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*IRAQ: latest news and developments

'Get my son home'

Dan and Emma Withers, whose son Josh is in Iraq, are having second thoughts about the war. "You just don't want to think you're being led down the garden path by the president and Colin Powell. . . . I think I'm tired of being lied to," Mrs. Withers said.

Even if they blocked out Fox News, stopped devouring the newspapers, and shut off the Internet, the mothers of this war would still know the toll of the desert. They would hear it in their children's voices.


http://www.sptimes.com/2003/07/13/Worldandnation/_Get_my_son_home_.shtml
 
An explosion......

has killed another US soldier and injured two others as they were travelling in a convoy on a road just west of Baghdad.
Soldiers at the scene said the blast happened as a 20-vehicle convoy was passing a wrecked car abandoned at the roadside.

They believe a bomb was hidden in the car wreckage which exploded at 0900 local time on Wednesday.

More than 30 have died since President George W Bush announced the end of major hostilities on 1 May.

john x
 
Mr Straw also claimed that the Government's case for military action was not based on "intelligence reports".
Labour MPs, including Tam Dalyell, the father of the House, asked why Mr Straw had not told MPs that the documents were fake in advance of the vote to approve military action on 18 March. "He now says the Government knew it was a forgery in February. Why didn't he tell us before Parliament voted for war?" he said. "Also if the case for war is not based on intelligence, what is it based on?"
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/politics/story.jsp?story=424786
 
President Caught In Another Lie.

This is just one more example of president Bush hiding one lie behind another._

07/15/03:__ During a press briefing at the Whitehouse with United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan on Monday, 07/14/03, our president continued to lie to the American people.

This latest instance of Presidential deceit relates to the reasons for the U.S. invasion of Iraq.

When questioned about his comments in the state of the union address relating to the now discredited claim that Iraq tried to buy Uranium yellowcake from Niger, the president said._

"The larger point is, and the fundamental question is, did Saddam Hussein have a weapons program? And the answer is, absolutely. And we gave him a chance to allow the inspectors in, and he wouldn't let them in. And, therefore, after a reasonable request, we decided to remove him from power, along with other nations, so as to make sure he was not a threat to the United States and our friends and allies in the region. I firmly believe the decisions we made will make America more secure and the world more peaceful."

This as clearly a lie by our president,_ "And we gave him a chance to allow the inspectors in, and he wouldn't let them in. And, therefore, after a reasonable request, we decided to remove him from power"

President Bush has rewritten history and provided a new reason as to why he ordered the_ US invasion of Iraq._

The actual circumstances were that the UN inspectors were in Iraq and the Iraqi government was providing unfettered access to UN weapons inspectors. UN inspectors were busy dismantling Iraqi missiles when they were instructed to leave Iraq, prior to the US - UK invasion.
source and transcript: http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4110.htm#lie
 
Top U.S. General in Iraq Sees 'Classical Guerrilla-Type' War
By BRIAN KNOWLTON,
International Herald Tribune

WASHINGTON, July 16 - A top United States general said today that American troops in Iraq were now facing a "classical guerrilla-type campaign" -- the sort of phrase Bush administration officials have so far avoided -- and he added that American troops should be prepared for duty tours of perhaps a year.

The blunt assessment by Gen. John Abizaid of the Army, who has responsibility for all military operations in Iraq, came shortly after the NATO secretary general made it clear that the military alliance had no interest in expanding its own limited role in Iraq.

full: http://www.nytimes.com/2003/07/16/international/worldspecial/16CND-POLI.html?hp
 
U.S. Soldiers Complain of Low Morale in Iraq

By Sue Pleming

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Fed up with being in Iraq and demoralized by their role as peacekeepers in a risky place, a group of U.S. soldiers aired their plight on U.S. television Wednesday and said they had lost faith in the Army.

Told several times they would be going home only to have their hopes dashed this week, a small group of soldiers from the 3rd Infantry Division in Iraq, spoke of poor morale and disillusionment with Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.

"If Donald Rumsfeld were here, I'd ask him for his resignation," one disgruntled soldier told ABC's "Good Morning America" show.

Asked by a reporter what his message would be for Rumsfeld, another said: "I would ask him why we are still here. I don't have any clue as to why we are still in Iraq."

About 146,000 U.S. troops are serving amid mounting security threats in postwar Iraq. The death toll has now equaled the number killed in the 1991 Gulf War.

Sgt. Filipe Vega, said they had expected to return home soon after the fall of Baghdad on April 9. "We were told the fastest way back home is through Baghdad and that's what we did. Now we are still here," he complained.

