mercredi 25 juillet 2007

Bush ties Al Qaeda in Iraq to Sept. 11

In a speech, he says Al Qaeda in Iraq is run by foreign leaders loyal to Osama bin Laden. Some experts challenge his assertions.

By Josh Meyer, James Gerstenzang and Greg Miller, L.A. Times Staff Writers

CHARLESTON, S.C. — President Bush made provocative new assertions Tuesday about Al Qaeda's role in Iraq, using recently declassified information to make his case that the global battle with the terrorism network — and Americans' safety at home — hinges on keeping U.S. troops there to fight.

Bush's comments were met with skepticism by some terrorism experts and former U.S. intelligence officials, who said the president exaggerated or even misrepresented the facts in Iraq. For a transcript of the president's remarks, click here.

Speaking to about 300 troops at Charleston Air Force Base, Bush said that Al Qaeda in Iraq was essentially the same organization that attacked the U.S. on Sept. 11, 2001, and that it was by far the biggest threat facing Iraqis and U.S.-led coalition troops there. Bush said that its leaders took orders from Al Qaeda officials coordinating the organization's worldwide jihad, or holy war, and that they would be killing civilians somewhere else if they were not in Iraq.

"Those who justify withdrawing our troops from Iraq by denying the threat of Al Qaeda in Iraq and its ties to Osama bin Laden ignore the clear consequences of such a retreat," Bush said. "If we were to follow their advice, it would be dangerous for the world and disastrous for America.

"Here's the bottom line," he said. "Al Qaeda in Iraq is run by foreign leaders loyal to Osama bin Laden. Like Bin Laden, they are coldblooded killers who murder the innocent to achieve Al Qaeda's political objectives.

"Yet despite all the evidence, some will tell you that Al Qaeda in Iraq is not really Al Qaeda and not really a threat to America," the president continued. "Well, that's like watching a man walk into a bank with a mask and a gun and saying's he's probably just there to cash a check."

Bush's impassioned 28-minute speech was the administration's longest and most detailed argument to date that Al Qaeda in Iraq and Bin Laden's terrorist operation were one and the same. Bush used it, he acknowledged, to rebut his critics' assertions that the Iraqi militant group was not justification enough for keeping U.S. troops in the war-riven country.

"For the security of our citizens and the peace of the world, we must give Gen. [David H.] Petraeus and his troops the time and the resources they need so they can defeat Al Qaeda in Iraq," Bush said of his top commander in the country.

White House officials said Bush used declassified intelligence reports and assessments to make his case, though they would not disclose details of where the information came from.

Bush's address to the 437th Airlift Wing contained oft-repeated assertions that the president and other officials have made in recent months to rally lagging support for the war. He mentioned Al Qaeda 95 times — and of those, 29 were in references to the group Al Qaeda in Iraq. Bush also employed chilling new language to expand on his warnings that a pullout could have grave consequences in the United States, turning Iraq into a country like Afghanistan in 2001, from which Al Qaeda could plot devastating attacks on U.S. soil.

"If we were not fighting these Al Qaeda extremists and terrorists in Iraq, they would not be leading productive lives of service and charity," Bush said. "Most would be trying to kill Americans and other civilians elsewhere, in Afghanistan or other foreign capitals or on the streets of our own cities."

Some U.S. intelligence and counter-terrorism officials said Bush's broader assertions were in line with analysts' views. They noted that Bush used careful wording and deliberate attribution in cases in which he was citing intelligence that had not been substantiated.

But other experts and former U.S. intelligence officials questioned those assertions.

They noted that the Iraq conflict had undoubtedly attracted Islamic extremists who were trained in Afghanistan and might have fought in other theaters. But some cited an official U.S. National Intelligence Estimate released last year that described Iraq as a "cause celebre" for Islamic radicals worldwide, fanning anger and resentment across the Muslim world and beyond.

"I think what the president is saying is in some sense fundamentally misleading," said Robert Grenier, former head of the counter-terrorism center at the CIA as well as the agency's mission manager for the war in Iraq. "If he means to suggest the invasion of Iraq has not created more jihadists bent on killing Americans, and that if Iraq hadn't been there as a magnet they would have been attracted somewhere else, that's completely disingenuous."

