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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, 9, 10, 11, 12
Snuffysmith
REPORT CONCLUDES US PROPAGANDA IN IRAQ NOT AGAINST REGULATIONS - BUT NOT EFFECTIVE, EITHER ECCENTRIC STAR (MAY 29)
http://eccentricstar.typepad.com/public_di...t_conclude.html

GIANT U.S. EMBASSY PROJECT DISMAYS IRAQIS - LIZ SLY (CHICAGO TRIBUNE, MAY 29): The new U.S. Embassy in Iraq, to be the biggest embassy in the world, also is the biggest construction project under way in battered Baghdad, where the only other cranes rising from the skyline belong to Saddam Hussein's abandoned project to build the world's biggest mosque.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationw...nationworld-hed

BAGHDAD NUMB TO REPORTS OF MASSACRE - ELLEN KNICKMEYER AND OMAR FEKEIKI (WASHINGTON POST, MAY 29): After three years of war that has been fought in their streets and claimed the lives of tens of thousands of civilians, people in Baghdad could spare little more than subdued expressions of sympathy Sunday after hearing reports of a U.S. Marine massacre of 24 men, women and children in a faraway western town.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...6052800766.html

2 CBS CREW MEMBERS KILLED IN IRAQ BOMBING - KRISTA LARSON, ASSOCIATED PRESS (CBS NEWS, MAY 29)
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/05/29/...D8HTJPP80.shtml

IRAQ IS THE REPUBLIC OF FEAR - NIR ROSEN (WASHINGTON POST, MAY 28): Every morning the streets of Baghdad are littered with dozens of bodies, bruised, torn, mutilated, executed only because they are Sunni or because they are Shiite. Power drills are an especially popular torture device.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...6052601578.html

IRAQIS FLEE AS KILLINGS INCREASE: SECTARIAN VIOLENCE TRIGGERS EXODUS - ANNA BADKHEN (SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE, MAY 29)
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?...MNG17J42S21.DTL

US MILITARY SEES BAGHDAD POLICE TAKING CHARGE THIS YEAR - MICHAEL GEORGY AND FREDRIK DAHL, REUTERS (WASHINGTON POST, MAY 27)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...6052700544.html

SECULAR IRAQIS UNIMPRESSED BY NEW GOVERNMENT - AARON GLANTZ (ANTIWAR.COM, MAY 27)
http://www.antiwar.com/glantz/?articleid=9050

THE PRICE OF IRAQ EDITORIAL (NEW YORK TIMES, MAY 28): In Iraq It's time for Mr. Bush either to chart a course that can actually be followed, or admit that there is none.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/28/opinion/28sun1.html

IRAQ'S UNCERTAIN PROGRESS: A CONSTITUTIONAL, DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENT IS IN PLACE, BUT THE BLOODSHED ONLY GROWS WORSE EDITORIAL (WASHINGTON POST, MAY 28)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...6052700849.html

AS IRAQ TURNS, MILES OF MILESTONES OUTLOOK (WASHINGTON POST, MAY 28): President Bush declared last week that the formation of a new cabinet in Iraq marked a "turning point" and a "watershed event" -- the latest of many he has detected in the last three years.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...6052601710.html

IRAQ: AMERICA'S TROOPS HAVE MOVED ON - OWEN WEST (INTERNATIONAL HERALD TRIBUNE, MAY 28): The deterioration of American support for the mission in Iraq is indicative not so much of U.S. military conduct there, where real gains are coming slowly but steadily, but of chaotic leadership.
http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/05/28/opinion/edwest.php

THE BUCK STOPS WITH BUSH, NOT RUMSFELD: TRUMAN SACKED MACARTHUR. CLINTON FIRED ASPIN. IT'S UP TO THE WHITE HOUSE AND CONGRESS TO MAKE HEADS ROLL OVER MISTAKES IN IRAQ - RAHM EMANUEL (LOS ANGELES TIMES, MAY 29) (Rep. Rahm Emanuel of Illinois is chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.)
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/o...1,1828470.story

IRAQ: TIME TO TALK ABOUT DISENGAGEMENT: EVEN WITHOUT A DEADLINE, BUSH SHOULD START TO THINK ABOUT LEAVING IRAQ ? EDITORIAL (LOS ANGELES TIMES, MAY 28)
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/editor...ment-editorials

DON'T BECOME THEM - MAUREEN DOWD (NEW YORK TIMES, MAY 27): By ignoring predictions of an insurgency and refusing to do homework before charging into Iraq on trumped-up pretenses, Bush left our troops undermanned, inadequately armored and psychologically unprepared.
http://select.nytimes.com/2006/05/27/opini...fMaureen%20Dowd
PAID SUBCRIPTION

CONSIDER THE LIVING - BOB HERBERT (NEW YORK TIMES, MAY 29): Pretty soon this war in Iraq will have lasted as long as our involvement in World War II, with absolutely no evidence of any sort of conclusion in sight.
http://select.nytimes.com/2006/05/29/opinion/29herbert.html
PAID SUSBCRIPTION

LET YOUR ENEMIES CRUMBLE: THE U.S. FORGOT THE LESSONS OF THE COLD WAR WHEN IT CAME TO IRAQ - PETER BEINART (TIME, MAY 28): ?It was that deeper argument for containment that war supporters like me neglected in the debate over Iraq.?
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/...1198924,00.html

WHO DIDN'T THINK IRAQ HAD WMD - LARRY ELDER (WASHINGTON TIMES, MAY 28)
http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/200605...11534-1451r.htm
Snuffysmith
54 killed in Iraq violence :

The worst bombing hit the market as Iraqis were doing their evening shopping in Husseiniyah, 95km south of Baghdad. At least 25 people were killed.
http://tinyurl.com/ofsg3

===
U.S. Increases Number Of Troops In Iraq:

The top American commander in Iraq has decided to move reserve troops now deployed in Kuwait into the volatile Anbar province in western Iraq to help quell a surge in insurgents attacks
http://www.contracostatimes.com/mld/cctime...ws/14697487.htm

===
Iraq PM impatient with US troops killing civilians:

Iraq's prime minister said on Tuesday his patience was wearing thin with excuses from U.S. troops that they kill civilians by "mistake" and said he would launch an investigation into killings at Haditha last year.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13430.htm

===
Haditha Massacre:

Was it an Isolated Event and Did the Military Try to Cover it up?

Must listen : Audio and transcript
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13434.htm

===
New details found in deaths of Iraqis:

Investigators say they have found drone video from the same day when Marines allegedly killed civilians after bombing
http://tinyurl.com/oacv9

===
Marines Haunted By Killings In Haditha:

Two Marines were severely traumatized after following orders to photograph corpses of unarmed Iraqi civilians whom members of their unit are suspected of killing, their families said Monday.
http://tinyurl.com/ne7ph

===
Video: Murtha: Military Still Trying to Spin Haditha Massacre :

Pennsylvania Congressman John Murtha appeared on CNN America Morning where he expressed outraged at military's handling of the massacre of innocent Iraq's by Marines in Haditha, Iraq.
http://tinyurl.com/oqr9x
Snuffysmith
Iraq is the republic of fear, once again. If the religious militias don't get you, the resistance will, or the terrorists will, or the criminal gangs will, or the Americans will.

Every morning the streets of Baghdad are littered with dozens of bodies, bruised, torn, mutilated, executed only because they are Sunni or because they are Shiite. Power drills are an especially popular torture device.

To view the entire article, go to http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...er=emailarticle
theglobalchinese
US to publish Iraq deaths probe BBC News
The US government has promised to make public all the details of inquiries into the alleged massacre of Iraqi civilians by US marines last November. Washington made the pledge following claims that the killings of 24 people in the town of Haditha were covered up. A White House spokesman said President George W Bush was concerned by the reports, but wanted the military to complete their inquiries first. The Iraqi prime minister said earlier Baghdad would investigate the claims. Nouri Maliki told Reuters news agency there was "a limit to the acceptable excuses" for civilian casualties. The Pentagon is close to ending its two separate inquiries into the killings and the cover-up in Haditha, initially attributed to a clash with militants.
QUOTE("Safa Younis - Haditha survivor")
When my father opened [the door] they shot him and then again. Then they threw a hand grenade into the bathroom... The Americans carried on shooting.
According to initial US military reports, 15 civilians and eight insurgents died after a bomb killed a marine in Haditha, a militant stronghold in Anbar Province. But the army now says it is investigating a total of 24 deaths. Observers say the incident on 19 November could deal a more serious blow to US standing than the Abu Ghraib prison abuse scandal. A member of the Iraqi parliament and former foreign minister, Adnan Pachachi, says Iraqis were stunned by the allegations. "I think it has created a feeling of great shock and sadness and I believe that if what is alleged is true - and I have no reason to believe it's not - then I think something very drastic has to be done," he told the BBC's World Today programme. "There must be a level of discipline imposed on the American troops and change of mentality which seems to think that Iraqi lives are expendable."

Marines 'co-operating'
White House spokesman Tony Snow said he had been assured by the Pentagon that "all the details" of the inquiries would be made public. "We'll have a picture of what happened," Mr Snow said. He said President Bush was "allowing the chain of command to do what it's supposed to do in the Department of Defense, which is to complete" their inquiries. "The marines are taking an active and aggressive role in this." The spokesman added that Mr Bush did not hear about the incident until earlier this year when a reporter began asking questions about it, leading officials to brief him. John Murtha, a Democratic Congressman and former marine, has said he had been briefed by military officials and believes the civilians were murdered and the incident was covered up. The BBC's Justin Webb in Washington says enough material has now been leaked to the US media about the Haditha incident to suggest to many Americans that allegations of a massacre are very serious and may well be true.

'Cold blood'
US investigators are looking at both the actual events in Haditha and the alleged cover-up by troops. The military said at the time that the civilians were killed as a result of either the bomb or a gun battle which erupted afterwards, in which the militants were reportedly killed. But reports from Iraqi witnesses and in the US media allege that marines went on a rampage.

November 2005: Initial US military report
  • One US marine killed in roadside bomb, two injured
  • Explosion also kills 15 Iraqi civilians
  • Eight insurgents killed in fire-fight following blast
January 2006: US military preliminary investigation
  • One US marine killed in roadside bomb, two injured
  • Fifteen civilians accidentally killed by US fire amid battle with insurgents
March 2006: US military begins criminal investigation
Secrecy over civilian deaths

Safa Younis, a 12-year-old girl who survived the attack, said US soldiers banged on the door of her house, shot dead her father and threw a hand grenade into the bathroom. "The Americans carried on shooting. I pretended I was dead and they didn't realise," she said, according to testimony obtained by Iraq's Hammurabi Human Rights group. According to the Wall St Journal, there is evidence that marines killed civilians, including women and children, without provocation. Several marines are likely to be charged with murder and others with attempting to cover up the incident, the newspaper said, quoting civilian and military officials close to the investigations. One of the marines in Haditha that day, Lance Cpl Roel Ryan Briones of Hanford, California, told the Los Angeles Times he had taken photos and carried bodies out of homes as part of a clean-up crew: "They ranged from little babies to adult males and females. I'll never be able to get that out of my head. I can still smell the blood."
theglobalchinese
Iraq PM in Basra on peace mission BBC News
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki has arrived in the main southern city of Basra to try to halt in-fighting between his fellow Shias. He was greeted by political leaders, tribal sheikhs and security officials. A Shia faction has threatened to halt oil exports through Basra to exert leverage over the Iraqi government. Mr Maliki has said he is ready to use force against "criminal gangs" who hold crucial oil exports and other trade to ransom in Basra, "the gateway to Iraq".
QUOTE("Colonel David Cullen @ multi-national military in Basra")
Basra has slipped behind almost certainly as a result of... disengagement
The BBC's Andrew North in Baghdad says that security has been deteriorating in Basra for some time. Much of the unrest is down to a power struggle between rival Shia factions, partly aimed at securing more independence from the central government. Mr Maliki is keen to demonstrate he is taking charge, our correspondent says.

Tackling the carnage
Criminal gangs are also part of the security problem in Basra, blamed for a wave of kidnappings and murders. Speaking to Reuters news agency before arriving in Basra, Mr Maliki warned that the authorities were ready to "use force against these gangs". Colonel David Cullen, chief of staff at the multi-national military headquarters in Basra, told the BBC's Today programme that security in the city had "slipped" because his forces' attention was spread across the whole of southern Iraq. "The south is much larger than Basra, there are four provinces here, there is peace, stability, developing prosperity and increasing sovereignty in the other three provinces. "Basra has slipped behind almost certainly as a result of that disengagement, so the second piece now is that we focus on Basra to make the very most of re-engagement, and build upon the trust that has been developed between us and the security forces in particular... " The prime minister's trip follows another day of violence in Iraq which claimed more than 50 lives. But in an interview with the BBC, Mr Maliki insisted he had a better chance of tackling the daily carnage in Iraq than his predecessors because he was head of the country's first permanent administration since the US-led invasion. "Previous governments were either temporary or transitional. They did not receive full backing from the Iraqi people to deal with this issue," he said. Mr Maliki's government - which includes members of the main Shia Muslim, Sunni Arab and Kurdish parties - was approved by parliament earlier in May, after five months of negotiations following December's general elections.
Snuffysmith
http://www.nysun.com/pf.php?id=33583



Pressure Mounts In Washington For Talks With Iran
BY ELI LAKE - Staff Reporter of the Sun
May 31, 2006
URL: http://www.nysun.com/article/33583

WASHINGTON - Pressure is mounting within the Bush administration to begin talks directly with Iran to convince the country to end its enrichment of nuclear fuel.

Facing a deadlock, envoys from America, China, France, Russia, and Britain are scheduled to meet again tomorrow to negotiate a unanimous resolution on Iran at the U.N. Security Council. Nonetheless, American diplomats are not optimistic that the aggressive sanctions contained in a European and American draft resolution will be agreed to by Russia or China - two countries that have enjoyed a robust trade in arms with Iran since the end of the Cold War.

Behind the scenes, two Bush administration officials say British, French, and German diplomats are quietly urging America to pursue direct talks with Iran to avoid a standoff at Turtle Bay. The man carrying this message to the White House and Foggy Bottom is the current no. 3 official at the State Department, Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns, whose private assessment of the negotiations among the great powers on Iran is that a unanimous resolution is near impossible.

The potential for the Bush administration to engage Iran now, after the country broke its pledges on uranium enrichment, could dampen enthusiasm among its opposition. In the last eight days, ethnic Azeris, who make up a quarter of Iran's population, have flooded Tabriz and other cities to protest a cartoon in a state-run newspaper depicting their ethnic group as cockroaches. And Iran's students have led demonstrations and in some cases clashes at major universities over new policies in the schools on firing professors and expelling students. The protests on campuses are estimated to be the largest since July 2003.

The State Department has begun publicly dialing back expectations for tomorrow's meeting in Vienna. A State Department spokesman, Sean McCormack, said yesterday that the ultimate resolution at the Security Council could entail phases of sanctions against Iran, depending the country's actions.

Mr. McCormack added, "Separate from that, you know, throughout this process, even if you are proceeding down the Security Council route ... you can still keep outside of that particular mechanism, individual states, like-minded states getting together to work on various financial measures that might be taken so that the Iranian regime can't exploit the international financial system for, you know, funding terrorism or for funding its weapons - illicit weapons of mass destruction programs."

One State Department official was careful to say Mr. Burns has not formally endorsed direct talks within the administration. But nonetheless, his assessment of the prospect for a resolution with teeth - one that would be supported and enforced by the five veto-wielding members of the Security Council - was pessimistic.

"Nicholas is the primary person looking at this. He is saying, 'It doesn't look good in the Security Council,'" the official, who asked not to be identified, said. "His primary message, however, is that we don't have a good chance for the resolution. He has not survived this long by raising both the problem and the solution, if the solution is not one the principals want to embrace." However, the official added that Mr. Burns also has conveyed the private message from European foreign ministries that America should at least be open to direct talks on the nuclear issue.

America has held discussions on and off with Iran since the inception of the Islamic Republic. In the 1980s, Reagan administration officials brokered a deal whereby Israel sold missiles to Iran in exchange for the release of American hostages captured by Hezbollah in Lebanon. More recently, Iranian diplomats have met with America's ambassador to Baghdad, Zalmay Khalilzad, since 2001, when he first brought Iran into the rebuilding of Afghanistan at a conference in Bonn, Germany. In 2003, Mr. Khalilzad discussed with Iran an exchange of Al Qaeda terrorists for members of the People's Mujahadin captured by American soldiers in Iraq. That plan went nowhere, though Senator Kerry, a Democrat of Massachusetts, endorsed it when he was running for president in 2004.

Direct talks now with Iran could end up demoralizing Iran's opposition, which in recent months has begun to organize in various sectors - from a strike of bus drivers in Tehran to more recent campus unrest.

One of the steering committee members of the Tehran Polytechnic University chapter of Iran's largest student organization, Abbas Hakim Zadeh, said last week that his organization, known as Takhim Vahdat, would endorse direct talks between America and Iran if the topic of negotiation was human rights and political prisoners. "However," he said, "if the idea is for Iran to get security guarantees embedded in it that the regime can suppress the human rights and the will of the people, that is something the Iranian student movement, the Iranian labor movement, and the Iranian women's rights groups reject firmly and totally."
Snuffysmith
http://apnews.excite.com/article/20060530/D8HUBU580.html




Iran Says It Wants to Resume Negotiations


May 30, 5:53 PM (ET)

By SEAN YOONG

PUTRAJAYA, Malaysia (AP) - Iran's foreign minister said Tuesday that Tehran is ready to restart negotiations with the European Union on its nuclear program, but he ruled out direct talks with the United States.

"I announce that Iran is ready to respond positively to the call" made by the Nonaligned Movement "for resuming the negotiations on Iran's nuclear issue without any preconditions," Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki told reporters.

"Accordingly, I would announce our readiness to restart immediately the negotiations with the EU Three to resolve the issues," he said, referring to Britain, France and Germany.

The announcement raised hopes that Iran would react positively to a planned package of incentives meant to convince it to abandon uranium enrichment. The package has been put together by the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany.



The package was to be presented to Tehran by France, Britain and Germany - the nations that broke off talks with Iran in August 2005 after it resumed activities linked to uranium enrichment.

The process can produce fuel for a nuclear reactor or fissile material for an atomic bomb, depending on the level of enrichment.

The Security Council gave Iran until the end of April to suspend all enrichment activities. But Iran announced last month it had for the first time successfully enriched uranium and was doing research on advanced centrifuges to produce more of the material in less time.

