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Common Ground Common Sense > Issues that Affect Our Lives > Foreign Policy and National Defense > Foreign Policy & National Defense Issues Archive
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Snuffysmith
http://www.wpherald.com/storyview.php?Stor...24-035542-5916r

Analysis: The Danger of Iraqi Benchmarks
Snuffysmith
http://www.antiwar.com/orig/hunsinger.php?articleid=6435

A Thirty Year War?
George Hunsinger
Snuffysmith
http://www.antiwar.com/reese/?articleid=6434

Expensive Favor: Charley Reese
Snuffysmith
War critics astonished as US hawk admits invasion was illegal

Oliver Burkeman and Julian Borger in Washington
Thursday November 20, 2003: (The Guardian)

International lawyers and anti-war campaigners reacted with astonishment yesterday after the influential Pentagon hawk Richard Perle conceded that the invasion of Iraq had been illegal.

In a startling break with the official White House and Downing Street lines, Mr Perle told an audience in London: "I think in this case international law stood in the way of doing the right thing."

President George Bush has consistently argued that the war was legal either because of existing UN security council resolutions on Iraq - also the British government's publicly stated view - or as an act of self-defence permitted by international law.

But Mr Perle, a key member of the defence policy board, which advises the US defence secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, said that "international law ... would have required us to leave Saddam Hussein alone", and this would have been morally unacceptable.

French intransigence, he added, meant there had been "no practical mechanism consistent with the rules of the UN for dealing with Saddam Hussein".

Mr Perle, who was speaking at an event organised by the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London, had argued loudly for the toppling of the Iraqi dictator since the end of the 1991 Gulf war.

"They're just not interested in international law, are they?" said Linda Hugl, a spokeswoman for the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, which launched a high court challenge to the war's legality last year. "It's only when the law suits them that they want to use it."

Mr Perle's remarks bear little resemblance to official justifications for war, according to Rabinder Singh QC, who represented CND and also participated in Tuesday's event.

Certainly the British government, he said, "has never advanced the suggestion that it is entitled to act, or right to act, contrary to international law in relation to Iraq".

The Pentagon adviser's views, he added, underlined "a divergence of view between the British govern ment and some senior voices in American public life [who] have expressed the view that, well, if it's the case that international law doesn't permit unilateral pre-emptive action without the authority of the UN, then the defect is in international law".

Mr Perle's view is not the official one put forward by the White House. Its main argument has been that the invasion was justified under the UN charter, which guarantees the right of each state to self-defence, including pre-emptive self-defence. On the night bombing began, in March, Mr Bush reiterated America's "sovereign authority to use force" to defeat the threat from Baghdad.

The UN secretary general, Kofi Annan, has questioned that justification, arguing that the security council would have to rule on whether the US and its allies were under imminent threat.

Coalition officials countered that the security council had already approved the use of force in resolution 1441, passed a year ago, warning of "serious consequences" if Iraq failed to give a complete accounting of its weapons programmes.

Other council members disagreed, but American and British lawyers argued that the threat of force had been implicit since the first Gulf war, which was ended only by a ceasefire.

"I think Perle's statement has the virtue of honesty," said Michael Dorf, a law professor at Columbia University who opposed the war, arguing that it was illegal.

"And, interestingly, I suspect a majority of the American public would have supported the invasion almost exactly to the same degree that they in fact did, had the administration said that all along."

The controversy-prone Mr Perle resigned his chairmanship of the defence policy board earlier this year but remained a member of the advisory board.

Meanwhile, there was a hint that the US was trying to find a way to release the Britons held at Guantanamo Bay.

The US secretary of state, Colin Powell, said Mr Bush was "very sensitive" to British sentiment. "We also expect to be resolving this in the near future," he told the BBC.

Copyright: The Guardian.
Snuffysmith
http://www.washingtontimes.com/national/20...05727-3863r.htm

Bush rejects timetable for Iraq pullout
Snuffysmith
Eight policemen, five Shiite poultry vendors killed in Iraq :

The bodies of eight Iraqi policemen and five Shiite poultry vendors were found in two separate areas near the capital, said security sources and relatives.
http://snipurl.com/ftyr



Iraqi Police Find Eight Beheaded Bodies :

Six of the bodies belonged to Shiite farmers taken from their home in Hashmiyat, 10 miles west of Baqouba, by an armed group wearing Iraqi army uniforms
http://snipurl.com/ftys



Suicide Car Bomber Kills Six in Iraq :

