Home  >  Community  >  The Vendio Round Table  >  WOW IRAQ IS FREE JUST WATCH THEM NOW


<< previous topic post new topic post reply next topic >>
 bigpeepa
 
posted on January 23, 2006 06:53:49 PM
Updated: 05:16 PM EST
Violence in Iraq Leaves Seven GIs Dead
Gunmen Dressed as Shiite Guards Kill, Kidnap Men in Sunni Area
By ROBERT H. REID, AP

BAGHDAD, Iraq (Jan. 23) - Gunmen wearing uniforms of a Shiite-led security force swept into a Sunni Arab neighborhood in central Baghdad before dawn Monday, killing three men and speeding away with more than 20 others, police and witnesses said.


Meanwhile, the U.S. military said seven more U.S. troops had been killed - a soldier in a roadside bombing in Baghdad on Monday, two Air Force members in a blast near Taji north of the capital late Sunday, and four soldiers in a roadside bombing near the northern town of Hawijah on Friday.

There was no word on the fate of kidnapped American journalist Jill Carroll. Iraqi officials said joint U.S.-Iraqi operations were carried out recently to free her, but they provided no details.

Also Monday, bodies of eight Sunni Arabs were found in a field north of Baghdad - five days after they were seized on their way home by bus after being rejected for admission to the police academy in the capital. Twenty-three bodies of the group were found Sunday, and 35 were believed to have been on the bus. Police are often targeted by insurgents.

The pre-dawn raid in the predominantly Sunni Arab of Toubji threatens to inflame sectarian tensions as leaders of Iraq 's religious and ethnic communities prepare for talks on a unity government to include Sunni Arabs, the heart of the insurgency.

Sunni Arabs have long complained of abuse by Shiite militias and security services and have demanded that those responsible be punished.

The raid began about 5 a.m., when seven carloads of gunmen rolled into the neighborhood, witnesses and police said. The gunmen fanned out, entering one mosque and several homes. They dragged males out of their beds and herded them into the street.

Hooded figures, presumably informants, identified those to be taken away, witnesses reported. Three men were shot dead and about 20 were forced into trucks and driven away, witnesses said.

Three men were later freed in eastern Baghdad but the rest remained unaccounted for, witnesses added. One of those released, Yasser Khalil, 24, said he was beaten.

"They took us away and put us into a room in a building I didn't recognize, where they beat us and asked us questions about who we were," he said. "Then they took a few of us in their cars and dumped us on the eastern outskirts of Baghdad, saying if we said anything or looked at them they would kill us."

He said his uncle, Ismail Mohsen, 44, was one of the three men killed.

Police Maj. Falah al-Mohammedawi said it was unclear whether the gunmen were government security forces or simply wearing uniforms, which are easily obtained in Iraq .

Later Monday, a senior official of a government organization that administers Sunni mosques was slain by gunmen as he drove home from evening prayers at a Baghdad mosque. Naji Mohammed al-Eithaw, 55, had served as a spokesman for the Sunni Endowments and was a regular contributor to Baghdad newspapers.

Sunni Arabs have long complained of abuses by the Shiite-led forces, accusing them of abducting and killing Sunni civilians under the pretext of battling the insurgency. Shiite civilians are also targeted by Sunni extremists.

"This issue is grave and will only ignite more violence in the country," Sunni politician Harith al-Obeidi said of the Toubji raid. "The government should take serious steps to stop such acts."

Most insurgents are Sunni Arabs while Shiites and Kurds dominate the security services, adding a sectarian and ethnic character to the conflict in Iraq . U.S. officials are seeking to encourage Sunni Arabs to join the police and army.

The 35 Sunnis rejected by the police academy were abducted as they headed to their homes in Samarra, a religiously mixed city 60 miles north of Baghdad. It was unclear why they were rejected by the academy and whether they were killed by Sunni hard-liners opposed to the recruitment program or Shiite extremists who want to keep the rival sect out of police ranks.

Sunni religious and political leaders plan to stage protests and a three-day strike in Samarra starting Tuesday to denounce the killings.

A suicide bomber targeted a police patrol near the Iranian Embassy in Baghdad and close to a main checkpoint into the fortified Green Zone. Two civilians and a policeman were killed and six Iraqis were wounded, officials said. Among the dead was a sports journalist for Iraqi TV station Al-Diyar.

Another car bomb exploded on a highway 20 miles south of Baghdad, killing one Iraqi civilian and wounding four, police said. A doctor who worked at the Iraqi Health Ministry in Baghdad was killed in a drive-by shooting, police added.

The latest deaths of Americans brought the number of U.S. military personnel killed since the war in Iraq began in March 2003 to at least 2,231, according to an Associated Press count.

Carroll, a freelance journalist for The Christian Science Monitor, was abducted Jan. 7 in Baghdad and her translator was killed. She has not been heard of since her kidnappers released a videotape first aired on Jan. 17. It included a threat to kill her unless all female detainees are freed.

