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  Sunnis want Iraq military actions halted   (AP)  Updated: 2005-11-14 17:05  
 Sunni Arab politicians stepped up demands Sunday for an end to U.S. and Iraqi 
military operations, claiming they threaten Sunni participation in next month's 
elections — a key U.S. goal. The U.S. command announced the deaths of three more 
American troops. 
 Meanwhile, some 1,100 Iraqi lawyers said they withdrew from Saddam Hussein's 
defense team over the slayings of two colleagues representing co-defendants of 
the ousted leader. The main attorneys for Saddam and his seven co-defendants had 
already threatened to boycott the next trial session Nov. 28. 
 On Monday, Operation Steel Curtain, being carried out near the border with 
Syria, entered a new phase when U.S. and Iraqi forces moved into the town of 
Obeidi, about 185 miles west of Baghdad. 
 "Five targets were struck by coalition air strikes resulting in an estimated 
37 insurgents killed," a military statement said. "Preliminary reports indicate 
an estimated 25 insurgents have already been captured and are currently 
detained." 
 
 
 
 
   An Iraqi policeman steps over rubble of 
 damaged homes, after a mortar round exploded in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, 
 Nov. 13, 2005.[AP] |   Troops assigned to the 2nd 
Marine Division have already fought their way through two neighboring towns, 
Husaybah and Karabilah. U.S. forces believe the border towns have been an entry 
point for insurgent fighters and weapons into Iraq. 
U.S. commanders have said offensives, especially those in the western 
province of Anbar near the Syrian border, are aimed at encouraging Sunni Arabs 
to vote in the Dec. 15 parliamentary elections without fear of intimidation by 
insurgents opposed to the political process. 
 However, several major Sunni Arab political groups insisted Sunday that such 
operations risk keeping Sunni turnout low because civilians are displaced by the 
fighting or they will be too frightened to venture out to the polls. 
 Some alleged the Shiite-led government was intentionally carrying out 
operations northeast of Baghdad to discourage Sunni Arabs from voting — a charge 
that Iraqi officials have denied. 
 "We strongly condemn the military operations and demand that they are halted 
immediately," Saleh al-Mutlaq of the Sunni National Dialogue Front told 
reporters. "We demand that the United Nations, the Arab League and humanitarian 
organizations stop these massacres." 
 Ayad al-Izi, a member of the largest Sunni Arab party, charged that raids by 
the Interior Ministry in religiously mixed Diyala province were politically 
motivated to cow Sunnis. 
 "Such practices are aimed at foiling the political process in the country and 
they ignite the strife in such areas," said al-Izi of the Iraqi Islamic Party. 
 On Monday, a car bomb detonated near a police patrol outside one of the main 
gates leading into the Green Zone in central Baghdad. Police Capt. Nabil 
Abdelqadir said at least one police office was killed and seven people were 
injured. 
 The Interior Ministry said 310 people were arrested in the Diyala raids, 
which followed a truck bombing in a Shiite village that killed about 20 people. 
It did not say whether all those arrested were Sunnis. 
 In a statement Sunday, the U.S. command said two Marines were killed the day 
before by a bomb west of Baghdad and an American soldier died in a vehicle 
accident in western Iraq. The latest deaths brought to at least 2,065 the number 
of U.S. military personnel who have died since the war began in 2003, according 
to an Associated Press count. 
 Despite the rising casualty toll, U.S. officials have been encouraged because 
so many Sunni Arab groups have decided to run in the December elections, hoping 
that will induce members of the Sunni-dominated insurgency to stop fighting. 
That would allow U.S. and other coalition troops to begin heading home next 
year. 
 Most Sunni Arabs boycotted the Jan. 30 elections, enabling the majority 
Shiites and their Kurdish allies to dominate the current parliament. That in 
turn ratcheted up sectarian tensions and reprisal killings. 
 Many Sunni politicians now consider the January boycott a disaster for their 
community. But Sunni hard-liners — including insurgents and many clerics — 
remain adamantly opposed to the political process. 
 "Our position is unchanged," Sheik Mohammed Bashar al-Faydhi, spokesman for 
the hard-line clerical Association of Muslim Scholars, told reporters Sunday. 
"We will not participle in the political process as long as the occupation 
exists," although he suggested that might change if Washington offered a 
timetable for withdrawal. 
 President Bush has refused to set a timetable, saying that would play into 
the hands of insurgents. However, Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Chalabi said 
Friday that U.S. troops could begin leaving in significant numbers sometime next 
year. 
 Iraqi President Jalal Talabani predicted in an interview televised Sunday in 
London that the 8,500 British soldiers could be gone by the end of 2006 — 
although he was not speaking for the government. 
 Talabani told Britain's ITV that no Iraqis wanted foreign troops to remain 
indefinitely, adding that Iraq's own soldiers should be ready to take over from 
British forces in the southern provinces around Basra by the end of next year. 
 The statement announcing the withdrawal of the 1,100 Iraqi lawyers also said 
the Saddam trial should be delayed because the government is not providing 
sufficient protection. The government says protection was offered but the 
lawyers refused. 
 Jordanian lawyer Ziad al-Khasawneh, who was once part of the defense team, 
said the statement was issued by most of the 1,500 Iraqi lawyers who were 
enlisted for Saddam's defense — most of them helping research legal precedents, 
prepare briefs and perform other tasks outside the courtroom. 
 In Baghdad, a senior court official, Raid Juhi, said the withdrawal would not 
affect the proceedings. 
 "The court will continue to give legal consultation through naming defense 
lawyers in case the defense team does not show up" when the trial resumes, Juhi 
told AP by telephone. 
 Saddam and seven co-defendants are on trial before a special Iraqi tribunal, 
charged in the 1982 deaths of 148 Shiite Muslims in Dujail after an 
assassination attempt against Saddam in that town north of 
Baghdad.  
  
  
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