The 3rd Infantry Division was the first U.S. unit to enter Baghdad after driving through southern Iraq from Kuwait.

Sgt. Terry Gilmore described a phone call with his wife, Stacey, when he told her he would not be coming home soon.

"When I told her she started crying and I almost started crying. I just felt like my heart was broken. I could not figure out ... how they could keep us here after they told us we were coming home."

Commenting on troop frustration, White House spokesman Scott McClellan said the president was grateful for the sacrifices being made by soldiers in Iraq. "We will continue to make sure they have all the support and resources they need as they do their job," he said.

A Pentagon spokeswoman said she understood the frustration, but said morale was still high. "It's obviously a frustrating situation for some of them, but it does not represent the entire 3rd Division."

Appearing on the same show, Stacey Gilmore said U.S. troops were ill-prepared for the post-war phase. "They were told after the fighting ended they were coming home. All I know is that morale is low and they are just hanging in there, sticking through it."
 
Exclusive- Breaking News:

Wolfowitz Committee Instructed White House To Use Iraq/Uranium Ref In Pres Speech:
The Senators and the CIA official said they could be forced out of government and brought up on criminal charges for leaking the information to this reporter and as a result requested anonymity.


full: http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4123.htm

===

Rumsfeld's personal spy ring:
The defense secretary couldn't count on the CIA or the State Department to provide a pretext for war in Iraq. So he created a new agency that would tell him what he wanted to hear


full: http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4124.htm
 
Bigfish - this (from one of your posts) is unbelievable - so this is how its going to be portrayed now - just like the lie that Saddam had "thrown out" the inspectors previously when in fact they had been withdrawn.

"PRESIDENT
The larger point is, and the fundamental question is, did Saddam Hussein have a weapons program? And the answer is, absolutely. And we gave him a chance to allow the inspectors in, and he wouldn't let them in. And, therefore, after a reasonable request, we decided to remove him from power, along with other nations, so as to make sure he was not a threat to the United States and our friends and allies in the region. I firmly believe the decisions we made will make America more secure and the world more peaceful. "
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/07/20030714-3.html
 
Whiterose - It demonstrates that cracks are beginning to appear in the whole rotten ediface. Lies and more lies are all this rabal have got left. The tide is turning back in our favour. The Bush Administration are beginning to take serious blows and more are on the way.
 
U.S. May Call National Guard for Iraq Duty
The Pentagon could start a call-up of as many as 10,000 U.S. National Guard soldiers by this winter to bolster forces in Iraq and offset a lack of troops from allies
http://reuters.com/printerFriendlyPopup.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=3105268

===

New 'Saddam Tape' Urges Jihad to Oust US Troops:
http://asia.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=3109149

===

Excerpts from the 'Saddam tape
' What will the two liars Bush and Blair say to their people and to humanity? What will they tell the world?
http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,1000288,00.html
 
Originally posted by bigfish
U.S. May Call National Guard for Iraq Duty
The Pentagon could start a call-up of as many as 10,000 U.S. National Guard soldiers by this winter to bolster forces in Iraq and offset a lack of troops from allies

When the F*** are they going to grow up and ask the UN for help???

My country has pledged lot of money made available to Iraq....our criteria is the UN disperses the money!!!

And as for the total BS about Afghanistan, South Korea and the Balkans...aren't the UN in there already cleaning up their mess?

<sorry for the thread derailment>
 
Postwar Window Closing in Iraq, Study Says
More Funds, International Force Recommended to Improve Security Situation


By Vernon Loeb
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, July 18, 2003; Page A09

A team of outside experts dispatched by the Pentagon to assess security and reconstruction operations in Iraq reported yesterday that the window of opportunity for achieving postwar success is closing and requires immediate and dramatic action by U.S. military and civilian personnel.

The team concluded that the U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority in charge of reconstruction efforts is isolated and underfunded, and it recommended that U.S. officials move immediately to internationalize the daunting task of rebuilding Iraq, particularly in light of "rising anti-Americanism in parts of the country."

Amid escalating guerrilla attacks against U.S. forces and mounting criticism of the Bush administration by Democrats for poor postwar planning in Iraq, the report represents a comprehensive, independent assessment of conditions there, both in terms of security and reconstruction.

"The 'hearts and minds' of key segments of the Sunni and Shi'a communities are in play and can be won, but only if the Coalition Provisional Authority and new Iraqi authorities deliver in short order," the experts said in 10-page report to Pentagon officials, which they released at a news conference.

The report noted "significant progress" but said "the next 12 months will be decisive."

full: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A8445-2003Jul17.html
 
U.S. Soldier Killed in Iraq Bomb Attack Back


A U.S. soldier was killed Friday when insurgents detonated a bomb under a military convoy in which he was traveling in this violent "Sunni Triangle" city west of Baghdad, the military said.

