Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06HILLAH3
2006-01-06 17:01:00
CONFIDENTIAL
REO Hillah
Cable title:  

NAJAF SADRISTS SUGGEST RESPONSIBILITY FOR KILLING CLERIC;

Tags:  PREL PGOV KISL IZ 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L HILLAH 000003 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 1/6/2016
TAGS: PREL PGOV KISL IZ
SUBJECT: NAJAF SADRISTS SUGGEST RESPONSIBILITY FOR KILLING CLERIC;
MORTARS HIT NEAR AL-HAKIM COMPOUN, 2005D

REF: HILLAH 05-0384

CLASSIFIED BY: ALFRED FONTENEAU, REGIONAL COORDINATOR, REO,
AL-HILLAH, STATE.
REASON: 1.4 (b),(d)



C O N F I D E N T I A L HILLAH 000003

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 1/6/2016
TAGS: PREL PGOV KISL IZ
SUBJECT: NAJAF SADRISTS SUGGEST RESPONSIBILITY FOR KILLING CLERIC;
MORTARS HIT NEAR AL-HAKIM COMPOUN, 2005D

REF: HILLAH 05-0384

CLASSIFIED BY: ALFRED FONTENEAU, REGIONAL COORDINATOR, REO,
AL-HILLAH, STATE.
REASON: 1.4 (b),(d)




1. (C) Summary: Flyers distributed from the offices of Moqtada
Al-Sadr in Najaf and Kufa and from his compound in Najaf
beginning on January 4 boast that a group called the "Battalions
of Imam Mousa Al-Sadr" carried out the December 26 assassination
of Shaykh Fattah Al-Thabhawi, a mid-level cleric associated with
both Grand Ayatollah Ali Al-Sistani and the Supreme Council for
the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI.) In a separate incident
on January 5, mortars landing near the Najaf compound of
Ayatollah Mohammed Saeed Al-Hakim injured three bystanders. End
summary.


2. (C) Flyers available in the Najaf and Kufa offices of Moqtada
Al-Sadr and at his Najaf compound beginning on January 4 appear
to offer a claim of responsibility for the December 26
assassination of Shaykh Fattah Al-Thabhawi, a mid-level cleric
affiliated with both Sistani and SCIRI (reftel.) The flyers,
headlined "The Islamic Iraqi Resistance," announce that they
were published by "The Battalions of Imam Mousa Al-Sadr for the
Vengeance of the Religious Mujahid Hawza." (Note: Mousa Al-Sadr
was a Lebanese Shi'a leader who formed the Amal Movement in
Lebanon but disappeared in Tripoli, Libya in 1978. End note.)


3. (C) The flyers appear to read as both an announcement of the
previously unheard-of group's existence and as a claim of
responsibility for the killing of Al-Thabhawi. The flyers read,
"We executed a spy who was working for one of the traitor
militias in Najaf since he confessed that he was working with
the invaders (a reference to Coalition Forces) to disgrace the
reputation of the Mujahid Hawza in Najaf." While Al-Thabhawi is
not named in the flyer, his recent, high-profile murder was
accompanied by rumors, according to SET Najaf local staff, that
he had been responsible for providing information about wanted
terrorists to the Iraqi Police (IP) and Coalition Forces. The
flyers also reference IP raids on the home and office of
Ayatollah Ahmed Al-Hassani Al-Baghdadi, a Sadrist cleric, which
took place in the wake of Al-Thabhawi's killing. The flyers
threaten further killings against "invaders and spies" who
threaten Iraq.


4. (C) On January 5, IP contacts reported that two mortar shells
landed just outside the Najaf compound of Mohammed Saeed
Al-Hakim, a cousin of the father of SCIRI Leader Abdul Aziz
Al-Hakim. The shells struck a car and a residence, badly
wounding two adults and a child. The wounded were taken to
Al-Hakim Hospital and the IP sealed the area and began searching
for the attackers.


5. (C) Comment: While SET Najaf local staff and other Najaf
contacts report no previous knowledge of the group mentioned on
the flyers, the fact that the flyers were distributed from
offices and the compound of Moqtada Al-Sadr would seem to
suggest that there is at least tacit Sadrist support for
Al-Thabhawi's killing. That the group apparently responsible for
the flyer also mentioned the raids against Al-Baghdadi, which
Sadr himself condemned and which sparked a Sadrist demonstration
in downtown Najaf, might also suggest at least a tenuous
connection between Sadr and the "Mousa Al-Sadr Battalion."
Further, the name of the group, which includes the label
"Mujahid Hawza," is reminiscent of the term "Speaking Hawza," a
name which Sadr frequently uses in reference to his following.
End comment.

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