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Iraq’s spiritual leader calls for new Iraqi government

BAGHDAD — The spiritual leader of Iraq’s Shiite majority called for a new, “effective” government Friday, increasing pressure on the country’s prime minister as an offensive by Sunni militants rages on.

Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani’s comments at Friday prayers contained thinly veiled criticism that Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, in office since 2006, was to blame for the nation’s crisis over the blitz by the al Qaeda-inspired Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

While Maliki’s State of Law bloc won the most seats in parliament in Iraq’s April 30 election, he now faces opponents bolstered by criticism Thursday from US President Barack Obama.

And with Iraq now asking the US for airstrikes to temper the militants’ advance — especially as they apparently prepared Friday to again assault the country’s biggest oil refinery — Maliki appears increasingly vulnerable.

“It is necessary for the winning political blocs to start a dialogue that yields an effective government that enjoys broad national support, avoids past mistakes and opens new horizons toward a better future for all Iraqis,” Sisanti said in a message delivered by his representative Ahmed al-Safi in the holy city of Karbala.

The Iranian-born Sistani, who is believed to be 86, lives in the holy city of Najaf south of Baghdad. A recluse, he rarely ventures out of his home and does not give interviews. Iraq’s Shiites deeply revere him, and a call to arms he made last week prompted thousands of Shiites to volunteer to fight against the Islamic State.

Sistani’s call to arms has given the fight against the Islamic State militants the feel of a religious war between Shiites and Sunnis. His office in Najaf dismissed that charge, and Safi on Friday said: “The call for volunteers targeted Iraqis from all groups and sects. … It did not have a sectarian basis and cannot be.”

Maliki has been seeking to place the blame for chaos in Iraq on the Islamic State and not his perceived exclusion of the Sunnis. However, questions persist on how much support, if any, the Islamic State enjoys among the Sunni population in areas it controls.

Ali Hatem al-Salman, a prominent tribal Sunni leader and a critic of Maliki, said Sunni tribesmen would fight the militants.

Using the commonly used Arabic acronym for the Islamic State, he told the Associated Press on Thursday: “Daash themselves know that the tribes will push them out. … There can’t be any trust given to Daash.”

Another Shiite cleric, Nassir al-Saedi, warned that the 300 US military advisers Obama plans to send to Iraq would be attacked. Al-Saedi is loyal to anti-US cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, whose Mahdi Army militia fought the Americans in at least two rounds of street warfare during their eight-year presence in Iraq.

“Our message to the occupier: … We will be ready for you if you are back,” he told a Friday sermon attended by Sadr supporters in Baghdad’s Sadr City district.

Less than three years after Obama heralded the end of America’s war in Iraq, he insisted Thursday in a White House address that he was not sending the military back into combat. Still, when coupled with previously announced steps, the president’s actions could put about 600 additional US troops in the midst of Iraq’s deeply unstable security situation.

Despite the deteriorating conditions, Obama has held off approving airstrikes that the Iraqi government has sought to stem an insurgency that has taken over the cities of Mosul and Tikrit and has pressed toward Baghdad. The president said he could still approve “targeted and precise” strikes if the situation on the ground required it, noting that the US had stepped up intelligence gathering in Iraq to help identify potential targets.

US officials say manned and unmanned US aircraft are now flying over Iraq 24 hours a day on intelligence collection missions.

Maliki’s Shiite-led government has long faced criticism of discriminating against Iraq’s Sunni and Kurdish populations. But it is his perceived marginalization of the once-dominant Sunnis that sparked recent violence reminiscent of Iraq’s darkest years of sectarian warfare after the 2003 US-led invasion.

Iraq’s newly elected parliament must meet by June 30 to elect a speaker and a new president, who in turn will ask the leader of the largest bloc to form a new government.

With Iraq in turmoil, Maliki’s rivals have mounted a campaign to force him out of office, with some angling for support from Western backers and regional heavyweights. On Thursday, their effort received a massive boost from Obama, who said: “Only leaders that can govern with an inclusive agenda are going to be able to truly bring the Iraqi people together and help them through this crisis.”

An “inclusive agenda” has not been high among priorities for Maliki, however. Many of his former Kurdish and Shiite allies have been clamoring to deny the prime minister a third term in office, charging that he has excluded them from a narrow decision-making circle of close confidants.

Maliki’s efforts last year to crush protests by Sunnis complaining of discrimination under his Shiite-led government sparked a new wave of violence by militants, who took over the city of Fallujah in the western, Sunni-dominated province of Anbar and parts of the provincial capital, Ramadi. Iraqi army and police forces battling them for months have been unable to take most areas back.

At the same time, many Iraqis complain of government corruption, the failure to rebuild the economy and too close ties with mostly Shiite Iran, a non-Arab nation that Sunni Arab states, including powerhouse Saudi Arabia, see as a threat to regional stability.

Maliki’s troubles come as militants and soldiers fight for control of the Beiji refinery, the country’s largest, some 155 miles (250 kilometers) north of Baghdad. The loss of the refinery would be a devastating symbol of the Baghdad government’s powerlessness in the face of a determined insurgency hostile to the West. By late Thursday, the two sides held different parts of the refinery, which extends over several square miles of desert.

The army officer in charge of protecting the refinery told the Associated Press on Friday that he believed the militants were regrouping to launch a new attack after his forces repelled one Thursday night. There was no immediate way to independently verify his claims.

The facility’s production accounts for just over a quarter of the country’s entire refining capacity. It goes strictly toward domestic consumption for gasoline as well as fuel for cooking and power stations.