The 3rd Infantry division soldier died from injuries in the midafternoon attack on the main Fallujah bridge over the Euphrates River, according to spokeswoman Sgt. Amy Abbott.

http://www.620ktar.com/news/article.aspx?article_id=181026&cc=012345
 
Iraqi Shi'ite leader rejects Council

NAJAF, Iraq (Reuters) - An Iraqi Shi'ite Muslim leader has told many thousands of followers in morning prayers that a U.S.-backed Governing Council was illegitimate and called for an Islamic army and constitution in Iraq.
"We condemn the Governing Council headed by the United States," Muqtada al-Sadr said in a fiery sermon delivered at a mosque in southern Iraq, home to most of Iraq's Shi'ite majority.

"An Islamic army must be created and volunteers for this great army must come forward," he said.

Sadr called for a constitution that represents the Iraqi people.

Iraq's new 25-member Governing Council, roughly reflecting Iraq's religious and ethnic composition and giving Iraqis a greater say in the running of their country, held its first meeting on Sunday.

It was unveiled amid hopes by Washington that attacks on U.S. troops will subside if Iraqis feel the U.S. and British occupying powers are transferring authority to local leaders. However, U.S. officials retain the final word on policy.

Sadr is the son of Ayatollah Mohammed Sadiq al-Sadr, who was assassinated along with two of his sons in 1999 by suspected Iraqi intelligence agents.

http://www.reuters.co.uk/newsPackageArticle.jhtml?type=worldNews&storyID=342930
 
From Reuters:

Body Found in Woods Matches UK Weapons Inspector
Fri July 18, 2003 10:37 AM ET
By Gideon Long

LONGWORTH, England (Reuters) - British police found a body Friday matching that of a mild-mannered scientist who disappeared after unwittingly becoming embroiled in a furious political dispute about the Iraq war.

The softly spoken 59-year-old had been thrust into the limelight by a row over whether the British government hyped the threat from Iraq in order to justify joining the U.S.-led war.

The political fallout was almost immediate. Prime Minister Tony Blair's government promised an independent judicial inquiry into events leading up to the death of Dr David Kelly, if it is confirmed.

Blair has refused previous calls for a wider inquiry into the government case for war in Iraq.

Kelly's family reported him missing overnight after he went for a walk in the Oxfordshire countryside Thursday with no coat and stayed out despite a rainstorm. Police found a body in a wood near his home Friday.

"We can confirm that the body matches the description of Dr Kelly. The body has not been formally identified," a police spokeswoman said.

Kelly, a microbiologist at the Defense Ministry who had worked for U.N. inspectors in Iraq, had been grilled by parliamentarians Tuesday after admitting he spoke to a reporter for Britain's BBC radio.

The reporter, Andrew Gilligan, said in May a senior intelligence source had told him the government "sexed up" data to emphasize the threat from Iraq.

That report sparked parliamentary hearings into how the government made the case for war, put Blair in the defensive and pitted government officials against the broadcaster in a heated war of words.

Blair spoke to top officials about the case from aboard a flight to Tokyo from Washington.

"The prime minister is obviously very distressed for the family of Dr Kelly," a spokesman said aboard the flight.

If the death is confirmed the Defense Ministry would hold an independent judicial inquiry, presided over by a judge with access to all government papers, he added.

Full: http://reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtm...1VWQCRBAEKSFEY?type=worldNews&storyID=3116211
 
Pentagon retaliates against GIs who spoke out on TV

Robert Collier, Chronicle Staff Writer

Friday, July 18, 2003

Fallujah, Iraq -- Morale is dipping pretty low among U.S. soldiers as they stew in Iraq's broiling heat, get shot at by an increasingly hostile population and get repeated orders to extend their tours of duty.

Ask any grunt standing guard on a 115-degree day what he or she thinks of the open-ended Iraq occupation, and you'll get an earful of colorful complaints.

But going public isn't always easy, as soldiers of the Army's Second Brigade, Third Infantry Division found out after "Good Morning America" aired their complaints. The retaliation from Washington was swift.

[...]

CAREERS OVER FOR SOME

"It was the end of the world," said one officer Thursday. "It went all the way up to President Bush and back down again on top of us. At least six of us here will lose our careers."

[...]

In Baghdad, average soldiers from other Army brigades are eager to spill similar complaints.

"I'm not sure people in Washington really know what it's like here," said Corp. Todd Burchard as he stood on a street corner, sweating profusely and looking bored. "We'll keep doing our jobs as best as anyone can, but we shouldn't have to still be here in the first place."

