February 17, 2007
Baghdad Plan Is a ‘Success,’ Iraq Prime Minister Tells Bush By MARC SANTORA
BAGHDAD, Feb. 16 — Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki told President Bush on Friday that the increased effort to provide security in Baghdad had gone exceedingly well so far, Mr. Maliki’s office said in a statement.
The two spoke via video link and, according the statement, Mr. Maliki said, “The security plan has been a dazzling success during its first days.â€
Across Baghdad, there were signs of the heightened troop presence, as cars were searched at new checkpoints and raids resulted in the arrest of at least 35 people, according to Iraqi officials.
Maj. Gen. Joseph F. Fil Jr., commander of the First Cavalry Division in Baghdad, told reporters on Friday that there had been a substantial reduction in violence in the past 48 hours, which he attributed both to the increased troop presence and the decision by Sunni and Shiite militants to keep a low profile.
“They’re watching us carefully,†he said. “There’s an air of suspense throughout the city. We believe, there’s no question about it, that many of these extremists are laying low and watching to see what it is we do and how we do it. How long that will last, we don’t know.â€
American military officers also disputed Iraqi reports that the commander of Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, Abu Ayyub al-Masri, was wounded in recent fighting, saying they have seen no evidence to support the claim.
Still, in an interview on Friday, Iraq’s Interior Ministry spokesman, Gen. Abdul Kareem Khalaf, continued to maintain that Mr. Masri had been wounded in fighting near Balad, north of Baghdad. He said Mr. Masri was wounded Thursday afternoon, then managed to flee. But two other Iraqi officials contradicted that account.
In Hilla, south of Baghdad, the Iraqi security forces arrested 34 members of a messianic Shiite splinter group that just three weeks ago tried to overthrow the Shiite clerical hierarchy in Najaf.
In heavy fighting in January, hundreds of members of the group, called the Soldiers of Heaven, were killed as American forces joined the Iraqis in a daylong battle in which an American attack helicopter was shot down.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/17/world/middleeast/17iraq.html?_r=2&pagewanted=print&oref=slogin&oref=slogin