The war "has convinced many Muslims that the United States is the enemy of Islam and is attacking Muslims, and they have become jihadists as a result of their experience in Iraq," Grenier said.

Bush also said Al Qaeda in Iraq posed a threat to Americans at home. "We've already seen how Al Qaeda used a failed state thousands of miles from our shores to bring death and destruction to the streets of our cities, and we must not allow them to do so again," he said.

Several experts said prevailing U.S. intelligence was at odds with that assertion as well.

Bruce Hoffman of Georgetown University, a veteran counter-terrorism analyst and government consultant, said the vast majority of fighters who are part of Al Qaeda in Iraq are Iraqis who have shown little interest in seeking targets beyond that country's borders.

In his speech, Bush acknowledged that the organization was one of several Sunni Muslim radical militant groups in Iraq, but that the intelligence community considered it to be the most dangerous because it was behind "most of the spectacular, high-casualty attacks," which were intended to accelerate sectarian violence.

Frank Hyland, a former consultant at the CIA's counter-terrorism center and at the multi-agency National Counterterrorism Center, said he agreed that Al Qaeda in Iraq was a dangerous organization with ties to Al Qaeda central in Pakistan.

But he added that Al Qaeda in Iraq was one of dozens of groups attacking civilians and U.S.-led troops in Iraq.

Other Sunni groups, Shiite Muslim militias such as the Al Mahdi army, criminal gangs, "throwaway kids" and Iranian intelligence operatives are doing so as well, he said.

A British panel of private and government experts known as the Iraq Commission released a report this month that concluded there were between 50 and 75 "disparate groups, formed to rid the country of coalition forces."

One of the more controversial claims that the Bush administration has made involves the operational link between Al Qaeda in Iraq and Al Qaeda's command-and-control operations headed by Bin Laden and others in Pakistan.

On Tuesday, Bush sought to bolster what he said were direct ties between the two, in response to criticism that the administration has been exaggerating the connections.

Bush said the founder of Al Qaeda in Iraq, the late Abu Musab Zarqawi, merged his organization with Al Qaeda and pledged allegiance to it.

Some experts and former U.S. intelligence officials said Tuesday that the Iraq group had always had its own agenda, as evidenced by a public fallout between Zarqawi and Al Qaeda's No. 2 leader, Ayman Zawahiri, over Zarqawi's killing of Shiite Muslims in Iraq.

Bush alluded to that disagreement in his speech, but he emphasized repeatedly that Al Qaeda in Iraq was part of Al Qaeda's "decentralized chain of command, not … a separate group" and that the two operations were "united in their overarching strategy."

As evidence of Al Qaeda's connection to the Iraqi group, Bush said, after Zarqawi — a Jordanian-born Palestinian — was killed by a U.S. airstrike last year, he was replaced by another foreigner, Egyptian Abu Ayyub Masri, whose ties to the Al Qaeda senior leadership are "deep and long-standing."

Bush said that according to the declassified intelligence, many of Al Qaeda in Iraq's other senior leaders are also foreign militants. They include a Syrian who is Al Qaeda in Iraq's "emir" in Baghdad, a Saudi who is its top spiritual and legal advisor, an Egyptian who fought in Afghanistan in the 1990s and a Tunisian who U.S. officials believe plays a key role in managing foreign fighters, the president said.

Rand Beers, a former senior Bush and Clinton administration counter-terrorism official, said Bush was exaggerating the connections.

"There is no question that he is oversimplifying what is happening there in Iraq," Beers said. "He is misrepresenting where the major front of Al Qaeda is, which is in Pakistan."

jeudi 19 juillet 2007

Two U.S. soldiers charged with murder in Iraq

By Alister Bull

BAGHDAD, July 19 (Reuters) - Two U.S. soldiers have been charged with murdering an Iraqi last month near Kirkuk, the U.S. military said on Thursday, the latest in a string of accusations of abuse laid against American forces in Iraq.

Sergeant 1st Class Trey Corrales, from San Antonio, Texas, and Specialist Christopher Shore, from Winder, Georgia, were each charged with one count of premeditated murder, the military said in a statement.

Incidents of American soldiers illegally killing Iraqis since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003 have incensed ordinary Iraqis and added to calls for a withdrawal of U.S. troops.