If Iran remains defiant and refuses to give up uranium enrichment, it could open the way for sanctions.

Mottaki said there was no question of direct talks with the United States, which accuses Iran of using its civilian nuclear program as a cover to produce nuclear weapons. Tehran says its nuclear program is merely to generate electricity.

"The level of enrichment is enrichment for peaceful purposes," said Mottaki, who was in Malaysia to attend a meeting of foreign ministers of the Nonaligned Movement that ended Tuesday. "I mean the level which makes us able to produce fuel for our nuclear power plants. It means we are not going to the level of enrichment for other purposes, including military purposes."

A meeting of the European foreign ministers, including Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, was set for Thursday in Vienna, said the diplomats, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were disclosing confidential information.

Indirectly linked to any possible deal for Iran would be agreement on a resolution tough enough for Washington but acceptable to Tehran ally Moscow, a dispute that has hobbled action by the Security Council's permanent members for months.

If Iran remains defiant, the proposal - as outlined to AP by diplomats familiar with the text - calls for a resolution imposing sanctions under Chapter 7, Article 41 of the U.N. Charter. But it avoids any reference to Article 42, which is the trigger for possible military action to enforce any such resolution.

The proposal also calls for new consultations among the five permanent Security Council members on any further steps against Iran - a move meant to dispel complaints by the Russians and Chinese that, once the screws on Iran are tightened, the council would automatically move toward military involvement.

Among the possible sanctions are a visa ban on government officials, the freezing of assets, blocking financial transactions by government figures and those involved in the country's nuclear program, an arms embargo and a blockade on the shipping of refined oil products to Iran.

If Tehran agrees to suspend enrichment, enter new negotiations on its nuclear program and lift a ban on intrusive inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency, rewards would include agreement to "suspend discussion of Iran's file at the Security Council," as well as help in building a peaceful domestic nuclear program that uses an outside supply of enriched uranium.
theglobalchinese
Iraq's Premier Seeks to Control a City in Chaos New York Times
Iraq's new prime minister made an urgent visit to this increasingly lawless city on Wednesday, imposing a state of emergency and ordering leaders to cease their violent struggle for power and allow order to return to this oil-rich region. Once seemingly immune to the violence that has plagued the rest of the country, Basra Province, the heart of Iraq's Shiite south, has sunk into chaos. Shiite political parties and their militias are fighting to control the provincial government and the region's oil wealth, contributing to some of the worst rates of killing since the invasion, with 174 killings in the past two months — double the amount from the previous two months, according to the Basra police. Trying to stamp his authority on the region, Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki arrived here in an American helicopter with Iraq's Sunni Arab vice president and three other senior Iraqi officials, and he berated local leaders for the chaos. He ordered the Iraqi Army to take over Basra's streets — a demand that apparently came as a surprise to the British Army, which patrols the region, and that could prove difficult, as units would have to be brought from outside the city. "I declare strongly and frankly that we will strike with an iron fist on all gangs that are manipulating security," Mr. Maliki said, addressing an auditorium crowded with political and tribal leaders and other Basra locals. "Security comes first, second and third." It is the first serious test of Mr. Maliki's authority since he became prime minister last month and pledged to deal decisively with political militias and criminal gangs whose growing power is now threatening the existence of the Iraqi state. The surge in violence has posed new difficulties for the British military, which has adopted more strenuous policing measures to contain it. In two operations on Sunday, the British detained a total of 10 people and reported a large find of bomb materials. "In our view, we need to do more, and that's what we're doing," Brig. James Everard, the commander of forces in Iraq's four southeastern provinces, said in an interview. In May, nine British soldiers were killed, the second-deadliest month for the British since the invasion, exceeded only in January 2005 when the crash of a British military plane killed 10 soldiers. Mr. Maliki spoke directly to the increased violence, using blunt language and a firm and measured tone. "What are these assassinations?" he asked. "What is this killing? What are the gangs that kill and kidnap? What is going on in this city, which sacrificed so much through history?" To a large degree, the violence has resulted from a power grab by Shiite factions left practically on their own to run the region and impose their own version of democracy while American and Iraqi officials in Baghdad have fought insurgents elsewhere. "Freedom of speech, freedom of expression: it just hasn't quite worked out the way it was planned," Brigadier Everard said. "They're not prepared to debate. They tend to do things at the end of a gun." In a city that welcomed the American invasion, threats against Iraqis working for the American Embassy are now so widespread that they have not picked up its trash or pumped its sewers for three weeks. One large prize is control of Basra's oil exports. The city is near the country's only seaport, and nearly all of Iraq's current exports flow through it. Political parties accuse one another of skimming from the flow and trying to control it. "As long as we have parties, it's impossible to ensure security," said one of Basra's senior security officials. "If you print this," the official added nervously, explaining why he wanted his name withheld, "I'll be killed." One of the ways the parties have wielded influence is through control of portions of this city's 15,000-man police force, which is about double it's the authorized size. Rival parties and gangs fight one another through their own police units. The police chief, Maj. Gen. Hassan Swadi al-Saad, has said he trusts only a small fraction of his forces. Mr. Maliki used the trip, his first as prime minister, as a warning to local leaders who have used the months that Baghdad was busy assembling a government to build their own fiefs and profit from their positions. He specifically referred to the impotence of the police force, and directly rebuked political leaders for manipulating it. "What worries us and hurts the heart of Iraq is that these apparatuses are practically helpless," he said. "It is impermissible to have a scared or disturbed military or police officer because of political interferences." A plain model of Toyota, known by the people of Basra as Batta, Arabic for duck, has been used in so many assassinations that it has become synonymous with killing. "Why can't we control this Batta?" said Wathib al-Amood, a member of the provincial council. "We are walking in the dark on a spiked floor." At the heart of the struggle in Basra are political parties and a web of allegiances that is baffling to outsiders. The governor, Muhammad al-Waeli, belongs to the Fadhila Party, a religious Shiite party, which controls the most seats in the provincial council. A bloc led by the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, or Sciri, detests Mr. Waeli and wants to remove him, but has failed to garner the two-thirds majority needed to do so. The struggle has raised questions about the balance of power between Baghdad and the provinces. A law drawn up under the former American administrator, L. Paul Bremer III, and that is still in effect gives the provinces full control over their police forces and their local governments, virtually cutting Baghdad out of the process — a fact that Mr. Waeli's supporters are quick to point out. Aqil Taleb, a council member from the Fadhila Party, said that because of the law, removing Mr. Waeli would be difficult. "They can't get the votes they need," he said, adding, "Even Maliki can't change the governor without them." The meeting with Mr. Maliki on Wednesday was attended by about 400 Basra citizens, including the governor, who arrived late, and the police chief, whom he has tried to fire. The officials from Baghdad included Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi, a Sunni Arab; Khalid al-Atiya, the deputy speaker of Parliament; Bahaa al-Aaraji, a Parliament member close to the anti-American cleric Moktada al-Sadr, whose influence and militia in Basra are strong; and Safa al-Safi, the minister of state for Parliament affairs. Mr. Maliki's political acumen was tested immediately. An hour after the meeting began, the discussion descended into a shouting match, with tribal sheiks hurling insults at the chairman of the provincial council, Muhammed Sadoon al-Abadi. Mr. Abadi, of Fadhila, said local leaders had done the best they could with few resources and blamed the news media for painting too ghoulish a security picture. "Don't put all the blame or all the mistakes or all the collapse on the local government here," he said. Shortly after that, tribal sheiks began to shout from a few rows back. "Liar!" one yelled. "None of this is true. You are a liar." When organizers proposed that participants break for lunch, there was more shouting. "We don't want to eat, we want to talk!" someone said. "All the tribes are here and if we don't have a solution we will make a revolution." Then, Mr. Maliki, dressed in a dark suit and tie, silenced them. "My brothers, peace," he said, and led them in a quick prayer. "The loudest voice is not usually the winner," he added. While Mr. Maliki focused on security, Mr. Hashemi, the Sunni Arab vice president, took leaders to task on the oil industry and sectarian cleansing. "I hoped to receive news from Basra that the Southern Oil Company exceeded its planned output," he said in a speech to the gathering. "I hoped that Basra ports would have attracted ships from the gulf." "But unfortunately we have come to deal with a serious problem that has exhausted the poor people of Basra."
State of emergency in Basra threatens British withdrawal Independent
Iraq's Premier Sets State Of Emergency For Southern City Washington Post
San Jose Mercury News - Irish Examiner - Guardian Unlimited - Scotsman - all 486 related »
theglobalchinese
Bush 'troubled' by Haditha report BBC News
US President George W Bush has said he is "troubled" by reports of an alleged massacre of Iraqi civilians by US marines last November. Making his first public comments on the issue, Mr Bush said if anyone had broken the law they would be punished. His comments followed claims that the killings of 24 people in the town of Haditha were covered up. On Tuesday, the US government promised to make public all the details of inquiries into the alleged massacre. "If, in fact, these allegations are true, the Marine Corps will work hard to make sure that... those who violated the law - if indeed they did - will be punished," Mr Bush told a press conference in Washington. The Pentagon is close to ending its two separate inquiries into the killings in Haditha, initially attributed to a clash with militants. According to initial US military reports, 15 civilians and eight insurgents died after a bomb killed a marine in Haditha, a militant stronghold in Anbar Province. But the army now says it is investigating a total of 24 deaths.

'Shock and sadness'
Over the past few days the American media has been dominated by pictures and interviews of Iraqis in Haditha, says the BBC's Andy Gallacher. Politicians fear that the repercussions could be far worse than the Abu Ghraib prison scandal, our correspondent says, with some politicians convinced that there has been a cover-up.

November 2005: Initial US military report
  • One US marine killed in roadside bomb, two injured
  • Explosion also kills 15 Iraqi civilians
  • Eight insurgents killed in fire-fight following blast
January 2006: US military preliminary investigation
  • One US marine killed in roadside bomb, two injured
  • Fifteen civilians accidentally killed by US fire amid battle with insurgents
March 2006: US military begins criminal investigation
Secrecy over civilian deaths

A member of the Iraqi parliament and former foreign minister, Adnan Pachachi, says the allegations have sparked "a feeling of great shock and sadness" amongst Iraqis. "There must be a level of discipline imposed on the American troops and change of mentality which seems to think that Iraqi lives are expendable," he told the BBC. But the UK's human rights envoy to Iraq, Ann Clwyd, who is in Baghdad at the moment, says the events in Haditha should "not be taken out of context". "I would say as I did over Abu Ghraib... [this is] a small group of people out of the many thousands of British and American and other soldiers who are here who have done a good job by and large," she told the BBC.

'Rampage'
White House spokesman Tony Snow said on Tuesday that the US Marine Corps was taking an "active and aggressive role" in investigating the allegations. The Pentagon had assured him that "all the details" of the inquiries would be made public, he said.
QUOTE("Safa Younis - Haditha survivor")
When my father opened [the door] they shot him and then again. Then they threw a hand grenade into the bathroom... The Americans carried on shooting.
US investigators are looking at both the actual events in Haditha and the alleged cover-up by troops. The military said at the time that the civilians were killed as a result of either the bomb or a gun battle which erupted afterwards, in which the militants were reportedly killed. But reports from Iraqi witnesses and in the US media allege that marines went on a rampage. According to the Wall Street Journal, there is evidence that marines killed civilians, including women and children, without provocation. Several marines are likely to be charged with murder and others with attempting to cover up the incident, the newspaper said, quoting civilian and military officials close to the investigations.
Snuffysmith
http://usinfo.state.gov/utils/printpage.html



Bush Says Formation of Iraq Government Marks Victory for Freedom
Says Iraqi people, leaders, and U.S. determined to defeat terrorists




The formation of a national unity government in Iraq marks a victory for the cause of freedom in the Middle East and a defeat for terrorists, President Bush says.

"It is a victory for millions of Iraqis who defied the terrorists and cast their ballots in three elections last year. It is a victory for the Iraqi Security Forces, who fought and bled for this moment, and now have a democracy worthy of their sacrifice. And it is a victory for the American, British, and other coalition forces who removed a murderous dictator who threatened the world," Bush said in his weekly radio address to the American people May 27.

The president said that since the formation of the Iraqi national unity government May 20, something fundamental has changed for the terrorists. "They are at war with the people of Iraq. The Iraqi people and their new leaders are determined to defeat this enemy, and so is the United States of America," Bush said.

The president said that British Prime Minister Tony Blair has reported to him that "Iraq's new leaders are determined to rid their country of terrorism, unite Iraqis as one people, and deliver peace and prosperity for all their citizens."

An audio file of the president’s address is available on the White House Web site.

Following is a transcript of the president's address:





THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary



Saturday, May 27, 2006



RADIO ADDRESS BY THE PRESIDENT TO THE NATION



THE PRESIDENT: Good morning. This Memorial Day weekend, Americans pay tribute to those who have given their lives in service to our Nation. America is free because generations of young Americans have been willing to sacrifice to defend the country they love, so their fellow citizens could live in liberty.

This weekend, I am visiting some of the brave men and women who will soon take their own place in the defense of our freedom -- the 2006 graduating class at West Point. This was the first class to arrive at West Point after the attacks of September the 11th, 2001. Each of them came to West Point in a time of war, knowing all the risks and dangers that come with wearing our Nation's uniform. And the reality of that war has surrounded them since their first moments at the Academy. Thirty-four times since they arrived at West Point, they have observed a moment of silence to honor a former cadet fallen in the war on terror.

One of those former cadets was First Lieutenant Rob Seidel, a 2004 West Point graduate who gave his life in Iraq earlier this month. Rob grew up in Maryland, and as a child he and his family made frequent visits to the Civil War battlefield at Gettysburg, and from his earliest days he dreamed of serving in the U.S. Army. He deployed to Iraq with the 10th Mountain division and was killed by a bomb in Baghdad. His father says this about Rob: "He loved his family, and believed in God, and he loved his country, and he was willing to pay the ultimate sacrifice on behalf of his country."

We live in freedom because of young Americans like Lieutenant Rob Seidel. And in recent days in Iraq, we've seen what their sacrifices have made possible. A week ago, the new Prime Minister of Iraq announced the formation of a national unity government. British Prime Minister Tony Blair recently visited Baghdad to meet with Prime Minister Maliki and Iraq's new leaders, and this week he came to the United States to give me his impressions. Prime Minister Blair told me that Iraq's new leaders are determined to rid their country of terrorism, unite Iraqis as one people, and deliver peace and prosperity for all their citizens.

The formation of a democratic government in Iraq marks a victory for the cause of freedom in the Middle East. It is a victory for millions of Iraqis who defied the terrorists and cast their ballots in three elections last year. It is a victory for the Iraqi Security Forces, who fought and bled for this moment, and now have a democracy worthy of their sacrifice. And it is a victory for the American, British, and other coalition forces who removed a murderous dictator who threatened the world. Because of their courage and sacrifices, Iraq has a free government that will be a strong and capable ally in the global war on terror.

The new government in Iraq is also a defeat for the terrorists, who fought the arrival of a free and democratic Iraq with all the hateful power they could muster. Now, a day that they feared has arrived. The terrorists can kill the innocent, but they cannot stop the advance of freedom. We can expect the terrorists to continue bombing and killing, but something fundamental has changed: The terrorists are now fighting a free and constitutional government. They are at war with the people of Iraq. The Iraqi people and their new leaders are determined to defeat this enemy, and so is the United States of America.

This Memorial Day weekend, we remember First Lieutenant Seidel and the brave Americans of every generation who have given their lives for freedom, liberated the oppressed, and left the world a safer and better place. And the best way to honor America's fallen heroes is to carry on their fight, defend our freedom, and complete the mission for which they gave their lives.

Thank you for listening.






Created: 26 May 2006 Updated: 27 May 2006
theglobalchinese
Haditha inquiry finds false reports: WPost Yahoo! News
A U.S. military inquiry into whether Marines tried to cover up the killings of Iraqi civilians in Haditha will conclude that some officers gave false reports to their superiors, who then failed to scrutinize the information, according to a newspaper report on Thursday. The Washington Post, citing an unidentified Army official, said the three-month investigation was also expected to call for changes in how U.S. troops are trained for duty in Iraq. The investigation is one of two ongoing military probes into the November 19 killings of 24 men, women and children in the town of Haditha, 125 miles northwest of Baghdad in an area that has seen much activity by Sunni Arab insurgents. The newspaper reported that the Army official said there were multiple failures but declined to say whether he would characterize it as a 'coverup' as alleged by Rep. John Murtha (news, bio, voting record). The Pennsylvania Democrat, a decorated retired Marine, is a vocal critic of the war in Iraq. The Post said a final report on the probe, led by Army Maj. General Eldon Bargewell, was expected to be delivered to top commanders by the end of the week. A new focus on training would begin as early as Thursday when Army Gen. George W. Casey, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, was expected to order all U.S. and allied troops in Iraq receive "core values" training, the newspaper reported. "Not only will leaders discuss how to treat civilians under the rules of engagement, but small units also will be ordered to go through training scenarios to gauge their understanding of those rules," the report said. There was no immediate comment from a U.S. Central Command spokesman in Baghdad. A separate ongoing military inquiry found evidence that the killings in Haditha were unprovoked, contradicting an account of the incident by U.S. Marines, U.S. officials said on Wednesday. The probe by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, responsible for cases involving Marines, might lead to charges including murder, officials said.
theglobalchinese
Iraqi PM mounts first security crackdown in Basra Yahoo! News
Police and soldiers set up checkpoints and searched cars in Iraq's second city on Thursday in a first test of new Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's ability to restore stability with an "iron fist" security crackdown. A day after he declared a one-month state of emergency in key oil hub Basra, the tough-talking Shi'ite Islamist said in Baghdad he planned to present his candidates for the interior and defense ministers to parliament on Sunday. He named his cabinet on May 20 without the two key security posts after failing to reach a consensus deal among the main blocs -- the Shi'ites, minority Sunni Arabs, Kurds and secular parties -- who form his national unity government. "We have reached a semi-closed road so I will go to the parliament with names of the candidates," said Maliki, who has vowed to rein in guerrilla and sectarian violence. Maliki ordered the army onto Basra's streets on Wednesday, vowing to use an "iron fist" to show Iraqis he means business about tackling insecurity. Basra, 550 km (340 miles) south of Baghdad, should be an early indication of whether he can back his words with action after previous Iraqi leaders failed to ease a raging Sunni insurgency and sectarian violence threatening vital oil exports. Also on Thursday, a top U.S. commander ordered combat troops to be trained to abide by moral and ethical standards on the battlefield, an apparent response to allegations U.S. Marines killed civilians in a western Iraqi town last year. In a case making waves in the United States, U.S. defense officials have said charges including murder may be brought against Marines following a U.S. investigation into the deaths of 24 civilian deaths in Haditha in November. The training over the next 30 days in "core warrior values" would highlight "the importance of adhering to legal, moral and ethical standards on the battlefield," a statement said. Lieutenant General Peter W. Chiarelli said that of nearly 150,000 U.S.-led troops in the country "99.9 percent of them perform their jobs magnificently" every day. "Unfortunately, there are a few individuals who sometimes choose the wrong path," he said in the statement. It did not mention events in Haditha, which some commentators are comparing to the 1968 My Lai massacre in Vietnam that helped turn many Americans against that war.