A suicide car bomber blew himself up Saturday outside an Iraqi police officer's home north of Baghdad, killing at least six people and wounding at least a dozen, police said.
http://snipurl.com/ftyt



Iraqi Reporter Shot Dead By U.S. Troops:

An Iraqi reporter working for an American news organization was shot and killed in Baghdad by U.S. troops after he apparently did not respond to a shouted signal from a military convoy, witnesses said.
http://snipurl.com/ftyu



Iraqis Fear Era of Relentless Chaos, Cruelty:

The mood darkens among residents as a wave of bombings swells the death toll. The new violence quiets talk of success against rebels.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article9273.htm

http://snipurl.com/ftyv



Iraq Shi'ite leader wants insurgents wiped out:

One of Iraq's most powerful Shi'ite leaders, Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, ruled out any dialogue on Friday with insurgents who, he said, had declared all out war on his community and "must be terminated".
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/MAC454670.htm

http://snipurl.com/ftyx



Iraq: The carve-up begins:

As the costs of the Iraq occupation spiral, British and American oil companies meet in secret next week to carve up the country's oil reserves for themselves. Tom Burgis reports
http://www.thelondonline.co.uk/theline/art...p?articleID=437

http://snipurl.com/ftyy



US caused more deaths in Iraq than Saddam, says anti-war tribunal :

The World Tribunal on Iraq (WTI), a grouping of NGOs, intellectuals and writers opposed to the war in Iraq, on Friday accused the United States of causing more deaths in Iraq than ousted president Saddam Hussein.
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp.../154590/1/.html

http://snipurl.com/ftz0



Iraqi oil workers lament lack of jobs :

"We believe American forces must withdraw immediately," Al Asade said outside the Port's Terminal 6. "We want to rebuild our country as Iraqis."
http://snipurl.com/ftz1



Iraq's power struggle as supplies falter :

Speak to any Iraqi and they will tell you their standard of living has not improved since the toppling of Saddam Hussein two years ago. Many will tell you it has got worse.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4618359.stm



Republicans join critics of war in Iraq:

In a worrying sign for the White House, which has tended to paint war critics as unpatriotic, Republican senators appear less reluctant to raise concerns about the way the administration is running the campaign in Iraq.
http://news.ft.com/cms/s/d1b746e8-e43c-11d...000e2511c8.html

http://snipurl.com/ftz3



America turns on Bush over Iraq:

Three in five want troops out as President vows to stay
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americ...sp?story=649440

http://snipurl.com/ftz5



Did U.S. Soldiers Shoot Iraqi Kids and Plant Weapons On Their Bodies?

Warning

This reports contain images that should only be viewed by adults.
http://snipurl.com/fu04



Our loved ones deserve an Iraq inquiry :

Our loved ones gave their lives in the service of this country. They all died in the Iraq war. When they went to that war they believed they were being sent to defend our country. They were told it was their duty to disarm the Saddam regime of its weapons of mass destruction.
http://snipurl.com/fu07
Snuffysmith
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/internatio...059&partner=AOL

31 are Killed in Separate Suicide Blasts in Iraq
Snuffysmith
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/GF25Ak04.html



The first, not the last throes
Pepe Escobar
Snuffysmith
http://www.wpherald.com/storyview.php?Stor...25-015431-5244r

Terrorists in Iraq seen from Africa
Snuffysmith
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Bush's Credibility Takes a Direct Hit From Friendly Fire
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Cheney's remark on the Iraqi insurgency's 'last throes' undercuts a calibrated message.

By Doyle McManus
Times Staff Writer

June 26 2005

WASHINGTON; For months, President Bush has struggled to maintain public support for the war in Iraq in the face of periodic setbacks on the battlefield. Now he faces a second front in the battle for public opinion: charges that the administration is not telling the truth about how the war is going.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...-home-headlines
Snuffysmith
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U.S. Plans Expansion of Crowded Iraq Prisons
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By Ashraf Khalil and Patrick J. McDonnell
Times Staff Writers

June 26 2005

BAGHDAD; Faced with a ballooning prison population, U.S. commanders in Iraq are building new detention facilities at the notorious Abu Ghraib prison and Camp Bucca near the Kuwaiti border and are developing a third major prison, in northern Iraq.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...-home-headlines
Snuffysmith
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-1669640,00.html

