perang menghadapi para pejuang Irak menunjukkan ketidakmampuan kita 
utk menghentikan konflik berdarah. Itu akan menunjukkan posisi US 
paling benar daripada posisi kita bahwa perang diwajibkan. Itulah 
membuktikan bahwa perang terhadap para pejuang Irak tetap dihalalkan 
oleh pasukan US. Perlu ada usaha menghentikan konflik dan solusi 
solusi??

Itulah terserah pada masyarakat bahwa kita perlu menyilakan perang 
atau solusi penyelesaian konflik?

Wassalam,

------------------------------
U.S. Helicopters Pound Militants in Najaf 

NAJAF, Iraq - U.S. tanks pushed into Najaf's vast cemetery-turned-
battlefield Tuesday as helicopter gunships fired on Shiite militiamen 
hiding there. American patrols with loudspeakers went through the 
city, warning militants to leave or face death. 

Explosions shook the streets and black smoke rose over parts of 
Najaf, but the fighting with Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr's Mahdi 
Army militia appeared more sporadic than in recent days. 

A large fire broke out at a hotel about 300 yards from the Imam Ali 
Shrine, Najaf's holiest site, which fighters have reportedly been 
using as a base. Witnesses said insurgents were firing from inside 
the hotel and U.S. forces returned fire. 

In a new tactic, U.S. military vehicles equipped with loudspeakers 
drove through the streets warning residents to stay away from the 
fighting and for militants to put down their weapons and leave. "We 
ask residents to cooperate with the Iraqi army and police," a voice 
said in Arabic. "There will be no truce or negotiations with 
terrorists." 

Small clashes also broke out in the Baghdad Shiite neighborhood of 
Sadr City, despite a nighttime curfew imposed Monday. 

Mahdi Army militants repeatedly attacked a district council hall, 
clashing with U.S. and Iraqi forces protecting the building, said 
U.S. Capt. Brian O'Malley of the 1st Brigade Combat Team. Groups of 
three to five fighters have been attacking the building with mortars, 
gunfire and rocket-propelled grenades "every hour or so" from 7 a.m. 
to about 5 p.m., he said. 

The fighting killed one person and wounded 18, Health Ministry 
officials said. 

There were no employees there during the attacks, and O'Malley said 
about 14,000 people "haven't been able to go to work since the 
fighting started" in Sadr City days ago. 

While U.S. and Iraqi forces were trying to quell the eruption of 
Shiite violence, attacks by Sunni Muslim militants persisted. 

A roadside bomb detonated as a U.S. military vehicle drove on a 
street in central Baghdad on Tuesday, slightly wounding two soldiers, 
the military said. On Monday a suicide car bomb targeting a deputy 
governor killed six people, and a roadside bomb hit a bus, killing 
four passengers. 

Another insurgent group warned in a videotaped message it would 
launch a campaign of attacks on government offices in Baghdad 
starting Tuesday, telling employees to stay away. 

The sixth day of Shiite violence came after al-Sadr said Monday that 
he would fight "until the last drop of my blood has been spilled." 

The uprising began to affect Iraq (news - web sites)'s crucial oil 
industry, as pumping to the southern port of Basra � the country's 
main export outlet � was halted because of militant threats to 
infrastructure, an official with the South Oil Company said. 

About 1.8 million barrels per day, or 90 percent of Iraq's exports, 
move through Basra, and any shutdown in the flow of Iraq's main money 
earner would badly hamper reconstruction efforts. Iraq's other export 
line � from the north to Turkey � is already out of operation. 

An Iraqi oil official said Tuesday that Iraq had enough oil in 
storage tanks to continue exporting crude until production returned 
to normal, possibly within one or two days. 

Clashes intensified around the southern city of Basra, where a 
British soldier was killed and several others wounded in fighting 
with militia near al-Sadr's office Monday, the British Ministry of 
Defense said. Three militants were killed and more than 10 were 
wounded, Iraqi police said. 

Much of the fighting in Najaf remained centered on the vast cemetery 
near the Imam Ali Shrine. The U.S. military said Mahdi Army gunmen 
were launching attacks from the cemetery and then running to take 
refuge in the shrine compound, one of the holiest sites in Shia 
Islam. 

Najaf Gov. Adnan al-Zarfi gave U.S. forces approval to enter the 
shrine, a senior U.S. military official said Monday. "We have elected 
at this point not to conduct operations there, although we are 
prepared to do so at a moment's notice," the official said. 

Such an offensive would almost certainly cause widespread outrage 
among the nation's Shiite majority and further exacerbate the crisis. 

The military official estimated that 360 insurgents were killed 
between Thursday, when fighting began, and Sunday night, a figure the 
militants dispute. Five U.S. troops have been killed in the fighting. 
About 20 police also have been killed, Najaf police chief Brig. 
Ghalib al-Jazaari said. 

The fighting has shattered a series of delicate truces worked out two 
months ago that ended the Mahdi Army's first uprising, which broke 
out in April. During that period, U.S. commanders vowed to "capture 
or kill" al-Sadr, but later tacitly agreed to let Iraqi authorities 
deal with the cleric. 

U.S. forces were apparently continuing the hands-off policy toward al-
Sadr. The senior U.S. military officer in Baghdad, speaking on 
condition of anonymity, said the cleric "is not an objective; we are 
not actively pursuing him." 

But the fighting has complicated the security situation for Prime 
Minister Ayad Allawi's government as it tried to take a tough stance 
against the mainly Sunni campaign of attacks, bombings and shootings 
plaguing Iraq for the past 15 months. 

In a sign of the deterioration of the situation in Najaf, the Polish 
military returned command in the province and neighboring Qadisiyah 
province to the U.S. Marines. The Poles had received command in the 
two provinces only 10 days ago. 

Mahdi Army militiamen in Baghdad also kidnapped a senior Iraqi 
policeman, Brig. Raed Mohammed Khudair, who is responsible for all 
police patrols in eastern Baghdad, said Col. Adnan Abdel Rahman, an 
Interior Ministry spokesman. In a video broadcast on the pan-Arab 
network Al-Jazeera, militants said the government should release all 
Mahdi Army prisoners in exchange for Khudair. 

Militants have been waging a violent campaign of car bombings, 
attacks and kidnappings in an effort to force coalition troops out of 
the country. 

Jordanian businessman Jamal Sadeq al-Salaymeh was taken hostage in 
Baghdad on Monday by kidnappers demanding $250,000 in ransom, the 
official Petra news agency said Tuesday. 

Also Tuesday, Lebanese businessman Antoine Antoun was freed after 
about a week in captivity in Iraq, his father Robert said



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