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*IRAQ: latest news and developments

US soldier killed in attack west of Baghdad

One US soldier was killed and another wounded when insurgents attacked their convoy Sunday west of Baghdad, the US military said in a statement. "A soldier of the 81st Brigade Combat Team is dead and one
wounded as a result of an attack on their convoy around 11 a.m. (0800 GMT)," the statement said.

"Secondary explosions at the scene were from the cargo the convoy was carrying," it added without elaborating. Over 1,120 US service members have been killed since the US-led invasion last March.
 
12 Iraqi Guardsmen Abducted, Executed

NAJAF, Iraq - Militants dressed as police abducted and executed 12 Iraqi National Guards who were traveling home to Najaf, an official with a leading Shiite party said Sunday. The 12 men were kidnapped near Latifiyah, an area of frequent violence bout 20 miles south of Baghdad, said Abu Ali al-Najafi from the Supreme Council of the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (news - web sites), known by its acronym SCIRI. They were heading home to Najaf on Thursday after a visit to Baghdad when the kidnappers, disguised as policemen, stopped their convoy, said al-Najaf, speaking from SCIRI offices in Najaf. The 12 were seized along with the convoy's driver, though a 13th guardsman escaped.

The assailants, who later identified themselves as members of a group calling itself the al-Furqan Brigade, tortured the driver, breaking his arm and sending him off with a ransom demand to their relatives, for payment of $1,000 for each "headless body of their dear one," Al-Najafi said.
 
Two UK soldiers injured in Iraq

Two British soldiers have been seriously injured in a suicide attack in Iraq, the Ministry of Defence said. The troops were part of the Black Watch battle group stationed at Camp Dogwood 20 miles (32km) from Baghdad, having been re-deployed from Basra. The MoD said they were injured in the attack at 0922 local time and had been airlifted to a US field hospital.

The injuries came after three soldiers were killed in a suicide bomb attack at a checkpoint near Falluja on Thursday. The two soldiers suffered serious injuries to their lower legs, BBC correspondent Ben Brown said from Camp Dogwood. The pair are due to be flown to a military hospital in Germany within 24 hours.
 
US forces under fire in Falluja

US-led coalition forces have exchanged heavy fire with insurgents in Falluja as they prepare for a major offensive.
Witnesses reported black smoke rising from several locations as US forces unleashed a fierce artillery barrage. Meanwhile fighters in the city fired mortars and small arms across the River Euphrates at American positions. US troops, who are massed near the city awaiting orders for an attack, took two bridges and a hospital overnight in the western part of the city.

But they have not entered deep into the city, and have repeatedly had to change position due to the insurgents' fire. The Associated Press news agency reported that US marines died overnight when their bulldozer overturned in the river. Their bodies were discovered in the morning.

Groups of civilians waving white flags were seen leaving the outskirts of the city. American troops let them pass, but coalition forces suspect some insurgents may be posing as civilians - soon after a pair of unarmed men approached a group of army engineers, rockets landed within 20 metres of the soldiers. The BBC's Quil Lawrence, with US forces near Falluja, said troops used night vision to seize the two bridges, which are main routes west out of the city. One of the bridges was the site of the killing of four US contractors that sparked the first attempt to retake Falluja in April.

There is no sign yet of American ground forces entering the city centre, where street by street fighting is expected, our correspondent adds. US planes and artillery have been battering what they call insurgent positions for the past few weeks to make entry into the city easier.
 
Updates...US killing Iraqis burying their dead....for fucks sake.

Thousands of Iraqis flee to Jordan border
Thousands of Iraqi citizens late Saturday rushed to the Jordanian-Iraqi border after U.S. occupation troops closed the high way between the two countries and threatened to attack the two cities of al-Falluja and al-Ramadi

Car bomb hits coalition convoy on road to Baghdad airport
A car bomb hit a civilian convoy belonging to U.S.-led coalition forces on Monday on the main highway to Baghdad's airport, the Interior Ministry said

Allawi closes Baghdad airport
IRAQ'S interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi has announced that the country's international airport would be closed to civilian flights for 48 hours.

