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Deal with Mahdi kept U.K troops from Basra battles

By Xinhua,

Beijing : An agreement between British forces and the Mahdi Army encouraging the Shiite movement back into the political process prevented British soldiers from entering Basra during battles to aid Iraqi and American troops, The Times reported Tuesday.

No British soldier could enter Basra without the permission of Defense Secretary Des Browne, the newspaper said.

It quoted Lt. Col. Chuck Western, a senior U.S. Marine who advises the Iraqi army, as saying “I was not happy. Everybody just assumed that because this deal was cut nobody was going in. Cutting a deal with the bad guys is generally not a good idea.”

Britain’s Ministry of Defense said there had been no “accommodation” with the Mahdi Army, and said British troops had not been able to join the battle because no plans had been made.

“There was no ‘accommodation’ which prevented U.K. troops from entering Basra, the reason why troops were not sent in immediately was because there was no structure in place in the city for units to go back in to start mentoring the Iraqi troops,” a spokeswoman said.

The Times report said 4,000 British troops remained on the sidelines while U.S. and Iraqi forces battled militants in the southern city because of the deal with the Shiite group led by the cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.

It also quoted a “senior British defense source” as saying that the deal had severely damaged Britain’s reputation in Iraq.

“(Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al) Maliki and the Americans felt the British were morally impugned by the deal they had reached with the militia,” the source said. “While we had a strategy of evasion, the Americans just went in and addressed the problem.”