Iraqi Deputy Justice Minister Busho Ibrahim Ali said six of the nine Iraqi women in U.S. custody were expected to be freed this week as part of a routine release planned before the kidnappers' ultimatum. There has been no U.S. confirmation, but Ali said he believed the Americans were wary about the releases being seen as part of a swap for Carroll.

More than 250 foreigners have been taken hostage in Iraq , either by insurgents or gangs, since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam. At least 39 have been killed.








 
 roadsmith
 
posted on January 24, 2006 02:23:54 AM
Good lord.
______________________________
 
 bigpeepa
 
posted on January 24, 2006 05:17:58 AM
roadsmith,

I felt the same way after reading that article. That's why I said

WOW IRAQ IS FREE JUST WATCH THEM NOW

 
 Helenjw
 
posted on January 24, 2006 05:43:06 AM

Actually, as long as they are occupied by the U.S. they are not free. Now, the U.S. is being accused of trying to decrease the influence of religion in Iraqi society.


Iran’s former President Ayatollah Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani told radical Iraqi Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr on Monday that the goals of United States-led forces in Iraq were against the demands of the Iraqi people.

Rafsanjani, who currently chairs the State Expediency Council, told firebrand Sadr that the “occupiers” where trying to create division among Iraqi groups because of their fear of a society ruled by the people, the state-run ISNA news agency reported.

“The goals of the occupiers are in contradiction to the wishes of the Iraqi people. By influencing the political events in that country they will try to force their imperialist goals on the future government”, Rafsanjani said, adding that Iraqi groups had a responsibility to work together to thwart the U.S.’s aims.

http://www.iranfocus.com/modules/news/article.php?storyid=5439



 
 Helenjw
 
posted on January 24, 2006 06:23:13 AM

Iraqi guerrilla groups attacked US and other targets 34,000 times in 2005, up 30% from the year before. The number of roadside bombs deployed nearly doubled to over 10,000, and the number of casualties was up. Any way you measure it, these statistics indicate that the US has failed miserably in counter-insurgency efforts in Iraq.

Iraqi professionals are fleeing the country, which makes the prospect of rebuilding even dimmer.

Top Ten Mistakes of the Bush Administration in Reacting to Al-Qaeda




 
 Bear1949
 
posted on January 24, 2006 12:10:35 PM
Actually, as long as they are occupied by the U.S. they are not free. Now, the U.S. is being accused of trying to decrease the influence of religion in Iraqi society.


They have more freedom now than they were under Saddam AND if you note the terrorists are targeting Iraqi citizens more than they are US troops. A sure sign they know that confronting US troops is NOT working.

"“More Iraqis think things are going well in Iraq than Americans do. I guess they don’t get the New York Times over there.”—Jay Leno".
 
 nerfballwillie
 
posted on January 24, 2006 04:00:32 PM
Bear1949...if you note the terrorists are targeting Iraqi citizens more than they are US troops. A sure sign they know that confronting US troops is NOT working.

Correction. It's a sure sign that they know what is working. Troubling, but true.


 
 mingotree
 
posted on January 25, 2006 07:33:04 AM
Bear1949...""if you note the terrorists are targeting Iraqi citizens more than they are US troops. A sure sign they know that confronting US troops is NOT working.""

OH what "GOOD" news...I didn't realize things were going so "WELL" in Iraq!!!


UH, excuse me....they're still KILLING US troops!!!DUH!!!!
DUH! They don't HAVE to "confront" troops to kill them !!

 
 bigpeepa
 
posted on January 25, 2006 08:21:43 AM
Bear,
Meanwhile, the U.S. military said seven more U.S. troops had been killed.

 
 Bear1949
 
posted on January 25, 2006 08:30:58 AM
And as is typical of the left you fail to see that all the violence is occuring in only 4 of 18 of Iraq's provences. Proof positive that freedom is spreading through out the country.


"“More Iraqis think things are going well in Iraq than Americans do. I guess they don’t get the New York Times over there.”—Jay Leno".
 
 mingotree
 
posted on January 25, 2006 08:38:29 AM
""And as is typical of the left you fail to see that all the violence is occuring in only 4 of 18 of Iraq's provences. Proof positive that freedom is spreading through out the country.""

ROFLMAO!

There aren't many people in the other provences hahahha hoo ho! and so even if there were....doesn't mean things are going great in Iraq'''LOLLOLOLOL!!!!!!



 
 
<< previous topic post new topic post reply next topic >>

Jump to

All content © 1998-2025  Vendio all rights reserved. Vendio Services, Inc.™, Simply Powerful eCommerce, Smart Services for Smart Sellers, Buy Anywhere. Sell Anywhere. Start Here.™ and The Complete Auction Management Solution™ are trademarks of Vendio. Auction slogans and artwork are copyrights © of their respective owners. Vendio accepts no liability for the views or information presented here.

The Vendio free online store builder is easy to use and includes a free shopping cart to help you can get started in minutes!