Help - Search - Members - Calendar
Full Version: Iraq
Common Ground Common Sense > Issues that Affect Our Lives > Foreign Policy and National Defense > Foreign Policy & National Defense Issues Archive
Pages: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
Snuffysmith
--------------------
A Place Apart in Iraq
--------------------

Kurdistan offers jobs in a nation hungry for them. For migrants from the Arab south, the prosperous region is like a different country.

By Jeffrey Fleishman
Times Staff Writer

February 16 2005

SULAYMANIYA, Iraq — Sahib Ali Abbas hopped onto a bus and rode until the date palms turned scarce and the mountains rose, big and wrinkled and waiting for snow.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...0,7523165.story
Snuffysmith
http://www.zaman.com/?bl=columnists&alt=&t...050216&hn=16631

The Danger Awaiting Iraq
Snuffysmith
http://www.boston.com/dailynews/047/world/..._choose_:.shtml
Shiite leaders fail to choose a prime minister; two-man race goes to secret ballot
Snuffysmith
http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/n...10915828.htm?1c

Iraq Exile Chalabi Refuses to Admit Defeat
Snuffysmith
A 'pragmatic' Islamist for Iraq
Ibrahim Jaafari, a former exile and a physician, appears poised to
become Iraq's new prime minister. By Dan Murphy and Jill Carroll
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0217/p06s01-woiq.html?s=hns
Snuffysmith
--------------------
Iraqi Alliance to Vote on Nominee
--------------------

Leading Shiite coalition will decide between Chalabi and Jafari as candidate for premier.

From Associated Press

February 17 2005

BAGHDAD Top Shiite Muslim politicians failed to agree Wednesday on their nominee for prime minister, shifting the race to a secret ballot.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...headlines-world
Snuffysmith
Rights Group: Chemical Ali; Linked to Basra Massacre

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=BA9A81:2F72C9D

Human Rights Watch says new information implicates Ali Hassan al-Majid
- known as Chemical Ali; - in execution of hundreds of
Shi'ite Muslims A U.S.-based human rights group says recently
gathered information could lead to new charges against a notorious
former Iraqi general who is accused of ordering the 1988 massacre of
Kurds in northern Iraq.

In a report issued Thursday, Human Rights Watch says the new
information implicates Ali Hassan al-Majid - known as "Chemical Ali" -
in the execution of hundreds of Shi'ite Muslims during an uprising in
the southern city of Basra in 1999.


Ali Hassan al-Majid "Chemical Ali" Iraqi officials say they
expect Chemical Ali to be among the first of several top lieutenants
of Saddam Hussein's regime to go on trial for a range of crimes,
including crimes against humanity and genocide.

In December, Iraq's interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi said the trials
of top officials of the ousted regime would begin within weeks. But so
far, no trial dates have been set.
Snuffysmith
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=stor...d=540&ncid=2100

Four Blasts Kill at least 29 in Baghdad
Snuffysmith
4 Blasts Target Shiites in Baghdad; At Least 29 Die

By Patrick Quinn

Four explosions ripped through Baghdad on Friday, killing at least 29 people and injuring dozens on the eve of Shiite Islam's most important holiday, officials said. It was the deadliest day since Iraq's landmark elections last month.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
The Religious Face of Iraq

By Philip Kennicott

The Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, the most revered Shiite leader in Iraq, seems through the prism of the Western media to be an elusive character. He has not met with coalition leaders directly, and he doesn't speak to reporters. His views on current affairs are known through statements made by those who surround him, which makes the ayatollah appear a remote, oracular, figure. Although he has avoided jumping directly into the political process, election results announced this week make his Shiite supporters the dominant force in the new government, and Sistani has proved in the past that he can muster tens of thousands of protesters to influence the course of the new Iraq. His impact on U.S. efforts to remake Iraq has been enormous. And yet he remains in many ways an enigma, an unseen hand and a powerful force guiding the country who knows where.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
Iraq Must Unify Or Face 'Disaster,' Premier Warns

By Anthony Shadid

BAGHDAD, Feb. 17 -- Interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi has warned that unless Iraq takes steps toward national reconciliation -- "not by words but by deeds" -- the country faces disaster, and he said he feared that Iraq could fall under the sway of neighboring Iran and an austere form of Islamic government that would derail efforts to foster democracy.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/artic...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
At Least 23 Killed in Baghdad Attacks on Shi'ites

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=BB20A2:2F72C9D

Attacks come a day after Electoral Commission certified election
results solidifying Shiite dominance in new National Assembly

Locals look on as U.S. Humvee attends scene following suicide
bomb-blast at al-Khadimain mosque Insurgents have attacked Shi'ite
Muslims in Baghdad Friday, during that community's most solemn
religious period.

Iraqi police and hospital officials say at least 23 people were killed
and dozens wounded in three separate attacks. In two of them, suicide
bombers approached worshippers leaving Friday prayers at two mosques
and detonated their explosives.

Authorities say the third attack was from a mortar shell that landed
on a cafe near a mosque in a Shi'ite neighborhood.