Some of the most publicised cases include the killing of 24 unarmed Iraqis in 2005 by U.S. Marines in the town of Haditha, and the rape and murder of a 14-year-old girl in Mahmudiya in March 2006.

In fresh violence, a roadside bomb killed four U.S. soldiers and an Iraqi interpreter on Wednesday while they were on patrol in eastern Baghdad, the military said, lifting the number of U.S. troops killed in Iraq this month to 47.

The premeditated killing of the Iraqi was alleged to have taken place on or around June 23 near the northern oil-city of Kirkuk, where the two soldiers were serving with the 3rd Brigade, 25th Infantry Division, the military statement said.

In addition, their battalion commander, Lieutenant-Colonel Michael Browder, while not a suspect in the case, was relieved of his duties because of a lack of confidence in his ability to command effectively, the statement said.

It gave no specific details on the incident.

On Wednesday, a military jury in California found a U.S. Marine guilty of conspiring to kidnap and kill an Iraqi man, who was shot dead last year.

Last month three U.S. soldiers were charged with the unlawful killing of three Iraqis in separate incidents during U.S. operations between April and June near the town of Iskandiriya, 40 km (25 miles) south of Baghdad.

The death of four more U.S. soldiers lifts the number killed since the U.S. invasion to 3,626 and was announced after Democrats in the U.S. Senate failed in a night-long bid to impose a timetable for a U.S. troop withdrawal.

U.S. and Iraqi forces have launched a major security clampdown in and around the capital to flush out Sunni militants and Shi'ite militiamen, and commanders warn that casualties may rise as their troops tackle riskier neighbourhoods.

The previous three months were the bloodiest for U.S. forces since the war began, with 331 personnel killed.

"It is a tough fight and it is one that will continue to be so for some time," military spokesman Brigadier-General Kevin Bergner said at a news conference in Baghdad on Wednesday.

U.S. President George W. Bush, under pressure to change the course of a war that is increasingly unpopular at home, says he is waiting for a September progress report from his top men in Iraq, General David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker.

samedi 14 juillet 2007

"War on Freedom" trailer 3 released

Life under Saddam was bad, but nothing compared to the American "freedom".

vendredi 13 juillet 2007

"Bush in Denial about Iraq": BarackObama.com starts sending letters to editors

In an effort to send a strong message about Iraq to Americans, Presidential hopeful Barack Obama has begun a system for supporters to easily email editors of major national and local newspapers about Iraq, or any issue for that matter.

A letter is even written out for the supporters who have the option of re-writing it entirely or editing it.

An extract of an AP wire ("New intel report: Al-Qaida renewing efforts to sneak terror plotters into U.S.") :

On Thursday, news of the counterterrorism center's threat assessment renewed the political debate about the nature of the al-Qaida threat and whether U.S. actions -- in Iraq in particular -- have made the U.S. safer from terrorism.

At a news conference Thursday, President Bush acknowledged al-Qaida's continuing threat to the United States and used the new report as evidence his administration's policies are on the right course.

"The same folks that are bombing innocent people in Iraq were the ones who attacked us in America on Sept. 11," he said. "That's why what happens in Iraq matters to security here at home."

Yet Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., said Iraq has distracted the United States. He said the U.S. should have finished off al-Qaida in 2002 and 2003 along the Afghan-Pakistan border.

Instead, "President Bush chose to invade Iraq, thereby diverting our military and intelligence resources away from the real war on terrorism," Rockefeller said. "Threats to the United States homeland are not emanating from Iraq. They are coming from al-Qaida leadership."

jeudi 12 juillet 2007

Journalists have trouble telling the story from Iraq as long as they are threatened by death

CHRONOLOGY-Journalists killed in Iraq

July 12 (Reuters) - An Iraqi photographer and driver working for Reuters in Iraq were killed in Baghdad on Thursday, the international news and information company said.

Iraq is the most dangerous place in the world to report. The Paris-based advocacy group Reporters Without Borders says over 191 journalists and media assistants have been killed since 2003.

Following is a chronology of those reported killed in the past three months.

April 5 - The body of Iraqi journalist Khamail Muhsin is found with a gunshot wound to the head and signs of torture. She was last seen on April 3.

