Leaders may meet to resolve Iraqi political turmoil
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BAGHDAD, Iraq
(CNN) -- With the country's
largest Sunni political bloc threatening to leave the
Cabinet, top Iraqi leaders are hoping to sit down soon to
settle the friction and finger-pointing among Sunni Arabs,
Shiites and Kurds, officials told CNN on Saturday.
Among the top leaders who would be involved in such a
meeting are President Jalal Talabani, who is Kurdish,
Shiite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and Sunni
Vice-President Tariq al-Hashimi -- a leader of the Iraqi
Islamic Party, the most powerful group in the dissatisfied
Sunni bloc, the Iraqi Accord Front.
There was also more violence in Iraq, Saturday. At
least five people were killed in a car bombing in eastern
Baghdad .
The "Front" -- whose 44 lawmakers ended its
parliament boycott recently after the deposed Sunni
parliamentary speaker returned to his position --
threatened to remove its ministers from the Cabinet
recently unless the Shiite-led government meets its
demands. The ministers have been postponing their
participation in government.
The Front has been critical of legislative stalemates
and the failure to achieve national reconciliation.
Wednesday they issued a statement demanding amnesty for
detainees thought to be innocent, an end to raids that
impinge on human rights, a halt to the integration of
Shiite militias into the armed forces, disarming such
militias, more consistent consultation on security
matters, genuine participation in national decisions, the
return of displaced people home, anti-corruption measures,
and more transparency in major crime investigations.
The government, in response, said on Friday said the
Accord Front is "hindering the political
process" with its stance.
Government spokesman Ali Dabbagh issued a
point-by-point refutation of the front's demands and said
the government is making efforts to pursue national
reconciliation and justice on the military and political
fronts and is dealing with the militia types.
"The policy of threatening, extortion and
pressures is useless policy, and hindering the
government," Dabbagh said.
Car bombing kills 5
Five people were killed on Saturday in a Baghdad car
bombing, the Interior Ministry said.
The bomb exploded in Uqba Bin Nafie square in eastern
Baghdad around 12:15 p.m. Ten people were wounded as well.
Earlier in the capital, a mortar struck on the Amil
neighborhood in southwestern Baghdad, wounding four
people, police said.
In northern Iraq, U.S.-led coalition forces arrested 16
suspected terrorists in raids on Saturday, the U.S.
military said. Raids in Tarmiya, north of Baghdad, ended
with the successful detention of two senior terrorist
leaders -- an al Qaeda in Iraq Sharia judge and his
alleged advisor, the military said.
In addition, nine other suspects were arrested there.
In Samarra, a raid on four buildings netted an alleged
bomb-making terrorist leader with suspected ties to
assassination, kidnapping and extortion operations. The
military said the individual is also believed to be a
close associate of the local al Qaeda in Iraq emir.
The military said four other suspected terrorists were
detained with him.
U.S. troops could start leaving in spring
A top U.S. commander in Iraq said if positive security
trends in Iraq continue over the next year,
"deliberate" troop draw-downs could unfold
successfully this spring.
Lt. Gen. Raymond Odierno, commanding general of the
Multi-National Corps-Iraq, told CNN's Arwa Damon on
Saturday about several positive trends -- a decrease in
roadside bomb attacks, fewer casualties, less violence and
improved Iraqi security force performance.
"We're seeing some clear trends. What I have to
understand --- are those trends going to continue?"
said Odierno, the second in command of U.S. forces in Iraq.
But the general was optimistic about the future,
adding, "I feel confident that we will be able to do
something in the spring."