The mosques were packed with Shi'ite worshippers marking the first two
days of mourning for the revered Imam Hussein, who was the grandson of
the Prophet Mohammed. Observances will culminate Saturday.

The attacks also come a day after Iraq's Electoral Commission
certified election results that solidify Shi'ite dominance in the new
National Assembly.

Some information for this report provided by AP, AFP and Reuters.
Snuffysmith
2 Indonesian Journalists Missing in Iraq

http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=BB20A4:2F72C9D

Indonesian Embassy says journalists were heading to Baghdad in rented
car when they disappeared Indonesian diplomats in Iraq say two
Indonesian journalists are missing.

Indonesian Embassy officials in Baghdad said Friday the journalists,
who work for an Indonesian television station (Metro TV,) were heading
to Baghdad in a rented car when they disappeared Tuesday in the region
of Ramadi.

No other details were immediately available.

Ramadi, 100 kilometers west of Baghdad, has been a center of insurgent
activity and frequent clashes between U.S. and Iraqi forces fighting
militants.

In another development, the U.S. military says an American soldier was
killed Thursday by small arms fire in the northern city of Mosul.

News of the latest violence comes a day after election officials
announced that final election results had given the country's main
Shi'ite coalition a slim majority in the interim National Assembly.

Some information for this report provided by AP, AFP and Reuters.
heritage
Buy stock in Iraq? Not yet.
February 14, 2005 edition
By Thomas Watterson | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor

http://csmonitor.com/2005/0214/p14s01-wmgn.html

....According to a recent article in Workforce Management magazine, more than 200 civilians working for US contractors have been killed in Iraq since the spring of 2003. More than a third of them were Americans, the magazine said.
Snuffysmith
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,7374-1489391,00.html

Disgraced, despised, exiled. Now he's in line for top job
heritage
Army Destroyed Mock Execution Pictures

Updated 7:44 AM ET February 18, 2005
By LARRY NEUMEISTER

NEW YORK (AP) - Pictures of U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan posing with hooded and bound detainees during mock executions were destroyed after the Abu Ghraib prison scandal in Iraq to avoid another public outrage, Army documents released Friday by the American Civil Liberties Union show.

The results of an Army probe of the photographs were among hundreds of pages of documents released after the ACLU obtained a federal court order in Manhattan to let it see documents about U.S. treatment of detainees around the world.

The ACLU said the probe shows the rippling effect of the Abu Ghraib scandal and that efforts to humiliate the enemy might have been more widespread than thought....

http://dailynews.att.net/cgi-bin/news?e=pr...88au6j80&src=ap
heritage
AP: Iraqi Died While Hanging by His Wrists
Updated 10:38 AM ET February 18, 2005

By SETH HETTENA

SAN DIEGO (AP) - An Iraqi whose corpse was photographed with grinning U.S. soldiers at Abu Ghraib died under CIA interrogation while in a position condemned by human rights groups as torture _ suspended by his wrists, with his hands cuffed behind his back, according to reports reviewed by The Associated Press.

The death of the prisoner, Manadel al-Jamadi, became known last year when the Abu Ghraib prison scandal broke. The U.S. military said back then that the death had been ruled a homicide. But the exact circumstances under which the man died were not disclosed at the time.

The prisoner died in a position known as "Palestinian hanging," the documents reviewed by The AP show. It is unclear whether that position was approved by the Bush administration for use in CIA interrogations.

The spy agency, which faces congressional scrutiny over its detention and interrogation of terror suspects at the Baghdad prison and elsewhere, declined to comment for this story, as did the Justice Department.....

http://dailynews.att.net/cgi-bin/news?e=pr...88b0nv80&src=ap
heritage
Fatal U.S. Military Accidents Up in Iraq

Updated 11:38 AM ET February 18, 2005
By ROBERT BURNS

WASHINGTON (AP) - U.S. troops in Iraq have suffered a rash of fatal vehicle accidents and other non-combat deaths in recent weeks, even as the number killed in insurgent attacks has declined.

Although details of recent accidents have not been made public, some officials believe the jump in their number can be explained in part by turbulence from the troop rotation that is now approaching its peak, with tens of thousands of troops arriving and like numbers going home.....

Although U.S. deaths in insurgent attacks have declined the past two months, the number of attacks has not. The U.S. military command in Baghdad said Thursday that in the two weeks since the Jan. 30 election there have been 1,012 insurgent attacks, compared with 1,876 from Jan. 1-29.

The spike in non-hostile deaths in January and February coincides with the troop rotation, which began in small stages last fall but reached its peak over the past two months. The last time there was a notable increase in non-combat deaths was during the previous troop rotation _ in February and March of 2004, according to Pentagon casualty statistics.....

http://dailynews.att.net/cgi-bin/news?e=pr...88b1k100&src=ap
Snuffysmith
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/apm...20Chalabi%20Q~A

Q&A: Ahmad Chalabi on official Iraq role
Snuffysmith
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washingt...aily__pentagon/

Iraq Insurgents Can Conduct 60 Strikes Daily - Pentagon
heritage
Bush's Iraq Coalition Shrinking
Updated 2:28 PM ET February 18, 2005
By DEB RIECHMANN

http://dailynews.att.net/cgi-bin/news?e=pr...88b43u80&src=ap

WASHINGTON (AP) - Sometimes it's hard to know who your friends are _ even if they're helping you fight a war. President Bush, who hopes to coax more Iraq support from European allies next week, used to boast that some 50 nations had joined the United States in Operation Iraqi Freedom. Today, a public listing is nowhere to be found.

