Sadr: Resistance Will Resume if U.S. Forces Stay in Iraq

W300

Shiite radical leader Moqtada al-Sadr said on Saturday that his supporters will resume their resistance to U.S. forces in Iraq if they do not leave as scheduled by the end of the year.

"If the Americans don't leave Iraq on time, we will increase the resistance and restart the activities of the Mahdi Army," Sadr said in a fiery statement read by a spokesman to thousands of followers in Mustansariyah Square in northeast Baghdad.

He was referring to his militia which mounted repeated uprisings against U.S.-led forces in Iraq before he stood it down in August 2008.

"Out, out America," spokesman Salah al-Obeidi repeatedly warned, speaking on the eighth anniversary of the day when Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein was ousted and Baghdad fell to U.S.-led forces.

The Americans must leave, "now, now, now," he warned, reading the statement from Sadr, who divides his time between the central shrine city of Najaf and neighboring Iran. "Out, out America," he added.

The message from Sadr came a day after U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates ended a two-day visit to Iraq, in which he said US forces could stay on beyond 2011 in some numbers if asked.

Gates asked Iraqi politicians to speed up their request if they wanted some troops to remain.

"My basic message to them is (for us to) just be present in some areas where they still need help. We are open to that possibility," the Pentagon chief said, speaking at a U.S. military base in northern Iraq.

"But they have to ask, and time is running out in Washington," Gates said, after meetings with Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, President Jalal Talabani and Massud Barzani, president of the autonomous Kurdistan region in the north.

But Sadr's statement warned that U.S. forces must leave, "to the last soldier and base."

Nearly 50,000 American troops still remain in Iraq, down from a peak of more than 170,000 after the invasion and ahead of the planned full withdrawal at the end of this year.

The controversial Sadr gained widespread popularity among Shiites in the months after the U.S.-led invasion of 2003, and his Mahdi Army militia later battled U.S.-led coalition and Iraqi troops in several bloody confrontations.

But in August 2008, Sadr suspended the activities of the militia, which once numbered in the tens of thousands, after major U.S. and Iraqi assaults on its strongholds in Baghdad and southern Iraq that the spring.