General admits to secret air war in Iraq
theglobalchinese
Feingold pushes Bush for withdrawal timetable Fond du Lac Reporter
By Patty Brandl. US Sen. Russ Feingold has introduced a resolution in the US Senate calling on President Bush to create a timetable for achieving goals and withdrawing American troops from Iraq. “Disappointment about Iraq is deepening. The majority of Wisconsinites are very skeptical of the way the war is going,” Feingold, D-Wis., said in a telephone interview from Washington, D.C., on Thursday morning. “We didn’t sign up for an indefinite occupation of Iraq.” The Wisconsin senator said there are three important questions the administration must answer:
  • What is our mission?
  • What is our time frame in which our mission can be accomplished?
  • And over what period of time can our exit happen?
It’s not a cut-and-run strategy, he said. Troops would have to remain, particularly to provide training for the Iraqi military. And the United States will have to concentrate on making resources available to help the Iraqi people rebuild their government and their country. According to an Associated Press story, President Bush continues to press his argument that U.S. troops cannot specify a timetable for withdrawal until Iraq is assured of victory over the insurgents. Bush to address troops. The president will make a direct appeal to the American public in an address to troops at Fort Bragg, N.C., on Tuesday night with a call “to complete a mission” the United States has started in Iraq. The White House is asking television news networks to make live air time available. Feingold said a clear plan would help in budgeting more responsibly for current and future military needs. The resolution does not set up a time frame for troop withdrawal. Feingold said that’s something for the military commanders to decide. It does, however, call for a commitment by Bush to set a tentative schedule for withdrawal within 30 days of its passage. The senator said he returns to Wisconsin almost every weekend. When he meets with his constituents, he has noticed the number of people who approach him asking when the U.S. government can bring their sons and daughters home has been on the rise. “Soldiers are dying, the pace is increasing, and the people of Iraq are dying daily,” Feingold said. “Our defense is being weakened.” With five more Wisconsin soldiers killed in Iraq in recent months, he said it’s time to give people a vision of a plan for U.S. troops coming home. Volunteer army tested. “About 7,000 of our 10,000 people in the National Guard have had to go over there,” he said. “Our volunteer army concept is great. But some in the army are saying the military is in desperate straits.” Bush, speaking at a press conference Friday with Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, urged support for the U.S. effort in Iraq. “They (terrorists) know that ... the carnage that they wreak will be on TV,” Bush said. “They know that it bothers people to see death. And it does. It bothers me. It bothers American citizens. It bothers Iraqis. They’re trying to shake our will. ... And so, of course, we understand the nature of that enemy. “We also understand that there is reason to be optimistic about what’s taking place,” said Bush, pointing to the development of a new, democratic government in Iraq and training of Iraqi security forces that ultimately must defend the nation. Feingold said he’s concerned that if the military operations extend indefinitely, it could require more troops than would be available under the current volunteer military structure. “If it becomes a quagmire, it could force a draft,” he said. “I oppose a draft, but I do understand why they might need it if things go on as they are.”
Bush vows to defeat Iraqi rebels Tehran Times
Bush battles home front as ambush kills women Sydney Morning Herald (subscription)
Minneapolis Star Tribune (subscription) - New York Times - CNN International - MarketWatch - all 1,340 related »
theglobalchinese
Iran has no intention to improve ties with US:Ahmadinejad Xinhua
Iran's president-elect MahmoudAhmadinejad said here Sunday that he has no intention to improve Tehran's relations with the United States as long as Washingtonadopts a hostile attitude towards the Islamic Republic. "Iran will develop ties with almost all countries in the worldexcept for the United States, for we cannot develop relations witha country which always keeps a hostile attitude toward us,"Ahmadinejad told a press conference, which was his first publicshow as president-elect. Ahmadinejad stressed that Iran can and will develop relationsjust with amicable countries. "As long as Washington keeps behavinglike that, there is no need for Iran to develop ties with it."
Iran closes door on US News24
Iran's new hard-liner maps path Christian Science Monitor
Middle East Newsline - CNN - ITV.com - Turks.US - all 2,561 related »
theglobalchinese
Summary Box: USDA to Use 3rd Mad Cow Test Forbes
