PDA

View Full Version : Rebels Kill 24 In Attacks On Iraqi Security Forces



DEMON CUNT
12-28-2004, 12:28 PM
Rebels Kill 24 In Attacks On Iraqi Security Forces

December 28, 2004
_
By KOMO Staff & News Services

BAGHDAD - Insurgents launched multiple attacks on Iraqi police across the dangerous Sunni Triangle on Tuesday, killing 24 people - including 19 policemen - a day after the major Sunni Muslim political party pulled out of the Jan. 30 elections citing the deteriorating security situation.

Also Tuesday, a militant group claimed to have executed eight Iraqi employees of the Sandi Group, American security company, saying they had supported the U.S.-led occupation. The claim could not be independently verified...

More... (http://www.komotv.com/stories/34571.htm)

What a fucking mess! Is Iraq really better off?

If you voted for Bush, you voted for this!

IMPEACH BUSH!

Nickdfresh
12-28-2004, 07:07 PM
It's going to be tough to turn over power to the Iraqis if:

A.) Most of the "security forces" are dead.

B.) The rest are working for the insurgents.

BigBadBrian
12-28-2004, 09:12 PM
The turnover will go on as scheduled.

Nickdfresh
12-28-2004, 09:32 PM
Originally posted by BigBadBrian
The turnover will go on as scheduled.

Great! The Iraqi Civil War and coming islamic fundamentalist regime is also right on schedule.:confused:

BigBadBrian
12-28-2004, 09:50 PM
Originally posted by Nickdfresh
Great! The Iraqi Civil War and coming islamic fundamentalist regime is also right on schedule.:confused:

Let the Islamic bastards murder each other in the hundreds of thousands. Let the Elections happen on schedule. Pull the troops out.

Do your reading on the Middle East. The only way anyone has ever managed to maintain control over any country or principality in the ME is by force...overwhelming, sickening BRUTAL force. Saddam needed to fill graveyards the size of stadiums to attain the results we've managed thus far. Inevitably however, we must decide how much burden we want to bear.

The Sunnis, Shiites, and Wahabbis have been slaying each other in the thousands for hundreds of years. Let the games continue...after the election. :gun:

DEMON CUNT
12-28-2004, 10:06 PM
Originally posted by BigBadBrian
The turnover will go on as scheduled.

It will also be very delicious!

http://www.nddistributors.com/Images/Bread%20May%202003/appleturnover.jpg

DEMON CUNT
12-28-2004, 10:09 PM
Originally posted by BigBadBrian
Let the Islamic bastards murder each other in the hundreds of thousands. Let the Elections happen on schedule. Pull the troops out.

Do your reading on the Middle East.

What would Jesus do?

You always suggest all this reading that we should do? So professor, what should we be reading?

Nickdfresh
12-28-2004, 10:13 PM
Originally posted by BigBadBrian
Let the Islamic bastards murder each other in the hundreds of thousands. Let the Elections happen on schedule. Pull the troops out.

Do your reading on the Middle East. The only way anyone has ever managed to maintain control over any country or principality in the ME is by force...overwhelming, sickening BRUTAL force. Saddam needed to fill graveyards the size of stadiums to attain the results we've managed thus far. Inevitably however, we must decide how much burden we want to bear.

The Sunnis, Shiites, and Wahabbis have been slaying each other in the thousands for hundreds of years. Let the games continue...after the election. :gun:

As long as we have an election on schedule, the killing will be inconsequential and such good sport! Good thing we invaded a country we know nothing about!

At least Saddam did do ONE thing right, security!:rolleyes:

Little_Skittles
12-28-2004, 11:10 PM
yep he sure did i would recommed us giving them fear, after all isn't that how saddam ruled was fear? Think about it who has the most power at school when we were kids? the bullies we feared them in all the communist countries who has the most power the government people FEAR it. American troops need to toughen up, and quit pussy footing around!

DEMON CUNT
12-29-2004, 01:42 AM
Originally posted by Nickdfresh
As long as we have an election on schedule, the killing will be inconsequential and such good sport! Good thing we invaded a country we know nothing about!

At least Saddam did do ONE thing right, security!:rolleyes:

This really speaks to the arrogance of the Bush regime and the right wing zealots that post on the board.

American can do no wrong!

Nickdfresh
12-29-2004, 08:29 AM
December 29, 2004

THE WORLD
U.S. Says Syria Aids Iraq Rebels
Regime harbors allies of Hussein's government, State Department says. The topic is likely to come up when Armitage stops off in Damascus.

From Associated Press


WASHINGTON — The Bush administration Tuesday accused Syria of helping insurgents in Iraq by giving haven to elements of deposed President Saddam Hussein's regime.

"And it is a problem that we think Syria needs to act to stop," State Department spokesman Adam Ereli said.

Deputy Secretary of State Richard L. Armitage is likely to discuss the U.S. complaint when he stops in Damascus on a trip that also will take him to Turkey and Jordan.

Details of Armitage's itinerary were withheld, except that he would leave Washington this week and return sometime next week.

Syria has said it was being made a scapegoat for the U.S. failure to stop the uprising in Iraq.

Reports circulated in Damascus, meanwhile, that key support for the insurgents was coming from Baath Party leaders in the Syrian capital and a half-brother of Hussein.

Ereli said Syrian officials "have done some things with respect to the border and working with the Iraqis to control the border."

But "the continued presence of former regime elements in Syria who are working, we believe, to the detriment of Iraq and in support of the insurgency is a problem that we think Syria needs to act to stop," he said.