Car Bomb in Mosul
A car bomb exploded in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul tonight, injuring one US soldier and 12 Iraqi bystanders, US military and hospital officials said.

12 killed in Fallujah attacks
TWELVE people were killed in US air strikes and ground fire in the centre of the rebel-held Iraqi city of Fallujah today, an official from a local medical clinic said.The official said 10 people were killed when a US aircraft bombed their house near the Faruq mosque in the centre of the Sunni Muslim bastion.Two hours later, shells landing near a local cemetery killed two other people taking part in a funeral procession, he said.

US/Iraqi troops seize Fallujah's hospital
US and Iraqi troops backed by warplanes stormed Fallujah early Monday, November 8, seizing the main hospital and killing at least nine people
 
More.....

British contractor killed in Iraq
A British contractor has been killed in a roadside bomb attack in Zubayr, south Iraq, an Army spokesman has said. The Foreign Office confirmed a Briton had died in an incident, but gave no further details. The Army spokesman in Basra said there were two civilian casualties from the bomb on Sunday morning. "I can confirm there was a car bomb this morning. I believe they were two civilians, they were definitely not military," he said.

Fallujah attack plans stolen?
An Iraqi company commander who had received a full battle briefing on the expected Falluja assault has deserted a military base where U.S. and Iraqi troops are preparing. Officials discovered the commander, a Kurdish captain, was missing on Friday. Marine officials believe the man took notes from the battle briefing Thursday and and are worried he may pass the information to insurgents. Sunday: .........CNN has pulled all reference to this story, including removing that tiny but devasting blurb. However, the Australian media has not, and here is the complete article: http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200411/s1236326.htm

Zarqawi Group Posts Video of Attack on UK Troops
A group led by al Qaeda ally Abu Musab al-Zarqawi posted an Internet video on Sunday of a suicide car bombing which killed three British troops in Iraq. The tape showed a dark-colored car driving down a road and then slowing down, allowing several other vehicles to pass, before it blew up in apparent footage of Thursday's attack.

Plumes of black smoke rose as the man behind the camera, who was taping from a distance, shouted "God is greatest." A script on the video identified the bomber as Abu Suleiman and said he had waited for civilian cars to pass before blowing up his car. The three soldiers and an Iraqi translator were killed when the car bomber attacked their checkpoint south of Baghdad in the first suicide attack on UK forces in Iraq. The video, posted on a Web site often used by Islamists and carrying the logo of Al Qaeda Organization of Holy War in Iraq, also showed what it said were British troops removing the bodies and the injured as well as a helicopter airlifting them. An unidentified man was shown kicking a severed arm and stomping on it.


I've been unable to verify this piece from Iran on Al Jazeerah's site as it is obviously getting a lot of hits and is unreachable at the moment.....

36 US soldiers held captive in Iraq
Tehran, Nov 8 - Armed groups in the Iraqi city of Fallujah Monday held 36 American marine forces captive, Al-Jazeera reported. The news was made public through mosques'e loudspeakers throughout the city. US soldiers and Iraqi interim government's forces have launched a massive raid on the city, claiming to be the power center of al-Qaeda groups.
 
Iraqi Officer Deserts With Battle Plan for Fallujah

An Iraqi military commander has deserted US forces hours after he received a full briefing on US military plans to storm the rebel-held city of Fallujah, CNN has reported. The pool report sent to Reuters and other media from a US marine unit quoted US officers as saying the desertion of the unidentified captain, a Kurdish company commander, would not change plans to retake the city before elections scheduled for January 27.

They said they believe the officer, who commanded 160 Iraqi soldiers training with US marines at a base on the outskirts of Fallujah, was not likely to hand over battle plans to rebels in the Sunni Muslim city. The officer disappeared on Friday morning, one day after US marine officers gave him a full briefing on the battle plans. US officers found his uniform and automatic rifles on his bed.“This man has no known ties with Fallujah and they (the US military) don’t believe in the first instance that he is headed for Fallujah. They believe that since the captain is a Kurd, he is more likely headed up north and going home,” the report said.