One thing, though, is clear: The coalition is shrinking.....there is a public listing of the countries that have actual troops in Iraq. These 20-plus countries, which have combat and support forces in Iraq under the command of Gen. George Casey Jr., make up the multinational force.

Daniel Goure, a Defense Department official in the first Bush administration, said current Bush officials apparently decided to start talking about a "multinational force" instead of a "coalition" to avoid questions about which countries were in or out....The last time the list was updated on the Internet was last October.
heritage
This is related to the military.....but not Iraq.

Soldier Says She Was Mistreated After Rape Updated 6:12 PM ET February 18, 2005
By JOHN CURRAN

http://dailynews.att.net/cgi-bin/news?e=pr...88b7d0g0&src=ap

MAYS LANDING, N.J. (AP) - A former National Guard lieutenant said in a TV interview that the Army treated her "like a criminal" after she accused a fellow soldier of rape.

Jennifer Dyer, 26, said in the interview to be broadcast Sunday on "60 Minutes" that Army investigators sequestered her in a hotel after the incident and threatened her with arrest when she didn't return to the base following a two-week convalescent leave.

The Army "has done nothing but lie to me and treat me like a criminal," said Dyer, who is from Mays Landing and has agreed to be identified by name. CBS released a partial transcript of the taped interview on Thursday.

Her alleged attacker, Michael Hall, 35, also a National Guard lieutenant, is scheduled to go on trial on rape charges next month in a military court in Alabama. He has said the sex was consensual.

Dyer's lawyer, Frederick Klepp, said the alleged attack occurred after she went to an officer's club last August while training at Camp Shelby, near Hattiesburg, Miss.

Hall's lawyer, Victor Kelley, has said that Dyer made up the rape allegation to get out of the Army. She has since requested and received an honorable discharge.

Last month, a military hearing officer recommended that the rape charge be dropped.

[CBS has not lost its guts. Do you think CBS will get reamed again by right wing bloggers?]
heritage
Shiites in Iraq Attacked in Five Bombings
Updated 8:11 PM ET February 18, 2005
By JAMIE TARABAY

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - Many kneeling in prayer, Shiite Muslims were attacked in their mosques and on the streets Friday on the eve of their holiest day, with five bombings killing 36 people in the deadliest day in Iraq since the Jan. 30 national elections.


http://dailynews.att.net/cgi-bin/news?e=pr...88b94no2&src=ap
heritage
Sens. McCain, Clinton to Visit Iraq
Updated 7:25 PM ET February 18, 2005
By DEVLIN BARRETT

http://dailynews.att.net/cgi-bin/news?e=pr...88b8ero0&src=ap

WASHINGTON (AP) - Sens. John McCain and Hillary Rodham Clinton, who have often challenged the Pentagon's planning and management of the Iraq war, are part of a bipartisan group of senators traveling to Iraq this weekend to meet with military leaders and others, officials said Friday.

The five senators flying to Iraq are McCain, R-Ariz.; Clinton, D-N.Y.; Susan Collins, R-Maine; Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.; and Russ Feingold, D-Wis. All but Feingold are members of the Senate Armed Services Committee. They plan to meet top Iraqi officials and local female leaders.

In December, McCain said he had "no confidence" in Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, but he added that keeping Rumsfeld in the position was President Bush's choice, not his.....

[Do you think that Susan Collins has any presidential goals? She headed the intelligence reform and now is deep in military issues....]
Snuffysmith
Attacks at Baghdad mosques kill 36:

Survivors said a man wearing a "suicide belt" blew himself up on Friday in al-Kathimain mosque in Abu Dushair district south of Baghdad.
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/CD0...183056DAE39.htm

http://tinyurl.com/5kbo7
Snuffysmith
Attacks at Baghdad mosques kill 36:

Survivors said a man wearing a "suicide belt" blew himself up on Friday in al-Kathimain mosque in Abu Dushair district south of Baghdad.
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/CD0...183056DAE39.htm

http://tinyurl.com/5kbo7
Snuffysmith
Attacks at Baghdad mosques kill 36:

Survivors said a man wearing a "suicide belt" blew himself up on Friday in al-Kathimain mosque in Abu Dushair district south of Baghdad.
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/CD0...183056DAE39.htm

http://tinyurl.com/5kbo7
Snuffysmith
Four U.S. Soldiers Killed in Iraq Attacks:

Four U.S. soldiers were killed in separate guerrilla attacks in Iraq, the U.S. military said Friday, three in or near the northern city of Mosul and the fourth in a roadside bomb blast north of Baghdad.
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?t...storyID=7675632

http://tinyurl.com/44szd


Three killed, five wounded in blast near cafe in Baghdad:

Three civilians were killed Friday while five others were wounded when a bomb went off near a caf{ in Al-Shu'ala city of the Shiites majority, Iraqi police confirmed today.
http://www.kuna.net.kw/Home/Story.aspx?Lan...=en&DSNO=706113

http://tinyurl.com/7xmu8


Bullet-riddled bodies of police chief’s sons found in Iraq:

The bodies of two kidnapped sons of Najaf police chief were found riddled with bullets in central Iraq on Friday.
http://tinyurl.com/3qxcq
Snuffysmith
'US Discreetly Reinforcing N. Iraq Military Bases' :

US military bases have been discreetly reinforced in the Kerkuk (Kirkuk) region against the possibility that Turkey might intervene militarily if Kurds take control of the city.
http://www.zaman.com/?bl=hotnews&alt=&trh=20050218&hn=16621

http://snipurl.com/cw1u
Snuffysmith
Suicide Bombers Kill at Least 35 in Baghdad Area
By JAMES GLANZ
Five suicide bombers exploded their bombs in crowds of
worshipers on the eve of the Shiite holy day of Ashura.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/02/19/internat.../19Iraq.html?th
Snuffysmith
--------------------
Iran Will Dominate Bush's Europe Trip
--------------------

As transatlantic ties thaw, Tehran's nuclear program could prove a sticking point with the U.S. skeptical of a diplomatic initiative.

By Tyler Marshall and Edwin Chen
Times Staff Writers

February 19 2005

WASHINGTON — President Bush departs Sunday on a European fence-mending trip under a full head of political steam.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/na...1,7820971.story
Snuffysmith
Bombers Strike Shiite Mosques in Baghdad on Eve of Holy Day
--------------------

By John Daniszewski and Patrick J. McDonnell
Times Staff Writers

February 19 2005

BAGHDAD; Suicide bombers, some wearing difficult-to-detect explosive vests, struck two crowded Baghdad mosques and other targets Friday on the eve of the Shiite Muslim holy day of Ashura, killing nearly 30 people and wounding dozens.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...0,1415631.story
heritage
The Harris Poll. Feb. 8-13, 2005. N=1,012 adults nationwide. MoE ± 3.

"Do you favor keeping a large number of U.S. troops in Iraq until there is a stable government there OR bringing most of our troops home in the next year?"

Wait for Stable Govt 39%

Bring Home In Next Year 59%

Unsure 1%

http://www.pollingreport.com/iraq.htm
heritage
Iraqi Shia talk to pick new PM
Monday 21 February 2005, 16:26 Makka Time, 13:26 GMT

Vice-president Ibrahim al-Jafari ® is leading the pack

Talks between Shia leaders to pick Iraq's next prime minister have resumed after a break for the Shia religious festival of Ashura.

The Shia parties, which won many seats in the new transitional parliament but failed to win an outright majority, have been haggling with each other over who will succed interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi.

Secular politician and a contender for the post himself, Ahmad Chalabi of the Iraqi National Congress told reporters that a limited committee was meeting and a decision would be taken to decide from the list; refering to the list of parties and candidates of the winning United Iraqi Alliance. ....

Ibrahim al-Jafari, the current vice president and leader of Iraq's oldest Shia party, Dawa, is widely expected to get the job, while Chalabi is seen as an outside candidate. [let us hope so]

http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/D18...07FCCE9BC6B.htm
heritage
Three US troops die in Iraq blast

Monday 21 February 2005, 21:35 Makka Time, 18:35 GMT

Three US soldiers have been killed and eight wounded in a bomb attack in Iraq, the US military has said....

The death brings to 1482 the number of US military personnel killed in Iraq since the US-led war in March 2003.

http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/1A2...A20578E6CC1.htm
heritage
Loud blast heard in Baghdad

Monday 21 February 2005, 9:46 Makka Time, 6:46 GMT

....On Sunday, US marines and Iraqi troops set up checkpoints and imposed an 8pm to 6am curfew on the city of Ramadi, part of a nationwide effort to stop the fighting after last month's election.

The operation followed bombings on Shia Muslims, killing at least 50, while they were marking Ashura, the most important day in the Shia religious calendar.

[does this sound like freedom to you?]

http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/577...DE22D14ABA0.htm
heritage
Insurgents attacking Baghdad’s lifelines
By James Glanz The New York Times
Tuesday, February 22, 2005

http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/02/21/news/sabotage.html

BAGHDAD Attacks by insurgents to disrupt Baghdad's supplies of crude oil, gasoline, heating oil, water and electricity have reached a degree of coordination and sophistication not seen before, Iraqi and American officials say.
.
The new pattern, they say, shows that the insurgents have a deep understanding of the complex network of pipelines, power cables and reservoirs feeding Baghdad, the Iraqi capital.
.
The shadowy insurgency is a fractured movement made up of distinct groups of Sunnis, Shiites and foreign fighters, some of them aligned and some not.
.
However, the shift in the attack patterns strongly suggests that some branch of the insurgency is carrying out a systematic plan to cripple Baghdad's ability to provide basic services for its six million citizens and to prevent the fledgling government from operating..

