Iraq Sunni party severs US ties

Iraq Sunni party severs US ties

Iraq's biggest Sunni Arab political party has suspended dealings with American military personnel and civilians following a raid by US-backed Iraqi forces near Fallujah in which one man was killed.

The Iraqi Islamic Party (IIP), headed by Tareq al-Hashemi, the Iraqi vice-president, said on Saturday that there had been a "hidden political motive" in the killing.
US forces said that one man, who they alleged was an anti-government fighter, had been arrested and that one person had been killed in the joint US-Iraqi raid, carried out on Friday.
But the IIP said in a statement that five people had been detained and one killed "in his bed", and that the targets of the raid were senior party officials.
The IIP said it would suspend all communication with US personnel until it got "a convincing explanation of what happened, accompanied by an official apology".
It also demanded assurance those responsible would be punished, compensation for the victims and the release of the five detainees.
Supporters of the IIP demonstrated against the raid on Saturday.
Security threat
The incident has inflamed tensions in Anbar province, where Fullajah is located, ahead of provincial elections scheduled for the end of January.
Following the US invasion of Iraq, Anbar province had been the scene of major battles between US forces and Sunni fighters until 2006, when Sunni tribal leaders agreed to join forces with the US against al-Qaeda in Iraq.
The move established the so-called Awakening Councils, which later spread to other Sunni areas.
The councils are seen as a successful US move in Iraq and have been one of the main reasons for recent security gains.
But the IIP has been locked in a bitter rivalry with the Sunni tribal leaders who joined forces with the US and that has raised concerns that the political tensions could spark violence and disrupt the Awakening Councils.
American forces handed over security responsibility for the province to the Iraqis on September 1, but they retain a presence in Anbar, which stretches west from Baghdad to the borders with Syria, Jordan and Saudi Arabia.
PHOTO CAPTION
Supporters of the IIP demonstrated against the raid, in which one man was killed [AFP]
Al-Jazeera

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