“It is significant that he disappeared the morning after he had a full and detailed brief on the full battle plan for the assault on Fallujah,” it added.
 
Al Jazeerah report - US firing at Ambulances again....?

Battle of Falluja under way

....Abu Bakr al-Dulaimi, an Iraqi journalist, told Aljazeera the clashes were the most violent the city has witnessed since April 2003. "US tanks, armoured vehicles, F16 and C130 fighters are taking part in the attack on Falluja," al-Dulaimi said.

"Violent clashes are now going on in the western areas of the city. US forces are backed by tanks and helicopters", he added. "Clashes have also erupted in Julan neighbourhood. Resistance in these areas is fierce," he said. "The city's defenders are responding to the US attacks with everything at their disposal." According to the journalist, the clashes also spread to the western parts of the city including al-Jisrain area. US F16 fighters also bombed sites in northeast Falluja. Fighters caused some damage to the advancing US forces hitting two tanks in the north western area of Saqlawiya and seven oil tankers in Qarma in the northeast."An unmanned aircraft was downed in central Falluja and a US military vehicle was burnt behind the new bridge," said al-Dulaimi. Falluja's Shura (consultation) Mujahidin Council called on Iraqi National Guards to withdraw from the battle in the interests of national unity

In a second statement, the council urged international intervention to halt the assault. It also called on the resistance fighters in other Iraqi cities to come to Falluja's aid. Earlier on Monday US marines seized control of land around the hospital on the western edge of the city, witnesses said. Iraqi special forces stormed the hospital at about 2am (2300 GMT Sunday) without firing a shot, blindfolding some people and kicking down some doors, a pool reporter embedded with the military said. They met little resistance except for a roadside bomb that exploded close to a US military vehicle wounding a marine, according to the pool reporter. The hospital, the largest in the city, is located on the western side of the banks of the Euphrates, which separates it from the centre, leaving just small clinics to deal with any local wounded or dead if full-scale fighting erupts.

The hospital director said earlier that the facility was surrounded. "They are telling us over loud speakers that if we leave the building we will be shot at," Dr Salih al-Isawi said, adding that an ambulance that tried to exit the facility was fired upon. It was not immediately clear if the driver was killed or wounded.

Al-Dulaimi said Falluja's general hospital had been undefended as it lay outside the city. "US forces have entered the hospital as it is not guarded; only doctors and patients are there," he said. A US commander told reporters that marines also took control of two bridges in the south-west of Falluja, spanning the Euphrates, while a large, white observation balloon was seen hovering above.
 
_40500027_boy-ap-300x220.jpg


Civilians remain in the city, living under US bombs which, as one doctor told the BBC, cannot tell women and children from militants.

_40500029_toddler-ap-300x220.jpg


This little injured boy lost his father to US bombing, hospital officials said.

_40500023_guard-ap-300.jpg


Syria has begun digging a border ditch under US pressure to prevent foreign fighters slipping into Iraq and heading for Falluja.

From the BBC
 
Just found this snippet on the Indy web site which would explain why the US will shoot ambulances.

Rules of engagement allow US troops to shoot and kill anyone carrying a weapon or driving in Fallujah, so US troops can fire on car bombers, Lt-Col Ramos said.
 
Militants in Iraq Attack Catholic Church

Militants attacked a Catholic church Monday in southern Baghdad, setting it ablaze, according to police and eyewitnesses. A huge explosion at the church in the southern Doura neighborhood left about 20 people injured, said a policeman who declined to give his name. Eyewitness Mohammed Aziz said that strong explosions rocked the area.

"Half an hour ago, I felt my house shaking three times and then saw the fire set in the church," he said. Police sealed off the area and fired bullets in the air to disperse the crowd, said another witness, Lyon Emad Elias, whose home faces the church.
 
US forces unleash massive shelling of Fallujah

.......artillery shells earlier blasted in sporadic bursts, said an AFP correspondent inside, while another reporter embedded with the marines on the northwestern edge said that armoured vehicles drove through the outer streets firing at buildings.