BASRA CRACKDOWN
In Basra some residents said security forces faced a complex network of gangs and assassins that includes Saddam Hussein loyalists and warring Shi'ite militias who thrive in the bloody chaos of an oil city that provides much of Iraq's income. "There are Baathist looting gangs. There are militias. There are even some tribes who come and occupy police stations," said Saleem Abdullah, 27, a graduate student. Checkpoints have popped up across Basra, with the police in the city center and army units on the outskirts inspecting every car that passes by, witnesses said. "There will be constant patrols. We have orders to pull over cars with shaded windows. Unauthorized weapons will be taken," said police captain Ali Jassem. Although the southern mainly Shi'ite region where British forces are based has been much quieter than Sunni Arab areas patrolled by Americans further north, Basra has become far more dangerous in recent months.
By Aref Mohammed
theglobalchinese
Iraq wants to set rules on U.S. raids Yahoo! News
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki on Thursday denounced the alleged killings of Iraqi civilians by U.S. forces and said he asked a ministerial committee to hold talks with U.S. military to set ground rules for raids and detentions. The move came in the wake of an investigation into allegations that U.S. Marines killed unarmed civilians in the western city of Haditha. Al-Maliki said he had ordered the "national security ministerial committee to follow up on this issue with the multinational forces" and "to hold talks with the multinational forces to formulate ground rules for detentions and raids." When asked about Iraqi complaints that U.S. forces show no regard for their lives during raids and detentions, al-Maliki said he objected to such practices. "We cannot forgive violations of the dignity of the Iraqi people," he said during a press conference. He also said the Cabinet had agreed to issue a statement denouncing such practices. The killings at Haditha, a city that has been plagued by insurgents, came after a bomb rocked a military convoy on Nov. 19, killing a Marine. Rep. John Murtha (news, bio, voting record), D-Pa., a decorated war veteran who has been briefed by military officials, has said Marines shot and killed unarmed civilians in a taxi at the scene and went into two homes and shot others. The U.S. military says it constantly strives to avoid civilian casualties and has promised the deaths in Haditha, 140 miles northwest of Baghdad, will be fully investigated. In his first public comments on the incident, President Bush said Wednesday that he was troubled by the allegations, and that, "If in fact laws were broken, there will be punishment." More than 4,000 Iraqis — many of them civilians — have been killed in war-related violence this year, including at least 936 in May alone, according to an Associated Press count. That makes May the second deadliest month for Iraqis over the past year. Only March recorded more fatalities.
Snuffysmith
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/HF02Ak01.html
Iraq: Alas in wonderland
By Ashraf Fahim

There is a hallucinatory, Alice in Wonderland quality to recent suggestions that the formation of an elected Iraqi government will allow US and British troops to withdraw from Iraq in large numbers.

No sooner did Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki say that Iraqi troops would take over most of Iraq from the departing "coalition" by year's end, confirming the whisperings of British and US officials, than the United States announced that 3,500 reserves were headed in the other direction, from their bases in Kuwait to Ramadi.

All that is missing from this picture is White House Press Secretary Tony Snow dressed up as the March Hare explaining to the press corps why adding troops is the same as withdrawing them.

Only a few days earlier, US President George W Bush had spoken with preternatural confidence of Iraq's latest "turning point" during a press conference held jointly with British Prime Minister Tony Blair. To anyone who owns a television, on which Iraq is nightly a vision of the Inferno in living color, such optimism would seem misplaced.

"With emergence of this government, something fundamental changed in Iraq last weekend," said Bush. "When you attack an Iraqi now, you're - you know, you're at war with an Iraqi government that's constitutionally elected. And that's a different attitude from the way it's been in the past."

True, Bush was careful not to endorse Maliki's timeline - "as the Iraqis stand up, we'll stand down", he enjoys saying - but he did seem to scent an end to Iraq's dark night in the May breeze.

With hindsight, previous "turning points" have proved to be anything but. A recent report by the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) took a critical look: "The December 15, 2005, election did no more to stabilize the situation and limit the insurgency than the transfer of power from the CPA [Coalition Provisional Authority] to the Iraqi interim government in June 2004, or any of the other elections that followed."

Through all these milestones, the carnage goes on - from the dark work of death squads and internecine slaughter that has spiraled out of control since the February bombing of the Samarra mosque (sacred to Shi'ites), to the fury of insurgent attacks, to rampant crime and kidnappings, to ever-present US military strikes.

War in Iraq is a juggernaut, impervious to the political dictates emanating from the air-conditioned tranquillity of the Green Zone. Since Maliki named his cabinet, nothing has changed - 54 were killed in violence on Tuesday, an unremarkable toll.

And yet rumors of a drawdown abound. Pentagon officials regularly brief the press that a third of US forces could leave by the end of June. A senior US military official said Najaf and Karbala would be relinquished during the summer and Baghdad by New Year's. And British officials have told the media that British troops would start by ceding the southern city of Muthanna in July, cut the entire presence in half by year's end, and depart by 2010.

Maliki has brimmed with confidence at the prospects of an Iraqi takeover. "Our forces will be able to take over the security file in all Iraqi provinces in a year and a half," he said after meeting with Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen. Sensing something fishy, Blair corrected him last Friday: "When ... Prime Minister Maliki talked about an objective timetable, what he meant was a timetable governed by conditions on the ground."

All spin and no stability
Blair, Bush and Maliki surely have good reason for the creative ambiguity they are engaging in. The US is gearing up for a congressional election in which Iraq is the Republicans' albatross, and a phantom withdrawal is better than none at all. Meanwhile, Blair's sunken fortunes within the Labour Party are not helped by the Iraq horror show, and he must spin furiously to keep afloat.

And Maliki's bravado is essential to burnishing the nationalist credentials on which his government's survival depends.

But spin does not change the reality that the "coalition" is stuck with a relentless war and a divisive political process. The predominantly Sunni insurgency rages unabated, Iraq's armed forces remain recast sectarian militias, and the still-dominant Shi'ite parties that Bush and Blair are banking on to bring stability are tied to the Shi'ite militias whose death squads run rampant.

Reining in the militias is the key to stability. Even US Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad has claimed that "more Iraqis are dying from militia violence than from the terrorists". But Maliki will have great difficulty enforcing the constitutional ban on militias, even if he wants to.

Even if the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution for Iraq's (SCIRI's) Badr Organization laid down its arms, for instance, the Mehdi Army of Muqtada al-Sadr (who is somewhat independent of the political process) might not follow suit. In addition, the Kurdish peshmerga, ever fearful of the central government, is unlikely to disarm. And if one militia refuses, all will likely refuse. Were the militias to be integrated into the armed forces, it would likely further the justifiable suspicions of the Sunni Arabs that the armed forces are manned by those loyal to sect rather than to nation.

By most accounts the Iraqi armed forces are in any event incapable of ruling Iraq independently. Though their numbers are increasing, according to the Pentagon, many are still dependent on the US for logistics, transport and communications support.

For all the talk of national unity, Iraq's permanent government remains dominated by the Shi'ite parties that won the elections based on their denominational identity. The marginalized Sunnis are better represented now, but the ethnic harmony that briefly erupted is fast wilting.

Prominent Sunni politician Salih al-Mutlaq's party, the Iraqi Front for National Dialogue, recently walked out of a parliamentary session intended to approve the cabinet. Even the Shi'ite al-Fadilah Party, active in increasingly unstable Basra, withdrew from negotiations over cabinet posts, saying sectarianism was trumping merit.

Bush has nevertheless sensed the winds of change. He brags that Iraq's new Sunni parliamentary Speaker, Mahmoud al-Mashhadani, a onetime opponent of the US occupation, now takes his calls. "He wouldn't have taken my phone call a year ago," Bush said. "He's now taken it twice."

Yet according to one report, the Kurdish and Shi'ite blocs recently met in closed session to curtail Mashhadani's powers. An expert on Iraq, Juan Cole, wrote: "The Sunni Arabs only have a vice president, a vice premier, four cabinet seats, and the Speaker of the House among high government posts. They are outraged that one of the few nodes of power they have left should now be removed." The Speaker may not be taking Bush's calls for long.

The new government will most likely continue to be perceived in Iraq as a collection of sectarian fiefdoms masquerading as ministries. With reconstruction having ground to a halt and basic services a disaster - oil and electricity production are below prewar levels - the government's crisis of legitimacy and the concomitant disorder will go on.

Men with guns
The vacuum left by chaos and political polarization is filled by the men with guns, be they Interior Ministry commandos kidnapping, torturing and executing Sunnis, Sunni insurgents blowing up innumerable Shi'ites, or US troops killing without prejudice.

The raw statistics on the violence say it all. According to Baghdad's morgue director, death squads linked to militias have killed 7,000 Iraqis. In the meantime, the insurgency is as effective as ever. The Brookings Institution puts car bombings constant at about 70 in May. According to iCasualties.org, 76 coalition soldiers were killed in May, about average for the war. Meanwhile, 146 Iraqi soldiers and police were killed and at least eight times as many civilians.

The rote official response to this catalogue of doom is that most of Iraq is relatively peaceful. Taking up this logic, the CSIS report tried valiantly, but failed, to find a silver lining: "Some 83% of the attacks from August 29, 2005, through January 20, 2006, occurred in only four of Iraq's 18 provinces, although these provinces do include Baghdad and Mosul and have some 43% of the population."

Of course given that parts of Anbar province are not under US control (by Khalilzad's own admission), and that Ramadi, its capital and the insurgents' stronghold, is in essence a free-fire zone, the relative state of the rest of Iraq is not so bad.

Basra is under coalition control, for example, and is the scene of a violent power struggle among Shi'ite parties. The Badr Organization, the Fadilha Party - which is aligned to the governor - and Muqtada's Mehdi Army now fight over a city stalked by criminal gangs, with Fadilha raising the stakes recently by threatening to end oil exports. Maliki is so concerned that he flew out to try and arbitrate, but ended up declaring a state of emergency.

Sunni Arabs in Ramadi daily experience chaos that belies official optimism - they are caught in a pincer between the Shi'ite/Kurdish armed forces, the insurgents who demand absolute fealty, and US military might. The city has been devastated by these crosswinds.

Nearly a dozen Sunni Arab tribal leaders who were cooperating with the US have been assassinated by insurgents and, as the media have reported, "The insurgent attacks since then have all but frozen the cooperation between Sunni tribal leaders and US forces."

It is difficult not to argue that in such places as Ramadi, if not in all of Iraq, it is the US presence at the locus of the violence. Some have argued that one way to cut this Gordian knot would be simply to withdraw US troops short of "victory" as defined by the coalition, at the very least eliminating the deadly war between the US and the insurgents.

The Bush administration has apparently flirted with this idea, but decided not to change horses in midstream. Al-Sharq al-Awsat newspaper reported in early May that 10 insurgent groups had been meeting with Khalilzad and proposed a memo offering to dismantle their groups immediately after a US withdrawal. They broke off talks on April 29, however, absent a US response.

Blair may believe, as he said last Friday, "There is no excuse now for anyone to engage in violence in Iraq." But the insurgents, fearful of a permanent foreign military presence, disagree.

Divided and weighed down by war, Iraq is coming apart at the seams, with its people racing toward the emerging fault lines. To all the other tribulations Iraqis are enduring must be added the specter of ethnic cleansing.

"The state of Iraq now resembles Bosnia at the height of the fighting in the 1990s," wrote Patrick Cockburn in The Independent. "Sectarian warfare has broken out in every Iraqi city where there is a mixed population ... Sunnis have been fleeing Basra after a series of killings. Christians are being eliminated in Mosul in the north. Shi'ites are being killed or driven out of cities and towns north of Baghdad."

And yet from the other side of the looking glass, things are going more or less to plan, and Iraq is soon to become a wondrous, happy place. Any day now Sunni, Kurd and Shi'ite will lay down their arms and sit down together at the Mad Democracy Tea Party, and the coalition freedom-bringers will sail off into the sunset after a job well done.

Ashraf Fahim is a freelance writer on Middle Eastern affairs based in New York and London. His writing can be found at www.storminateacup.org.uk.

(Copyright 2006 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing .)
Snuffysmith
PSY-OPS COUNTERED BY ISLAMIC DIGITAL PROPAGANDA - SELWYN MANNING (SCOOP AUCKLAND, JUNE 1)
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0606/S00016.htm

IRAQ: KILLING OF JOURNALISTS IS CHOKING INFORMATION (RFR/RL, MAY 31): Correspondent Jan Jun spoke with the director of IPI's International News-Safety Institute, Rodney Pinder, about why the war in Iraq is an especially dangerous war for journalists and about the impact on coverage of the conflict.
http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2006/...374f558760.html

LIVE FROM BAGHDAD: MORE DYING - MAUREEN DOWD (NEW YORK TIMES, MAY 31): The tally of journalists killed in Iraq is now 71, more than the number killed in Vietnam or World War II.
http://select.nytimes.com/2006/05/31/opinion/31dowd.html
PAID SUBCRIPTION

THE SHAME OF KILO COMPANY: SPARKED BY A TIME REPORT PUBLISHED IN MARCH, A U.S. MILITARY INVESTIGATION IS PROBING THE KILLING OF AS MANY AS 24 IRAQI CIVILIANS BY A GROUP OF MARINES IN THE TOWN OF HADITHA LAST NOVEMBER. SEVERAL MARINES MAY FACE CRIMINAL CHARGES, INCLUDING MURDER. AND NEW REVELATIONS SUGGEST THAT THEIR SUPERIORS MAY HAVE HELPED IN A COVER-UP - MICHAEL DUFFY (TIME, JUNE 5)
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/...1198892,00.html

PROBE INTO IRAQ DEATHS FINDS FALSE REPORTS: U.S., ALLIED TROOPS IN IRAQ TO UNDERGO 'CORE VALUES' TRAINING - THOMAS E.RICKS AND ELLEN KNICKMEYER (WASHINGTON POST, JUNE 1)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...6060100343.html
SEE ALSO
http://www.wonkette.com/politics/iraq/coup...-out-177616.php

HADITHA MASSACRE: AMERICA'S ALLIES SHOCKED, BUT NO LONGER SURPRISED ? EDWARD M. GOMEZ (WORLD VIEWS, SF GATE, MAY 30)
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/sfgate/det...5&entry_id=5626

FROM HUBRIS TO HUMILITY - DERRICK Z. JACKSON (BOSTON GLOBE, MAY 31): It should not surprise us that a few of soldiers may have turned their hatred of being in Iraq into a door-to-door killing spree of the innocent.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial...is_to_humility/

INVESTIGATING HADITHA EDITORIAL (CHICAGO TRIBUNE, MAY 31): It is critical, whatever the fallout for U.S. interests, that the U.S. military give a full accounting.
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion...newsopinion-hed

DEATH IN HADITHA EDITORIAL (BOSTON GLOBE, MAY 31): The Pentagon needs to probe deeply to determine whether a cover-up of the Haditha killings extended beyond the battalion.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial...ath_in_haditha/

MEN@WAR: HADITHAH IN CONTEXT - MACKUBIN THOMAS OWENS (NATIONAL REVIEW, MAY 30): For insurgents, there is no more powerful propaganda tool than the claim that their adversaries are employing force in an indiscriminate manner.
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=MGFjZ...2I4NDEwYWM5NWI=

WHAT HAPPENED IN HADITHA: THE RESPONSE TO A REPORTED MASSACRE BY U.S. TROOPS MUST BE FULL ACCOUNTABILITY EDITORIAL (WASHINGTON POST, MAY 31): Though we don't yet know the details of the Marine investigation, there is no way to mitigate or excuse such despicable acts if they occurred, and hardly any way to alleviate the tremendous damage that will be done to U.S. honor in Iraq and around the world.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...6053001308.html

COUNTLESS MY LAIS IN IRAQ - DAHR JAMAIL (ANTIWAR.COM, MAY 31): Just like Abu Ghraib, while the media spotlight shines squarely on the Haditha massacre, countless atrocities continue daily, conveniently out of the awareness of the general public.
http://www.antiwar.com/jamail/?articleid=9068

U.S. TROOPS KILL PREGNANT WOMAN IN IRAQ - KIM GAMEL, ASSOCIATED PRESS (CHICAGO TRIBUNE, MAY 31)
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationw...ll=chi-news-hed

INSURGENT ATTACKS IN IRAQ AT HIGHEST LEVEL IN 2 YEARS: MILITANTS EXPLOITING POLITICAL UNCERTAINTY, PENTAGON SAYS - BRYAN BENDER (BOSTON GLOBE, MAY 31)
http://www.boston.com/news/world/middleeas...vel_in_2_years/

ADVICE AND DISSENT: U.S. POLS NEED TO GET REAL ABOUT IRAQ'S PROBLEMS - FRED KAPLAN (SLATE, MAY 30): If Condi Rice thinks that, with a dash of pressure and willpower, the Iraqis can make the wheels of governance spin, no wonder she and her associates look so crestfallen whenever they speak on the subject.
http://www.slate.com/id/2142638/?nav=tap3

A POLITICAL PATH OUT OF IRAQ - FAREED ZAKARIA (WASHINGTON POST, MAY 31): The greatest challenge in Iraq comes from the large and growing Mahdi Army of renegade cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...6053001180.html

TEARING IRAQ APART - THOMAS X. HAMMES (NEW YORK TIMES, JUNE 1): To keep Iraq unified, the White House must commit to long timelines and to providing the money necessary for both the military and reconstruction efforts.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/01/opinion/01hammes.html

A QUICK FIX FOR THE GAS ADDICTS - THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN (NEW YORK TIMES, MAY 31): Bush is ready to send young Americans to war, but he's not ready to look Detroit or Congress in the eye and demand that we put in place the fuel-efficiency legislation that will weaken the forces of theocracy and autocracy that are killing our soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan.
http://select.nytimes.com/2006/05/31/opinion/31friedman.html
PAID SUBCRIPTION
Snuffysmith
In another town, Iraqis say US killed civilians

By Reuters

Iraqi army and police officers and several people who said they were witnesses and relatives of the dead said U.S. soldiers killed two women, aged 60 and 20, and a mentally handicapped man in their home on May 4 after insurgents fired on the troops.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13459.htm

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The 10,000th Haditha.

