World | Basra Iraqi Assault on Basra Was 'Thrown Together' Americans taken aback by Maliki's hasty, improvised raid By Jason Farago Posted Apr 3, 2008 6:37 AM CDT Copied Iraqi children stand on top of a destroyed Iraqi Army's vehicle in Basra, Iraq, Wednesday, April 2, 2008. (AP Photo) American officials were expecting a gradual, methodical operation when Nouri al-Maliki moved Iraqi troops into Basra to restore order in the city. What they witnessed instead was a rush job: an Iraqi raid that had little forethought and began even before the last of the soldiers had arrived. "He went in with a stick and he poked a hornet's nest," one coalition official told the New York Times. President Bush has hailed the Iraqi offensive against the Sadrist seizure of Basra as a "defining moment," but it was little more than an improvisation, insiders say. As the bloodshed mounted, Gen. David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker jumped in to provide both military and political support. “Nothing was in place from our side,” said Crocker. “It all had to be put together.” Read These Next An undersea cable that changed our world is coming up. Boebert defends leaking Hillary Clinton photo. Baby born deep in Amazon rainforest is 'a source of hope.' The Lancet unloaded on Robert Kennedy Jr. in an editorial. Report an error