Four US troops killed as Iraqis wrangle on govt
Posted on: Thursday, 18 May 2006, 11:58 CDT
By Mariam Karouny and Hiba Moussa
BAGHDAD (Reuters) - A roadside bomb near Baghdad killed four U.S. soldiers on Thursday and Iraq's leaders fought last-minute battles for jobs in a much delayed national unity government before a parliament vote scheduled for Saturday.
An Iraqi interpreter also died in the blast northwest of the capital in the type of violence Washington hopes a grand coalition of Shi'ites, Sunnis and Kurds will start to tackle after five months of stalemate.
Prime Minister-designate Nuri al-Maliki is juggling with a host of names put forward by the various political parties for the posts already broadly allocated to them, negotiators said.
Factional fighting within Maliki's own Shi'ite Alliance bloc and others was complicating the task of appointing ministers to be confirmed in Saturday's expected parliamentary vote.
"He's got too many names in front of him and he's trying to please everyone," one senior negotiator said.
"All options are open," said another senior official.
Washington hopes a government backed by all Iraq's ethnic and sectarian communities which turned out peacefully and in large numbers to vote in December, can turn the tide of violence, though officials concede that it will take time.
Hundreds of people are killed every month in Baghdad alone, their bodies turning up often handcuffed and mutilated. Tens of thousands of people have also fled their homes in fear.
U.S. TROOPS
With congressional elections in November and President George W. Bush's approval ratings hitting new lows due to the Iraq war, U.S. officials are keen to start withdrawing troops.
But Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld told senators on Wednesday he could not promise to reduce the number of Americans from the present 130,000 this year, much as he would like to.
The four soldiers killed on Thursday, as well as a sailor attached to Marine forces who died in western Iraq on Wednesday, took the U.S. death toll this month to 51, making the first part of May one of the bloodiest periods of the past year.
Roadside bombs are the biggest killers of U.S. troops in Iraq and commanders say insurgents have developed bigger and more powerful devices to combat advances in American armor.
At least 2,454 Americans have died in Iraq since 2003 in a war in which Washington has had few allies willing to risk their own citizens' lives. Italy's newly elected centre-left prime minister, Romano Prodi, told parliament the invasion had been a "grave error" and he proposed bringing Rome's 3,000 troops home.
In Basra, new Defense Secretary Des Browne visited some of Britain's 8,000 soldiers -- the second biggest contingent in Iraq -- after some of their toughest weeks in the south.
British officials hope Maliki's Shi'ite-led government in Baghdad will quickly turn its attention to quelling the fighting among Shi'ite factions in Basra, Iraq's oil-rich second city, that they believe has spawned attacks on British troops.
Basra's police chief survived a bomb attack on Thursday.
Browne said: "This upsurge in violence ... is a reflection of the power struggle ... for those who have taken advantage of the political hiatus of the past five months."
SHI'ITES DIVIDED
The fragmentation of Maliki's Alliance bloc among more than a dozen Shi'ite Islamist parties is reflected in last-minute competition for those jobs in the new government -- about half of the 30 ministries -- already allocated to the Shi'ites.
Under a constitutional deadline, he has until Monday to present his cabinet to parliament.
Gunmen killed six Baghdad laborers going to work in a minibus and a bomb in the capital killed seven people, including four policemen on Thursday. Many more deaths go unreported.
Kidnapping is another scourge. Officials were trying to secure the release of 15 members of the national tae kwondo martial arts squad, abducted on a desert road on Wednesday.
A source close to Maliki said Shi'ite former army officer Nasser al-Amery was close to securing the Interior Ministry. But he faced stiff opposition from rivals who regard him as close to the party that has run the ministry this past year and has faced accusations of running death squads within the police force.
Sunnis and the United States have demanded a non-partisan figure to run the ministry in the new, full-term administration.
Among Iraqis' complaints over the U.S. presence is shootings of civilians at checkpoints. Responding to these, the Pentagon said troops now had lasers to dazzle drivers who failed to stop.
It insisted they were legal and would not cause blindness.
(Additional reporting by Ahmed Rasheed, Fredrik Dahl, Aseel Kami and Alastair Macdonald)
Source: REUTERS
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