A new analysis by some of those officials reveals that the choice of targets and the timing of sabotage attacks have evolved over the last several months, shifting from economic targets to become what amounts to a siege of the capital.
.
In a stark illustration of the change, out of more than 30 sabotage attacks on the oil infrastructure this year, no reported incident has involved the southern crude oil pipelines that are Iraq's main source of revenue. Instead, the attacks have aimed at gas and oil lines feeding power plants and refineries and providing fuel for transportation around Baghdad and in the north.
.
In an indication of how carefully chosen the targets are and how knowledgeable the insurgency is about the workings of the infrastructure, the sabotage often disrupts the lives of Iraqis, leaving them dependent on chugging, street-corner generators to stave off the darkness and power televisions or radios, robbing them of fuel for stoves and heaters, and even halting the flow of their drinking water..

The overall pattern of the sabotage and its technical savvy suggests the guidance of the very officials who tended to the nation's infrastructure during Saddam Hussein's long reign, current Iraqi officials say.
.
The only reasonable conclusion, said Aiham Alsammarae, the Iraqi electricity minister, is that the sabotage operation is being led by former members of the ministries themselves, possibly aided by sympathetic holdovers.
.
"They know what they are doing," Alsammarae said. "I keep telling our government, 'Their intelligence is much better than the government's."'
.
Sabah Kadhim, a senior official at the Iraqi Interior Ministry, said he believed the sabotage was part of a larger, two-faceted plan that included the terror operations that have killed so many Iraqis over the last two years.
.
The new pattern of sabotage, he said, lays the groundwork for chaos - a deeply resentful populace, the appearance of government ineffectuality, a halt to major business and industrial activities..

The second side - the suicide bombings, assassinations and kidnappings - he said, is aimed in large measure in sowing discord among ethnic and religious groups..

"And I think they, honestly, stand a better chance with the first than the second," Kadhim said.
.
Whatever the source of the plan, it shows clear signs of being centrally controlled, Iraqi and U.S. officials say.
.
"There is an organization, sort of a command-room operation," Thamir Ghadhban, the Iraqi oil minister, said Thursday in an interview. In his area of responsibility, Ghadhban said, "the scheme of the saboteurs is to isolate Baghdad from the sources of crude oil and oil products."
.
"And they have succeeded to a great extent," he said.
.
Ghadhban supported his assertions with a map showing that in November, December and January, in widely scattered attacks, insurgents simultaneously struck all three crude oil pipelines feeding Baghdad's Doura fuel refinery, the largest Iraqi producer of gasoline, kerosene and other refined products.
.
During that period, more than 20 attacks occurred on a set of huge pipelines carrying things like oil, kerosene, gasoline and other fuels to Baghdad from oil fields and refineries in the north.
.
In contrast, in the same region, the map shows an economically crucial crude oil pipeline - one that carries oil for export - was not attacked even once.
.
The map was prepared by his ministry by cataloging the exact coordinates, dates and nature of the attacks and combining that information with a detailed schematic of the web of pipelines, fuel depots, roads and refineries in and around Baghdad.
.
Those attacks caused widespread disruptions, including severe gasoline shortages.
.
And Ghadhban said that when he tried to make up for the shortages by trucking the fuel in with tankers, saboteurs went after the fuel convoys and the bridges that they crossed to reach Baghdad.
.
After allowing a reporter to view on a computer screen the map and an array of other graphs and figures describing the pattern of sabotage, Ghadhban declined to provide a copy; but his ministry's analysis has circulated among other officials in Iraq, and one of them agreed to give a copy of the map to The New York Times.
.
Oil and transportation are far from the only infrastructure that the insurgents have struck to isolate Baghdad and deprive its residents.
.
In mid-January, a bomb hit a water main from a treatment plant that supplies 65 percent to 70 percent of the city's drinking water. It struck in just the spot that would lead to a collapse of water pressure in nearly the entire system. Most Baghdad residents were left with little or no running water for more than a week.
.
Attacks on carefully chosen targets were also a major reason that the output of Iraq's national electricity grid recently slumped below the amount it produced before the U.S.-led invasion in April 2003, despite billions of dollars of projects aimed at repairing power plants and transmission lines, and adding huge new electricity generators..