By Ted Rall

Months after Time magazine reported that U.S. Marines had carried out a My Lai-style massacre of at least two dozen innocent Iraqi civilians, the average "support our troops" American is waking up and smelling the butchery.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13457.htm

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Iraq War Vets talk about random civilian killings

Excerpt From BBC Documentary

Newsnight follow a group of former US soldiers who have returned from Iraq deeply affected by the experience. As they march across America to protest, shocking interviews emerge on the indiscriminate killing of Iraqi civilians.

Click here to watch.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13454.htm

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Iraqi Girl tells of US Attack in Haditha

Video

Ten-year-old Iman Walid witnessed the killing of seven members of her family in an attack by American marines last November. The interview with Iman was filmed exclusively for ITV News by Ali Hamdani,our Iraqi video diarist..

Click Here To View
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13452.htm

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Justice Denied

By Dima Tareq Tahboub

Three years last April will have passed since the killing of my husband. We spent the same number of years together, three years of happy and blessed marital and paternal life that were cut short by the dark forces of American democracy.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13469.htm

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Media Crimes Sanitize War Crimes in Iraq

By Danny Schechter

As events in Iraq continue to slip from bad to worse, the good news brigade is scrambling for new stories— - ‘anything, give me anything’ - to shore up what’s left of public support for a bloody war without end.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13467.htm
Snuffysmith
At least 18 kiled as occupation continues:

Several mortar bombs exploded on the southern edge of Baghdad, killing at least nine people and injuring 43, police sources said.
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L01577281.htm

===
Iraqi Kurds accuse Turkey of shelling:

Turkey has been accused of shelling villages inside in Iraq's autonomous region of Kurdistan.
http://tinyurl.com/rqh8x

===
Iraqis' Accounts Link Marines to the Mass Killing of Civilians:

She said American troops shot and killed her husband, Rashid Abdul Hamid. They killed her father-in-law, Abdul Hamid Hassan Ali, a 77-year-old in a wheelchair, shooting him in the chest and abdomen, she said.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13462.htm

===
Maliki: Haditha a 'terrible crime':

Nuri al-Maliki, the Iraqi prime minister, said on Thursday that the deaths of 24 Iraqis in the western town of Haditha last November, apparently at the hands of US marines, was a "terrible crime".
http://tinyurl.com/o5alz

===
U.S. Conducts Three More Probes Into Military's Conduct in Iraq :

The U.S. military, facing allegations that Marines killed civilians in November in western Iraq, is conducting at least three more probes into the conduct of its forces in Iraq, spokesman Major-General William Caldwell said.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13460.htm

===
A Time For Mutiny? :

Prior to this war, we were trained to be killers, not murderers. We killed combatants, not women and children.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13455.htm

===
Values training in Iraq:

The top U.S. general in Iraq today ordered American commanders to conduct core values training on moral and ethical standards on the battlefield.
http://www.yorkdispatch.com/nationworld/ci_3887931

===
The really big question with no answers:

t's four Memorial Days and counting since "Mission Accomplished." We still have 132,000 American troops in Iraq. A million of our men and women have served by now, giving of themselves in tragic and extraordinary ways. Yet the insurgency is growing bolder - not fading away.
http://www.newsday.com/news/columnists/ny-...0,687603.column
theglobalchinese
Baghdad mortar barrage kills nine BBC News
At least nine people have been killed and some 40 wounded in a mortar bomb attack in southern Baghdad. Several mortar bombs landed in the Doura neighbourhood of the Iraqi capital, police said. The number of casualties are expected to rise, police sources were quoted by Reuters news agency as saying. Doura is considered one of Baghdad's most dangerous areas. It has been the site of frequent bombings since the mainly Sunni insurgency began in 2003. The same area came under a similar mortar attack on Wednesday, killing nine people and injuring 17, police said. In other violence on Thursday, a bomb killed two Iraqis and wounded another 21, as they milled around hoping for construction work in a central Baghdad square, police said.
theglobalchinese
Abu Ghraib dog handler convicted BBC News
A US Army dog handler has been convicted of abusing prisoners with his dog at Iraq's Abu Ghraib jail. Sgt Santos Cardona, 32, was found guilty on two of nine charges of abuse and dereliction of duty at the prison, near Baghdad, in 2003 and 2004. Cardona now faces up to three-and-a-half years in jail. The military policeman is the 11th American soldier to be convicted in connection with abuse of detainees at Abu Ghraib jail.

'Biggest mistake'
As well as his jail term, Cardona could also be discharged from the army or have his rank reduced.

Images of the Abu Ghraib abuse were shown around the world

A US military jury cleared Cardona of seven other charges of at a trial at Fort Meade in Maryland, in a court martial which began on Tuesday. President George W Bush last week called the incident the biggest mistake of America's war in Iraq. The prosecution had described Cardona as one of a group of "corrupt cops" who tormented Iraqi prisoners for fun. But the defence argued the accused was only obeying orders from senior officers. The conviction follows the March jailing of US army dog handler Sgt Michael Smith, who received six months for abusing detainees in Abu Ghraib from 2003 to 2004. The Abu Ghraib scandal came to light in 2004, after photographs showing the abuse and sexual humiliation of Iraqi prisoners were leaked to the US press. Some had shown unmuzzled dogs threatening naked prisoners. No senior officers have so far been convicted for the abuse at the prison. Cardona's verdict comes as the US investigates the deaths of 24 Iraqi civilians last November at Haditha. US marines are suspected of carrying out a massacre.
Snuffysmith
http://apnews.excite.com/article/20060602/D8I01FUG0.html




Iraqi PM Calls Haditha Killings 'Horrible'

Jun 2, 6:49 AM (ET)

By HAMZA HENDAWI


BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki upbraided the U.S. military over allegations that Marines killed two dozen unarmed civilians in Haditha, calling the killings "a horrible crime" in his strongest public comments on the subject since his government was sworn in last month.

The U.S. military ordered coalition troops in Iraq on Thursday to undergo special training in ethics and "the values that separate us from our enemies" in the wake of the Haditha allegations.

The order came as Iraq's government began its own investigation of the deaths last November in the western town as well as other incidents involving U.S. troops.

Al-Maliki said the list of human rights breaches by coalition forces in Iraq was long.


"This is a phenomenon that has become common among many of the multinational forces," the prime minister said. "No respect for citizens, smashing civilian cars and killing on a suspicion or a hunch. It's unacceptable."

Al-Maliki's remarks bolstered Iraqi complaints that U.S. troops are insensitive to their culture and show disregard for their lives. To many Iraqis, the soldiers are occupiers seeking to control the country's oil wealth.

The Americans, on the other hand, are under intense pressure, isolated from Iraqis by cultural and language barriers and battling insurgents who easily blend into the civilian population. Some of the troops are in Iraq on their third combat tour since the U.S. invasion three years ago.

The training, which will include slideshows, will cover all coalition soldiers in Iraq and last 30 days. Of the 150,000-strong multinational contingent in Iraq, 130,000 are Americans.

"As military professionals, it is important that we take time to reflect on the values that separate us from our enemies," Lt. Gen. Peter Chiarelli, the No. 2 U.S. general in Iraq, said in a statement. "The challenge for us is to make sure the actions of a few do not tarnish the good work of the many."

Maj. Gen. William Caldwell, spokesman for the Multinational Force-Iraq, told a Baghdad news briefing that the training was designed to reinforce what troops learned before coming to Iraq. It will focus on "values and looking at the legal, moral and ethical standards that every one of us in uniform here, as guests of the Iraqi government, need to adhere to," he said.

"The coalition does not and will not tolerate any unethical or criminal behavior. All allegations of such activity will be fully investigated," he said.

Chiarelli's announcement followed last week's visit to Iraq by U.S. Marine Commandant, Gen. Michael W. Hagee, who cautioned troops on the danger of becoming "indifferent to the loss of a human life."

The U.S. military is conducting at least two investigations into the killings of civilians, including women and children, in Haditha on Nov. 19.

The killings followed the death that day of a Marine in a bomb explosion that targeted a military convoy. Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa., a decorated war veteran who has been briefed by military officials, has said the Marines, angered by the loss of a comrade, shot and killed civilians in a taxi near the scene and went into nearby homes and shot others.

U.S. military investigators have evidence that points toward unprovoked murders by the Marines, a senior defense official said last week. The Washington Post reported Thursday that the investigators will conclude some officers gave false testimony to their superiors, who then failed to scrutinize the reports adequately.

"It appears to be a horrible crime," Prime Minister al-Maliki told reporters. "A large number of women, men and children have been killed because of an explosion that targeted a vehicle of the multinational forces."

It took nearly a month for President Bush to be told of the Haditha investigation, the White House said Thursday. Earlier this week, Bush aides had said the president was briefed "soon after" the probe began.

The decision to launch an Iraqi inquiry was made at a Cabinet meeting Thursday, according to Adnan al-Kazimi, an adviser to the prime minister.

A committee of security experts as well as officials from the Justice and Human Rights ministries will look into the Haditha incident as well as other cases where misconduct by U.S. troops is suspected, al-Kazimi told The Associated Press.

An Iraqi government, which took office May 20, said the Haditha "tragedy" violated the guidelines of justice and human rights" and demanded no leniency be shown to its perpetrators.

"The Council of Ministers demands that generous financial compensations be paid to the victims' families and an official apology be presented to the Iraqi government after the results of the investigation are announced," a government statement said. It emphasized, however, the need for coordination between the Iraqi side and the U.S.-led coalition forces.

------
Snuffysmith
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060602/ap_on_...HE0BHNlYwN0bWE-



Al-Zarqawi urges Sunnis to take on Shiites
By MAGGIE MICHAEL, Associated Press Writer

The leader of al-Qaida in Iraq urged Sunnis to confront Shiites and ignore calls for reconciliation in a new audiotape posted on the Web on Friday, saying Shiite militias are killing and raping the Sunni Arab minority.

The tape was a four-hour sermon by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi against Shiites, denouncing their top cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani as an "atheist" and saying the community had collaborated with invaders throughout Iraq's history.

"Oh Sunni people, wake up, pay attention and prepare to confront the poisons of the Shiite snakes who are afflicting you with all agonies since the invasion of Iraq until our day. Forget about those advocating the end of sectariansim and calling for national unity," al-Zarqawi said.

The authenticity of the audiotape could not be independently confirmed. It was posted on a Web forum often used by his al-Qaida in Iraq for messages and the voice resembled that of al-Zaraqawi's on other confirmed tapes from him.

It was the first message from al-Zarqawi since April, when he appeared in a video tape saying that any government formed in Iraq would be merely a "stooge" of the Americans. That video was the first time al-Qaida in Iraq had released images showing al-Zarqawi's face.

Al-Zarqawi, a Jordanian, has claimed responsibility for some of the most high-profile suicide bombings in Iraq, and also for a score of other attacks including hotel bombings in November in Jordan.
theglobalchinese
Our responsibility on Iraq John Kerry
Dear Friend,
It's as simple as this. Most members of Congress, myself included, share some responsibility for getting us into Iraq. We've got to take responsibility for getting us out. Since April, hundreds of thousands of you have joined me in calling for a change in policy, a change in course -- for Iraq, and for Americans here at home. Now let's turn the volume up higher. Washington needs to hear your voice.

Click here!

The violence continues to spiral in Iraq. But, instead of a deadline to bring our troops home and put the future of Iraq in the hands of Iraqi leaders, we get half-hearted comments about past mistakes, and cynical political calculation. Last month, I introduced Senate Joint Resolution 36 which calls for the withdrawal of our combat troops from Iraq by the end of this year. In the next few weeks, I am urging the Senate to take a strong stand on Iraq and pass this Resolution. It's time to put the future of Iraq where it belongs - in the hands of the Iraqi people and their leaders. Our valiant soldiers have done their job.

Tell your Senators: support Senate Joint Resolution 36 to bring our combat troops home in 2006
President Bush wants to stumble along, perpetuating his mistakes for the remainder of his time in office. He's even suggested that decisions about withdrawing all of our troops from Iraq will be for the next president to make. And, instead of statesmanship, the president's top advisor, Karl Rove, is worrying that the war has put voters in a "sour mood" for the 2006 elections. He should be worried about the safety of our troops, not the job security of Republican congressmen. It took President Bush three years to admit he was wrong to say 'bring it on.' We can't afford years to go by until he admits the standstill in Iraq today is wrong.

Tell your Senators: support Senate Joint Resolution 36 to bring our combat troops home in 2006
After months of squabbling and delay, we now hear that the new Iraqi government will complete its cabinet in a matter of days. So, it's time to act -- time to keep the pressure on. Iraqi leaders have only responded to deadlines -- a deadline to transfer authority to a provisional government, a deadline to hold three elections, and their own constitutional deadline to establish a unity government. Now we must set another deadline to get our combat troops out and get Iraq up on its own two feet. We must agree with the new Iraqi government on a schedule for withdrawing American combat forces by the end of this year. Doing so will empower the new Iraqi leadership, put Iraqis in the position of running their own country, and undermine support for the insurgency, which is fueled in large measure by the majority of Iraqis who want us to leave their country.

Tell your Senators: support Senate Joint Resolution 36 to bring our combat troops home in 2006
Our soldiers have done their job, and America is grateful to them for their honor and sacrifice. Now it's time for the Iraqis to do their job of securing and governing their country and it is time to get our combat troops home in 2006. Only troops essential to finishing the job of training Iraqi forces should remain. We need blunt talk and clear plans -- and only pressure from you can force Washington to change course. I am committed to forcing Congress to speak out on Iraq. Yesterday in Los Angeles I made it clear that I'm not going to stop fighting until we have a change in policy. I urge you to keep supporting our efforts to force action when lives are on the line and leadership is desperately needed.
Sincerely,

John Kerry
MAKE A CONTRIBUTION
theglobalchinese
Military denies latest claims of deliberate killings in Iraq Seattle Times
Senior Defense Department officials pushed back Friday against the latest accusations of wrongdoing, denying accounts that US soldiers deliberately killed civilians in a March raid but acknowledging that more civilians might have died than first reported. Iraqi police and other witnesses had claimed that U.S. forces killed as many as 13 civilians in the hamlet of Ishaqi, 60 miles north of Baghdad, tying up some and shooting them in the head. Video obtained by the British Broadcasting Corp. and The Associated Press showed some bodies of victims, including several children, who apparently had been killed by gunshot wounds or shrapnel. The U.S. military initially reported four people — one insurgent and three civilians — were killed in the Ishaqi raid. But officials acknowledged Friday that eight other noncombatants had been killed, calling those casualties "collateral deaths." The new questions about the military's account came in the wake of other allegations of misconduct by U.S. troops. In one, a squad of Marines is accused of killing as many as 24 unarmed Iraqi civilians in Haditha. The incident is under investigation both for the soldiers' actions and for the way in which it was handled by the Marine Corps, which has been accused of a cover-up. In another incident, eight Marines could face murder charges in the death of a civilian in Hamdania in April, and other charges for possibly attempting to cover up the killing. The developments have prompted concern within the military that the public will perceive a pattern of excessive violence, lack of discipline and criminal acts. Trying to head off another controversy, military officials Friday vehemently denied that the incident at Ishaqi bore any relationship to Haditha.
QUOTE("The other investigations")
  • Haditha: The U.S. is investigating reports that up to 24 unarmed Iraqi civilians were killed Nov. 19 when Marines stormed into homes after a roadside bomb killed a comrade. A lawyer for the families said three or four Marines carried out the shootings while 20 waited outside. The military also is investigating whether there was a cover-up. The Iraqi government also has said it will investigate.
  • Hamdania: Eight Marines could face murder, kidnapping and conspiracy charges in the April 26 death of an Iraqi man who reportedly was dragged from his home and shot. The Marines are being held in solitary confinement at Camp Pendleton in California.
"Nothing suggests anything happened close to Haditha," a senior Defense official said. The military acknowledges that something went wrong in Haditha, both in the killings and in the failure to quickly investigate what happened. But military officials believe Haditha was an aberration, and they took pains Friday to show they had investigated the Ishaqi raid thoroughly. A senior Pentagon official said the military's investigation — which began soon after the Ishaqi incident — showed that the civilians were killed in a crossfire between U.S. forces and members of terrorist leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's organization. In a written statement, Maj. Gen. William Caldwell IV said the raid was launched against a building where a Kuwaiti-born al-Qaida cell leader, Ahmad Abdallah Muhammed Na'is Al-Utaybi, and a bomb maker, Uday Faris al-Tawafi, aka Abu Ahmed, were located. Allegations that U.S. forces executed a family during the raid, then covered it up by directing an airstrike on their house, "are absolutely false," Caldwell said. "The investigation revealed the ground force commander, while capturing and killing terrorists, operated in accordance with the rules of engagement governing our combat forces in Iraq," he said. Caldwell said U.S. troops began taking fire from a house as they arrived in the area. U.S. forces returned fire, but called in helicopters and finally an airstrike after firing from the house persisted, "ultimately eliminating the threat," he said. "The investigating officer ascertained that the ground force commander properly followed the rules of engagement as he necessarily escalated the use of force until the threat was eliminated," Caldwell said. Al-Utaybi was captured, and U.S. troops found the bodies of Abu Ahmed and three civilians, Caldwell said. The investigator concluded that as many as nine other people died in the airstrike, but a precise number couldn't be determined because the house's walls had collapsed. Caldwell said the investigation was carried out the day after claims arose that U.S. troops had killed the civilians. Iraqis interviewed immediately after the raid acknowledged that an al-Qaida member was visiting the house. They said he was visiting the house's owner, a relative who was a local schoolteacher. While accusations that U.S. troops kill civilians are fairly common in Iraq, the Ishaqi incident stood out because the claims of civilian deaths originated with Iraqi police. The police reported that U.S. troops herded at least 11 people into the house and executed them. Those killed included a 75-year-old woman and a 6-month-old infant, the police report said. But inconsistencies in those claims soon appeared. The Iraqi officer investigating the case initially claimed that each of the dead had been handcuffed and shot once in the head. But reports of the medical examinations of the bodies showed that each bore multiple wounds. Partly because of inconsistencies, an initial inquiry by U.S. military officials never developed into a formal criminal investigation, according to a defense official familiar with initial findings. "There were too many inconsistencies," said the official, who asked not to be named since those findings hadn't been released. "It didn't all add up." Relatives of the deceased said Friday that the U.S. investigation was cursory at best. They said a U.S. officer came and interviewed people once after the raid but never returned. "We do not want anything," said Adil Maruf, 27, whose sister-in-law, nephew and niece were killed in the raid. "We just want the American soldiers to be exposed. We do not want it to be repeated again."
By Los Angeles Times and Knight Ridder Newspapers.
US soldiers cleared of murdering civilians in Iraq Mail & Guardian Online
Military clears GIs at Ishaqi while Haditha probe opens Chicago Tribune
CBC News - New York Times - Monsters and Critics.com - BBC News - all 929 related »
theglobalchinese
Troops cleared of Iraq wrongdoing BBC News
A US military investigation has found there was no misconduct by US troops over Iraqi civilian deaths in the town of Ishaqi, a spokesman says. Maj Gen William Caldwell said reports that troops "executed" a family during a raid on a house in March and tried to cover it up were "absolutely false". Questions over the 11 deaths in Ishaqi come amid a Pentagon inquiry into a bigger alleged massacre in Haditha. The US has announced extra training in moral and ethical values for troops. Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki has criticised coalition forces for what he describes as habitual attacks against civilians. News in the US this week has been dominated by discussion of the investigations in Iraq, the BBC's Adam Brookes reports from Washington. The Bush administration has had an exceptionally difficult time focusing public attention on what it says is the progress being made by the new Iraqi government, our correspondent says.

