U.S. officials highlight progress in Iraq

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wewant2no2
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Post by wewant2no2 »

abuyemeni wrote:wewant2no2
If the Idiots Terror groups like A.Q. and a few others would STOP this senseless killings of the innocent people in Iraq, and STOP blowing up everything they fu**ing touch, "including themselves" progress would be a-hell-of-a lot faster for the Iraq people. Wouldn't YOU say?
You mean by progresss,..Let this criminal Shia gouvermant commit genocide against the sunni's,...???

Removing this criminal Shia gouvermant and all it's gangmembers, That's progress,..

You should tell your friend in Iraq to stop crying and be a man,..ISI is taking controle over this country and you either with them or against them,...
I would like see YOUR reliable source's that the New Iraqi Government is committing this genocide against the sunni's! thanks..

Take care...
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wewant2no2
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Post by wewant2no2 »

abuyemeni wrote:
ISI is not going to take control of Iraq. That's something you can bet your house on.
Well that's a bet,..

I hope you got a nice hous,..


Now that's a good one!! :wink:

:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

Take care.... :lol:
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TagemandBagem
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Post by TagemandBagem »

wewant2no2 wrote:Show me a "VERY" reliable source that the CIA supported and trained Saddam.
How about an eye-witness? Former National Security Council staffer Roger Morris: http://www.globalpolicy.org/security/is ... istory.htm

http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/bush/saddam.htm

No way! The U.S., the land of the free, supporting a brutal dictator? It would never happen!
Image


http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/kurds/alliance.html

"Although the U.S. government officially denounced the gassing of the Kurds," after first trying to get their man off the hook by blaming Iran "it was business like never before with Iraq. After 1988 business with Iraq actually increased. By 1989, Iraq was given American agricultural guarantees worth $1 billion."

Months after Halabjah the British advance Saddam £340 million in export credits.

So you commit genocide against men, women and children and the U.S. and UK give you over $1 billion. What lovely countries. I bet they didn't use Halabjah as an excuse to invade Iraq, because that would be silly wouldn't it? :roll:
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guest
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Post by guest »

wewant2no2 wrote: I would like to SEE ALL your sources! AND do make them reliable source's!

Thanks!! :wink:

Take care...
:lol:

Reliable sources? For you? Who is constantly copying from wikipedia and other sides? I think wikipedia is enough for you.

USA selling weapons to Iraq, directly and indirectly, and it´s support for Iraq in general:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arms_sales ... _1973-1990

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._suppo ... n-Iraq_war

CIA urging shiites to rise up against Saddam:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gulf_War

Chemical weapons sold to Saddam by western countries:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_w ... n-Iraq_War

Now i would like to see your sources for the Euthanasia. And i´d really like if you could answer on the Iraq-Vietnam discussion. :wink:
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MaxPower
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Post by MaxPower »

TagemandBagem wrote:
wewant2no2 wrote:Show me a "VERY" reliable source that the CIA supported and trained Saddam.
How about an eye-witness? Former National Security Council staffer Roger Morris: http://www.globalpolicy.org/security/is ... istory.htm

http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/bush/saddam.htm

No way! The U.S., the land of the free, supporting a brutal dictator? It would never happen!
Image


http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/kurds/alliance.html

"Although the U.S. government officially denounced the gassing of the Kurds," after first trying to get their man off the hook by blaming Iran "it was business like never before with Iraq. After 1988 business with Iraq actually increased. By 1989, Iraq was given American agricultural guarantees worth $1 billion."

Months after Halabjah the British advance Saddam £340 million in export credits.

So you commit genocide against men, women and children and the U.S. and UK give you over $1 billion. What lovely countries. I bet they didn't use Halabjah as an excuse to invade Iraq, because that would be silly wouldn't it? :roll:
HA, I wasn't born at the time but I've read about the dealings between the U.S and Iraq. Reagan was keeping his friends close but his enemies closer. We were using Saddam to fight the Iranians and probably gave him some of the weapons used during the war. The FOX News channel forgot to mention that during the 2003 invasion.
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abuyemeni
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Post by abuyemeni »

sadrr join up with police and gouvermant killing and raping

Muqtada al-Sadr leader of the barbaric gang Mahdi army sends his army in the Iraqi police and army. In the second video he is sitting with internal minister representative and a member of parliament (both shia) and telling them how he sent his criminals to the city of Telaafer in the north of Iraq were a 50 year old women was lately raped. (more)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MpTjJs7n ... ted&search

saddr putting his gangmembers in the iraqi army english subs
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lLD8kvlr ... ed&search=

