BAGHDAD, Iraq - US and Iraqi forces arrested a top aide to radical Shiite 
cleric Muqtada al-Sadr on Friday in Baghdad, his office said. 
 
 
   The 
 sign at the entrance to Camp Pendleton Marine Corps Base in California. A 
 US Marine pleaded guilty to murder and other charges connected to the 
 death of an Iraqi civilian outside Baghdad last year.[AFP]
   | 
Sheik 
Abdul-Hadi al-Darraji, al-Sadr's media director in Baghdad, was captured during 
a 2 a.m. raid on a mosque in the eastern neighborhood of Baladiyat, an official 
in al-Sadr's office said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of security 
concerns. 
The US military said special Iraqi army forces operating with coalition 
advisers captured a high-level, illegal armed group leader in Baladiyat, but it 
did not identify the detainee. It said two other suspects were detained by Iraqi 
forces for further questioning. 
The raid comes as Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has pledged to crack down on 
Shiite militias as well as Sunni insurgents in a planned security operation to 
quell the sectarian violence in Baghdad amid concerns that his reluctance to 
confront the Mahdi Army of his political backer al-Sadr led to the failure of 
two previous crackdowns. 
The US military accused the main suspect of having ties with the commanders 
of so-called death squads, which have been blamed for many of the killings that 
have left dozens of bodies, often showing signs of torture, on the streets of 
Baghdad. 
The suspect was detained "based on credible intelligence that he is the 
leader of illegal armed group punishment committee activity, involving the 
organized kidnapping, torture and murder of Iraqi civilians," according to the 
military statement. 
It also said he was reportedly involved in the assassination of numerous 
Iraqi security forces and government officials. 
"The suspect allegedly leads various illegal armed group operations and is 
affiliated with illegal armed group cells targeting Iraqi civilians for 
sectarian attacks and violence," the statement said, adding he was believed to 
be affiliated with Baghdad death squad commanders, including Abu Dura, a Shiite 
militia leader who has gained a reputation for his brutality. 
The official and an Iraqi police officer, who also 
declined to be identified for fear of reprisals, also said one of the mosque's 
guards was killed in a firefight during the raid that damaged the mosque walls, 
while four other people who were with the sheik were arrested.