'Correct procedures'
A report filed by Iraqi police accused US troops of rounding up and deliberately shooting 11 people in the house in Ishaqi, including five children and four women, before blowing up the building.

The BBC footage from Ishaqi was cross-checked with other images

Maj Gen Caldwell said the US investigation into events in Ishaqi, where the military says it was attempting to capture insurgents, had found no wrongdoing on the part of the troops. Four bodies including that of an insurgent were found after the raid while up to nine "collateral deaths" resulted from the US raid, according to the investigation. It added that a precise death toll could not be determined because of collapsed walls and debris. All the correct procedures were followed when troops came under fire as they approached the house, Maj Gen Caldwell said. "The investigation revealed the ground force commander, while capturing and killing terrorists, operated in accordance with the rules of engagement governing our combat forces in Iraq," he added. "Allegations that the troops executed a family living in this safe house, and then hid the alleged crimes by directing an air strike, are absolutely false." The outcome of the Pentagon investigation emerged a day after the BBC released video footage that appears to show the aftermath of US action in Ishaqi, about 100km (60 miles) north of Baghdad.

'Violence commonplace'
The video tape obtained by the BBC shows a number of dead adults and children at the site with what our world affairs editor John Simpson says were clearly gunshot wounds.
QUOTE("Hiren Dessai @ Baroda, India")
When you fight evil it can embrace you
The pictures came from a hardline Sunni group opposed to coalition forces. It has been cross-checked with other images taken at the time of events and is believed to be genuine. Other probes are being carried out into the alleged massacre at Haditha, and also into claims that an Iraqi man was deliberately killed on 26 April in Hamandiya - and that the circumstances were covered up. Seven marines and a navy sailor are being held over the claims. The Iraqi government has also launched an investigation into the alleged massacre at Haditha, where eyewitnesses claim US marines shot dead 24 civilians after a roadside bomb attack in November. Mr Maliki said he would ask the US for the investigative files into the incident. Violence against civilians was "common among many of the multinational forces", he added. Many troops had "no respect for citizens, smashing civilian cars and killing on a suspicion or a hunch", he added. US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said on Friday that 99.9% of US forces conducted "themselves in an exemplary manner".
Snuffysmith
http://www.wpherald.com/storyview.php?Stor...02-013936-6673r

Analysis: Sunni strategy succeeding
By Martin Sieff
UPI Senior News Analyst
Published June 2, 2006


WASHINGTON -- The latest wave of violence in Iraq seems all too familiar to Americans, but its strategic implications are fresh and disturbing.

On Tuesday at least 54 people were killed around the California-sized nation of 28 million people in a new wave of car bomb and mortar attacks. The day before 40 people were killed in such attacks. And the rate at which Iraqis are dying in the insurgency is rising. Some 801 were killed in April, but 871 died in the month of May up to Tuesday.


Strategically, therefore, the 220,000-strong Iraqi police and army, backed by the 130,000 U.S. troops in Iraq, have been unable to significantly reduce the scale and intensity of the Sunni Muslim insurgency even though it is rooted primarily only in two of Iraq's 18 provinces and in the capital Baghdad, and even though its support is based among less than 20 percent of the Iraqi population, the 5.5 million or so Sunni Muslims.

Of potentially far greater import, relations between the U.S. armed forces in Iraq, their British allies and the Shiite militias that control much of southern Iraq -- where the bulk of the 60 percent Shiite majority population is located -- continue to deteriorate.

Hard-liners backed by Iran and led by Moqtada al-Sadr, head of the Mahdi Army militia, had good relations with the old Iraqi government of Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari. They are far less happy with the new, more pro-American government of Nouri al-Maliki. Therefore the prospects of a potentially disastrous collision between the U.S.-backed Maliki government and the Shiite militias in southern Iraq are growing by the day.

The Maliki government, which has yet to appoint its new interior and defense ministers, this week declared a state of emergency in the southern port city of Basra, where relations between British forces and the Iranian-backed Shiite militias have deteriorated to breaking point.

The current wave of Sunni insurgent violence appears prompted by direct hostility to the new Maliki government. Its strategic purpose appears to be to discredit and fatally weaken the Maliki government before it can get properly established.

The attacks also confirm the grim trend we have tracked in United Press International analysis columns over the past five months whereby, even when the rate of U.S. military fatalities in Iraq fell significantly in recent months, the numbers of U.S. troops wounded, Iraqi troops killed and Iraqi civilians killed in terror bombings continued at their previous levels or higher.

Further, the escalating violence and the failure of the new Iraqi armed forces to contain it has forced U.S. military commanders to re-commit increasing numbers of combat troops to the worst-affected areas of western Iraq. In March, Gen. George Casey, commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, sent 700 additional American troops into Anbar province. They are still operating there. This week, the U.S. military announced that another 1,500 troops were being sent to the region.

The Sunni insurgents appear to be focusing primarily not on attacking U.S. troops, but on killing and maiming as many Shiite civilians as possible in the hope of discrediting the new Maliki government from its main constituency. At least 25 people were killed and another 65 injured in a car bomb explosion at a market frequented by Shiites north of Baghdad Wednesday. Also Wednesday, another car bomb killed at least 12 people and injured 32 more in predominantly Shiite southern Iraq.

As long as the insurgency can maintain this kind of attack, apparently at will, it is likely to continue to succeed in achieving at least one of its strategic goals: denying the parliamentary-appointed central government in Baghdad basic credibility across the country. Meanwhile, the Shiite militias in the south, backed by Iran, benefit from the Sunni insurgents' onslaught on the Maliki government and its armed forces. So the more U.S. forces fail to roll back the Sunni insuirgency, the more they are likely to face Iranian-backed Shiite militas rising up against them too.

The Sunni insurgency strategy therefore, is not suicidal or insane. It is certainly ruthless.

But it is working.
theglobalchinese
Four in Russian Diplomatic Car Kidnapped in Baghdad FOX News
Four people in a Russian diplomatic car were kidnapped in western Baghdad Saturday and one man may have been killed, police said. According to police, witnesses at the scene told them than gunmen opened fire on a car that belonged to the Russian Embassy in west Baghdad's upscale Mansour district. Interior Ministry Lt. Col. Falah al-Mohamedawi said one person was killed in the incident, which took place just outside the embassy. The Russian consul in Baghdad told Russia's RIA Novosti news agency that one Russian diplomat had been killed and four abducted. "One (embassy) official was killed and four kidnapped," Alexander Potapov told RIA Novosti on the phone but did not elaborate. A man who answered the phone at Russian embassy, located in Mansour, would not comment. According to police 1st Lt. Thaeir Mahmoud, the at least one person was reported killed. Neither al-Mohamedawi nor Mahmoud knew the nationalities of the four people. In Moscow, the ITAR-Tass news agency, citing unnamed sources in consulate service of Russian Embassy in Baghdad, said one Russian diplomat was killed and four "diplomatic representatives" were abducted. Associated Press Television News footage showed a white SUV with tinted windows, diplomatic licenses plates and a small tag that had Russian Embassy written on it in English and Arabic. That sign had a bullet hole in it. An ambulance was seen driving into the embassy. A spokesman for the Russian Foreign Ministry could not immediately comment on reports. There was no immediate comment from the Iraqi foreign ministry. The interfax news agency quoted an employee at the Russian Embassy in Baghdad as saying that "we confirm that one diplomat has been killed, four abducted." At least 439 foreigners have been kidnapped in Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion three years ago, according to figures provided earlier this month by a special U.S. anti-kidnapping task force. Diplomats have been the targets of abductions previously. In May 2004, gunmen ambushed Russian electrical engineers at Musayyib, kidnapping two and killing one. The two hostages were later released. Rebels also ambushed Russian technicians heading to a Baghdad power plant the same month, killing two and an Iraqi. The violence prompted Moscow-based Interenergoservis to pull out its 241 employees. Russia opposed the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, has no troops here but maintains a diplomatic presence in Iraq. The most recent was a United Arab Emirates diplomat who was seized by gunmen in Mansour and held for more than two weeks before being released late last month. Last July, two Algerian diplomats and an Egyptian colleague were separately kidnapped and killed. In October, two Moroccan Embassy workers were abducted and later killed. The insurgent group al-Qaida in Iraq claimed responsibility for all the abductions.
Russian embassy employee shot dead in Baghdad Reuters
Gunmen ambush Russian diplomats in Baghdad SI.com
Houston Chronicle - ABC News - Forbes - KVOA.com - all 205 related »
Snuffysmith
IRAQ: ALAS IN WONDERLAND - ASHRAF FAHIM (ASIA TIMES, JUNE 2): The new Iraqi
government is no more than a collection of sectarian fiefdoms masquerading as
ministries, and the people are racing toward emerging fault lines.
http://atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/HF02Ak01.html

GIVE THE DEFENSE DEPARTMENT AN F: A REPORT TO CONGRESS ON THE STATE OF IRAQ
IS INACCURATE AND MISLEADING. AMERICANS DESERVE THE TRUTH - ANTHONY H. CORDESMAN
(LOS ANGELES TIMES, JUNE 3): The report, "Measuring Stability and Security in
Iraq," provides a fundamentally false picture of the political situation in Iraq
and of the difficulties ahead.
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commen...home-commentary

WILL CIVIL WAR BRING LASTING PEACE TO IRAQ: HISTORY SHOWS CIVIL WARS MUST
BE FOUGHT WITHOUT FOREIGN INTERFERENCE BEFORE STABILITY PREVAILS - EDWARD N.
LUTTWAK (LOS ANGELES TIME, JUNE 2)
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commen...omment-opinions

THE REAL IRAQ - AMIR TAHERI (COMMENTARY, JUNE): Yes, the situation in Iraq
today is messy. Births always are.
http://www.commentarymagazine.com/Archive/...&aid=12106023_1
PAID SUBSCRIPTION

IRAQ IS EUROPE'S BUSINESS, TOO - GEORGE ROBERTSON (WASHINGTON POST, JUNE 4):
It's time that European leaders recognized that what is playing out in Iraq
today is their future, too.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...6060201539.html

IRAQ: THE DOG THAT DIDN'T BARK - ADAM CLAYTON POWELL III (PUBLIC DIPLOMACY
BLOG, USC CENTER ON PUBLIC DIPLOMACY, JUNE 1): In the hotly contested political
campaign in Great Britain, Iraq was a non-issue.
http://uscpublicdiplomacy.com/index.php/ne...hat_didnt_bark/

IRAQ LIKE WATER OFF A DUCK'S BACK TO BUSH, BLAIR LEON HADAR (ANTIWAR.COM,
JUNE 2): Trying to weigh the devastation that the Bush-Blair duo have inflicted
on their countries and the world as a result of the Iraq War against the damage
produced by the Lay-Skilling pair in the Enron scandal is like comparing a
splash your kid made in the swimming pool to the Indian Ocean tsunami.
http://www.antiwar.com/orig/hadar.php?articleid=9078

SAME WAR, DIFFERENT LENSES: TO CREATE 'THE WAR TAPES,' A FILMMAKER GAVE
VIDEO CAMERAS TO SOLDIERS IN IRAQ - GREGORY M. LAMB (CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR,
JUNE 2) 'The War Tapes" is a documentary shot and narrated entirely by American
soldiers in Iraq in what its promoters call "the first war movie filmed by
soldiers themselves."
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0602/p12s03-almo.html
theglobalchinese
GIs at Ishaqi Cleared; Haditha Probe Open ABC News
Investigation Clears U.S. Troops in Deaths at Ishaqi; Probes of Killings at Haditha Continue. A military investigation into allegations that American troops intentionally killed civilians in Ishaqi, a village north of Baghdad, has cleared them of misconduct, the U.S. said Friday even though it acknowledged the deaths of up to 13 Iraqis in the March raid. Meanwhile, a lawyer representing families of some of the two dozen unarmed Iraqi civilians allegedly killed by U.S. Marines in the western town of Haditha on Nov. 19 said three or four Marines carried out the shootings while 20 more waited outside the homes. He also said victims' relatives turned down a request by U.S. investigators to exhume the victims' bodies for forensic tests. The investigation of the March 15 attack in Ishaqi concluded that the U.S. troops followed normal procedures in raising the level of force as they came under attack upon approaching a building where they believed an al-Qaida terrorist was hiding, said Maj. Gen. William Caldwell, a U.S military spokesman.

This image is believed to have been taken a day or two after the Haditha incident, and was made available in Baghdad, Iraq,Friday, June 2, 2006. by lawyer Khaled Salem Rsayef, but was not taken by him. It purportedly shows the scene in one of the houses in Haditha, Iraq after two dozen civilian Iraqis were allegedly killed by U.S. Marines last November, which Rsayef said Friday was carried out by three or four Marines while about 20 more waited outside. EDS NOTE: Khaled Salem Rsayef, 40, is a lawyer representing several of the families and says he himself lost a sister, her husband, an aunt and her husband, and several cousins in the alleged massacre. (AP Photo)

Caldwell also acknowledged there were "possibly up to nine collateral deaths" in addition to the four Iraqi deaths that the military announced at the time of the raid. The results of the investigation were released after questions were raised about the original U.S. report as television stations aired AP Television News footage of a row of dead children in the aftermath of the raid. The probe was part of U.S. investigations into possible misconduct by American troops in at least three separate areas of Iraq. Besides Haditha and Ishaqi, seven Marines and a Navy corpsman could face murder, kidnapping and conspiracy charges in the April shooting death of an Iraqi man west of Baghdad. The military said Friday it will cooperate with the Iraqi government in its own investigation of Haditha and other incidents of alleged wrongdoing by U.S. troops. "We're going to give them whatever assistance they need as a part of this investigation," said Army Brig. Gen. Donald Campbell, the chief of staff for U.S. forces in Iraq. Campbell's pledge came a day after Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki upbraided the U.S. military over Haditha, which he called "a horrible crime," and accused U.S. troops of habitually attacking unarmed civilians.
On Friday, White House press secretary Tony Snow said al-Maliki had told U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad that he had been misquoted. But Snow was unable to explain what al-Maliki told Khalilzad or how he had been misquoted. Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld defended the training and conduct of U.S. troops and said incidents such as the alleged massacre of Iraqi civilians at Haditha shouldn't happen. "We know that 99.9 percent of our forces conduct themselves in an exemplary manner. We also know that in conflicts things that shouldn't happen, do happen," he said. "We don't expect U.S. soldiers to act that way, and they're trained not to." In Haditha, the Marines, enraged by the loss of a comrade, stormed into nearby homes in the area and allegedly shot occupants dead as well as several men in a taxi that arrived at the scene of the blast, according to U.S. lawmakers briefed by military officials. In one of the homes, Marines ordered four brothers inside a closet and shot them dead, said the Haditha lawyer, Khaled Salem Rsayef. Rsayef said he himself lost several relatives in the alleged massacre, including a sister and her husband, an aunt, an uncle and several cousins. He and his brother, Salam Salem Rsayef, spoke to The Associated Press by telephone from the Euphrates River town of 90,000 late Thursday and Friday. Despite the Iraqi government's insistence of cooperation between the U.S. and Iraqi investigations, the Rsayefs said they and other victims' families refused the request several months ago to exhume the bodies. "No way we can ever agree to that," Salam Salem Rsayef said. Under Islamic teachings, exhuming bodies is prohibited, but is allowed on case-by-case basis, sometime after a fatwa, or an edict, from a senior cleric allowing it to proceed. The Rsayef brothers met at least four times with U.S. military investigators looking into the killings. They said the meetings began in February and were held at Samarra General Hospital. The next meeting is scheduled for Sunday, the two brothers said, suggesting that the U.S. investigations are not finished. Khaled Salam Rsayef identified the four brothers killed in the closet as a car dealer, a traffic policeman, an engineer and a local government employee. He said the U.S. military did not give compensation payments to their families because the brothers were believed to be insurgents. The lawyer said his account of what happened was based on his personal observations from the rooftop of his home and windows. He said his house is several dozen yards away from the three homes raided by Marines. The killings, which he did not witness in person, were recounted to him and other members of his family the following day by survivors, he said. He said his own home shook violently when the roadside bomb went off at 7:15 a.m. and that intermittent gunfire lasted for about two hours. He could not go out of his house to see for himself, but managed to steal quick glances from his roof and from behind windows. "About 5 p.m. I emerged with my family carrying white flags," he said. "We wanted to move away from the area fearing that shooting could resume." The New York Times, in a story for Saturday editions posted on its Web site, quoted a senior Marine officer as saying that commanders learned within two days that civilians in Haditha were killed by gunfire and not a roadside bomb. But the officer, who wasn't further identified, said officials had no information suggesting the civilians had been killed deliberately and saw no reason to investigate further. The Haditha attack came four months before the nighttime raid in the village of Ishaqi, about 50 miles north of Baghdad. A U.S. ground force conducted the Ishaqi attack, said two defense officials in Washington. After being fired upon from the targeted building, the soldiers pulled back and called in airstrikes by an Air Force AC-130 gunship, which attacked and collapsed the building, they said. One of the officials said the investigation into the circumstances of the Ishaqi attack found that four people in the building were killed by U.S. forces, including two women and a child. The main target of the attack, said by U.S. intelligence to be an al-Qaida figure, ran from the building but was later captured, the official said. Caldwell said that a search found "the body of Abu Ahmed plus three noncombatants," while the "investigating officer concluded that possibly up to nine collateral deaths resulted from this engagement but could not determine the precise number due to collapsed walls and heavy debris." Local Iraqis said there were 11 dead, contending they were killed by U.S. troops before the house was leveled. The bloody aftermath of the attack was captured at the time in the footage shot by an AP Television News cameraman. The video became the focus of attention Friday when the BBC aired it in the wake of recent allegations of U.S. troops killing unarmed civilians. The footage shows at least one adult male and four of the children with deep wounds to the head that could have been caused by bullets or shrapnel. One child has an obvious entry wound to the side and the inside of the walls left standing were pocked with bullet holes. A voice on the tape said there were clear bullet wounds in two people. The video includes an unidentified man saying "children were stuck in the room, alone and surrounded." "After they handcuffed them, they shot them dead. Later, they struck the house with their planes. They wanted to hide the evidence. Even a 6-month-old infant was killed. Even the cows were killed, too," he said. Although it has been known that U.S. air power was involved in the assault on the building in Ishaqi, it was not previously reported that there was an AC-130 gunship, a devastating weapon capable of operating at night and pummeling its target with side-firing guns, including a 105mm cannon. The gunship is flown by Air Force Special Operations crews. Associated Press writers Robert Burns in Washington and Qais al-Bashir, Patrick Quinn and Mazin Yahya in Baghdad contributed to this report.
By HAMZA HENDAWI and KIM GAMEL
We did not kill villagers Advertiser Adelaide
Iraqi PM: US rushed Ishaqi probe CNN International
DetNews.com - World Peace Herald - Reuters - New York Times - all 2,541 related »
theglobalchinese
Basra car bomb kills at least 28 BBC News
A car bomb has left at least 28 people dead and another 62 wounded in the southern Iraqi city of Basra. Police said the explosion took place in the main market place in the old part of the port city. The blast came just days after Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki visited the city and declared a state of emergency to try to impose calm. The premier has vowed to crack down on gangs in the city who he said were threatening the country's oil exports. A large number of people were shopping in the market at the time of the explosion, police said. Pools of blood and the charred remains of several vehicles were seen at the site of the blast where hundreds of onlookers gathered to watch the rescue efforts. It was one of the deadliest attacks to hit the oil-rich city since the start of the US-led invasion in three years ago.