Nearby, Pfc. Jason Ring stood next to his Humvee. "We liberated Iraq. Now the people here don't want us here, and guess what? We don't want to be here either," he said. "So why are we still here? Why don't they bring us home?"

full: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2003/07/18/MN248299.
DTL
 
Originally posted by whiterose
Italian journalist says gave U.S. Iraq-Niger papers
http://www.reuters.com/locales/newsArticle.jsp?type=topNews&locale=en_IN&storyID=3119366
So, the forged Niger documents did not come from the British as the President claimed in his State of the Union address, they actually came from an Italian Journalist who gave them to the American embassy in Rome!!!! There's no wonder the Brits are claiming to have another seperate and ultra secret source for the uranium claims. They could see that this Italian aspect was bound to unravel sooner or later, hence their shift in position.

Good spot WR.
 
U.S. Syria raid killed 80

By Richard Sale, UPI Intelligence Correspondent

07/17/03 (Washington Times) Depicted by the Pentagon as a mere border skirmish, the June 18 strike into Syria by U.S. military forces was, in fact, based on mistaken intelligence and penetrated more than 25 miles into that country, causing numerous Syrian casualties, several serving and former administration officials said.
...
But one senior administration official told UPI the attack crossed "25 miles or more" into Syria, and the Pentagon had initial reports of 80 Syrians "who were KIA (killed in action)."

Full: http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4138.htm
 
Two more US dead in rocket attack

US forces hit in northern Iraq


US soldiers are being killed almost daily in Iraq
Two US soldiers have been killed and another injured in a Kurdish-controlled area of northern Iraq where attacks on American forces have been rare.
The soldiers - from the 101st Airborne Division - came under under attack near Tal Afar, just west of the northern city of Mosul.

Their convoy was attacked by rocket-propelled grenades and small arms fire, said military spokesman Corporal Todd Pruden.

All three soldiers were rushed to a military hospital, where two of them died, bringing the number of US soldiers killed in action since President W Bush declared on 1 May that major combat was over to at least 34.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/3081135.stm
 
Iraqi Shi'ites hold mass anti-U.S. protest

By Miral Fahmy
NAJAF, Iraq (Reuters) - More than 10,000 angry Shi'ites have marched on the local offices of Iraq's U.S.-led administration in the sacred city of Najaf to protest against alleged U.S. harassment of a prominent Shi'ite leader.

The protesters accused U.S. soldiers in Najaf of surrounding the house of Moqtada al-Sadr on Saturday in response to a fiery anti-American speech he delivered on Friday.

Moqtada, one of Iraq's most influential Shi'ite leaders, had denounced a new U.S.-backed governing council.

A line of U.S. troops and coils of barbed wire kept protesters more than one km (mile) away from the local headquarters of the U.S.-led Coalition Provisional Authority.

At least two armoured personnel carriers guarded the building and U.S. soldiers were stationed on nearby rooftops.

"This demonstration is a reflection of our displeasure with the American treatment of our leader," Saad al-Maliki, an official in Sadr's office, told Reuters.

http://www.reuters.co.uk/newsPackageArticle.jhtml?type=worldNews&storyID=343496
 
Soldiers Dead Since May Is 3 Times Official Count
NEW YORK --News Analysis
By Greg Mitchell

Any way you look at it, the news is bad enough. According to Thursday's press and television reports, 33 U.S. soldiers have now died in combat since President Bush declared an end to the major fighting in the war on May 2. This, of course, is a tragedy for the men killed and their families, and a problem for the White House.

But actually the numbers are much worse -- and rarely reported by the media.

According to official military records, the number of U.S. soldiers who have died in Iraq since May 2 is actually 85. This includes a staggering number of non-combat deaths. Even if killed in a non-hostile action, these soldiers are no less dead, their families no less aggrieved. And it's safe to say that nearly all of these people would still be alive if they were still back in the States.

Nevertheless, the media continues to report the much lower figure of 33 as if those are the only deaths that count.

A Web site called Iraq Coalition Casualty Count (http://lunaville.org/warcasualties/Summary.aspx) is tracking the deaths, by whatever cause, of U.S. military personnel in Iraq, based on official Pentagon and CENTCOM press releases and Army Times and CNN casualty trackers. Their current count is 85 since May 2.

Looking at the entire war, there was much fanfare Thursday over the fact that the latest U.S. combat death this week pushed the official total to 148 -- finally topping the 147 figure for Gulf War 1. However, according to the Iraq Coalition Casualty Count, the total number of all U.S. deaths, combat and otherwise, in Iraq is actually 224.