At least 12 people were killed and more than 20 wounded in the bombardments, said an official from a local clinic, where medics complained about a shortage of supplies after the seizure of the general hospital.


I wonder if the insurgents will listen to Tony?! What a fucking nonce.

British Prime Minister Tony Blair says coalition must "hold firm"

LONDON Prime Minister Tony Blair says British troops will "hold firm" in Iraq. He says the big offensive just launched against rebels in Fallujah will clear the way for next year's elections.

He says the assault "would cease now, immediately" if rebels disarmed and agreed to participate in the elections. Blair says letting rebels win in Fallujah would endanger the world, so the allies there must "hold firm, be resolute and see this through." Blair told Parliament today that defeating militants in Iraq "is defeat for this new and virulent form of global terrorism everywhere."
 
From the BBC

-In Ramadi, another town where there has been strong resistance to the US-led troops, suicide attackers are reported to have attacked US forces during clashes

-Heavy gunfire is reported in Baghdad during clashes between US troops and insurgents

-A bomb explodes at a Catholic church in the capital, setting the building on fire and reportedly injuring a number of people

-European Union foreign policy chief Javier Solana says there is little prospect of Iraq holding national elections in January as planned because of the deteriorating security situation.
 
...........

Car Bomb Hits Coalition Convoy in Baghdad
BAGHDAD, Iraq -- A car bomb hit a civilian convoy belonging to U.S.-led coalition forces on Monday on the main highway to Baghdad's airport, the Interior Ministry said. Two sport utility vehicles were caught in the explosion as the convoy traveled through the western Amiriyah district, spokesman Col. Adnan Abdul-Rahman said.

Earlier, a police officer at the scene said he believed the vehicles were hit by rocket-propelled grenades rather than a car bomb. One vehicle was overturned by the blast while the other burst into flames. The number of casualties was not immediately known. Police and U.S. troops blocked off the site of the explosion.Witnesses reported seeing two dead Westerners lying on the ground while three victims were airlifted away. Westerners and contractors traveling in sports-utility vehicles are frequently targeted by insurgents.

Hmmm..........

U.S. military gear on sale at dangerous Baghdad bazaar

BAGHDAD — A bazaar in Baghdad’s perilous downtown sells U.S. military uniforms at discount prices. One shop displayed about 40 U.S. desert camouflage uniforms, along with beige boots, headgear and backpacks. At least one backpack still had an Army and Air Force Exchange Service tag affixed to it. An entire outfit, boots and backpack included, could be had for about $55 — about half the original cost of legitimate boots alone.

Fallujah and the Reality of War

The assault on Fallujah has started. It is being sold as liberation of the people of Fallujah; it is being sold as a necessary step to implementing “democracy” in Iraq. These are lies.

I was in Fallujah during the siege in April, and I want to paint for you a word picture of what such an assault means. Fallujah is dry and hot; like Southern California, it has been made an agricultural area only by virtue of extensive irrigation. It has been known for years as a particularly devout city; people call it the City of a Thousand Mosques. In the mid-90’s, when Saddam wanted his name to be added to the call to prayer, the imams of Fallujah refused.

U.S. forces bombed the power plant at the beginning of the assault; for the next several weeks, Fallujah was a blacked-out town, with light provided by generators only in critical places like mosques and clinics. The town was placed under siege; the ban on bringing in food, medicine, and other basic items was broken only when Iraqis en masse challenged the roadblocks. The atmosphere was one of pervasive fear, from bombing and the threat of more bombing. Noncombatants and families with sick people, the elderly, and children were leaving in droves.

After initial instances in which people were prevented from leaving, U.S. forces began allowing everyone to leave – except for what they called “military age males,” men usually between 15 and 60. Keeping noncombatants from leaving a place under bombardment is a violation of the laws of war. Of course, if you assume that every military age male is an enemy, there can be no better sign that you are in the wrong country, and that, in fact, your war is on the people, not on their oppressors,, not a war of liberation.
 