[url=http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-syria29dec29,0,3717482.story?coll=la-home-world[/url]
*

Banging the drums of war for Syria now? How many countries can we invade and then occupy?

ODShowtime
12-29-2004, 08:53 AM
Originally posted by BigBadBrian
Let the Islamic bastards murder each other in the hundreds of thousands. Let the Elections happen on schedule. Pull the troops out.

This is one of the most evil and deluded statement I've ever read on this board. You know what the end result of their fighting is? You want an Islamic Shiite regime stretching from the western desert of Iraq to the borders of Afghanistan? Who's gonna have to put the slap down on that? Way to show your true colors you warmongering fool.

Do your reading on the Middle East. The only way anyone has ever managed to maintain control over any country or principality in the ME is by force...overwhelming, sickening BRUTAL force. Saddam needed to fill graveyards the size of stadiums to attain the results we've managed thus far. Inevitably however, we must decide how much burden we want to bear.

No shit. Saddam was perfect for the job. All we had to do was keep buying from him or bribing him and he'd be cool. Why did we get rid of him? Just so our soldiers could die instead? If thousands were dying before we arrived, and thousands are guaranteed to die afterwards, then you people's idiotic claim that we are saving the Iraqi people from brutal repression goes right out the fuckin' window. Nice one BBB. What, have you invested in defense stocks? Body bag stocks?

The Sunnis, Shiites, and Wahabbis have been slaying each other in the thousands for hundreds of years. Let the games continue...after the election. :gun:

Nickdfresh
12-29-2004, 06:31 PM
Tipster lures Iraqi police to house bomb, 28 killed
Wednesday, December 29, 2004 Posted: 8:43 AM EST (1343 GMT)

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- At least 28 people, including several Iraqi police officers, died when a house exploded in western Baghdad Tuesday night, Baghdad police said.

Initial evidence suggested the police walked into a trap set by insurgents who lured them into the house with an anonymous call after a nearby gun battle, which started about 8:30 p.m. (1:30 p.m. ET).

Iraqi police said 28 people died in the blast, but the number of police officers among the dead is uncertain. The U.S. military said at least four police officers were killed, but a Baghdad police official put the number at nine.

Police decided to enter the house two hours after the anonymous caller told them it was an insurgent hideout, a police official said.

Explosives inside the house ignited just as police entered it, killing the police and civilians, a police official said.

The house was in the Ghazaliya neighborhood of western Baghdad, the location of frequent clashes with insurgents.

An Interior Ministry official said 21 people were hurt and three other houses were destroyed.

A U.S. military statement said it is believed between 1,700 to 1,800 pounds of explosives were rigged to go off inside the house.

In earlier attacks, insurgents killed 18 Iraqi police and five Iraqi troops in three Iraq cities Tuesday, nearly a month shy of the nation's scheduled elections.

The attacks came one day after an audiotape believed to be from al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden called on Iraqis to support Abu Musab al-Zarqawi's terror campaign in Iraq.

Near Tikrit, insurgents killed 12 Iraqi police officers and destroyed the Um Kashifa police station, U.S. military officials said.

Also near Tikrit, insurgents attacked a police checkpoint, killing one Iraqi police officer and wounding two others, according to Capt. Bill Coppernoll of the U.S. 1st Infantry Division.

Four attacks on police checkpoints near Balad, about 50 miles south of Tikrit, killed five Iraqi police officers and wounded three, Coppernoll said.

Six miles south of Baquba, a suicide car bomber targeted Iraqi national guard troops at a traffic circle as they were working on the aftermath of an earlier roadside bombing, the U.S. military said.

The attacks began when a roadside bomb wounded three soldiers with an Iraqi national guard convoy near the Maffrak traffic circle in the Mualemeen neighborhood, the military said.

A second roadside bomb was found at the attack scene and an Iraqi explosive ordnance disposal team was called in to remove it.

As the removal team worked, the suicide car bomber drove through a security cordon, setting off the vehicle bomb, killing a civilian and wounding 26 other people.

The Maffrak traffic circle has been a frequent scene of clashes between insurgents and coalition forces.

In Baghdad, a suicide car bomber targeted a top officer of Iraq's national guard as he was leaving his home for work, an Iraqi police official said.

The parked car bomb exploded near a gas station, killing its driver and wounding five Iraqi civilians, the U.S. military and Iraqi police said.

The attack targeted a convoy for Maj. Gen. Moudher al-Mula, an Iraqi national guard commander in the capital city, said an Iraqi police official.

Al-Mula and his guards escaped unhurt.

CIA: Bin Laden tape appears authentic
There was no way to tell if the attacks across the country were related to the taped call by a person believed to be bin Laden to support al-Zarqawi, whom he called "the prince of al Qaeda in Iraq."

The voice on the audiotape, aired Monday on the Arabic-language television network Al-Jazeera, praised al-Zarqawi's operations and welcomed his group's joining forces with al Qaeda.

In October, the Jordanian-born al-Zarqawi declared allegiance to bin Laden and changed the name of his group from Unification and Jihad to al Qaeda in Iraq.

A CIA analysis Monday found that the tape appeared to be authentic, a U.S. official said.

CNN's Arwa Damon, Nermeen Al Mufti and Mohammad Tawfeeq in Iraq and Jamie McIntyre in Washington contributed to this report.

On Wednesday, an Iraqi woman stands outside houses destroyed in the explosion in west Baghdad.
Image:

DEMON CUNT
12-29-2004, 06:38 PM
IF YOU VOTED FOR BUSH- YOU VOTED FOR THIS!