And although the overall output has recently reached prewar levels, that qualified success has been punctuated by repeated blackouts caused by breakdowns, sabotage and other problems.
.
With all of their knowledge, and a seemingly unquenchable hatred for the people now running the government, the insurgents have transformed their initially generic brand of sabotage into a more subtle science, said Gal Luft, executive director of the Institute for the Analysis of Global Security in Washington, which closely tracks Iraq's oil infrastructure.
.
The attacks now aim to "prolong the destruction," Luft said. Insurgents achieve that aim by going after critical junctures in the pipeline system and focusing on equipment that is difficult to repair or remanufacture - even taking into account what stocks of spare parts may be low in Iraqi warehouses, he said.
.
heritage
An EU voice of caution
By Judy Dempsey International Herald Tribune
Monday, February 21, 2005

http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/02/20/news/solana.html

...Solana, however, remains pessimistic on Iraq's future, dismissing any notion that the U.S. decision to invade has been vindicated. ...
.
"So you think you are vindicated because there were elections in a region that is very close to Iran and that the Iranians might try and influence Iraq," he said. "It is not a vindication.
.
"Think about it. What kind of regime will emerge? It is too early to say. You don't know what is going to happen in Iraq."
.
His sober assessment, he said, was informed by his long talks with leaders in the region.
.
Yes, he noted, participation in the recent elections was high. But he added: "Is this a vindication when you count how many billions of dollars have been spent, how many people have been killed, how many soldiers have died? It is a little too early to say."
.
He paused. "I can tell you, if you go to Jordan and talk to the king of Jordan, he is in panic." Egypt's president, Hosni Mubarak, too, Solana said, "is in panic.".

Solana added: "They wonder what kind of Iraq will emerge. Will it be a government of theologians or engineers?".....
.
So far in Bush's second term, Solana said, there have been "two good sentences" from the president and his new secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice: "One. Four years of war, let's have four years of diplomacy. Good Line. Second. Four years of monologue to be followed by four years of dialogue. Good line. Let's see if that's true.".

A test case could be Iran. ......
"We are trying to do the utmost to make it work," said Solana, adding that if it did not work, the problem would "move from one capital to another" - to the United Nations Security Council in New York, where Iran could face sanctions for not complying with the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.
.
"We know that Iran has, according to the treaty, the right to have civil nuclear power for electricity," Solana added. "But we don't want them to have the capability to go nuclear. We don't think the Middle East needs more nuclear weapons in a region that is already so unstable."
.
The Europeans would like the United States to join these negotiations so as to apply maximum pressure on Iran. But Solana stressed that they could not push Washington "into a difficult situation."
.
"The Americans have not had relations with Iran for over 20 years," he said. "And President Bush has said very clearly they don't want to legitimate the regime. They cannot get engaged because it means legitimating them."....
.
heritage
Bush's Uncle Profits From Iraq Stock Sale
Updated 10:37 PM ET February 23, 2005

http://dailynews.att.net/cgi-bin/news?e=pr...88eknug1&src=ap

By MATT KELLEY

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush's uncle made more than $450,000 last month by selling stock in a defense contractor whose profits are growing because of the Iraq war, records show.

William H.T. Bush made the money by exercising stock options in St. Louis-based Engineered Support Systems, Inc. Bush is a member of ESSI's board of directors and therefore had to report the sale to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Bush, the youngest brother of former President George H.W. Bush, did not return a telephone message seeking comment Wednesday afternoon. He told the Los Angeles Times, which first reported the stock sale Wednesday, that he had not pulled any strings in Washington for the company.....

The Pentagon's inspector general is investigating whether an ESSI subsidiary improperly got a contract to make equipment from the Air Force. That contract was overseen by Darleen Druyun, a former Air Force contracting official serving a nine-month prison term for contract fraud involving Boeing.
heritage
Iraqi TV Airs Tape of Purported Confession
Updated 7:08 AM ET February 24, 2005

By MAGGIE MICHAEL

http://dailynews.att.net/cgi-bin/news?e=pr...88es7hg0&src=ap

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - The Syrian intelligence officer who appeared on the U.S.-funded Iraqi state television station had a stark message about the insurgency _ he'd helped train people to build car bombs and behead people.....

Al-Iraqiya TV can be seen nationwide and is believed to be widely watched by Iraqis _ mainly those who cannot afford satellite dishes offering the Persian Gulf-based Al-Jazeera and Al-Arabiya stations. But the station, which went on the air in May 2003 with help from the Pentagon, is viewed by many Iraqis as an American propaganda tool.....
heritage
Father and Son to Fight Together in Iraq

http://dailynews.att.net/cgi-bin/news?e=pr..._050220&src=abc

Updated 9:02 AM ET February 24, 2005

When Chris Phelps left Camp Lejeune, N.C., for Iraq last week, he said goodbye to his family, but the 34-year-old Marine major told his father he would see him shortly.

That's because Master Gunnery Sgt. Kendall Phelps, a 57-year-old music teacher from Silver Lake, Kan., will be joining his son there next month.

Last Fought in Vietnam

Members of the 5th Civil Affairs Group, the Phelpses will spend seven months together in Al Anbar province, one of the most dangerous areas of Iraq.

"I'm psychologically imbalanced, " joked Kendall Phelps, a Vietnam Veteran who last saw combat 37 years ago.