May 6 - Russian freelance photographer Dmitry Chebotayev is killed in a roadside bomb attack north of Baghdad. He is the first Russian journalist to be killed in Iraq.

May 9 - Two Iraqi journalists, a clerk for their media firm and their driver are dragged from their car and killed by gunmen southwest of Kirkuk near the small town of Rashad.

May 17 - Two ABC journalists, cameraman Alaa Uldeen Aziz and soundman Saif Laith Yousuf, are killed in Baghdad. They were returning from the Baghdad bureau when their car was attacked.

May 21 - Militants kidnap and kill Ali Khalil from the Azzaman newspaper.

May 28 - Abdul Rahman al-Isawi, a reporter for the independent National Iraqi News Agency (NINA), is taken from his village of Amiriyat al-Falluja, west of Baghdad.

-- Gunmen kill Mahmoud Hakim Mustafa, editor-in-chief of Hawadith weekly newspaper, near his home in Kirkuk.

May 30 - Nazar Abdul Wahid al-Rahdi, a reporter for the Aswat al-Iraq news agency and New Sabah newspaper, is shot dead in Amara, 365 km (230 miles) south of Baghdad.

May 31 - Saif M. Fakhry is shot and killed near his home in Baghdad. He was an Iraqi cameraman working for the Associated Press (AP), the fifth AP employee to die violently in Iraq.

June 7 - Sahar al-Haideri, a female journalist working with the independent Aswat al-Iraq news agency, is shot dead in the al-Hadbaa neighbourhood of northeastern Mosul. The Ansar al-Sunna group later claim responsibility.

June 11 - Aref Ali, a journalist working for the Aswat al-Iraq news agency is killed while on assignment near the town of Khalis in Diyala province.

June 14 - Filaih Wadi Mijthab, managing editor of the state-run al-Sabah daily newspaper, is killed a day after he was abducted in Baghdad.

July 12 - Photographer Namir Noor-Eldeen and driver Saeed Chmagh, both of whom worked for Reuters news agency, are killed in eastern Baghdad during clashes between U.S. forces and militants in the area.

Sources: Reuters, RSF: www.rsf.org/, CPJ: www.cpj.org

Reuters feature describes Iraq today

Iraqis bemoan lack of services in long, hot summer

BAGHDAD, July 11 (Reuters) - Iraqi schoolboy Sarmad Qais sleeps on the roof of his Baghdad home, desperate to escape the stifling heat inside. His family say they have not had electricity for 20 days. Their air-conditioners lie idle.

Qais does not bother to set his alarm clock to wake up for school -- the sound of mortars after dawn are usually enough.

"Having no power and water really annoys me," said 9-year-old Sarmad, speaking outside his home in central Baghdad's Karrada neighbourhood, which like almost all Iraqi houses has a flat roof reached by stairs inside.

"I can't shower, I can't watch cartoons and I can't sleep because of the heat and mosquitoes. I wake up most mornings to the sound of explosions and mortars."

Many Iraqis say basic services (OTCBB:BICV) are at their worst level in decades. More than four years of war has crippled infrastructure while unrelenting violence has hobbled reconstruction efforts.

To make matters worse, summer temperatures can remain above 40 degrees centigrade (104 degrees Fahrenheit) even at night.

Some residents say they get electricity in Baghdad and other provinces for around two hours a day, while water supplies are often cut for days at a time. Motorists sometimes queue for half a day to get petrol.

Taxi driver Mustafa al-Zubaidi said he had spent nine hours moving his car several hundred meters in a slow-moving queue in Baghdad's baking heat to get a tank of petrol.

The fact Iraq has the world's third largest oil reserves adds to his frustration.

"I don't know whether to laugh or cry when I see the situation with fuel in a country that sits on a sea of oil,"
he said, before edging closer to the petrol station.

The Qais family said they had no idea why they had not had electricity for 20 days. An Electricity Ministry official said it was because cables in their neighbourhood needed repair.

But sleeping on the roof is not without risks.

A mortar round killed seven members of one family in the Sunni neighbourhood of Fadhil in Baghdad last week as they slept on their roof. The dead included a couple and their four children, aged 9 to 17, police said.