BBC Radio Orwell Reporting for Duty

*William Bowles • 8 November 2004

http://www.williambowles.info/

Under the headline “Fixing the Problem in Fallujah”, the BBC Radio 4’s Website (7/11/04) tells us

“Troops say they are ready to reclaim Falluja for its citizens”

That is, what’s left of Fallujah and its citizens after almost continuous pounding by the US since last April. So as far as the BBC is concerned Fallujah is merely a ‘problem’ that has to be fixed, what like a leaky pipe? In contrast the following puts the BBC’s government-inspired propaganda into some kind of context

“I began to count out loud…as the bombs tumbled to the ground with increasingly monotonous regularity. There were 38 in the first half-hour alone… The perimeter of [Fallujah]…is already largely in ruins. The crumbling remains of houses and shell-pocked walls reminded me of my home town Beirut in the 1980s at the height of Lebanon's civil war.”
Hala Jaber, a reporter for the Times

The BBC report doesn’t even mention the bombing! Instead it describes 500 and 1000 lb bombs thus

“With flashes in the night sky and the sound of automatic fire marking their progress, US ground forces moved through the outskirts of Falluja.”

Thus “fixing the problem” is the tried and tested method of colonial occupation, destroying everything that stands in the way of installing ‘democracy’ in Iraq. Bombs are now merely “flashes in the night sky” (well it was Guy Fawkes night this past Saturday), the reality has been utterly expunged by the BBC story. The article also reinforces this sanitised, official reality by describing bombing without actually mentioning that bombs are being dropped

“The sound of war-planes overhead was constant until dawn.”

So what were they doing if not dropping bombs I wonder? Sightseeing? Yet occasionally, even the Centurians of the imperium reveal a reality that the BBC will not talk about when one of its own says

“[Iraq is] a huge strategic disaster, and it will only get worse… The idea of creating a constitutional state in a short amount of time is a joke. It will take ten to fifteen years, and that is if we want to kill ten percent of the population.”
(Lt. Gen. William Odom, Director of the National Security Agency, 1985-88)

The BBC report goes on to tell us

“They [the US] swept into Iraq in a short, victorious campaign, and quickly settled down to nation-building and peacekeeping.”

This is bizarre, Alice-in-Wonderland ‘reportage’ that has nothing to do with the reality of at least 100,000 Iraqi deaths since the invasion and occupation. Nation-building? Peacekeeping? Any reporter worth his salt would know that Bush and his capos long ago told us that the last thing on their minds was ‘nation-building’ and indeed are on record as saying that the objective of occupying Iraq is anything but nation-building.

“We are not in Iraq to engage in nation-building — our mission is to help Iraqis so that they can build their own nation.”
Donald H. Rumsfeld, Washington Post, September 25 2003.

Indeed, even the right-wing, pro-Bush Cato Institute (motto: Individual Liberty, Limited Government, Free Markets and Peace) says

“The U.S. invasion of Iraq wasn't part of a nation-building scheme. Ironically, beginning with the First Gulf War and ending with the ouster of Saddam Hussein, U.S. policies interrupted and eventually ended a process of nation building led by Saddam.”
www.cato.org/dailys/06-20-04.html

The BBC report is in fact promoting the fiction of US attempts at ‘nation-building’ designed to obscure the real aims of the occupation, a fact that the mouthpieces of the Bush administration are all too willing to express even if the BBC ain’t!

“Iraqi gains are very welcome, but they come as a happy byproduct of the coalition pursuing its own interests, not as the primary goal. It is proper to put coalition forces’ lives at risk only to the extent that liberating and rehabilitating Iraq benefits the United States, the United Kingdom and the other partners.”
'War as Social Work?' by Daniel Pipes New York Post May 6, 2003

Pipes, unlike the BBC, has no hesitation in spelling out the real reasons for the occupation and indeed does all he can to disabuse us of such idealistic notions as ‘nation-building’ when he says

“When the population does not see the benefits to themselves of warfare, U.S. soldiers are pulled from the battlefield, as in Lebanon in 1984 and Somalia in 1993. There simply is no readiness to take casualties for the purposes of social work.

“So, by all means, bring on “Iraqi Freedom.” But always keep in mind, as President Bush has done, that the ultimate war goal is to enhance American security.”

