between insurgents and security forces. <= o:p>
Insurgents exp=
ected
back
U.S. and Iraqi
officials think the initial shock of the plan will wear off and the insurge=
nts
will be back.
"That's a
common issue that you have to deal with in any combat environment," La=
mb
said. "They're going to evaluate what we're doing and adjust to it, ju=
st
as we have to evaluate what they're doing and adjust to it."
Iraqi troops, =
often
criticized for lax responses, appeared to move more aggressively. Their Hum=
vees
were arrayed along the main road through the Kadhimiya district. Two truckl=
oads
of soldiers wound their way along a narrow street in the Adhamiya neighborh=
ood.
A soldier wearing a purple bandana grinned as he manned a .50-caliber machi=
ne
gun and gestured for vehicles to stop.
The situation =
was
similar in neighborhoods of every sect and economic class.
Security force=
s also
sealed off Sadr City, the Shiite district that is the power base of the Al
Mahdi militia. Even so, a car bomb there killed three people and injured 25=
.
U.S. officials=
say
that unlike previous efforts, the security crackdown has the support of Ira=
qi
Prime Minister Nouri Maliki's government, which had blocked American effort=
s to
target certain individuals and neighborhoods.
Raids in the l=
ast
two days targeted the Baratha mosque, the base of a powerful Shiite politic=
ian,
the Hillah offices of a local leader of Maliki's Dawa Party, and an office =
of
radical cleric Muqtada Sadr's movement in Hillah.
In the souther=
n city
of Basra, officials launched a simultaneous security crackdown and sealed t=
he
nearby borders with Iran, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. One British soldier was
killed and another injured during attacks on checkpoints west of Basra.
A U.S. Marine =
died
in western Iraq on Wednesday, where 4,000 of the 21,500 additional U.S. tro=
ops
being added for the security plan will be deployed by May.
U.S. officials,
including President Bush, have urged patience in measuring results of the
crackdown.
Six weeks ago,=
U.S.
forces converted nine abandoned homes into a small military base in the
once-leafy west Baghdad neighborhood of Ghazaliya.
"The firs=
t two
weeks after the base was completed were really calm," said the owner o=
f an
electrical shop in the neighborhood who asked not to be identified.
But Sunni and =
Shiite
gangs soon resumed attacking each other, he said. Shiites burned down a
cherished library adjacent to a Sunni mosque. Sunnis responded with a killi=
ng
spree.
"U.S. tro=
ops
never did anything," the resident said. "I do not know what will
happen, or whether this plan to secure Baghdad will succeed.... It seems li=
ke
someone is always trying to make sure it doesn't."
daragahi@latim=
es.com
Times staff wr=
iters
Said Rifai, Saif Hameed and Zeena Kareem in Baghdad and special corresponde=
nts
in Baghdad, Basra and Hillah contributed to this report.
GRAPHIC: MAP:
Baghdad crackdown;CREDIT: Doug Stevens Los Angeles Times;PHOTO: OVERCOME: A
woman cries as Iraqi forces demolish a block of shops in the Baghdad
neighborhood of Ghazaliya that authorities said were used for cover by
insurgents.;PHOTOGRAPHER: Chris Hondros Getty Images