Diplomat killed
The latest bloodshed came just hours after a Russian diplomat was killed and four others kidnapped in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad.

Severed heads are transported in a box to a Baquba morgue

Officials said gunmen used cars to block a road in the western Mansour district before opening fire on the Russian diplomatic vehicle. Witnesses said the victims had been out buying food. Their white sports utility vehicle was shown on TV with shattered windows. Mansour houses a number of embassies and has been the scene of attacks on other diplomats.

In other violence
  • Iraqi police say they have found eight severed heads on a roadside near the town of Baquba, 60km (35 miles) north-east of Baghdad - one of the dead is identified as a local Sunni preacher
  • Militants open fire and throw grenades at a checkpoint in Baquba killing seven policemen and wounding another 10 people
  • Police find four bodies in different areas of Baghdad, all showing signs of torture.
theglobalchinese
Confusion over abducted Russians BBC News
Confusion surrounds the fate of four Russian embassy workers kidnapped in Baghdad, amid conflicting reports from the Iraqi government. An interior ministry official had said they were freed by Iraqi commandos in a raid on the attackers' hideout on Saturday night. But another ministry official denied the report and the Russian foreign ministry said it could not confirm it. One Russian diplomat was killed in the abduction on Saturday. Gunmen had opened fire on a diplomatic vehicle in the Mansour district close to the embassy. Immediately after the abduction the Russian foreign ministry said it had set up a "crisis cell" to find the kidnapped diplomats.

'Arrested'
The Iraqi interior ministry's Lt Col Falah al-Mohamedawi had said on Sunday that commandos raided a hideout in the Jadriya neighbourhood in south-eastern Baghdad. He said the kidnappers had been arrested. But the ministry's information director, Brig. Adnan Abdul Rahman, said reports of the releases were "not true". Neither the Russian embassy in Baghdad nor the foreign ministry in Moscow could verify the release. Witnesses said the victims had been out buying food when they were ambushed. Their white sports utility vehicle was shown on TV with shattered windows. Moscow identified the dead employee as Vitaly Titov and said one of those abducted was third secretary, Fyodor Zaitsev. The Mansour area of Baghdad houses a number of embassies and has seen attacks on other diplomats. A United Arab Emirates diplomat was seized and held for two weeks before being freed last month. Last year, two Algerian, one Egyptian and two Moroccan embassy workers were abducted and killed.
jeffmoskin
Iraq fails to fill security posts by
Saturday 03 June 2006 8:04 PM GMT

Al-Maliki is struggling to impose order in Iraq

A session of Iraq's parliament in which new defence and interior ministers were expected to be chosen has been postponed indefinitely, the deputy speaker says.

Khaled al-Attiya did not give reasons for the postponement on Sunday but government sources said the powerful Shia Alliance is deadlocked on a nominee for the interior ministry post.

Shia Alliance sources said the the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq threatened to reject former Shia army officer Farouk al-Araji for the interior portfolio.

Al-Araji was nominated by Nuri al-Maliki, the prime minister.

A rejection could split the bloc, to which al-Maliki belongs.

Some members of the Shia Alliance said a deal could still be struck later in the day.

Intense wrangling led al-Maliki to leave the defence and interior posts empty when he unveiled his government of national unity on May 20.

Reuters
By

You can find this article at:
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/E1F...3B8A002E0C0.htm
theglobalchinese
Hassan murder trial due to begin BBC News
Three men are due to go on trial in Baghdad in connection with the kidnap and apparent murder of British aid worker Margaret Hassan. Mrs Hassan, who had British, Iraqi and Irish nationality, was taken hostage in October 2004 and shot a month later. Her body has not been found. Mrs Hassan's family have claimed she was killed because the UK government refused to speak to her hostage-takers. The government says it wanted to "minimise" Mrs Hassan's UK links. The family of Care International worker Mrs Hassan, who was born in Dublin but had lived in Iraq for 30 years, said kidnappers made four calls to her Iraqi husband Tahseen asking to speak to the British Embassy.
QUOTE("Family statement")
During the period of her captivity, four calls were made from the kidnappers to her husband Tahseen in Baghdad
In a statement released at the weekend, Deidre, Geraldine, Kathryn and Michael Fitzsimons said they had begged foreign secretaries Jack Straw and Margaret Beckett, as well as the Foreign Office, to arrange for the men - who were arrested by the US military - to be interviewed by British Military Police. "They have refused this request even though this is the only way that Margaret's remains will be found and we can bring her home to be buried with the dignity she deserves," they said in a statement. "During the period of her captivity, four calls were made from the kidnappers to her husband Tahseen in Baghdad. "These calls were made from Margaret's mobile phone. "The hostage-takers demanded to speak to a member of the British Embassy, but Tahseen had been told by the British that they would not speak to the kidnappers." The "refusal by the British government to open a dialogue" with the kidnappers had "cost our sister her life", they added.
QUOTE("Foreign Office")
Our strategy was one of personalisation and localisation - to minimise the links between Margaret Hassan and the UK
The Foreign Office confirmed Mrs Hassan's husband was called from her phone, but could not verify the caller's kidnapping claims. A spokesman said: "Our strategy was one of personalisation and localisation - to minimise the links between Margaret Hassan and the UK." He understood her family had criticisms of the government's approach, but they remained in constant contact with them, he added.
Snuffysmith
US PROPAGANDA IN IRAQ: MANURE MANUFACTURED BY BUSH & CO. - CHRISTOPHER BRAUCHLI (COMMON DREAMS, JUNE 3)
http://www.commondreams.org/views06/0603-24.htm

SUPPORTING OUR TROOPS OVER A CLIFF - FRANK RICH (NEW YORK TIMES, JUNE 4): What the White House has always had instead of a strategy for victory is a strategy for public relations.
http://select.nytimes.com/2006/06/04/opinion/04rich.html
PAID SUBSCRIPTION

CRUSADER CASTLES, MINUTEMEN AND WAR 21ST CENTURY STYLE PATRICIA LEE SHARPE (WHIRLED VIEW, JUNE 1): The new U.S. Embassy in Baghdad project is all too reminiscent of the crusader castles whose ruins overlook the King?s Highway in Jordan.
http://whirledview.typepad.com/whirledview...astle.html#more

AS SECTARIAN VIOLENCE CONTINUES, SO DOES DISPLACEMENT - IRIN (REUTERS, JUNE 4): Nearly 180,000 Iraqis have now been displaced due to ongoing sectarian violence, an increase of about 80,000 from previous figures, said government officials.
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/I...1aec5abfcbc.htm

BAGHDAD MORGUE REPORTS RECORD FIGURES FOR MAY: NEARLY 1,400 BODIES WERE BROUGHT TO THE FACILITY, THE HIGHEST NUMBER SINCE THE WAR BEGAN - LOUISE ROUG (LOS ANGELES TIMES, JUNE 4)
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/wo...-home-headlines

IRAQIS ACCUSE MARINES IN APRIL KILLING OF CIVILIAN: DISABLED MAN'S FAMILY DISPUTES TROOPS' STORY - ELLEN KNICKMEYER (WASHINGTON POST JUNE 5)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...6060400797.html

IRAQIS SKEPTICAL OF U.S. PROBE: PREMIER PLANS NEW LOOK AT RAID IN MARCH IN WHICH CIVILIANS DIED - NELSON HERNANDEZ AND MUHANNAD SAIF ALDIN (WASHINGTON POST, JUNE 4)
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...6060300182.html

US PROBE OF ISHAQI KILLINGS NO SURPRISE FOR IRAQIS REUTERS (WASHINGTON POST, JUNE 4): The U.S. investigation that cleared soldiers of any misconduct in Ishaqi may have allowed the soldiers to move on with their lives. But the farming town will be haunted by memories of the bloodshed.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...6060400216.html

HADITHA SIGNALS BEGINNING OF END OF IRAQ WAR - RICHARD GWYN (TORONTO STAR, JUNE 2/COMMON DREAMS)
http://www.commondreams.org/views06/0602-28.htm

THE WAY AMERICANS LIKE THEIR WAR - ROBERT FISK (SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER, JUNE 3/COMMON DREAMS): Who is dumping so many bodies on garbage heaps? After Haditha, we are going to reshape our suspicions.
http://www.commondreams.org/views06/0603-27.htm

A HARD LOOK AT HADITHA EDITORIAL (NEW YORK TIMES, JUNE 4): At the very least, the public is now entitled to straight answers on what went wrong at Haditha and who, besides those at the bottom of the chain of command, will be required to take responsibility for it.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/04/opinion/04sun1.html

OH! WHAT A LOVELY (CIVIL) WAR - MARTY KAPLAN (HUFFINGTON POST, JUNE 2): As our country figures out the least bad way to pay the terrible price for the tragedy that BushCo has inflicted on us, the last thing we need is a revisionist neo-con job that portrays internecine savagery as the freedom-lover's new best friend.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/marty-kaplan...il_b_22076.html

WHAT IS THE MISSION? - CHARLEY REESE (ANTIWAR.COM, JUNE 3): President Bush teared up on Memorial Day and said we must complete the mission in Iraq to honor the 18,000 wounded and 2,400-plus dead. Well, I have a question. What is the mission??
http://www.antiwar.com/reese/?articleid=9082

WRONG MISSION ACCOMPLISHED: HOW INVADING IRAQ HAS SET BACK DEMOCRACY - DILIP HIRO (WASHINGTON SPECTATOR, JUNE 2/COMMON DREAMS)
http://www.commondreams.org/views06/0602-24.htm

IRAQ LOOKS A LITTLE MORE LIKE VIETNAM EVERY DAY - MICHAEL PORTILLO (TIMES, U.K., JUNE 4): Vietnam ended with American helicopters plucking marines from the roof of the embassy in Saigon as the Vietcong overran the city. It is not impossible that one day the scene will be re-enacted in the green zone of Baghdad.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2088-2209855,00.html
Snuffysmith
Baghdadis suffer deadliest month :

May saw highest death toll since invasion began in 2003
http://tinyurl.com/q9w29

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More than 6,000 corpses found in Iraq in five months:

Most of the corpses had gunshot wounds, while others showed marks of burns or electrocution.
http://tinyurl.com/rrjhk

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Gunmen Kill 21 Northeast of Baghdad:

Gunmen killed 21 people many of them high school students after dragging them off buses northeast of Baghdad, officials said. Four Sunni Arabs were spared and the dead were all Shiites or Kurds.
http://abcnews.go.com/International/print?id=2037753

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Sixteen people killed in clashes in Sunni mosque in Basra :

Sixteen people were killed in clashes between local police and guards of a Sunni mosque in the center of Iraq's southern city of Basra on late Saturday night, a police source said on Sunday.
http://english.people.com.cn/200606/04/eng...604_271026.html

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10 Bodies Found In Baghdad:

In Kirkuk, three Iraqi civilians were killed in three separate incidents in the northern Kirkuk city besides the kidnapping of a nine-years-old child close to the city, a police source told Kuna.
http://www.kuna.net.kw/Home/Story.aspx?Lan...=en&DSNO=873101

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Six Iraqi policemen killed in Mosul:

Iraqi Police in Mosul announced Sunday that six of its members were killed in attack by unknown militants.
http://www.kuna.net.kw/Home/Story.aspx?Lan...=en&DSNO=873125

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U.S. Bombs Kill Iraqi civilians:

A U.S. artillery round landed in an inhabited area of Iraq on Friday and police said afterwards that two civilians were killed and four were wounded in a blast, the U.S. military said on Sunday.
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/DAH459235.htm

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Armed men kidnap 50 in Baghdad :

The attackers - dressed in police uniforms - stormed the stations, in the centre of the capital, abducting drivers and passengers preparing to travel out of Iraq.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,,1790750,00.html

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Evidence Points To Cover-up By U.S. Military:

New evidence may suggest cover-ups in two separate incidents at the center of a simmering scandal over Iraqi civilian deaths at the hands of American forces.
http://tinyurl.com/osogz

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US confronts brutal culture among its finest sons :

American veterans of the war in Iraq have described a culture of casual violence, revenge and prejudice against Iraqi civilians that has made the killing of innocent bystanders a common occurrence.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13504.htm

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Marine's wife paints portrait of US troops out of control in Haditha :

The marine unit involved in the killing of Iraqi civilians in Haditha last November had suffered a "total breakdown" in discipline and had drug and alcohol problems, according to the wife of one of the battalion's staff sergeants.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13513.htm

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Rupert Cornwell: Out of America :

The fish rots from the head down. The thought comes to mind as this misbegotten conflict in Iraq - embarked upon by President Bush on the basis of at best false information, at worst downright lies - moves well into its fourth year.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13507.htm

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UK: Bring our boys home:

The organisers of Military Families Against the War, set up by the parents of dead armed forces personnel last year, say their movement is supported by hundreds of service families and that more than 100 families and veterans are actively involved.
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/this_brit...ticle624659.ece

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German Ex-Minister Attacks US Policy in Iraq: Tehran's Secret Helper:

Former German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer writes about mistakes and shortcomings in Washington's Middle East policies. Gloomy predictions about the Iraq war, he writes, have been surpassed by reality.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13506.htm

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Saddam: America's Best Enemy: Video :

Historical account of the relationship between America and Saddam Hussein. Reveals the complicity of America in Saddam's atrocities. Forty years of secrets, incomprehension and incompetence led to the occupation of Iraq
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13512.htm
Snuffysmith
At Least 16 Killed In Ongoing Violence:

Police found nine severed heads in the al-Hadid district in the city of Baquba, 65 km (40 miles) north of Baghdad, police sources said.
http://today.reuters.com/News/CrisesArticl...oryId=ANW623136

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Report: Marines staged Iraq killing:

The victim, identified by Knight Ridder as Hashim Ibrahim Awad, was dragged from his home and shot by Marines, who placed a shovel and AK-47 next to him to make it appear he was an insurgent.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13514.htm

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Victim's Brother Speaks:

New Evidence Undermines U.S. Iraq Claims: Iraqi Anger Builds Amid New Details of Civilian Deaths and Clearing of U.S. Forces at Ishaqi
http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/print?id=2040930

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3 British Soldiers Cleared in Iraqi Death :

A military court Tuesday cleared three British soldiers of killing an Iraqi teenager who drowned after allegedly being forced into a canal.
http://www.620ktar.com/?nid=46&sid=187449

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Iraq To Release 2,500 Prisoners :

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki today said he will order the release of 2,500 prisoners against whom there is no clear evidence.
http://tinyurl.com/jkbok

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Field commanders tell Pentagon Iraq war 'is lost':

Military commanders in the field in Iraq admit in private reports to the Pentagon the war "is lost" and that the U.S. military is unable to stem the mounting violence killing 1,000 Iraqi civilians a month.
http://www.capitolhillblue.com/artman/publ...nter_8790.shtml

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Iraqi Girl Blog: Baghdad Burning:

According to people working and living in the area, around 15 police cars pulled up to the area and uniformed men began pulling civilians off the streets and from cars, throwing bags over their heads and herding them into the cars. Anyone who tried to object was either beaten or pulled into a car.
http://tinyurl.com/z29na

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"War" outlasting attention spans:

The amount of time devoted to Iraq on the three biggest television networks' weeknight newscasts has dropped by nearly 60 percent from 2003 to the first four months of 2006, according to the independent Tyndall Report tracking service.
http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/news/14739712.htm

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Government Investigates Iraq Contracting Fraud:

The Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction has 78 open investigations into fraud and corruption in the Coalition Provisional Authority
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5453477

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Robert Fisk: Iraq: The face of the enemy :

Robert Fisk penetrates the world of the Palestinian 'martyrs' flooding over the border to fuel the insurgency
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13521.htm

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If we knew more about Ireland, we might never have invaded Iraq :

Loach's film about the Irish independence war is being rubbished because it tells the other side of the occupation story
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/st...1791178,00.html

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The Architects Of War: Where Are They Now?:

President Bush has not fired any of the architects of the Iraq war. In fact, a review of the key planners of the conflict reveals that they have been rewarded – not blamed – for their incompetence
http://thinkprogress.org/the-architects-where-are-they-now/

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Officer likely to refuse Iraq call:

A Fort Lewis soldier is poised to become the first U.S. military officer to publicly refuse to deploy to Iraq, his supporters said Monday.
http://tinyurl.com/ka4ws

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A Call to Support U.S. Military Officer to Refuse Illegal Iraq War:

Thank you LT for standing up for international, US and military law by refusing to deploy to Iraq in support of the ongoing illegal war and occupation.
http://www.thankyoult.org/index.php?option...ntpage&Itemid=1

===
Lieberman faces showdown over Iraq:

After years of ardent support for the Iraq war, Connecticut Sen. Joseph Lieberman (news, bio, voting record) could become that conflict's first big political casualty in a Democratic primary race fueled by rising anti-war anger.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060605/pl_nm/lieberman_dc
Snuffysmith
US MILITARY PERSONNEL DO MORE GOOD THAN HARM: ALLEGED VIOLENCE AT HADITHA IS SHAMEFUL, BUT US AID IN DISASTER RELIEF IS LAUDABLE - JOHN HUGHES (CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR, JUNE 7)
http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0607/p09s02-cojh.html

THE PENTAGON'S SHAKY SELF-EXONERATION: RETURN TO ISHAQI - CHRIS FLOYD (COUNTERPUNCH, JUNE 5): It would be foolish to accept the result of any of the Pentagon's self-investigations at face value, without independent corroboration.
http://www.counterpunch.org/floyd06052006.html

FOR WASHINGTON, WHAT'S A DEAD IRAQI WORTH? EDWARD M. GOMEZ (WORLD VIEWS, SF GATE, JUNE 5)
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/sfgate/det...5&entry_id=5767

NEARLY 600 IRAQI PRISONERS RELEASED - PATRICK QUINN, ASSOCIATED PRESS (WASHINGTON POST, JUNE 7): Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki released nearly 600 detainees Wednesday, making good on a pledge intended to ease feuding between Sunni Arabs and Shiites.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...6060700338.html

9 HEADS FOUND IN BOX ON VILLAGE STREET: VIOLENCE RAMPANT AS POLITICIANS ARGUE OVER SECURITY JOBS - LOUISE ROUG (SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE, JUNE 7)
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?...MNGI7J9FLE1.DTL

PROPAGANDA AND BEHEADINGS: IT HAS BEEN EIGHT MONTHS SINCE THE LAST VIDEO OF A HOSTAGE BEING BEHEADED EMERGED FROM IRAQ. HAS THIS GRUESOME PRACTICE COME TO AN END IN A WIDER PROPAGANDA BATTLE FOR SUPPORT AROUND THE WORLD? - SHARIF SAKR (BBC NEWS, JUNE 6)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/4962350.stm

MIMI, DON'T DIAL 911 - AL KAMEN (WASHINGTON POST, JUNE 7): "Crime in Iraq is rated by the U.S. State Department as critical and will continue to get worse for the foreseeable future," the embassy in Baghdad reports in a cable.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...6060601293.html

BLOODBATH BEYOND THE GREEN ZONE: THE UNREPORTED IRAQ - PATRICK COCKBURN (COUNTERPUNCH, JUNE 6): Iraq is in a civil war waged by assassins and death squads. It is breaking up into its constituent communities.
http://www.counterpunch.org/patrick06062006.html

OUR ROCKY `ENGAGEMENT' IN IRAQ - DERRICK Z. JACKSON (BOSTON GLOBE, JUNE 7): We said we were liberating Iraq. We are creating thousands of children who want to execute us.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial...gement_in_iraq/

ANTHONY ARNOVE'S "THE LOGIC OF WITHDRAWAL": SHOULD WE STAY OR SHOULD WE GO NOW? - DAVID SWANSON (COUNTERPUNCH, JUNE 5): Arnove argues that the Iraqis themselves can best handle the rebuilding assuming we liberate them from our liberation.
http://www.counterpunch.org/swanson06052006.html

FIELD COMMANDERS TELL PENTAGON IRAQ WAR 'IS LOST' - BY DOUG THOMPSON (CAPITOL HILL BLUE, JUNE 5)
http://www.capitolhillblue.com/artman/publ...icle_8790.shtml

THE TRUTH ABOUT IRAQ - CAL THOMAS (BALTIMORE SUN, JUNE 7): The key to victory for Iraq and the United States is staying the course until the elected Iraqi leadership can defend itself and the country.
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/o...-oped-headlines

SALVAGING IRAQ - DAVID IGNATIUS (WASHINGTON POST, JUNE 7): What can America do to mitigate the Iraq disaster? Certainly it doesn't need more strategy papers.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...6060601396.html

IRAQ WAS LOST BEFORE WE STARTED - MARK LEVINE (COMMON DREAMS, JUNE 5): The disaster of Iraq can teach Americans, if not the Bush Administration, two things if we're willing to listen: there is no such thing as a benign occupation; second, as long as American foreign policy is based upon strategic interests that are seen to conflict with the majority of the world's other inhabitants, more Iraqs and a long and bloody war on terror are inevitable.
http://www.commondreams.org/views06/0605-30.htm

RUMSFELD PAINTING IN IRAQ ART EXHIBIT - HAMZA HENDAWI (ASSOCIATED PRESS, JUNE 6): Muayad Muhsin?s exhibit illustrates the simmering anger of Iraqis with the United States as the country continues to endure violence, sectarian tensions and crime three years after Saddam Hussein's ouster.
http://articles.news.aol.com/news/article....9990001&cid=842
SEE ALSO
http://eccentricstar.typepad.com/public_di..._artist_ex.html

HEEDING BRITISH GHOSTS - H.D.S. GREENWAY (BOSTON GLOBE, JUNE 6): The fate of the British in Iraq after the First World War, when they cobbled together three provinces from the old Ottoman Empire, has ironies piled upon ironies for both Britons and Americans.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial...british_ghosts/
theglobalchinese
Allegations of Atrocities Concern Hagee ABC News
Michael Hagee Says He's Worried by Charges of Slayings Committed by Troops Against Iraq Civilians. The top Marine said Wednesday he is "gravely concerned" by allegations of atrocities committed by his troops against Iraqi civilians but declined to say what investigators have found thus far.

Marine Corps Commandant, Gen. Michael Hagee gestures during a Pentagon news conference, Wednesday, June 7, 2006 where he talked about his recent trip to Iraq. (AP Photo/Heesoon Yim).

In his first public remarks about the allegations concerning Iraqi civilian deaths in the town of Haditha last November and in Hamdaniya two months ago, Gen. Michael Hagee, the Marine Corps commandant, sought to assure the public that any Marine found to have violated standards of behavior will be held accountable. Asked at a 15-minute Pentagon news conference whether he had considered resigning over the matter, Hagee replied, "I serve at the pleasure of the president, and I have not submitted any resignation." He said he could not comment on any aspect of the investigations, which are being conducted by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service. The Haditha case centers on allegations that a small number of Marines from the 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment murdered 24 Iraqi civilians included unarmed women and children on Nov. 19 after a roadside bomb in the town killed one of their fellow Marines. The allegation in the Hamdaniya case is that Marines pulled an unarmed Iraqi man from his home on April 26 and shot him to death without provocation. Seven Marines and one Navy corpsman in that unit were taken out of Iraq and put in the brig at Camp Pendleton, Calif., pending the filing of any charges against them. Hagee acknowledged the existence of a set of photographs taken by a Marine intelligence team that examined the scene of the killings in Haditha, but he would not discuss any specifics. News reports have said the photos show that civilians in at least two houses, including several women and children, were shot in the head and torso at close range. That evidence matches the accounts offered by villagers in interviews with The Associated Press and other news organizations. But it conflicts with the Marines' original public assertion that 15 civilians were killed by the explosion of the roadside bomb that also killed one Marine, and that eight insurgents were killed in a subsequent firefight. The Marines now admit that their original version of events was false, but they have not presented a corrected version pending the outcome of the investigations. Hagee said he would wait until the Haditha and Hamdaniya criminal investigations are completed before he would remove any commanders from their posts. "I am waiting for those investigations to be complete so that I can understand actually what happened, both on the ground and within the chain of command," he said. Noting the growing public speculation about the case, Hagee urged patience as investigators complete their work. "We intend to keep you informed to the fullest extent possible without interfering with the legal process," he said. Hagee said no one should doubt that the allegations will be fully and fairly investigated. "As commandant I am gravely concerned about the serious allegations concerning actions of some Marines at Haditha and Hamdaniya," he said. "I can assure you that the Marine Corps takes them seriously." "As commandant I am the one accountable for organization, training and equipping of Marines," he added. "I am responsible and I take these responsibilities quite seriously." Hagee, who is due to complete his four-year tenure as Marine commandant this year, traveled last week to Iraq to reinforce the importance of adhering to Corps standards of behavior. At his news conference he said he was pleased to find that "their morale is really quite high," despite concerns about the atrocity allegations. "They are focused on what they're doing," he said. "They are making a difference. They are very proud of what they're doing. And I can tell you, their families are very proud of what they're doing. Are they concerned? Yes. But they know what we're going to do: We're going to complete those investigations. And if any individual has been found to have violated our standards, rules or regulations, they will be held accountable." The commandant said he plans to make additional trips, to Marine bases in California, Hawaii and Japan, to deliver the same message.
By ROBERT BURNS AP Military Writer.
Charges concern commandant Washington Times
Officer praises Haditha marines Sydney Morning Herald
Journal Gazette and Times-Courier - Reuters - all 306 related »
theglobalchinese
Iraq frees prisoners 'for unity' BBC News
Iraq has released about 600 prisoners, the first of 2,500 due to be set free as part of a national reconciliation initiative by the prime minister. Nouri Maliki said those freed would be people with no clear evidence against them or who were arrested by mistake. More than 100 prisoners were brought to Baghdad by bus, where Sunni Arab politician Omar Juburi welcomed them and gave each one a gift of $200. About 29,000 prisoners are believed to be held in US- and Iraqi-run jails. Correspondents say this is expected to be one of the biggest releases of prisoners since US-led forces invaded the country in 2003 to topple Saddam Hussein. As they stepped out of the buses, some released prisoners wept and kissed the ground while others smiled and waved at waiting relatives.

Accused
"You are rejoining society now and you will serve your society and mix again with people," said Mr Juburi, who is the human rights director for the Iraqi Islamic Party.
QUOTE("Released detainee")
I spent 16 months in jail without any specific reason - they only questioned me once, accusing me of funding terrorism
"We will exert the utmost efforts to release detainees and bring a smile back to prisoners' faces," he added. Most prisoners are believed to be held on suspicion of involvement in the insurgency that has gripped the country since 2003. "I spent 16 months in jail without any specific reason. They only questioned me once, accusing me of funding terrorism," said one of the released detainees. Iraq has been engulfed in sectarian violence since an attack on an important Shia Muslim shrine on 22 February - which has added greatly to the bloodshed of the mainly Sunni-led insurgency. In the latest attacks:
  • Two attacks on police vehicles in Baghdad kill six officers
  • A civilian dies when a mortar round hits his house in the Baladiyat neighbourhood of the city. Five bodies are found in various parts of the capital
  • Three university students are shot dead by gunmen as they wait at a bus stop in the northern city of Mosul
  • A Sunni mosque preacher said to be sympathetic to insurgents is shot in Hawija, northern Iraq
  • At least another six people are killed in attacks in Mosul, Tikrit, Kirkuk and Baquba, the AFP news agency reports.
Meanwhile, at least 15 people from a group of 50 who were kidnapped in Baghdad on Monday, had been found alive, police said. They were sitting together on a street in central Baghdad. Some had been shot in the foot and showed other signs of torture.
theglobalchinese
US hopeful on impact of al-Zarqawi death San Jose Mercury News
The death of al-Qaida in Iraq's leader, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, allowed US counterterrorism officials to breath a sigh of relief when reached in the wee hours of the morning on Thursday. But several still cautioned that, while his death was a significant development, it wouldn't end the terror operations or violence in Iraq. "It shouldn't cause anyone to have unrealistic expectations," said one official, who requested anonymity while details of al-Zarqawi's death were still unfolding. The impact of al-Zarqawi's death is nonetheless symbolic: The U.S. has not seen the elimination of such an iconic figure since former President Saddam Hussein was found in an underground bunker in late 2003. Al-Zarqawi was considered the most dangerous terror plotter and foreign fighter in Iraq, coordinating a loose coalition of militants numbering at least in the hundreds. Osama bin Laden calls him the "emir," or prince, of al-Qaida in Iraq. The U.S. government was offering up to $25 million for information leading to al-Zarqawi's killing or capture, putting him on par with Hussein, bin Laden and his top deputy, Ayman al-Zawahri. During a speech in April, Gen. Michael Hayden, the newly appointed CIA director who was then serving as the No. 2 U.S. intelligence official, said the war in Iraq motivates jihadists, but their failure there would weaken the movement globally. "The loss of key leaders like bin Laden, Zawahri and Zarqawi - especially if they were lost in rapid succession - could cause the jihadist movement to fracture even more into smaller groups, and would probably lead to strains and disagreements," Hayden said. Al-Qaida in Iraq has taken responsibility for numerous mortar attacks, suicide bombings, beheadings and other violence against U.S. and Iraqi targets. Scores, including many ordinary Iraqis, have died. Yet even into 2004, al-Zarqawi was considered a shadowy figure whose followers were known simply as "the Zarqawi network." He operated under the names of various jihadist groups, and began emulating bin Laden with recordings fraught with anti-Western rhetoric and calls to arms. U.S. intelligence veterans have said he craved attention and saw an expanded role for himself in the al-Qaida organization. But the U.S. government has misunderstood him at times. The Bush administration cited al-Zarqawi's presence in Iraq before the April 2003 collapse of Saddam's government among its evidence of contacts between al-Qaida and the former regime - and part of its justification for the Iraq war. While al-Zarqawi is believed to have been in Iraq, he was not operating as part of al-Qaida then. The July 2004 report from the Sept. 11 Commission found no evidence of a collaborative relationship between Saddam and bin Laden's terror organization before the invasion. But by October 2004, al-Zarqawi pledged his allegiance to bin Laden. Al-Zarqawi was also known for a time as the "one-legged terrorist," because U.S. authorities believed was fitted for an artificial leg in Baghdad in 2002. The assessment was later revised. Over time, a more vivid picture of al-Zarqawi emerged. Born in Jordan in 1966, al-Zarqawi developed ties to mujahedeen, or holy warriors, while fighting alongside them during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in the 1980s. Intelligence officials believe al-Zarqawi has cells or links to Muslim extremists worldwide, including Iraq, Afghanistan, Turkey, Spain, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Pakistan and Kuwait. In the United States, FBI and other government officials did not believe al-Zarqawi had operatives under his command, but they had said it's likely that he has ties to some U.S.-based militants or sympathizers from his years of work in the extremist community. U.S. officials have said bin Laden contacted al-Zarqawi last year to enlist him in attacks outside Iraq. Al-Zarqawi's group claimed responsibility for deadly bombings at three hotels in Jordan in November, including a wedding, which drew fierce condemnation. At a rally, hundreds of angry Jordanians shouted "Burn in hell, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi!" after the terrorist's group claimed responsibility for the blasts.
Analysis: Will Zarqawi's death ease woes? BBC News
Zarqawi: the face of Al Qaeda in Iraq ABC Online
New York Times - MSNBC - ABC News - Middle East Times - all 711 related »
theglobalchinese
Key Iraq ministers get approval BBC News
The Iraqi parliament has approved Prime Minister Nouri Maliki's nominees for the key government posts of defence and interior ministers. The two posts had remained vacant for nearly three weeks due to wrangling between the main parties in the governing Shia alliance. Jawad Bulani, a Shia, is the new interior minister and Abdul Qadir Obeidi, a Sunni, the defence minister. Shirwan Waili has also been approved as minister of national security. The nominees were approved by an overwhelming majority and sworn in by the parliamentary speaker after brief questioning by members of parliament. Filling the posts was seen as vital in furthering the government's efforts to fight the insurgency.

Saddam opponent
Mr Obeidi, a general in the Iraqi army under Saddam Hussein, told parliament that he had been demoted for opposing the 1990 invasion of Kuwait. He said that he was forced to retire in 1992 and detained two years later. He faced a military court which ordered the confiscation of his house and other assets. Mr Obeidi insisted that he had no links to any Iraqi political faction. Mr Bulani was a member of Iraq's interim Governing Council in 2004. He became a member of the Iraqi parliament in 2005. During the rule of Saddam Hussein he was an air force engineer but left the armed forces in 1999.
theglobalchinese
Al-Zarqawi Is Killed by US Air Raid Near Baghdad Bloomberg
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the Jordanian terrorist who led al-Qaeda in Iraq, was killed in a US air raid north of Baghdad, removing the figurehead of the middle-eastern nation's bloody three-year insurgency. "Today al-Zarqawi has been killed,'' Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said in a televised press conference from Baghdad. "This is a message to all those who take violence as a path to reconsider and to go back to their senses before it is too late.'' Seven other people were killed in the raid, he said. Al-Zarqawi, 39, was the most wanted man in Iraq, with a $25 million U.S. bounty on his head. The Jordanian's group has claimed responsibility for dozens of bombings, kidnappings and beheadings of foreign hostages across Iraq since the March, 2003 U.S.-led invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein. Intelligence led to the deadly air raid, which was carried out yesterday at about 6:15 p.m. local time on a safe house near Baqubah, north of Baghdad, General George Casey, who leads coalition forces in Iraq, said at the press conference. Sheik Abd-Al-Rahman, a spiritual adviser and lieutenant to al-Zarqawi, was also killed in yesterday's raid, he said. "Tips and intelligence from Iraqi senior leaders from his network led forces to al-Zarqawi and some of his associates who were conducting a meeting approximately eight kilometers north of Baqubah when the air strike was launched,'' the general said. "Coalition Forces were able to identify al-Zarqawi by fingerprint verification, facial recognition and known scars.'' Al-Qaeda in Iraq confirmed al-Zarqawi's death in a statement posted on the Internet, and vowed to continue its "holy war,'' the Associated Press reported.