And there you have it from the horse’s mouth so-to-speak. The BBC on the other hand, would rather blow it out the other end of the equine.

Destroying them to save them

““The competence and compassion of my marines will mitigate any civilian casualties,” said Lieutenant-Colonel Gareth Brandl when asked how he could control where all this firepower would be directed in the narrow streets and alleys of Falluja.””

Can corpses feel compassion? This is by the way the same Lieutenant-Colonel Gareth Brandl who said

“The enemy has got a face. He’s called Satan. He lives in Falluja. And we’re going to destroy him”

Compassion or revenge? The same BBC report actually uses this chilling quote (twice) but without comment (need we ask why?).

‘Precision-guided munitions’ well may be precise (to within 10 metres assuming they find their ‘target’) but consider that a 1000lb percussion bomb has a destructive radius of nearly half a kilometre and the notion of ‘precision’ takes on an altogether different dimension especially for the people living in small, closely-packed houses.

The ‘embedded’ journalist who wrote this piece of propaganda, a certain Paul Wood, also neglects to tell us that ‘embedded’ is newsspeak for censored, a fact that has been conveniently (and quietly) dropped since the beginning of the occupation. His objectivity is revealed for the sham that it is when he tells us

“At our forward base, rockets from the insurgents fizzed overhead a couple of times a day, sending the marines scrambling for cover.”

Note that he describes the forward base of the US Marines as “our” thus dispelling the fiction of the much-vaunted ‘objectivity’ of BBC journalism. He goes on

“”We’re gonna whack ’em,” he told a roomful of newly-embedded journalists.

“This is not bloodlust. The marines know better than anyone the reality of combat.””

But clearly Wood is not interested in the reality of “whack[ing]” the inhabitants of Fallujah. Such ‘little slips’ of the pen are commonplace as the complacency and sanctimonious drivel of the state-run media gears up to justify the extermination of Fallujah. The piece ends with the following

“But for the highly-professional marines, Falluja is also a return to the simplicity of combat after the complexities of peacekeeping and an enemy that never shows itself.”

And indeed, the article reiterates the idea that the Iraqis are sneaky a bunch of bastards who won't fight ‘fair’ like our ‘professional soldiers’

“…roadside bombs, suicide bombers, booby traps, bombs thrown from roof-tops, mosques used as sniper positions, and a small group of Islamist fighters who believe they are about to seek martyrdom in a holy war.”

Thus the BBC reinforces the racist stereotype of the ‘fuzzy-wuzzy’ in the immortal phrase of Rudyard Kipling who are, according to Paul Wood only fighting to seek a place in heaven. Aside from this the reality and futility of destroying the people in order to save them is perhaps best illustrated by the following extract

“In 1995 the Russians pounded Grozny until the neighbourhoods harbouring Chechen fighters were reduced to rubble but, nine years on, rebels are still blowing up Russian soldiers with booby-trap bombs.”
‘Russia's Chechnya Wars 1994-2000: Lessons from Urban Combat.’

Hence, the propaganda effort is revealed as futile by the very people who are orchestrating the Fallujah “fix” as the BBC describes it. For us the issue is how to ‘fix’ the BBC’s blatant propaganda campaign on behalf of its masters in Downing Street. One way may be to write to the manipulators of reality at Broadcasting House and tell them that such blatant distortions of reality are not appreciated either in Iraq or here.

(See also the Medialens piece The BBC – Legitimising Mass Slaughter in Fallujah)

http://free.freespeech.org/medialens/

Write (politely but firmly) to Paul Wood
Email: [email protected]

Write (politely but firmly) to director of BBC news, Helen Boaden
Email: [email protected]

If you care to share with us, please email them to [email protected]

**
 
:rolleyes:

Rumsfeld: Strike Won't Kill Many Iraqis

Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said Monday that large numbers of Iraqi civilians would not be killed, "certainly not by U.S. forces," during the siege to retake Fallujah, even as the top U.S. commander there predicted a "major confrontation" between insurgents and up to 15,000 troops in the Sunni Muslim city.

Rumsfeld told a Pentagon news conference that bringing stability to the city would be difficult because insurgents were expected to put up a pitched battle. "Listen these folks are determined. These are killers They chop people's heads off. They're getting money from around the world. They're getting recruits," Rumsfeld said.

He declined to speculate on how many Iraqi civilians remained in the city, who might be in harm's way. "There's nobody who knows how many people are in there," he said. But, Rumsfeld added, "U.S. forces are disciplined, they are well-led, they are well trained ... and there aren't going be large numbers of civilians killed and certainly not by U.S. forces."
 
Eyewitness: Taking cover in Falluja

US and Iraqi national guard forces have launched the long-awaited assault on the Iraqi city of Falluja. We spoke by phone to a Fadhil Badrani, a journalist in Falluja who reports for the BBC World Service in Arabic. For people in the city, life has become even more extreme.

Food is in short supply and the shops are all closed in anticipation of the looming attack. Electricity is cut off because of damage to the main power station from the bombardment. The water supply has been cut off too. The roads are now heavily cratered.

People, particularly children and women, tend to stay at home, fearing being mistaken for a military target. Doctors say medical supplies at the main hospital, which has been in American hands since Sunday, are low. Most of the city's population has left, some for other parts of Iraq, others, I hear have left the country altogether for neighbouring Arab counties. Economic life here has been way down since the first siege last April. This has meant that most people are suffering desperate financial difficulties and many are living in Baghdad with family.

Rents in Baghdad have shot up, partly because of refugees from Falluja.
 
..........

Marine with experience in Fallujah speaks of U.S. offensive

First Sgt. Jeff Mingeldorff with the 3rd Batallion, 24th Marines, India Company out of Nashville understands what U.S. and Iraqi troops are facing in Fallujah, Iraq. The Marine reservist's unit just returned from Fallujah last month after being stationed there for seven months. 1st Sgt. Mingeldorff told News 2 that Operation Phantom Fury - the massive assault to take back Fallujah from insurgents - will be a long, challenging one for troops. First of all, the battle is in an urban area - a city of two million people, similar to the size of Dallas.

"I would think that this will continue for months. This is not an easy process - imagine it's clearing room-by-room, house-by-house, building-by-building to properly secure it. Keeping what you just cleared secure and continue to operate is quite a task," said Mingledorff.

Eight die in church, hospital blasts

CAR bombs at two Baghdad churches and outside a hospital treating the victims of those attacks have killed at least eight people and wounded dozens. The first blast was outside St George's Catholic church in southern Baghdad just before 6.30pm local time (2.30am AEDT) and was followed minutes later by a second outside St Matthew's church. Victims from both blasts, some carried by friends or relatives, were rushed to Yarmouk hospital.

The Iraq Quagmire Deepens

The aerial bombings in Fallujah will surely add to the rising death toll of civilians as well as insurgents. Worse, the attacks will not make Fallujah--nor any other part of Iraq--“safe for democracy.” Imagine if Cincinnati, Ohio, a city of Fallujah’s size, were destroyed ten weeks before the election was to take place. Elections would make little sense in the aftermath of such destruction. Furthermore, the attacks in Fallujah will spur more violence in surrounding towns, such as Samarra, where more than 30 people were killed this past weekend, making the country less safe and unlikely to be able to hold honest elections in January. But there are three other reasons why the assault on Fallujah is posed to further sink the U.S. in a quagmire with no exit:
 
Explosion hits near hospital in Baghdad

At least three people were killed in an explosion near Yarmouk Hospital in western Baghdad, police and hospital officials said. Policeman Adnan Jassim Mohammed said two mortar rounds were fired at police cars parked outside of the hospital, killing at least three policemen. He said there may be more casualties to come, adding: ”They are still transferring the wounded.”

Mohammed said the police cars were carrying people to the hospital when the rounds were fired. “They targeted the police,” he said of the attackers.
 
Snippet from BBC

Our correspondent reports that the initial phase of the operation has seen the clearing of booby-trap bombs on the main routes into the city. He says a US marine officer has told him that huge 2,000lb bombs have been dropped on insurgent positions from aircraft.
 
Fallujah assault not justified: Sadr

A spokesman for radical Iraqi Shiite Muslim cleric Moqtada al-Sadr has condemned the US-led assault on the city of Fallujah, appealing to Iraqi soldiers to abandon the Americans in the fight for the rebel bastion.

"Let us condemn the invasion of Fallujah and ask our sons in the national guard and police force not to become instruments of the occupation forces," Sheikh Abdel Hadi Darraji told AFP. US and Iraqi forces unleashed an all-out offensive to seize Fallujah from the hands of rebels, with marines advancing toward the city centre following massive strikes by artillery and warplanes.

Shortly before the attack Prime Minister Iyad Allawi rallied Iraqi troops at the main US military base of Camp Fallujah, telling them they needed to avenge the deaths of innocent Iraqis. "You need to avenge the victims of the terrorists like the 37 children who were killed in Baghdad and the 49 of your colleagues who were slaughtered," he said, referring to two of the deadliest attacks unleashed by insurgents loyal to Iraq's most wanted militant and Al Qaeda frontman Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. Sadr's spokesman argued that Zarqawi was being used in part to justify the assault, saying "the pretext of the presence (of Zarqawi's terrorist network) does not justify an attack against an entire population".

Last month, Sadr told Sunni leaders in Fallujah that he was prepared to help, whether they chose to fight or opted for dialogue to end their stand-off with the US-installed, interim government and US forces.
 
Families flee besieged city as residents speak of hostility to US action

Iraqis fleeing Falluja ahead of the US assault yesterday described a city deserted and already badly destroyed by weeks of bombing raids.
At least 200,000 people are thought to have poured out of the city, many heading to nearby suburbs of western Baghdad where they are sheltering with relatives. Thousands more remain in Falluja to sit out the US attack.

....When you go to Falluja what grabs your attention is the destruction. You see destruction everywhere," said Mr al-Shamari, 28. He left the city on Friday with his wife and two-year-old son, and is staying with relatives. "We know the Americans are a major power and that the Iraqi government has no will, they just receive instructions. Yet they will not control Falluja."

Many of the men in the crowd cited examples of other Sunni cities in Iraq that have been attacked by the US military. Last month the military seized control of Samarra in what it said was a model operation but in recent days there has been a string of suicide bombings in the city, suggesting that insurgents who fled the attack have simply regrouped and returned.

...."Even if we accept what they are saying about terrorists, what is the fault of the people of Falluja? If the government cannot control Falluja how can we control the terrorists and hand them over for trial?" asked Mr al-Shamari.

..."Falluja is dead after 4pm, you cannot see anyone around," he said. "Sometimes you see a man by himself staying to protect his house or his shop from being looted. Before it was a prosperous crowded city, now it is completely destroyed." The streets are controlled by armed groups of Iraqi rebels. "The mujahideen of Falluja are people with a cause," said Mr al-Ani. "We believe in them, regardless of the fact that sometimes they commit unreasonable acts. But I don't believe in fighting inside a city - it means destruction for all."
 
Battle rages in restive Falluja

Troops have been gradually forcing their way into Falluja. Up to 15,000 US and Iraqi troops are continuing a full-scale assault on the insurgent stronghold of Falluja. Overnight the city was attacked from all sides, by ground and air. Explosions and flares lit up the sky. Correspondents say soldiers have advanced at least one kilometre into the city amid intense fighting. US and Iraqi officials hope the assault, deeply unpopular with some Iraqis, will help prepare the way for elections in January.

But it is estimated there could be tens of thousands of civilians remaining in the city. The BBC's Paul Wood, embedded with US soldiers - and whose reporting is subject to military restrictions - says more than 12 hours after the assault began, the sounds of battle are still constant from Falluja.

He says the battalion he is accompanying took its first serious casualties as they advanced street by street, clearing out insurgents who are fighting for every inch of ground.
 
Reports from AFP that a US helicopter has been downed over Fallujah and that a police stations north of Baghdad have been attacked killing 25 people and wounding many more.
 
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