"I had known them for more than 15 years. Suddenly this happened, they were killed in this horrible way," said Abu Ahmed, a neighbour. "It's so sad."

(AFP/WISSAM AL-OKAILI: IRAQ, Baghdad : Iraqis inspect the wreckage of a truck which was allegedly targeted by a military air strike on the outskirts of Baghdad's impoverished district of Sadr City according to local witnesses, 11 July 2007.)

FUEL PIPELINE A "SIEVE"

Iraqi officials could not be reached to give details on electricity generation and water supplies.

But the Washington-based Brookings Institution, which compiles data on Iraq, said the average daily supply of electricity in Baghdad in May was 5.6 hours, compared to an estimated 16-24 hours before the U.S.-led invasion in 2003.

At a parliamentary hearing on Monday both the oil and the electricity ministers sought to explain the problems behind the current shortages of basic services.

Oil Minister Hussein al-Shahristani told lawmakers that acts of sabotage by insurgents and people drilling holes in fuel pipelines to steal refined oil products were a major reason for petrol shortages.

"In just one stretch of pipeline between Baghdad and Baiji, we found 1,488 holes," he said, referring to a key pipeline running from a refinery in the city of Baiji, 180 km (112 mile) south to the capital.

"It doesn't function as a pipeline ... it's more like a sieve."

Electricity Minister Karim Waheed said systematic sabotage was to blame for the crisis in his ministry as well lengthy bureaucracy in releasing funds for new projects and maintenance.

It is a vicious cycle.

Officials at the Baghdad municipality say water cannot be purified and pumped without power. The Electricity Ministry says part of its problem is a lack of fuel to operate power stations while the Oil Ministry says a lack of electricity greatly increases demand for fuel for small generators at home.

Lamia Hasan, a mother of three, says her family are counting the days to October and November, when the weather cools.

"No one can stand the heat. My children don't understand why they can't watch television or sleep at night," Hasan said.

"We are not greedy, we gave up on the hope of living like the rest of the world long ago ... all we want is the luxury of water and a good night sleep."

mercredi 11 juillet 2007

Moore criticizes CNN for poor coverage leading up to Iraq War

Michael Moore was brought on originally to be interviewed about his new movie "Sicko", but instead attacks Wolf Blitzer for CNN's lack of journalistic ethics.

mardi 10 juillet 2007

lundi 9 juillet 2007

Al Gore on the Daily Show with Jon Stewart




Gore speaks about how reason has taken a beating lately especially concerning the link between 9/11 and Iraq.

U.S. military deaths in Iraq at 3,605 (AP)

By The Associated Press

(visit http://www.defenselink.mil/news/ for the latest on U.S. military deaths)

As of Sunday, July 8, 2007, at least 3,605 members of the U.S. military have died since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count. The figure includes seven military civilians. At least 2,952 died as a result of hostile action, according to the military's numbers.

The AP count is 15 higher than the Defense Department's tally, last updated Friday at 10 a.m. EDT.

The British military has reported 159 deaths; Italy, 33; Ukraine, 18; Poland, 20; Bulgaria, 13; Spain, 11; Denmark, seven; El Salvador, five; Slovakia, four; Latvia, three; Estonia, Netherlands, Thailand, two each; and Australia, Hungary, Kazakhstan, Romania, South Korea, one death each.

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The latest deaths reported by the military:
-- A soldier was killed Saturday during combat in Salahuddin province.
-- A soldier was killed Sunday in a bombing in western Baghdad.
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The latest identifications reported by the military:
-- Army Spc. Michelle R. Ring, 24, Martin, Tenn.; died Thursday of wounds sustained by mortar fire in Baghdad; was assigned to the 92nd Military Police Battalion, Fort Benning, Ga.
-- Army Sgt. Keith A. Kline, 24, Oak Harbor, Ohio; was killed Thursday when his vehicle struck an explosive in Baghdad; was assigned to 96th Civil Affairs Battalion, 95th Civil Affairs Brigade, Fort Bragg, N.C.

dimanche 8 juillet 2007

Second trailer of "War on Freedom" released

This second trailer focuses on the Iraqi reaction to 9/11.

First trailer of "War on Freedom" released

This one is angled on the view that there was no division along religious lines until after the March 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq.