http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/iraq/la-fg-iraq27jun27,0,839726,full.story?coll=la-home-headlines

June 27, 2005latimes.com : IraqE-mail story   Print   Most E-mailed 


THE CONFLICT IN IRAQ
U.S., Rebels in Iraq Talking

Amid reports of direct contacts with militants and on a day of more deadly 
suicide attacks, American officials seek to quell doubts at home.

By Borzou Daragahi, Times Staff Writer


BAGHDAD - Insurgents killed nearly three dozen Iraqis with suicide bombings and 
gun and mortar fire Sunday as a newly published report detailed direct contacts 
between leaders of violent rebel groups and high-level U.S. officials 
attempting to end the attacks.

U.S. officials did not confirm or deny reports that American diplomats had 
recently met with insurgent commanders, the majority of whom are Sunni Arabs. 
Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld and Gen. John P. Abizaid, who commands 
U.S. forces in the region, acknowledged that U.S. and Iraqi officials had met 
with Sunni leaders, but insisted that they were not prepared to compromise with 
those who have killed Americans and Iraqis.

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As U.S. officials were forced to confront details of reported meetings with 
insurgent leaders, three suicide bombings took place in and around the northern 
city of Mosul. In one attack, a suicide bomber wearing explosives blew himself 
up among a group of guards and day laborers waiting at the gate of an Iraqi 
military base. The attack killed at least 15 Iraqis. 

In another attack, a suicide bomber driving a pickup truck laden with 
explosives - covered by melons - rammed a police station in the city's busy 
outdoor produce market, killing seven police officers and two civilians, 
officials and witnesses said.

"The car bomb exploded when the place was crowded with civilians," said Yihia 
Fatah Alla, a 22-year-old vegetable vendor wounded in the attack. 

Another suicide bomber wearing explosives blew himself up in a police depot 
inside Mosul's Jumhuriya Hospital, where many of those wounded in previous 
attacks were being treated. The explosion killed at least five police officers.

One U.S. soldier was killed and two injured in a roadside bomb attack in Saddam 
Hussein's hometown of Tikrit, the military announced.

At least 1,735 U.S. troops have been killed since the U.S.-led invasion of 
Iraq. More than 1,200 Iraqis have died in insurgent attacks since the naming of 
a new Cabinet on April 28.

Relentless and increasingly sophisticated attacks by foreign Islamic militants 
and members of Iraq's disgruntled Sunni Arab minority have drained U.S. public 
support for the war and pressured Bush administration officials to find a 
speedy resolution to the conflict.

The Sunday Times of London published a report detailing a series of direct 
meetings between U.S. diplomats and military commanders and members of violent 
groups, including Ansar al Sunna, an Islamic militant group with links to Osama 
bin Laden's Al Qaeda network. 

The report said the meetings took place in a villa near the Sunni Triangle city 
of Balad on June 3 and June 13. 

Rumsfeld told NBC's "Meet the Press" that "meetings take place all the time." 
The Iraqi government is "not going to try to bring in the people with blood on 
their hands, for sure, but they're certainly reaching out continuously and we 
help to facilitate those from time to time," he said.

Rumsfeld's remarks were part of a media offensive by the Bush administration 
Sunday aimed at reversing growing doubts among Americans that the war in Iraq 
can be won. President Bush is scheduled to address the nation Tuesday on the 
issue.

Rumsfeld appeared on three different Sunday talk shows, Abizaid on two, and 
Vice President Dick Cheney on one. Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim Jafari, who is 
on his first visit to the United States since he was chosen to head the interim 
government, also joined those arguing that the U.S. should maintain its 
policies in Iraq. 

They delivered a similar message: that despite the insurgency's ability to 
sustain its deadly attacks, progress was being made in Iraq and those trying to 
create chaos would eventually be defeated. 

Abizaid said he was concerned that declining public support at home could 
affect U.S. troop morale. "When my soldiers say to me and ask the question 
whether or not they've got support from the American people or not, that 
worries me, and they are starting to do that," he said on CNN's "Late Edition." 
"American soldiers fight best when they know the people back home are behind 
them."

Speaking on NBC's "Meet the Press," Rumsfeld warned that the violence could get 
worse as insurgents attempt to disrupt the run-up to elections later this year. 
He sought to justify contacts with Iraqi militants as a tactic to coax "people 
to all move toward the support of the government." 

U.S. officials have previously confirmed holding indirect talks with rebel 
groups using Sunni Arab mediators, but have insisted they would never hold 
talks with people who have killed Americans or Iraqis.

But according to the Sunday Times report, American officials met with some of 
the most notorious groups waging war on Jafari's government and U.S.-led 
coalition troops, including Ansar al Sunna, which claimed responsibility for a 
suicide bombing inside the mess hall of a U.S. base near Mosul last December 
that killed 22 people. 

U.S. commanders and leaders of Iraq's transitional government distinguish 
groups of non-Iraqi Islamic fighters like the one led by Jordanian-born Abu 
Musab Zarqawi from nationalist insurgent cells rooted in Iraq's Sunni Arab 
communities.

"I would say that U.S. officials and Iraqi officials are looking for the right 
people in the Sunni community to talk to in order to ensure that the Sunni Arab 
community . become part of the political process," Abizaid, who leads U.S. 
Central Command, told CNN. "It makes sense to talk to them. We're not going to 
compromise with Zarqawi."

But most analysts agree that the lines are blurred between Iraqi nationalists 
and foreign fighters responding to a call to religious war by such militants as 
Bin Laden. Most experts agree there is some level of coordination and 
cooperation between foreign fighters and Iraqi insurgents.

A U.S. official in Baghdad, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the U.S. 
was not negotiating with insurgents. "We've always talked to people, and many 
of those people have some sort of link to insurgents," the official said in an 
e-mail. "It's hard to gauge how much influence anyone has with insurgents, or 
to determine which insurgent group they're associated with for that matter." 

But a high-level U.S. military commander in Iraq, also speaking on condition of 
anonymity, said earlier that U.S. and Iraqi forces must devise a mechanism that 
allows even hard-core insurgents to lay down their arms. 

"We talked to the Germans and Japanese at the end of World War II," he said in 
an interview. "You cannot have a peace if you do not have negotiations, if you 
do not have talks. Right now, there have been no serious discussions, so the 
insurgents, some of whom probably are fighting for a nationalistic point of 
view, they think they're trying to do the right thing by trying to run the 
coalition out."

He said that a message should be sent to insurgents and effectively state: "If 
you didn't murder anybody, if you did not saw anybody's head off and put it on 
the Internet, if you are not directly responsible for murder and terrorist 
acts, you are hereby pardoned. That pardon is contingent on you laying down 
arms, and fighting no more, forever."

Despite a string of high-profile military operations meant to squash rebel 
strongholds, insurgents often manage to regain footholds. Violent attacks in 
Mosul have increased since U.S.-led forces attempted to root out insurgents 
there late last year. Authorities in the ethnically mixed city have shut down 
all but three police stations out of fear of attacks. 

The 7 a.m. bombing in the produce market collapsed the front of the police 
building. The blast was followed by mortar rounds directed at the area. By late 
morning, the market - normally bustling with workers unloading produce crates 
from trucks and customers shopping for fruit - was deserted.

In Baghdad, insurgents shot dead a high-level police official on his way to 
work and fired a mortar shell that landed in the Baladiyat neighborhood, 
killing one woman and her two sons, police said. 

Insurgents also launched attacks in Kirkuk, striking police patrols with a 
roadside bomb and a car bomb in two separate incidents. At least seven officers 
were wounded. 

*



Times staff writers Tyler Marshall in Washington and Patrick J. McDonnell in 
Baghdad and special correspondents in Mosul and Kirkuk contributed to this 
report.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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