BETTER TEST: The Agriculture Department is pledging to use a more sophisticated test when determining the presence of mad cow disease in suspicious cattle. NEW CASE: After two tests on a beef cow showed conflicting results, the Western blot test was applied. That and other tests confirmed the second case of mad cow disease in the U.S. INTERNAL DISPUTE: Agriculture officials had initially declined to apply the more sophisticated test. The department's chief oversight officer later ordered it because of her concern with the other results.
Beef scare tests US on cow-feed policies Christian Science Monitor
Wants to reopen border despite new "mad cow" case MarketWatch
OregonLive.com - Atlanta Journal Constitution (subscription) - International Herald Tribune - Chicago Sun-Times - all 1,380 related »
theglobalchinese
US confirms direct meetings with insurgent leaders Boston Globe
The US military in Iraq has been holding face-to-face meetings with some Iraqi leaders of the insurgency there, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and the US commander in charge of Iraq confirmed yesterday. The talks are part of the military's revised campaign to drive a wedge between the Iraqi insurgents and foreigners, according to US commanders. Pentagon officials have acknowledged the strategy but have not, until now, spoken openly about efforts to contact some Iraqi insurgent leaders. Asked to respond to a report that US military representatives met with several Sunni Iraqi insurgents twice in June, Rumsfeld told Fox News ''there have probably been many more than that" and described the contacts as an effort to ''split people off and get some people to be supportive" of the political process in Iraq. Other parts of the US government, including the State Department and CIA, have also been holding secret meetings with Iraqi insurgent factions in an effort to stop the violence and coax them into the political process, according to US government officials and others who have participated in the efforts. The military plan, approved in August 2004, seeks to make a distinction between Iraqi insurgents who are attacking US troops because they are hostile to their presence, and foreign insurgents responsible for most of the suicide bombings -- which have killed more than 1,200 people in the last couple of months -- and whose larger political aims are unclear. General John Abizaid, commander of the US Central Command who is in charge of the war in Iraq, told CNN yesterday that ''US officials and Iraqi officials are looking for the right people in the Sunni community to talk to in order to ensure that the Sunni Arab community becomes part of the political process. And clearly we know that the vast majority of the insurgents are from the Sunni Arab community. It makes sense to talk to them." But, Abizaid added, ''We're not going to compromise with Zarqawi," a reference to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian who is believed to be leading that part of the insurgency involving foreign fighters, particularly Islamic extremists arriving from Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Yemen, and elsewhere. Rumsfeld compared the meetings to those Afghan President Hamid Karzai held with the Taliban, against whom the United States waged war in 2001. ''The same thing's going on in Iraq," he said. Rumsfeld and Abizaid were responding to an article in the Sunday Times of London, which reported that the meetings were held June 3 and June 13 at a summer villa near Balad, 40 miles north of Baghdad. Citing two Iraqi sources, the newspaper said that among the Sunnis in attendance was a representative from the Ansar al-Sunna Army, which claimed responsibility for killing 22 people in the dining hall of a US base at Mosul, and another from the Islamic Army in Iraq, which claimed responsibility for the murder of Italian journalist Enzo Baldoni. The newspaper said the insurgents ''had agreed beforehand to focus their main demand" on a guaranteed timetable of US withdrawal. ''We told them it did not matter whether we are talking about one-year or a five-year plan but that we insisted on having a timetable nonetheless," one of the Iraqi sources was quoted as saying. The newspaper said the meetings were supervised by Ayham al-Samurai, a Sunni Muslim who lived in the United States for 20 years and returned to Iraq to become electricity minister in the new government. The meeting included a senior military and a senior intelligence officer, a civilian staff aide from Congress, and a representative of the US embassy in Baghdad. During a series of interviews yesterday, Rumsfeld said the insurgency could last as long as 12 years but the role of US and foreign troops would diminish as Iraqi forces strengthen.
US admits secret talks with militants Newark Star Ledger
Rumsfeld: US Met With Iraq Insurgents Washington Post
Forbes - Winston-Salem Journal - Xinhua - all 571 related »
Snuffysmith
http://www.antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=6449

