Iraq sacked 1,300 troopers and policemen today for fighting poorly or not at all in last month’s Basra battles. “Some of them were sympathetic with these lawbreakers,” said one official. “Some refused to battle for political, national, sectarian or religious reasons.” The firings are tantamount to Baghdad admitting it failed in the clashes against Shiite insurgents, the New York Times reports.
Earlier this month, a government official blamed soldiers' reticence on fear: “They felt the other party was too strong, and too courageous and they couldn’t confront them.” Today Baghdad also drafted a law to ban parties from October's provincial elections unless they disband their militias—a clear attempt to increase pressure on cleric Moqtada al-Sadr. (More Iraqi government stories.)