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A1Hi0318 ... ed&search=

Iraq's Death Squads


Sunday, December 4, 2005; Page B06

OF ALL THE bloodshed in Iraq, none may be more disturbing than the campaign of torture and murder being conducted by U.S.-trained government police forces. Reports last week in the Los Angeles Times and New York Times chronicled how Iraqi Interior Ministry commando and police units have been infiltrated by two Shiite militias, which have been conducting ethnic cleansing and rounding up Sunnis suspected of supporting the insurgency. Hundreds of bodies have been appearing along roadsides and in garbage dumps, some with acid burns or with holes drilled in them. According to the searing account by Solomon Moore of the Los Angeles Times, "the Baghdad morgue reports that dozens of bodies arrive at the same time on a weekly basis, including scores of corpses with wrists bound by police handcuffs." The reports followed a raid two weeks ago by U.S. troops on a clandestine Baghdad prison run by the Interior Ministry, where some 170 men, most of them Sunni and most of them starved or tortured, were found.

A dirty war conducted by the Iraqi government against one ethnic group will make civil war inevitable. It will render impossible a political accord among Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/co ... 00881.html

Shia death squads working for the gouvermant
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid ... &plindex=0

Violations by Iraqi security forces
Iraqi security forces under the control of the Interior Ministry reportedly committed widespread human rights violations, including involvement in killings of civilians and torture and other ill-treatment of detainees. They reportedly maintained close links with two Shi'a armed groups, the Mahdi Army and the Badr Brigades, from whose ranks many were said to have been recruited, and were accused of supporting or acquiescing in abuses committed by these groups. The security forces were also alleged to have been involved in "death squad"-style killings.

• In October, an entire police brigade was suspended pending investigations into its involvement in the abduction of 26 Sunni factory workers in October, at least 10 of whom were later found dead.

Torture and other ill-treatment of detainees by Interior Ministry security forces was reported.

• On 30 May, a joint Iraqi-MNF team inspected Site 4 detention centre in Baghdad, where 1,431 detainees were held under the control of the Interior Ministry. The inspection found that detainees had been systematically abused, in some cases amounting to torture, and were being held in unsafe, overcrowded and unhealthy conditions. In November, the Interior Minister announced that arrest warrants for 57 employees, including a police general, had been issued in connection with the abuses.

No findings were made public of investigations launched in 2005 into alleged human rights violations in an Interior Ministry detention centre in the al-Jadiriyah district of Baghdad. US military forces had raided the detention centre and reportedly found at least 168 detainees in appalling conditions, many of whom had allegedly been tortured.
http://thereport.amnesty.org/eng/Region ... frica/Iraq

November 25, 2006, Saturday
By MAUREEN DOWD (NYT); Editorial Desk
Late Edition - Final, Section A, Page 15, Column 1, 797 words
DISPLAYING ABSTRACT - Maureen Dowd Op-Ed column notes that some analysts are calling war in Iraq a genocide or clash of civilizations, arguing that civil war is too genteel term for butchery that is destroying nation; holds that Bush administration has failed to comprehend that in Arab world, revenge and religious zealotry can be stronger compulsions than democracy and prosperity
http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract. ... ies%2fIraq


U.S. MAY CUT AID TO IRAQI POLICE CITED IN ABUSES


*Please Note: Archive articles do not include photos, charts or graphics. More information. September 30, 2006, Saturday
By RICHARD A. OPPEL JR. (NYT); Foreign Desk
Late Edition - Final, Section A, Page 1, Column 6, 1191 words
DISPLAYING ABSTRACT - US officials warn Iraqi leaders that they might have to curtail aid to Interior Ministry police because of US law that prohibits financing of foreign security forces that commit violations of human rights and are not brought to justice; ministry, dominated by Shiites, has been accused by Sunni Arabs of complicity in torture and killings; US Amb Zalmay Khalilzad is optimistic that Iraqi officials will resolve matter; issue centers on one of most sensitive subjects within Iraqi government: joint Iraqi-American inspection in May and subsequent investigation of Baghdad prison known as Site 4; controversy has become emblematic of problem of militia members infiltrating Interior Ministry's security forces and fears that Iraqi leaders are unwilling to take action against rogue groups
http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract. ... ies%2fIraq



Al Mahdy army and Iraqi army attacking sunni civilians
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vtLGUr8c ... ed&search=

Footage and interviews with Sunni families that were forcibly deported from the Hurriya Al-Thalitha and Dola'i districts on December 9 and 10, 2006, by Mahdi Army militiamen and the Iraqi National Guard

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tagZ7zwV ... ed&search=
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BGOcSnUb ... ed&search=
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oE7g2Dlb ... ed&search=
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EENhBXWd ... ed&search=
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FwgruikY ... ed&search=

Nouri al maliki and saddr
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zsvYOB8r ... ed&search=


"Many Sunni neighborhoods in Baghdad are now ghost towns"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7AB7xIK6 ... ed&search=
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abuyemeni
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Post by abuyemeni »

Don't forget the rape and beating of Sabrine Janabi,..english subs


Image

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=omnKITLL0jA


Woman arrested over police rape claims


March 13, 2007

The Iraqi Government has arrested a woman who alleged last month that she was raped by three Iraqi policemen, claims that provoked a spate of sectarian killing, two Iraqi officials told The Times.

Sabrine Janabi’s rape case has polarised Iraq’s Sunni and Shia communities at a moment when the country is already enmeshed in a low-level civil war. Shia officials have accused her of being a proxy for Sunni militants who want to sabotage a security plan for Baghdad, while Sunni politicians have pointed to her story as proof of the sectarian nature of Shia Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s Government.
Janabi shocked Iraq last month when she appeared on Al-Jazeera television and accused three policemen of detaining her and then raping her in their garrison.

Her story earned a fiery rebuttal from the Shia Prime Minister, who praised the policemen and promised to promote them. His office released a medical report allegedly taken from a US military combat hospital that said the woman had been beaten but showed no signs of sexual penetration.

Rape is a taboo subject in Arab culture and the news of Janabi’s rape sparked anger in the Sunni community.

In turn, the Government accused Janabi of being paid by insurgents to make her claims. An arrest warrant was issued and Janabi then vanished from the scene.

Sunni extremist groups vowed revenge and 14 policemen were executed by the Al-Qaeda linked Islamic State of Iraq in early March.

Since then, Iraqi officials have debated how to handle the Janabi case, which could still fuel even greater violence. However, two Iraqi officials told The Times Monday that Janabi was arrested a few days after the scandal broke and had filmed her confession.

Although initial reports described Janabi as a 20-year-old Sunni Turkman, the officials said that she was actually a Shia woman, who worked as a prostitute and had been paid by the Islamic Party, the largest Sunni faction in parliament, to come forward with the charges. Janabi was a pseudonym she invented for her job.

"She is in Iraqi custody. She was arrested a few days after you heard about her. She lied," one of the officials told The Times.

"She was interrogated by a doctor and expert in rape cases." The Government had initially planned to release her videotaped confession this week, but delayed it, the official said.

Another official said that the Government was worried about the impact the video would have on Sunni-Shia relations in Iraq. Sunnis are still seething about the video of Saddam Hussein’s hanging in December that was leaked on the internet.

Before her arrest, Janabi had already been detained briefly by police for living in a displaced person’s house, where she was suspected of working in a medical clinic for insurgents, the official said. She will most likely be prosecuted on these charges, he said.

Salim Abdullah, a spokesman for the Islamic Party, told The Times that the Government was trying to cover up Janabi’s rape. "An arrest warrant was issued against Sabrine al-Janabi so as to prevent her from talking anymore to the media," Abdullah said.

"From the beginning we figured out her arrest would be aimed at seizing her confessions from the public as well as to fabricate a lie." He denied the Islamic Party had any role in the case.

The Iraqi Government has raided the homes of eight Sunni MPs in the last week, Salim Abdullah told The Times.

A senior Shia official said raids on the homes of Sunni MPs Khalaf al-Ayan and Dhafir al-Ani had found bomb-making materials.
http://www.uruknet.info/?p=31340
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abuyemeni
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Post by abuyemeni »

84739579
Let´s stick to reality, ISI is never going to control the whole of Iraq. Shia dominance in the south and (secular) Kurdish dominance in the north are too strong. Maybe they will rule in the parts which they declared as their Islamic State of Iraq. But i bet a few certain countries would prefer to annihilate all life there before they accept that.
Don't worrie,...gambling is against my religion,..but this is not a gamble, this is soon to be a fact,..

TagemandBagem seems to be a nice man,..And soon to be a bumb,..( no offence ok), just keeping it real,..
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guest
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Post by guest »

Ey, wewant2no2, what do you say?
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abuyemeni
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Post by abuyemeni »

Ey, wewant2no2, what do you say?
I doubt we get any reply,
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yourmum
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Post by yourmum »

Where is wewant2no??? Has she conviently forgot to reply again?
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