BAGHDAD, Iraq - U.S. administrators in Iraq declared a radical Shiite cleric an "outlaw" Monday and announced a warrant for his arrest, heightening a confrontation after battles between his supporters and coalition troops killed at least 52 Iraqis and nine coalition troops, including eight Americans.\nAmerican officials would not say when they would move to arrest Muqtada al-Sadr, who is holed up in the main mosque in Kufa, Iraq, south of Baghdad, guarded by armed supporters.\nU.S. troops surrounded the city of Fallujah, Iraq, west of Baghdad, poised for a major operation in response to the grisly slaying and mutilation of four American civilians by insurgents there last week. A Marine was killed Monday in the Fallujah area, the military said, without providing details.\nThe showdown with al-Sadr threatened to heighten tensions with Iraq's Shiite Muslim majority at a time when U.S. troops are burdened by the Sunni guerrillas' bloody insurgency. But American officials apparently hope the Shiite public -- many of whom distrust al-Sadr -- will not rally around the cleric.\nBrig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt said the potential for violence depended on "whether (al-Sadr) decides to come peacefully or whether he decides to come not peacefully. That choice is the choice of Mr. Muqtada al-Sadr."\nAl-Sadr, a 30-year-old firebrand who frequently denounces the U.S. occupation in his sermons, vowed to resist.\nThe Americans "have the money, weapons and huge numbers, but these things are not going to weaken our will because God is with us," he said in a statement sent to the Arab TV station Al-Jazeera, which provided a copy to The Associated Press.\n"We don't fear death and martyrdom gives us dignity from God," al-Sadr said.\nSeveral hundred of his armed militiamen control Kufa, holding its police station and blocking a road leading to the main mosque.\nSheik Abu Mahdi al-Rubaie, a 35-year-old al-Sadr follower at the mosque, warned any U.S. move against al-Sadr would be "a very dangerous thing."\n"They will pay a heavy price. We will not allow them to enter Kufa ... We are ready to lay down our lives for al-Sayed," he said, using the Arabic word for "master" to refer to al-Sadr.\nU.S. officials said the warrant against al-Sadr -- on charges of murdering a rival cleric -- was issued months ago by an Iraqi judge and Iraqis only now want to carry it out. The crackdown on the opponent of the U.S. administration also comes as the June 30 deadline approaches for the transfer of power from the Americans to the Iraqis.\nMonday, President Bush portrayed al-Sadr's removal as a step toward protecting democracy. "This is one person that is deciding that rather than allowing democracy to flourish, he's going to exercise force," he told reporters. "We just can't let it stand."\nL. Paul Bremer, the top U.S. administrator in Iraq, declared al-Sadr an "outlaw."\n"He is attempting to establish his authority in the place of the legitimate authority. We will not tolerate this," Bremer said.\nSunday's clashes -- sparked by the arrest of an al-Sadr aide who is also accused in the slaying of rival cleric Abdel-Majid al-Khoei -- were a surprise show of power by al-Sadr's militia, the Al-Mahdi Army.\nFighting was particularly fierce in Sadr City, a Shiite neighborhood in Baghdad, where militiamen ambushed U.S. soldiers, killing eight and sparking battles that killing 30 Iraqis and wounding 110 others. It took a column of tanks to restore quiet and force the militiamen out of police stations they had seized after police fled.\nSunday, outside the city of Najaf, south of Baghdad, firing between militiamen and Spanish-led coalition troops killed one Salvadoran soldier and 22 Iraqis.\nViolence broke out Monday morning in another Shiite neighborhood of the capital, al-Shola, Iraq, where militiamen clashed with a U.S. patrol. An American armored vehicle caught fire and an Iraqi ran away with a heavy machine gun. A U.S. Apache helicopter was hit by small arms fire and responded with a barrage of machine-gun rounds, the U.S. military said.
Warrant issued for Iraqi cleric
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