The Baghdad Kidnapping

Kidnapping at Ministry of Higher Education in Baghdad; Raid against Sadr’s Mahdi Army; multiple Ramadi IED cells targeted

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Map of Baghdad. Click to view.

A group of insurgents have conducted a daring daylight kidnapping in the heart of Baghdad. A large group of men in police uniforms, with a reported 30 vehicles, raided the Ministry of Higher Education in Baghdad’s Karrada district. Initial reports indicated up to 150 employees were abducted, however subsequent reports indicate the number is about 70.

Iraqi forces have surrounded several locations in Baghdad, where the kidnappers are believed to have retreated. They are in the Shia districts. Deutsche Presse-Agentur reports “a majority of the more than 100 kidnapped Iraqi government workers had been released or rescued.” Five senior members of the Baghdad police force have been arrested, including the police chief of the Karrada district. Shia militias and corrupt members of the Baghdad police force are strongly suspected of conducting the kidnappings.

The abductions at the education ministry occur as Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is considering reshuffling the Cabinet. The ministers of Oil, Health, Justice, Housing and Reconstruction, Transportation and Culture are expected to lose their portfolios. Muqtada al-Sadr, the Iranian backed cleric and leader of the Mahdi Army, currently holds the ministries of Health, Housing and Reconstruction, Transportation.

Yesterday, CENTCOM Commander General John Abizaid met with Prime Minister Maliki, and demanded the Shiite militias be disarmed. This follows calls from General Casey and Ambassador Khalilzad just prior to the U.S. midterm elections for the Mahdi Army to disband. Last night, U.S. and Iraqi forces raided the offices of Sadr’s lieutenants Baghdad’s Shula district. Six were said to be killed in the raids.

U.S. forces also struck at bombmakers in Ramadi. A doctor at a hospital in Ramadi claims 30 civilians were killed, however al Qaeda has been known to intimidate hospital workers in Anbar province to inflate casualty results. The U.S. states 11 insurgent IED emplanters were killed in three separate strikes.

Baghdad and Ramadi remain the focal points of the insurgency. Baghdad is a mish-mash of Sunni insurgents, al Qaeda and Shiite militias battling it out with suicide bombs, IED attacks and death squads. Ramadi remains a haven for al Qaeda, as the Iraqi government failed to approve the clearing of the city during last year’s offensive in Anbar prior to the national election.

Bill Roggio is a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and the Editor of FDD's Long War Journal.

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5 Comments

  • With such a large and audacious attack as the kidnapping mentioned, the area security forces would have to either be totally complicit or completely apathetic. Either way, they need to be sweeped out of authority. Hopefully Maliki’s actions provide the change necessary, but they can’t be easy to replace.

  • The Baghdad Kidnapping

    Courtesy of The Fourth Rail:
    Kidnapping at Ministry of Higher Education in Baghdad; Raid against Sadr’s Mahdi Army; multiple Ramadi IED cells targeted
    A group of insurgents have conducted a daring daylight kidnapping in the heart of Baghdad. A…

  • Andrew R. says:

    Shawn,
    The thing is, can you blame the largely Shi’ite police and soldiers from turning a blind eye to Mahdi killers? After all, after enduring 30 years of repression, they’ve now had to endure another three years of the most abominable terrorism imaginable. It’s pretty understandable that they’d want to see some rough payback delivered to the Sunni community that lets Ba’ath insurgents and Al Qaeda continue to operate.

  • I wasn’t aware of the exact ethnic composition of the kidnapped. Assuming they were all Sunni, then perhaps complicity or apathy can entirely be expected. At the same time, no matter how they feel, as security officials it cannot be tolerated.
    Obviously, the city is extremely large. It is difficult to put this kind of event in perspective at the ground level in terms of logistics. Unfortunately, the general press never provides this kind of analysis.

  • DJ Elliott says:

    A couple of quotes out of the news. Aparently the PM was not amused…
    http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/iraq
    —-
    “I do not need only the captives to be released, but I also want those who did that act,” Maliki said at Baghdad university during a visit to calm shocked professors and students after Tuesday’s abductions.
    —-
    The interior ministry arrested five senior police officers from Karrada, the area where the crime occurred, saying they “should be held responsible.”

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