`Godfather' of Killing
U.S. President George W. Bush was informed of the killing at 4:35 p.m. Washington time yesterday, White House spokesman Tony Snow told reporters today. The president "made it clear that it certainly wouldn't be the end of things,'' Snow said. U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair, Bush's biggest supporter during the war, hailed the killing as a ``strike'' against global terrorism. "Al Zarqawi's death was a strike against Al-Qaeda in Iraq and therefore a strike against al-Qaeda everywhere,'' Blair said today in a televised briefing in London. ``But we should have no illusions. We know that they will continue to kill.'' The military had been homing in on al-Zarqawi for at least a month. Major General Rick Lynch, a U.S. military spokesman, said on May 4 that material found in five recent raids, including documents, maps, sketches and video footage, was helping the coalition gain an insight into "his plans and mind.'' The terrorist's "focus'' was Yusufiyah and Baghdad, he said.

Sectarian Violence
The deaths will boost al-Maliki's attempts to establish security and may diminish a wave of sectarian killings that has beset Iraq since the Feb. 22 bombing of the Golden Mosque in Samarra, which is sacred to Shiite Muslims. Zarqawi, a Sunni Muslim, in a September audiotape broadcast by al-Arabiya declared an "all-out war'' on Iraq's majority Shiite Muslims. "The death of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi marks a great success for Iraq and the global war on terror,'' U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad said. "Zarqawi was the godfather of sectarian killing and terror in Iraq. He declared a civil war within Iraq and a global war of civilizations.'' The terrorist's death was a "good omen'' for the government, he said. Thousands of Iraqis have been killed in sectarian violence since the Samarra blast, with bombings, kidnappings and shootings a daily occurrence in Iraq. The violence took place amid a power vacuum, as political parties representing all Iraqi groups bartered over the formation of a new government. Al-Maliki on May 20 won parliamentary approval for his new cabinet, and told lawmakers at the time that his government would make security a priority. "We will defeat terrorism,'' he said.

Al-Qaeda Still a Threat
"It would be wrong to suggest the insurgency began or ended with al-Zarqawi,'' Sajjan Gohel, an analyst with the Asia Pacific Foundation, said in a telephone interview in London. *It doesn't belong to one person, it is broad-based and one person killed or arrested is not going to remove the insurgency because it is beyond one man.'' A roadside bomb today killed 3 people and wounded 28 in a market in southeastern Baghdad's al-Jadida district, Agence France-Presse reported. Casey also warned that al-Qaeda would remain a threat. "Although the designated leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq is now dead, the terrorist organization still poses a threat as its members will continue to try to terrorize the Iraqi people and destabilize their government as it moves toward stability and prosperity,'' the general said.

Ministers Named
Al-Maliki today filled the three remaining posts in his cabinet, naming Jawad al-Bulani, a Shiite Muslim, as interior minister, Abdel Qadir al-Obeidi, a Sunni Muslim, as defense minister, and Shirwan al-Waili, a Shiite, as national security chief, according to the Iraqi government's Web site. The appointments were approved by parliament. "The election of the new government and its full formation today, shows a new spirit to succeed,'' Blair said in London. Disagreements among political parties over the nominees meant the Cabinet's security posts were the last to be filled following the December election of a permanent government. The U.S.-led coalition, which has more than 150,000 troops in the country, has linked the start of any withdrawal to the training of Iraqi forces who can take over the country's security.

Jordan, Afghanistan, Iraq
Al-Zarqawi's group began as Tawhid Wal-Jihad, or ``Unity and Holy War,'' before the Jordanian declared allegiance in October 2004 to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda terrorist network. The group claimed responsibility for some of the bloodiest atrocities committed by the insurgency in Iraq, including the assassination of Iraqi Governing Council leader Izzedine Salim in May 2004, and the beheadings of U.S. hostages Nicholas Berg, Eugene Armstrong, and Jack Hensley and the Briton Kenneth Bigley. Born as Ahmad Fadil Nazal al-Khalayleh on Oct. 30, 1966, al- Zarqawi took his later name from the town of al-Zarqaa, in Jordan. After dropping out of school, he spent time in prison for drug possession and sexual assault, according to the New York- based Council on Foreign Relations. The Jordanian made his way to Afghanistan in 1989 following his release from prison, and then spent time in Peshawar, Pakistan, where he may have met bin Laden for the first time, and where he adopted his fundamentalist Muslim Salafist beliefs, the council said on its Web site.

Attack on UN
Prior to the 2003 war in Iraq, al-Zarqawi's group had conducted some attacks in Jordan, including the murder of U.S. aid official Lawrence Foley in Amman in 2002. Al-Zarqawi in April 2004 was sentenced to death in his native country for the murder of Foley. Last December, he received another death sentence for an attempted bombing carried out in 2004 on the border with Iraq. The first prominent attack carried out by al-Zarqawi's group in Iraq following the U.S.-led invasion was the bombing in August 2003 of the Jordanian Embassy in Baghdad. Less than two weeks later, the terrorist's group bombed the United Nations headquarters in the Iraqi capital, killing Sergio Vieira de Mello, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan's special representative to Baghdad, and 22 other people. That blast prompted the withdrawal of most UN staff from Iraq. The bombing campaign continued through 2004, with attacks on the fortified "Green Zone,'' home to ministries and embassies, and the blast that killed Salim. A spate of kidnappings of foreign hostages also began, with al-Zarqawi releasing graphic videos showing the beheading with knives of hostages including Hensley, Armstrong and Bigley.

`Difficult Days'
The U.S. military and Iraqi government said in May 2005 that they believed al-Zarqawi had been injured, in response to reports that the Jordanian had been hurt during U.S. air strikes. al- Zarqawi himself said in a voice recording posted on the internet that he had "light'' injuries. Also last year, Al-Zarqawi's group increased operations outside Iraq, with its most notable attack being the Nov. 9 suicide bombings that killed 57 people in three hotels in Amman. The Jordanian continued to issue audiotapes and video messages, including one on April 25 this year in which he urged Iraqis not to cooperate with the new government. Images showed the fugitive speaking, training recruits, firing a machine gun and appearing for the first time without a mask. "Zarqawi's death will not by itself end the violence in Iraq,'' Khalilzad said. "There will be difficult days ahead as we continue together, Iraq and Coalition forces, to fight terrorists and those who want Iraq to fail.''
Terrorist Zarqawi 'dead in airstrike' Bangkok Post
Al Qaeda chief Zarqawi killed in Iraq ABC Online
Boston Channel.com - Center for Research on Globalization - Reuters Canada - People's Daily Online - all 2,797 related »
theglobalchinese
Zarqawi raids uncover new leads BBC News
The US military says a series of raids conducted following the killing of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi has yielded a "treasure trove" of new information. A spokesman said the death of the leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq freed investigators to pursue new targets.

Pictures of Zarqawi's body were put on display by the US
Zarqawi was killed when US planes dropped two 500lb (230kg) bombs on a site near Baquba. His death was welcomed by George W Bush and Tony Blair, though both warned it was unlikely to end the daily violence. The US struck after receiving specific tip-offs from within Zarqawi's organisation, officials said. The militant's body was identified by fingerprints, tattoos and scars. The news came shortly before the Iraqi parliament approved the key posts of defence and interior ministers.


The two crucial roles had remained unfilled despite the formation of a coalition government last month. In the space of 24 hours, the Iraqi government was able to announce the capture of its arch nemesis and fill important cabinet positions with responsibility for security, says the BBC's Ian Pannell in Baghdad. But he says Iraqis remain ambivalent about the prospects of the future, aware that Zarqawi's group is just one of many insurgent groups active in the country, and concerned that revenge attacks could follow.

Zarqawi 'eliminated'
Zarqawi's "safe house" about 8km (five miles) north of Baquba was struck at 1815 (1415 GMT) on Wednesday by F-16 jets, officials said.
Jordanian-born Zarqawi was said to have been in a meeting with associates at the time. At least five other people were killed in the raid, including spiritual adviser Sheikh Abd-al-Rahman and an unidentified woman and child. Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki announced the news on Thursday, telling a news conference in Baghdad: "We have eliminated Zarqawi."

QUOTE("Nouri Maliki - Iraqi Prime Minister")
This is a message to those who choose the path of violence to change their direction before it is too late
The news sparked sustained applause. The strike was the "painstaking, deliberate result" of intelligence over "many weeks", US military spokesman Major General William Caldwell said. He said that 17 simultaneous raids conducted in and around Baghdad following the strike had yielded "a treasure trove... of information and intelligence". "And we had identified other targets we had previously not gone after, to allow us to continue staying focused on getting Zarqawi. But now that we have got him, it allows us now to go after all these other targets," he said. A Jordanian government spokesman said Jordanian agents had contributed to the operation against Zarqawi. Zarqawi was known for his particularly gruesome techniques, such as his trademark videotaped beheadings. His group was also blamed for many of the worst attacks on civilians, both inside Iraq and in neighbouring Jordan. He was a bloodthirsty and violent thug - says the BBC's security correspondent, Frank Gardner - who made enemies and several mistakes that might have contributed to his downfall.

'No illusions'
US President George W Bush described the news as a "severe blow to al-Qaeda" and "justice" for Zarqawi. Zarqawi's death was an opportunity for the new government to "turn the tide", Mr Bush said. British PM Tony Blair described it as "very good news", but both leaders said Zarqawi's death would not end violence.
QUOTE("ZARQAWI-CLAIMED ATTACKS")
  • 19 Aug 2003: Bombing of UN office in Baghdad, 23 dead
  • 29 Aug 2003: Bombing of Najaf shrine killing Shia cleric Muhammad Baqr Hakim, 85 dead
  • 2 March 2004: Co-ordinated attack on Shia mosques during Ashoura ceremony, 181 dead
  • 11 May 2004: Nick Berg beheaded, first of at least nine foreign hostages killed in 2004
  • 14 Sept 2004: Car bomb targeting police recruits in Baghdad, 47 dead
  • 19 Dec 2004: Car bombs in Najaf and Karbala, 60 dead
  • 9 Nov 2005: Triple attack on hotels in Amman, 60 dead
  • Iraqis give their reaction
  • Your views: Zarqawi's death
"We should have no illusions. We know they will continue to kill, we know there are many, many obstacles to overcome," said Mr Blair. On the streets of Baghdad, most people greeted the news. "We consider this a great delight to the people because right must prevail," said one man.

"Thanks are due to God for ending our ordeal."
But a statement on an Islamist website, purportedly from al-Qaeda, said: "The death of our leaders ... only makes us more determined to continue the jihad." However reports suggest Zarqawi's savage tactics had lost him the confidence of leading al-Qaeda figures, including Osama bin Laden's deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri, says the BBC's Jon Leyne. Several sources close to the insurgency had suggested in the last few weeks that Zarqawi's role had already been downgraded. The US state department says it is not yet clear who will receive the $25m bounty on Zarqawi's head. The violence in Iraq continued on Thursday, with at least 35 people killed in a spate of bombings in Baghdad.
  • Jordanian intelligence reportedly assisted the US-led operation
  • Zarqawi traced to isolated safe house approximately 8km north of Baquba, north east of Baghdad
  • US aircraft launched air strike at about 1815. The militant leader was reportedly holding a meeting with associates, including spiritual adviser Sheikh Abd-al-Rahman, at time of raid
  • Several others were reportedly killed
  • Iraqi police were first on the scene, followed by troops from the Multi-National Division North
  • Zarqawi's identity confirmed by fingerprints, facial recognition and known scars
theglobalchinese
Baghdad curfew after Zarqawi raid BBC News
Vehicles have been banned from the streets of Baghdad for several hours, amid fears of bomb attack reprisals for the death of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. The death of the al-Qaeda in Iraq leader was announced on Thursday. The vehicle ban coincides with Friday prayers and is in force both in the capital and in nearby Baquba, where Zarqawi was killed in a US air raid. Thousands of worshippers go to mosques for Friday prayers and have often been targeted by bombers linked to Zarqawi. Two car bombs exploded in mainly Shia areas of Baghdad on Thursday evening, killing 15 people. "The curfew is a measure to keep people indoors as there could be more bombings like the ones last night, following Zarqawi's death," said an Iraqi defence ministry official. See a map of where Zarqawi was killed. The US military said the operation against Zarqawi had given them a "treasure trove" of new information.

The US struck after receiving specific tip-offs from within Zarqawi's organisation, officials said.
QUOTE("Nouri Maliki - Iraqi Prime Minister")
We believe we will soon reach a tipping point in our battle against the terrorists
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki said the $25m bounty on Zarqawi's head would be honoured. News of the militant's death has given a massive boost to the Iraqi government and the Bush administration, says the BBC's Middle East analyst Roger Hardy. Shortly after the death was announced, the Iraqi parliament approved the key posts of defence and interior ministers, which had lain vacant despite the formation of a coalition government last month.

Challenges
The new government has an ideal opportunity to persuade nationalist elements within the insurgency to join the political process, our correspondent says. But, he says, it will have to perform better than its predecessors in its approach to divisive issues such as the constitution, corruption, the rising power of militias and failing basic services. In an interview with Britain's Times newspaper, Mr Maliki promised "an initiative to secure Baghdad and confront the ethnic cleansing taking place... around the capital". "We believe we will soon reach a tipping point in our battle against the terrorists as Iraqi security services increase in size and capacity," he said. Zarqawi was known for his particularly gruesome tactics, including videotaped beheadings of hostages and synchronised bomb attacks on civilians.

'Utter nonsense'
Unrest has continued in Iraq with several attacks targeting workers and installations used by the oil industry:
  • A senior official from Iraq's state oil company is kidnapped near his home in Baghdad
  • Three oil engineers are reportedly shot dead on the road from Baiji to the oil production centre of Kirkuk
  • Gunmen in Kirkuk attack an oil pipeline, reportedly killing one civilian and injuring three soldiers
On the streets of Baghdad, most people welcomed the news of Zarqawi's death. "We consider this a great delight to the people because right must prevail," said one man. "Thanks are due to God for ending our ordeal." But a statement on an Islamist website, purportedly from al-Qaeda, said: "The death of our leaders ... only makes us more determined to continue the jihad." US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld has dismissed as "utter nonsense" fears that Zarqawi's death will lead directly to more violence. "These things tend to get planned well in advance," he said, after a Nato meeting in Brussels. "You could have an upswing [in violence] but I think linking it to that would surprise me."
Snuffysmith
For the women of Iraq, the war is just beginning :

Across Iraq, a bloody and relentless oppression of women has taken hold. Many
women had their heads shaved for refusing to wear a scarf or have been stoned in
the street for wearing make-up. Others have been kidnapped and murdered for
crimes that are being labelled simply as "inappropriate behaviour".
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle...ticle717570.ece
Snuffysmith
Zarqawi betrayed by Qaeda insider :

As the U.S. commandos took up positions, Ismael said, someone from inside the
house in the date grove began shooting. The Americans returned fire, Ismael
said, but the gun battle did not last long.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13552.htm
Snuffysmith
Greg Palast: Unreported:The Zarqawi Invitation:

They got him -- the big, bad, beheading berserker in Iraq. But, something's gone
unreported in all the glee over getting Zarqawi … who invited him into Iraq in
the first place?
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13555.htm
Snuffysmith
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi: Dead Again :

The reported death—and past deaths—are simply another dimension of a rather
transparent psychological operations campaign run out of the Pentagon.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13553.htm
Snuffysmith
Baghdad Bomb Blast Kills 4, Injures 27

BAGHDAD, Iraq -- A roadside bomb targeting a police patrol exploded in an
outdoor market in Baghdad on Saturday, killing four people and wounding 27,
police said.

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Snuffysmith
Iraqi Leader Charts Nation's Priorities

By Nelson Hernandez

BAGHDAD, June 9 -- As the dust settled Friday from the news that Iraq's most
notorious insurgent leader had been killed and that its new government had
finally been completed, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki outlined a plan to
confront the country's deeper problems of rampant violence, economic...

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theglobalchinese
New raids hit al-Qaida Advertiser Adelaide
The US military has intensified its offensive against al-Qaida in Iraq, staging 38 more raids based on information uncovered during the hunt that led to the death of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in an air strike. The fresh raids came as al-Qaida issued urgent appeals for money and volunteers to fight American forces, after al-Zarqawi's death left it without a clearly recognised leader. The US military also gave details of the Wednesday evening air strike that killed al-Zarqawi, saying he initially survived the blast from two 226kg bombs dropped on his hideout in the village of Hibhib, 85km north of Baghdad. The al-Qaida appeals suggested al-Zarqawi's network may be feeling the heat from the US raids, which have extended beyond Hibhib to include a series of locations in and around Baghdad. In a video news conference relayed from Baghdad to the Pentagon, spokesman Major General William Caldwell displayed a suicide belt, explosives and Iraqi army uniforms uncovered in 17 raids conducted in the immediate aftermath of al-Zarqawi's death. The raids targeted people whom the US had been monitoring in the build-up to the strike, which was delayed until al-Zarqawi had been pinpointed because they were giving "indicators at different points in time as to where Zarqawi might be," he said. In the next two days another 38 raids were conducted, some directly related to information obtained in the earlier raids, General Caldwell said. Two official statements posted on the website used by al-Qaida urged Muslims to volunteer to fight in Iraq, saying al-Zarqawi's death should remind them of their "duty" to fight infidels. "Iraq is the front line of defence for Islam and Muslims. So, don't miss this opportunity to join the Mujahidin and the martyrs," said one signed by Abdullah Rasheed al-Baghdadi, who succeeded al-Zarqawi earlier this year as head of the Mujahidin Shura Council, the umbrella group that includes al-Qaida. "This is a compulsory duty for all Muslims in these days," it said. Another statement in the name of Hamil al-Rashash (Holder of the Rifle) was desperate. "Help, help! Support, support!" it said. "Assistance, assistance! Where is your money? And where are your men? Wake up before it gets too late and before all the curses of Earth and heaven fall upon you." The military has portrayed the strike against al-Zarqawi as the culmination of weeks of intelligence gathering from multiple sources, including an al-Qaida informant. General Caldwell said it was unlikely anyone would receive the $33 million reward offered for al-Zarqawi. He said Iraqi police who reached the bombed house first found al-Zarqawi still moving, and put him on a stretcher. When US forces arrived, al-Zarqawi appeared to try to move, but they "re-secured him," General Caldwell said. "He mumbled a little something, but it was indistinguishable and very short," he said. Al-Zarqawi also appeared to make eye contact with the troops, Lieutenant Christina Skacan said. "He made what seemed to them to be some kind of eye contact, he rolled a little to the side and then he passed away," she said. Asked if it was possible al-Zarqawi could have been shot to death by the forces that found him, General Caldwell said it was still uncertain.
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