He reluctantly retired from the Marine Reserves in 1999, but after Sept. 11 Kendall began trying to re-enlist.
heritage
Car Bomb Attack Kills 15 Iraqi Policemen
Updated 7:49 AM ET February 24, 2005

http://dailynews.att.net/cgi-bin/news?e=pr...88esqo00&src=ap

By SAMEER N. YACOUB

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - A man wearing a police uniform drove a car bomb inside the main police compound in Saddam Hussein's hometown north of Baghdad on Thursday, setting off a massive explosion that killed 15 police and wounded 22, officials and witnesses said.

At least four other police were killed in separate attacks across the country, including another suicide car bomb assault on a police convoy in Iskandariyah, 30 miles south of the capital.

In the capital, gunmen opened fire on a bakery in eastern Baghdad, killing two people and wounding a third, police said.

The violence came a day after interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi announced he was forming a coalition to try to hold onto his post in the next government and block the candidate of the dominant Shiite political alliance. Kurdish parties also weighed in with demands for top posts, setting up a possible showdown over the role of religion in a new Iraq.
heritage
Network Helps Saudis to Iraq for Jihad

Updated 1:58 PM ET February 24, 2005

http://dailynews.att.net/cgi-bin/news?e=pr...88f27v83&src=ap

By DONNA ABU-NASR

.....Ahmed is one of many Saudi youths _ estimates run from the low hundreds to as many as 2,500 _ who have slipped into Iraq in the past two years, often traveling through Syria to join other Arab and Muslim recruits eager to translate a fiercely anti-U.S., al-Qaida-inspired ideology into strikes against Americans and their Western and Iraqi allies.....

In January, Iraq's national security adviser Kasim Daoud said most of the infiltrations are from Iraq's western border, which it shares with Syria, Jordan and Saudi Arabia. He accused Syrian authorities of conspiring to assist the insurgency _ something Damascus has denied. Daoud also accused Iran of "clear interference" in Iraq. "We are monitoring penetration of many insurgents crossing the border" with Iran, he said, although Tehran, too, has denied that it allows militants to cross.

The Saudi border is inhospitable for militants: Its flat, desert terrain is equipped with image-recognition technology that can detect movement across the frontier.

The Saudis say they are guarding the border stringently because they do not want a post-Afghanistan style problem with militants streaming back home to wage jihad on the ruling family. Saudis believe "Arab-Afghans" set up al-Qaida's infrastructure in the kingdom upon their return in the 1990s, and they're behind terrorist attacks in Saudi Arabia during the past few years.

It's easy for Saudis to go to Syria since they are not required to get visas; tourists from Persian Gulf countries are especially welcome because of the huge sums of money they spend.

Still, Saudi militants are sent to Syria mostly via another country because airport officials might be suspicious of a man traveling alone to Damascus, according to Faris bin Hizam, a Saudi journalist who has been researching the issue of "Iraqi-Saudis" for two years.

"There, the man would be met by a contact, spirited away to a hiding place and then smuggled into Iraq," bin Hizam said.

He said more than 350 Saudis have been killed in Iraq from an estimated total of 2,000 to 2,500 men who have gone there since the war began in March 2003....
heritage
NBC News/Wall Street Journal Poll conducted by the polling organizations of Peter Hart (D) and Bill McInturff ®. Feb. 10-14, 2005. N=1,008 adults nationwide. MoE ± 3.1.

"When it comes to the war in Iraq, do you think that removing Saddam Hussein from power was or was not worth the number of U.S. military casualties and the financial cost of the war?"

Worth It 44%
Not Worth It 49 %

"Do you think that the war in Iraq is generally over, with most of the challenges behind us, or do you think that most of the challenges in Iraq remain ahead?"

Most Challenges Ahead 73%

-------

The Harris Poll. Feb. 8-13, 2005. N=1,012 adults nationwide. MoE ± 3.

"Do you favor keeping a large number of U.S. troops in Iraq until there is a stable government there OR bringing most of our troops home in the next year?"

Bring Home In Next Year 59%

http://www.pollingreport.com/iraq.htm
heritage
http://csmonitor.com/2005/0225/p01s03-woiq.html

Iraq in Transition
from the February 25, 2005 edition

Iraq's neighborhood councils are vanishing
After their members were killed, many councils were scared out of existence.

By Dan Murphy | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
heritage
http://csmonitor.com/2005/0223/p03s01-wogi.html

from the February 23, 2005 edition

War-crimes trials gear up in Iraq

Hussein and others may be tried in next few weeks in cases that will ripple around the world.

By Faye Bowers | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

WASHINGTON – With the paint still drying on the walls of the newly constructed Baghdad courthouse, the Iraqi Special Tribunal is counting down to T-day, when it places the alleged perpetrators of the world's most gruesome crimes on trial in front of television cameras for the world to witness.

War-crimes trials for Saddam Hussein and 11 of his Baathist Party cohorts, accused of genocide, crimes against humanity, and other human rights violations, will begin within the next two to four weeks, according to a US government official who works with the Iraqis.....