Biden's BS on Iraq
The Democratic leadership is Bush Lite
Snuffysmith
http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/internatio...i=5070&emc=eta1

Rumsfeld: Iraq Insurgency Could Last Years
Snuffysmith
http://itar-tass.com/eng/level2.html?NewsI...72657&PageNum=0

Iraqi militants blast oil pipelines south of Baghdad
Snuffysmith
U.S. Talks With Iraqi Insurgents Confirmed

By Dana Priest

Rumsfeld says the meetings were part of an effort to include Sunni factions that had forsaken the nascent Iraqi political process but may now have a change of heart.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
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U.S., Rebels in Iraq Talking
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Amid reports of direct contacts with militants and on a day of more deadly suicide attacks, American officials seek to quell doubts at home.

By Borzou Daragahi
Times Staff Writer

June 27 2005

BAGHDAD; Insurgents killed nearly three dozen Iraqis with suicide bombings and gun and mortar fire Sunday as a newly published report detailed direct contacts between leaders of violent rebel groups and high-level U.S. officials attempting to end the attacks.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/ir...-home-headlines
Snuffysmith
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Joint Isn't Jumping in Baghdad
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By Borzou Daragahi
Times Staff Writer

June 27 2005

BAGHDAD; Close your eyes and the dusty ballroom of Hadira Shalal seems to come alive with the sounds of Iraqi folk music and the scent of booze and cologne. The scattered wooden chairs of the deserted nightclub become the swirling figures of happy-go-lucky revelers flirting and line-dancing. Juicy kebabs and bottles of liquor appear on the bare tables, now piled up in the corners.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/ir...-home-headlines
Snuffysmith
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Islamic Law Controls the Streets of Basra
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Enforcers patrol the city and Shiite militiamen have taken over the police. Residents accused of infractions are beaten or killed.

By Louise Roug
Times Staff Writer

June 27 2005

BASRA, Iraq; Physicians have been beaten for treating female patients. Liquor salesmen have been killed. Even barbers have faced threats for giving haircuts judged too short or too fashionable.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/ir...-home-headlines
Snuffysmith
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...world-headlines

A Look at Iraq by the Numbers
Snuffysmith
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=100...euwhpg&refer=us

Bush's Credibility on Iraq Undercut by Violence, Slow Progress
theglobalchinese
Rumsfeld: Insurgency could last decadeCNN
An Iraqi man cleans debris and blood from the floor of a cafe after a mortar attack Sunday in Baghdad. US President George W. Bush was preparing a major address on the Iraq war as his defense chief predicted the insurgency could last another decade. Bush -- facing polls showing declining support among Americans for the war -- will deliver his speech from Fort Bragg, North Carolina on Tuesday, the one-year anniversary of the handover of sovereignty. It follows comments by U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld on Sunday that Iraqis, and not Americans, would defeat the insurgency -- but not for a long while. "The insurgency could go on for any number of years," Rumsfeld said in a U.S. television interview. "Insurgencies tend to go on five, six, eight, 10, 12 years. "Coalition forces, foreign forces are not going to repress that insurgency," he told Fox News. "We're going to create an environment that the Iraqi people and the Iraqi security forces can win." Rumsfeld said insurgents were trying to disrupt Iraq's transformation to democracy as leaders draft a constitution and plan for December elections to select a full-term government. "I would anticipate you're going to see an escalation of violence between now and the December elections," he told NBC's "Meet the Press." Rumsfeld's remarks came on another deadly day in Iraq. Three suicide bombings targeting Iraqi military and police stations killed more than 30 people, including 15 police officers, in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul on Sunday, U.S. military officials said. (More details) The violence continued Monday, with attacks in two Baghdad neighborhoods leaving four Iraqi civilians dead, police said. (More details) Rumsfeld and the commander of U.S. forces in the region, speaking on U.S. television talk shows Sunday, danced around questions about a report in the Sunday Times of London that U.S. officials were negotiating with insurgent leaders for an end to violence and a timetable for U.S. troop withdrawal. "I'm not sure that I would characterize it as a dialogue between U.S. officials and insurgents," Gen. John Abizaid, head of U.S. Central Command, said on CNN's "Late Edition." "I would say that U.S. officials and Iraqi officials are looking for the right people in the Sunni community to talk to in order to ensure that the Sunni Arab community ... becomes part of the political process," Abizaid said. "And clearly we know that the vast majority of the insurgents are from the Sunni Arab community." Rumsfeld said U.S. officials are talking to "people all across the spectrum, insurgents and opponents, people kind of leaning that way, people in the middle, people leaning toward the government and then the government." "The goal is to get everyone moving in the right direction towards the government," he told ABC News. "There's all kinds of talks going on, and that's a good thing." The two men carried similar messages on Sunday talk shows: that the United States would beat the insurgency, that the press is reporting only negative things about the war and that a timetable for withdrawal would be a mistake. Abizaid said the insurgency would fail, twice calling U.S. forces "the shield behind which politics take place." "This is not a quagmire," he said. "It is a marathon, and we're at about the 21st mile." Abizaid appealed for public support of the soldiers and their mission. "We don't need to fight this war looking over our shoulder worrying about the support back home," he told "Late Edition."

Mosul bombings
Fifteen police officers and 18 civilians were killed Sunday in Mosul, capping a deadly weekend in Iraq's third-largest city -- where insurgent violence has flared periodically since November. Sixteen civilian laborers died Sunday morning in a blast in the parking lot of the Kasak army post, the U.S. military said. A bombing at a police post outside Mosul's Jamahoori Hospital killed five police officers, military spokesmen said. A bomb hidden under a pile of watermelons in a truck outside the al-Toob police station in western Mosul killed 10 police officers and two civilians, Iraqi police and U.S. military spokesmen said. Despite the attacks, "policemen in Mosul have continued to man their posts," the U.S. military said. Most of Mosul's police force abandoned their posts after a series of attacks in mid-November. The string of bombings began Saturday night when a suicide car bomb targeting an Iraqi police convoy killed seven people, U.S. military officials said.