This Web site not only counts deaths, it describes each one in whatever detail (often sketchy) the military provides, along with the name and age and home town of each fatality.

An analysis of the 85 deaths by E&P reveals that nearly as many U.S. military personnel have died in vehicle accidents (17) as from gunshot wounds (19). Ten have died after grenade attacks and seven from accidental explosions, another seven in helicopter crashes. Six were killed by what is described as "non-hostile" gunshots, and three have drowned.

The vast majority of those killed -- at least 70% -- were age 18 to 30 but several soldiers in their 40s or 50s have also perished. Pentagon officials also disclosed that there have been about five deaths among troops assigned to the Iraq mission that commanders say might have been suicides. As inquiries continue, one official said the susupected suicides were not clustered in any single time period that might indicate a related cause.

The most recent non-combat death was Cory Ryan Geurin, age 18, a Marine lance corporal from Santee, Calif. "He was standing post on a palace roof in Babylon when he fell approximately 60 feet," the site said.

On July 13, Jaror C. Puello-Coronado, 36, an Army sergeant, died while "manning a traffic point when the operator of a dump truck lost control of the vehicle."

Another soldier, still officially listed as "Unknown," died on July 13 "from a non-hostile gunshot incident," according to the site.

n Before that, on July 9, another Marine Lance Corporal, age 20, died in Kuwait "in a vehicle accident."

Many other deaths are only vaguely described as the "result of non-combat injuries." One recent death occurred in a mine-clearing accident. Others "drowned" or "died of natural causes," and still others lost their lives in a "vehicle accident."---
source:http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article4148.htm
 
A Chronicle of Confusion in the Hunt for Hussein's Weapons

On paper, the Pentagon's plan for finding Iraq's unconventional weapons was bold and original.

Four mobile exploitation teams, or MET's, each composed of about 25 soldiers, scientists and weapons experts from several Pentagon agencies, would fan out to chase tips from survey units and combat forces in the field. They would search 578 "suspect sites" in Iraq for the chemical, biological and nuclear components that the Bush administration had cited time and again to justify the war. The Pentagon said the weapons hunters would have whatever they needed — helicopters, Humvees in case weather grounded the choppers, and secure telecommunications.

But the "ground truth," as soldiers say, was this: chaos, disorganization, interagency feuds, disputes within and among various military units, and shortages of everything from gasoline to soap plagued the postwar search for evidence of Iraq's supposed unconventional weapons.


http://www.iraqwar.ru/iraq-read_article.php?articleId=12489&lang=en
 
[BearingPoint will be responsible for creating Iraq's budget, writing business laws, setting up tax collection, and laying out trade and customs rules.
It will also privatise state-owned enterprises by auctioning them off or issuing Iraqis shares in the enterprises. As well as reopen banks and help the private sector by making loans of between 100 usd and 10,000 usd. Bank of America, Citigroup and JP Morgan all expect to seek work as subcontractors, the report added.]
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/features/20030721-9999_1c21cards.html
 
How Do You Spell D-R-A-F-T ?

Officials Debate Whether to Seek a Bigger Military
By THOM SHANKER

WASHINGTON, July 20 -- The strains on American ground forces as the Bush administration extends their global missions are prompting new debates on Capitol Hill and within the Pentagon over the question of whether the military needs more troops worldwide.

Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and senior military officers spent time over the weekend considering how to assign enough soldiers to fill the long-term mission of stabilizing Iraq while simultaneously fulfilling other overseas commitments and providing security against terrorism at home and abroad.

full: http://www.nytimes.com/2003/07/21/international/worldspecial/21DEPL.html?hp
 
Cash and corpses in Baghdad

BAGHDAD (AFP) - Crime is bad in Baghdad. So bad in fact that a rich Baghdad businessman staged a funeral to change dollars to dinars and avoid being robbed in the capital.

Mohammed al-Timimi bought a mini-bus, and hired people to pose as weeping mourners, so he could smuggle his dollars stashed in a coffin inside a money exchange and convert them to dinars, reported Al-Taakhi newspaper, owned by the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP).

As the funeral procession entered the city's Al-Kifah neighborhood, home to many money-changers and violent thieves, he hired female mourners who wept and beat their chest to create a distraction.

The coffin was then discretely slipped into an exchange bureau, where the coffin was filled with dinars, replacing the visage of Benjamin Franklin on 100 dollar bills for the familiar face of fallen dictator Saddam Hussein (news - web sites).

The paper did not specify the amount Timimi traded, perhaps mindful of its readers with criminal records.


http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tm...ast_afp/iraq_crime_offbeat&cid=1514&ncid=1478
 
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