[Do you think Bush will get another poll ratings boost out of this? Just as his ratings slip below 50%, something happens to help Bush]

The first to sit in the dock is likely to be Ali Hassan al-Majid, known as "Chemical Ali," for the role he played in the chemical weapons attacks that killed as many as 100,000 Kurds in northern Iraq in 1988. Then, Barzan Ibrahim al-Hassan al-Tikriti, commander of the Special Republican Guard as well as director of the Mukhabarat, the notorious intelligence service, is expected to be tried for torturing and murdering thousands of people.

Although the courts are set up differently - much to the distress of international law and human rights experts - the cases brought against members of the Hussein regime will parallel in some ways the prosecutions of members of the Slobodan Milosevic regime in the special war crimes tribunal created for the former Yugoslavia. It will be about building responsibility all the way to the top - to Mr. Hussein himself.

"The trick for the prosecutors is not necessarily to prove the crimes were committed but to prove individual responsibility," says Nathan Brown, an Arab world expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington......

Advisers from the US State Department and Department of Justice (DOJ) have been working with the Iraqi court since it was launched by the US-led Coalition Provisional Authority in December 2003.....

....several international law and human rights experts are worried about the viability of the tribunal. They cite a multitude of reasons - from the inclusion of the death penalty to the "opaqueness" of the procedures to due process guarantees. They also worry about compliance with the Geneva Conventions and how US involvement could affect perceptions in a region where trials like these have never been held.....

Unlike the war crimes court for the former Yugoslavia, which was created by the international community, the US set up the Iraqi tribunal, with the help of Iraqi leaders. Moreover, the new Iraqi government is basically a transitional regime that will begin drafting a new constitution at about the same time these trials are held.
heritage
from the February 24, 2005 edition

http://csmonitor.com/2005/0224/p06s01-woiq.html?s=u

In Fallujah's wake, marines go west

US and Iraqi forces have launched Operation River Blitz, targeting insurgents in cities along the Euphrates.

By Dan Murphy | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

....Three weeks after Iraq's elections, US forces are still leading the fight in Anbar, the most dangerous of the country's 18 provinces. Marines have launched operations in at least three other provincial cities in operation "River Blitz."....

The US effort, which flows from the November assault on Fallujah, is designed to restore some government control over the town of Anbar. Until now, Anbar has provided safe ground for insurgents, with the roads and trails along the Euphrates River serving as "rat-lines" for men and weapons to move around the country...

The last time Bravo company was here, in October, the "muj" had taken over the town council and the local police station without resistance. They killed locals whom they accused of supporting the new government and the US....

[we seem to keep covering ground we already covered]
heritage
Army Mechanic Faces Desertion Charge

Updated 7:11 PM ET February 25, 2005

http://dailynews.att.net/cgi-bin/news?e=pr...88frt8o1&src=ap

By RUSS BYNUM

SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) - An Army mechanic who refused to deploy to Iraq for a second tour of duty will be court-martialed on desertion charges, officials said Friday.

Sgt. Kevin Benderman, 40, missed his unit's deployment flight Jan. 7 after giving his commanders notice 10 days earlier that he planned to seek a discharge as a conscientious objector. Benderman said he had become opposed to war after serving in the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
heritage
Iraq: Key Insurgent Caught; 3 GIs Killed

Updated 6:40 PM ET February 25, 2005

http://dailynews.att.net/cgi-bin/news?e=pr...88frf506&src=ap

By PATRICK QUINN

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - The Iraqi interim government announced the arrest of a man it described as a key figure in the country's most feared terrorist group and expressed confidence Friday it was tightening the noose around his leader, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.

Word of the capture came as insurgents ambushed a U.S. patrol, killing three American soldiers and wounding nine. Friday's attack took place in Tarmiyah, about 20 miles north of the capital.

In Haqlaniyah, 85 miles northwest of Baghdad, residents said U.S. military vehicles equipped with loudspeakers were driving through town offering $25 million for information leading to the arrest of al-Zarqawi _ thought to be one of the masterminds behind a wave of car bombings, kidnappings, and beheadings across Iraq.

"We are very close to al-Zarqawi, and I believe that there are few weeks separating us from him," Iraq's interim national security adviser, Mouwafak al-Rubaie, told The Associated Press.
heritage
British Soldiers Get Prison in Iraq Abuse

Updated 4:14 PM ET February 25, 2005

http://dailynews.att.net/cgi-bin/news?e=pr...88fpa9o0&src=ap

By MATT SURMAN

OSNABRUECK, Germany (AP) - Three British soldiers were sentenced Friday to as many as two years in prison and dismissed from the military for abusing Iraqi civilians in the southern city of Basra in 2003 _ a case that raised comparisons to abuse by U.S. forces at Abu Ghraib prison.

Lance Cpl. Mark Cooley was sentenced to two years in prison, Cpl. Daniel Kenyon 18 months and Lance Cpl. Darren Larkin five months. All were dismissed from the service "with disgrace."

A court-martial this week found Kenyon and Cooley guilty of mistreating Iraqi detainees suspected of looting a humanitarian aid warehouse outside Basra in May 2003.
This is a "lo-fi" version of our main content. To view the full version with more information, formatting and images, please click here.
Invision Power Board © 2001-2010 Invision Power Services, Inc.