Baghdad attacks
In Baghdad, attacks in two neighborhoods killed four Iraqi civilians, police told CNN Monday. A bomb exploded Monday morning in front of the council office for the northern neighborhood of al-Adhamiya, killing a man and wounding his wife. Police said the attack took place around 9:30 a.m. (1:30 a.m. EDT). About 11 hours earlier, gunmen killed three people after opening fire on a barbershop in the southeastern neighborhood of al-Jadida. Police said attackers then placed a bomb inside the shop and blew it up before making their escape. Three bodies charred bodies were found inside. Al-Jadida is a section of Baghdad where Christians, and Sunni and Shiite Muslims live together. Earlier Sunday, Deputy Police Chief Col. Riyadh Abdulkrim was killed when gunmen opened fire while he was driving to work in southeast Baghdad's Mashtal neighborhood, police said. Two mortar rounds slammed into a residential area near a fire station in the eastern Baladiyat neighborhood, killing two Iraqi civilians and wounding two others, Iraqi police said Sunday. A U.S. soldier was killed and two others were wounded Sunday when a roadside bomb exploded in Baghdad, the U.S. military said.

Deadly helicopter crash
A U.S. Army AH-64 Apache helicopter crashed northwest of Baghdad Monday morning, killing the two crew members on board, the military said. The crash took place about 11 a.m. (3 a.m. ET) north of Taji -- about 20 miles (30 km) from Baghdad -- in central Iraq, the military said. No cause of the crash was given, and the incident is under investigation. Meanwhile, a U.S. Army soldier was killed Monday in the Iraqi capital while investigating a burning vehicle, the military said. The soldier with Task Force Baghdad was hit by small-arms fire around 10:15 a.m. (2:15 a.m. ET). The military said the soldier's unit was aiding Iraqi police at the scene of a vehicle fire when it came under attack. The deaths of the three soldiers brought to 70 the number of American deaths in the month of June -- 403 so far this year and 1,737 since the start of the war in March 2003.
CNN's Jane Arraf, Jamie McIntyre, Mohammed Tawfeeq and Enes Dulami contributed to this report.
US helicopter crashes north of Baghdad; casualties unknown Minneapolis Star Tribune (subscription)
Mosul area blasts kill 32 Chicago Tribune
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Snuffysmith
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article9278.htm

Index: Testimony from the World Tribunal for Iraq
History of US and UK Intervention in Iraq
Snuffysmith
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article9292.htm

The Conduct of the UN before and after the 2003 Invasion
H.C. von Sponeck
Snuffysmith
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article9279.htm

Violations of International Law Being Committeed By the Occupiers of Iraq
Culminating Session Testimony
Dahr Jamail
Snuffysmith
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article9280.htm

the Doctrine of Humanitarian Intervention and the Neo-Colonial Implications of Its Revival in Our Unipolar World
Snuffysmith
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article9293.htm

Illegality of Preventative Attack and Unilateral Use of Force
Philip Shiner
Snuffysmith
"The decisions on how to carve up Iraq are being made behind closed doors in Washington, London and Baghdad.
Iraq: The carve-up begins
Tom Burgis
Thursday 23 June 2005
As the costs of the Iraq occupation spiral, British and American oil companies meet in secret next week to carve up the country's oil reserves for themselves. Tom Burgis reports


In the driving seat: with so much clear profit at stake, the question of who owns Iraq's biggest natural resource is hotly contended / Getty
The Iraq war has so far cost America and Britain £105billion. But the financial clawback is gathering pace as British and American oil giants work out how to get their hands on the estimated £3trillion worth of oil.

Executives from BP, Shell, Exxon Mobil and Halliburton, Dick Cheney's old firm, are expected to congregate at the Paddington Hilton for a two-day chinwag with top-level officials from Iraq's oil ministry. The gathering, sponsored by the British Government, is being described as the "premier event" for those with designs on Iraqi oil, and will go ahead despite opposition from Iraqi oil workers, who fear their livelihoods are being flogged to foreigners. The Met will be on hand to secure the venue ahead of the conference.

"This is a networking opportunity for UK businesses involved in Iraqi oil," explained Dr Hussain Rabia, managing director of the consultancy Entrac Petroleum Ltd. "We have the moral support of the UK government. They're bringing the guys over from Iraq, offering them visas. We expect all the big oil companies to be there," he said.

Delegate numbers are described as "confidential". Shell spokesman Simon Buerk would not confirm that a representative of the company would be attending, but said he "wouldn't be at all surprised if they were".

"We aspire to establish a long-term presence in Iraq," he said. "We have been helping the [Iraqi] Ministry of Oil and engineers with training."

Those who have purchased their £1,200 tickets can expect access to executives from Iraq's oil ministry, including Salem Razoky, the director general of exploration.

But Iraqi oil workers are furious about the conference. "The second phase of the war will be started by this conference carving up the industry," said an outraged Hasan Juma'a, head of the Iraqi General Union of Oil Employees. "It is about giving shares of Iraq to the countries who invaded it - they get a piece of the action as a reward. The British government will back this action in order to pay its debt in Iraq."

Hasan, who represents 23,000 skilled oil workers, fears that deals struck at the conference will see profits from Iraq's massive oil reserves - the second richest in the world - lining the pockets of multinational corporations at the expense of the Iraqi people.

Previous form suggests his concerns are well founded. Under the initial wage table drawn up by Paul Bremer's provisional Baghdad government in September 2003, oil workers were to receive a minimum monthly pay packet of £25. After a threatened union strike, it was raised to £38. And, Hasan insists, "Iraqi oil workers are good enough to rebuild without any need of help. "

Greg Muttitt, a researcher with Platform, an independent environmental think thank, agrees. "The decisions on how to carve up Iraq are being made behind closed doors in Washington, London and Baghdad.

"This conference is a key part of the plan to help multinational companies get stuck in once those arrangements are in place. It's a corporate feeding frenzy - they're not writing the recipes, they're tucking in their napkins."

Yahia Said, an Iraqi research fellow in global governance at the London School of Economics, commented:

"Iraq's oil is very cheap to extract. In the lack of transparency and with Iraq under occupation, people suspect oil companies are up to foul play. But those companies wouldn't yet dare sign a contract under the present government because it lacks legitimacy. But the oil companies are eyeing each other - this conference is like a dating game."

http://www.thelondonline.co.uk/theline/art...p?articleID=437
Snuffysmith
Bush Tyranny In Iraq Surpasses That Of Saddam.

In a close race Bush beats Saddam.

The Evidence File
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article9304.htm

http://snipurl.com/fv8y
Snuffysmith
Incinerating Iraqis; the napalm cover up

by Mike Whitney

Two weeks ago the UK Independent ran an article which confirmed that the US had "lied to Britain over the use of napalm in Iraq". (06-17-05) Since then, not one American newspaper or TV station has picked up the story even though the Pentagon has verified the claims. This is the extent to which the American "free press" is yoked to the center of power in Washington. http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article9307.htm

http://snipurl.com/fv8l
Snuffysmith
Articulating The Unspeakable: The Strategy Of Genocide:

The Islam of the Qur'an is a righteous religion, supporting a unique form of culture and civilization. Let's make peace with its people.

By Casey Butler

The Bush administration's decision to invade and occupy Muslim nations in perpetuity, while intentionally keeping knowledge of the Qur'anic doctrine of self-defense from the American people, is the USA's politically correct, long-term, 'final solution' for "Islamic terrorism."
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article9294.htm

http://snipurl.com/fv8w
Snuffysmith
Bush Tyranny In Iraq Surpasses That Of Saddam.

In a close race Bush beats Saddam.

The Evidence File
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article9304.htm

http://snipurl.com/fv8y
Snuffysmith
At Least 37 Killed In Iraqi Violance:

Fifteen people were killed and seven wounded when a bomber blew himself up among a crowd of people gathered in a parking lot next to the Al-Kisk army base west of the city
http://snipurl.com/fv8z



2 Killed as U.S. Helicopter "Crashes":

Two Task Force Baghdad Soldiers were killed around 11 a.m. June 27 when their AH-64 Apache helicopter crashed northwest of Baghdad .
http://www.mnf-iraq.com/Releases/June/050627f.htm

http://snipurl.com/fv90



Report : Iraqi Resistance Brought Down Helicopter :

Iraqi journalist Ziyad al-Samarai told Aljazeera the the aircraft was hit by a rocket in the farm-rich area.
http://snipurl.com/fv91



U.S. Soldier Killed:

Task Force Baghdad Soldier died June 27 from wounds sustained during a small-arms fire attack in central Baghdad around 10:15 a.m.
http://www.mnf-iraq.com/Releases/June/050627g.htm

http://snipurl.com/fv92



US 'in talks with Iraq with Iraq rebels':

Militants reveal secret face-to-face meetings
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article9283.htm

http://snipurl.com/fv93



'Iraqi Resistance Denies Negotiations With U.S. Occupation Forces:

Iraqi forces opposed to the occupation affirm that the rumors about US attempts to negotiate with the resistance are "a mere fabrication".
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article9295.htm

http://snipurl.com/fv95



U.S. headed for disaster when efforts in Iraq collapse:

We may now be only weeks away from a complete collapse of the Iraqi army and the withdrawal of British troops from Iraq in the face of overwhelming public pressure on Tony Blair.
http://www.herald-dispatch.com/2005/June/24/OPlist3.htm

http://snipurl.com/fv96



A letter from an Iraqi citizen to the American people:

You picked up weapons against the occupiers until you forced him to go out of your state which was a great victory for you.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article9306.htm

http://snipurl.com/fv97



U.S. says Iraqis may fight rebels for years:

U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said on Sunday that American forces would not defeat Iraq's rebels but would make way for Iraqis to put down an insurgency that could go on for a decade or more.
http://snipurl.com/fv98
Snuffysmith
Bush warns Blair he must boost UK forces :

Tony Blair was warned that war-torn Iraq remains on the brink of disaster - more than two years after the removal of Saddam Hussein - during his summit with President Bush in Washington earlier this month.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article9286.htm

http://snipurl.com/fv9i
Snuffysmith
How the leaked documents questioning war emerged from 'Britain's Deep Throat':

It started with a phone call and has now swept across America: Michael Smith tells the tale of his ‘Downing Street memo’ scoop
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-1669292,00.html

http://snipurl.com/fv9j
Snuffysmith
Scott Ritter: Unplugged and Uncensored

Bush is a Liar - US at War with Iran - The Downing Street Memo's & More - The Peace Movement Failed

This Is A Must Listen

Question and Answer Session with Scott Ritter
http://www.traprockpeace.org/scott_ritter_23june05.html

http://snipurl.com/fvfk
Snuffysmith
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...5062700270.html

Survey Finds Most Support Staying in Iraq
Public Skeptical About Gains Against Insurgents
Snuffysmith
http://www.antiwar.com/eland/?articleid=6464

Negotiations with Iraqi Rebels Are a Good Start But Not Enough
Ivan Eland
Snuffysmith
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle...sp?story=650186

Iraq: A Bloody Mess
Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/n...q_insurgency_dc

As insurgency holds, US prepares long, Iraq campaign
Snuffysmith
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...2701584_pf.html

From Memos, Insights Into Ally's Doubts on Iraq War
British Advisers Foresaw Variety of Risks, Problems
Glenn Frankel
Snuffysmith
--------------------
A Tenuous Grip on Sovereignty
--------------------

A year after taking the formal reins of government, the Iraqis are far from having a sense of control over their own destiny.

By Borzou Daragahi
Times Staff Writer

June 28 2005

BAGHDAD; On a busy commercial strip, U.S. soldiers cajole a ragged band of reluctant Iraqi army recruits to take charge of their own streets. In the highest corridors of power, U.S. officials press Iraqi politicians to meet political deadlines. A year after occupation authority head L. Paul Bremer III handed the formal reins to an appointed Iraqi government, private military firms contracted by the Pentagon continue to wield guns with scant regard for Iraqi authorities.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/ir...-home-headlines
Snuffysmith
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Iranian Revolution Is Thriving in Iraq
--------------------

Robert Scheer

June 28 2005

Did those wily ayatollahs give us the purple finger again? It sure looks like it after the smashing defeat Iran's religious fanatics dealt reformers in the presidential election Friday.

The complete article can be viewed at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/columnists/la-...-home-headlines
Snuffysmith
From Memos, Insights Into Ally's Doubts On Iraq War

By Glenn Frankel

LONDON -- In the spring of 2002, two weeks before British Prime Minister Tony Blair journeyed to Crawford, Tex., to meet with President Bush at his ranch about the escalating confrontation with Iraq, Foreign Secretary Jack Straw sounded a prescient warning.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...er=emailarticle
Snuffysmith
http://www.wpherald.com/storyview.php?Stor...27-012054-6266r

Outside view: Staying the course in Iraq
Anthony Cordesman
Snuffysmith
http://www.wpherald.com/storyview.php?Stor...27-120936-7833r

Walkers World: 4th generation wars
Martin Walker
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