IRAQ on The Brink of Civil War

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  • Nickdfresh
    SUPER MODERATOR

    • Oct 2004
    • 49203

    IRAQ on The Brink of Civil War

    Feb 22, 8:33 PM EST

    Mosque Attack Pushes Iraq Toward Civil War

    By ZIAD KHALAF
    Associated Press Writer

    Iraqis gather at the ruins of a Shrine in Samarra, 95 kilometers (60 miles) north of Baghdad, Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2006. A large explosion Wednesday heavily damaged the golden dome of one of Iraq's most famous Shiite religious shrines, sending protesters pouring into the streets. It was the third major attack against Shiite targets in as many days. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)

    SAMARRA, Iraq (AP) -- Insurgents posing as police destroyed the golden dome of one of Iraq's holiest Shiite shrines Wednesday, setting off an unprecendented spasm of sectarian violence. Angry crowds thronged the streets, militiamen attacked Sunni mosques, and at least 19 people were killed.

    With the gleaming dome of the 1,200-year-old Askariya shrine reduced to rubble, some Shiites lashed out at the United States as partly to blame.

    The violence - many of the 90 attacks on Sunni mosques were carried out by Shiite militias - seemed to push Iraq closer to all-out civil war than at any point in the three years since the U.S.-led overthrow of Saddam Hussein.

    Many leaders called for calm. "We are facing a major conspiracy that is targeting Iraq's unity," said President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd. "We should all stand hand in hand to prevent the danger of a civil war."

    President Bush pledged American help to restore the mosque after the bombing north of Baghdad, which dealt a severe blow to U.S. efforts to keep Iraq from falling deeper into sectarian violence.

    "The terrorists in Iraq have again proven that they are enemies of all faiths and of all humanity," Bush said. "The world must stand united against them, and steadfast behind the people of Iraq."

    British Prime Minister Tony Blair also condemned the bombing and pledged funds toward the shrine's reconstruction.

    U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad and the top American commander in Iraq, Gen. George Casey, called the attack a deliberate attempt to foment sectarian strife and warned it was a "critical moment for Iraq."

    No one was reported injured in the bombing of the shrine in Samarra.

    But at least 19 people, including three Sunni clerics, were killed in the reprisal attacks that followed, mainly in Baghdad and predominantly Shiite provinces to the south, according to the Iraqi Islamic Party, the country's largest Sunni political group.

    Many of the attacks appeared to have been carried out by Shiite militias that the United States wants to see disbanded.

    In predominantly Shiite Basra, police said militiamen broke into a prison, hauled out 12 inmates, including two Egyptians, two Tunisians, a Libyan, a Saudi and a Turk, and shot them dead in reprisal for the shrine attack.

    Major Sunni groups joined in condemning the attack, and a leading Sunni politician, Tariq al-Hashimi, urged clerics and politicians to calm the situation "before it spins out of control."

    The country's top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, sent instructions to his followers forbidding attacks on Sunni mosques, and called for seven days of mourning.

    But he hinted, as did Vice President Adil Abdul-Mahdi, that religious militias could be given a bigger security role if the government cannot protecting holy shrines - an ominous sign of the Shiite reaction ahead.

    Both Sunnis and the United States fear the rise of such militias, which the disaffected minority views as little more than death squads. American commanders believe they undercut efforts to create a professional Iraqi army and police force - a key step toward the eventual drawdown of U.S. forces.

    Some Shiite political leaders already were angry with the United States because it has urged them to form a government in which nonsectarian figures control the army and police. Khalilzad warned this week - in a statement clearly aimed at Shiite hard-liners - that America would not continue to support institutions run by sectarian groups with links to armed militias.

    One top Shiite political leader accused Khalilzad of sharing blame for the attack on the shrine in Samarra.

    "These statements ... gave green lights to terrorist groups. And, therefore, he shares in part of the responsibility," said Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, head of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq and the former commander of its militia.

    The interior minister, who controls the security forces that Sunnis accuse of widepsread abuses, is a member of al-Hakim's party.

    The new tensions came as Iraq's various factions have been struggling to assemble a government after the Dec. 15 parliamentary elections.

    The Shiite fury sparked by Wednesday's bombings - the third major attack against Shiite targets in as many days - raised the likelihood that Shiite religious parties will reject U.S. demands to curb militias.

    The Askariya shrine, also known as the Golden Mosque, contains the tombs of two revered Shiite imams, who are considered by Shiites to be among the successors of the Prophet Muhammad.

    No group claimed responsibility for the 6:55 a.m. assault on the shrine in Samarra, a mostly Sunni Arab city 60 miles north of Baghdad, carried out by four insurgents disguised as police. But suspicion fell on Sunni extremist groups.

    The top of the dome, which was completed in 1905, collapsed into a crumbly mess, leaving just traces of gold showing through the rubble. Part of the shrine's tiled northern wall also was damaged.

    Thousands of demonstrators crowded near the wrecked shrine, and Iraqis picked through the debris, pulling out artifacts and copies of the Muslim holy book, the Quran, which they waved, along with Iraqi flags.

    "This criminal act aims at igniting civil strife," said Mahmoud al-Samarie, a 28-year-old builder. "We demand an investigation so that the criminals who did this be punished. If the government fails to do so, then we will take up arms and chase the people behind this attack."

    U.S. and Iraqi forces surrounded the Samarra shrine and searched nearby houses. About 500 soldiers were sent to Sunni neighborhoods in Baghdad to prevent clashes.

    On Al-Jazeera television, Sunni politician Adnan al-Dulaimi pledged that the violence would not discourage Sunnis from working to form a new government and claimed the Samarra attack was not planned by Sunni insurgents but "a foreign hand aiming to create differences among Iraqis."

    National Security Adviser Mouwafak al-Rubaie said 10 people were detained for questioning about the bombing. The Interior Ministry put the number at nine and said they included five guards.

    In the hours after the attack, more than 90 Sunni mosques were attacked with automatic rifles and rocket-propelled grenades, burned or taken over by Shiites, the Iraqi Islamic Party said.

    Large protests erupted in Shiite parts of Baghdad and in cities throughout the Shiite heartland to the south. In Basra, Shiite militants traded rifle and rocket-propelled grenade fire with guards at the office of the Iraqi Islamic Party. Smoke billowed from the building.

    Shiite protesters later set fire to a Sunni shrine containing the seventh century tomb of Talha bin Obeid-Allah, a companion of Muhammad, on the outskirts of Basra.

    Protesters in Najaf, Kut and Baghdad's Shiite slum of Sadr City also marched through the streets by the thousands, many shouting anti-American and anti-Israeli slogans and burning those nations' flags.

    Tradition says the Askariya shrine, which draws Shiite pilgrims from throughout the Islamic world, is near the place where the last of the 12 Shiite imams, Mohammed al-Mahdi, disappeared. Al-Mahdi was the son and grandson of the two imams buried in the Askariya shrine. Shiites believe he is still alive and will return to restore justice to humanity.

    © 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy.
  • BITEYOASS
    ROTH ARMY ELITE
    • Jan 2004
    • 6530

    #2
    first the ports, now this! getting closer to chimpeachment time!

    Comment

    • Nickdfresh
      SUPER MODERATOR

      • Oct 2004
      • 49203

      #3
      This could be a disaster for the occupation forces in Iraq...

      There's no way they can keep these two apart if it breaks.

      Comment

      • Little Texan
        Full Member Status

        • Jan 2004
        • 4579

        #4
        Shit is about to hit the fan in Iraq.

        Comment

        • Hardrock69
          DIAMOND STATUS
          • Feb 2005
          • 21888

          #5
          Hey, lookit the extra billions Chimpy and his cronies will make?

          They can sell arms to both sides, ask for more contracts for Haliburton and also a bigger defense budget so we can "keep our troops over there as peacekeepers for an indeterminate length of time...".

          Looks like the fuse has been lit on the powderkeg....only a matter of time before Baghdad becomes a vaporized radiation cloud....

          Comment

          • bueno bob
            DIAMOND STATUS
            • Jul 2004
            • 22942

            #6
            I think, really, civil war in Iraq has been pretty much a forgone conclusion since the war got kickin'...just a matter of when and for what reasons...
            Twistin' by the pool.

            Comment

            • Nickdfresh
              SUPER MODERATOR

              • Oct 2004
              • 49203

              #7
              Thursday, Feb. 23, 2006
              46 Bodies Found in Wave of Iraqi Violence
              Thursday, February 23, 2006 6:31 AM EST
              The Associated Press
              By ALEXANDRA ZAVIS

              BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) — A major Sunni Arab bloc Thursday suspended talks with Shiite and Kurdish parties on a new government after scores of Sunni mosques were attacked and dozens of bodies found in a wave of reprisal violence following the bombing of a revered Shiite shrine.

              Violence continued Thursday with an attack on a Sunni mosque in Baqouba, where eight Iraqi soldiers were killed in a bombing and nearly a dozen people were wounded.

              Faced with the grim prospect of sectarian war, the government extended the curfew in Baghdad and Salaheddin province for two days in the wake of Wednesday's attack on the Askariya shrine in Samarra. All leaves for Iraqi soldiers and police were canceled and personnel were ordered to report to their units.

              Radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr slammed the Iraqi government and U.S. forces for not protecting the Samarra shrine, also known as the Golden Mosque, and ordered his militia to defend Shiite holy sites across Iraq.

              "If the government had real sovereignty, then nothing like this would have happened," al-Sadr said a statement. "Brothers in the Mahdi Army must protect all Shiite shrines and mosques, especially in Samarra."

              At least 46 bodies were found scattered across Iraq late Wednesday and early Thursday, many of them shot execution-style and dumped in Shiite-dominated parts of the capital, Baghdad.

              They included a prominent Al-Arabiya TV female correspondent and two other Iraqi journalists, who had been covering Wednesday's explosion in Samarra. Their bullet-riddled bodies were found on the outskirts of the mostly Sunni Arab city 60 miles north of Baghdad.

              In mostly Shiite Basra, police said militiamen broke into a prison, hauled out 12 inmates, including two Egyptians, two Tunisians, a Libyan, a Saudi and a Turk, and shot them dead in reprisal for the shrine attack. They had been held in Basra after trying to leave the country following the 2004 U.S. attack on the insurgent stronghold of Fallujah.

              The destruction of Samarra's gleaming dome of the 1,200-year-old Askariya shrine sent crowds of angry Shiites into the streets. Many included members of al-Sadr's Mahdi Army and other Shiite militias which the U.S. wants abolished.

              The hardline Sunni clerical Association of Muslim Scholars said 168 Sunni mosques were attacked, 10 imams killed and 15 abducted. The figures could not be independently confirmed.

              In Thursday's violence, unidentified assailants fired machine guns and threw hand grenades at the Abu Ayoub al-Ansari mosque in Baqouba, about 35 miles northeast of Baghdad. At least one mosque employee was killed and two others injured, police said.

              The eight Iraqi soldiers died when a bomb exploded near their patrol in the center of the city, the army said.

              Also Thursday, thousands of protesters carrying Shiite flags and banners marched through parts of Baghdad and the Shiite holy city of Najaf. Shiite leaders called upon the people of Najaf to go to Samarra to defend the shrine.

              Many religious and political leaders called for calm. "We are facing a major conspiracy that is targeting Iraq's unity," President Jalal Talabani said Wednesday. "We should all stand hand in hand to prevent the danger of a civil war."

              Talabani, a Kurd, summoned political leaders to a meeting Thursday to ensure the violence does not derail talks aimed at forming a national unity government after December parliamentary elections. The negotiations — which U.S. and Iraqi leaders hope will help dent the deadly Sunni-driven insurgency — have bogged down over sharp differences between Iraq's Shiite, Kurdish and Sunni Arab parties.

              Spokesmen for the Iraqi Accordance Front, the main Sunni Arab faction, said they would not attend Talabani's meeting and would freeze talks with Kurdish and Shiite parties pending an apology for reprisal attacks against more Sunni mosques.

              "We want a clear condemnation from the government which didn't do enough yesterday to curb those angry mobs," said Dr. Salman al-Jumaili, a member of the Accordance Front. "There was even a kind of cooperation with the government security forces in some places in attacking the Sunni mosques."

              U.S. military units in the Baghdad area were told Thursday morning to halt all but essential travel. Commanders feared that convoys might be caught up in demonstrations or road blocks.

              President Bush pledged American help to restore the mosque after the bombing, which dealt a severe blow to U.S. efforts to keep Iraq from falling deeper into sectarian violence.

              "The terrorists in Iraq have again proven that they are enemies of all faiths and of all humanity," Bush said. "The world must stand united against them, and steadfast behind the people of Iraq."

              No one was reported injured in the bombing of the shrine in Samarra. But dozens of people, including three Sunni clerics, were killed in the reprisal attacks that followed, mainly in Baghdad and predominantly Shiite provinces to the south.

              The country's top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, sent instructions to his followers forbidding attacks on Sunni mosques and called for seven days of mourning.

              But he hinted, as did Vice President Adil Abdul-Mahdi, that religious militias could be given a bigger security role if the government cannot protect holy shrines — an ominous sign of the Shiite reaction ahead.

              Link

              Comment

              • Hardrock69
                DIAMOND STATUS
                • Feb 2005
                • 21888

                #8
                Vengeance is a LARGE part of raghead society over there.

                I would not be surprised if sooner, rather than later, the Iraqui government tells the U.S. to get the fuck out.

                Then they can destroy each other for a long period of time without any interferenece from Chimpy.

                Comment

                • ODShowtime
                  ROCKSTAR

                  • Jun 2004
                  • 5812

                  #9
                  The question is... why now? I think the answer will point to the blame.

                  It show's how ruthless the Mullahs are, to destroy one of their own 1200 year old shrines. Why not sacrifice Tehran also?
                  gnaw on it

                  Comment

                  • Nickdfresh
                    SUPER MODERATOR

                    • Oct 2004
                    • 49203

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Hardrock69
                    Vengeance is a LARGE part of raghead society over there.

                    I would not be surprised if sooner, rather than later, the Iraqui government tells the U.S. to get the fuck out.

                    Then they can destroy each other for a long period of time without any interferenece from Chimpy.
                    We may not want to stick around for the fireworks...

                    We're essentially supporting pro-Iranian Militia Death Squads posing as "police."

                    Maybe we should get with the Sunni Insurgents and kill off 'al-Qaida of Iraq,' then get out...

                    Comment

                    • thome
                      ROTH ARMY ELITE
                      • Mar 2005
                      • 6678

                      #11
                      Muslims are the coolest MF in the whole world, if a group of them get
                      together and decide they need a place to worship, instead of
                      getting ahold of a -Real Estate- agent and finding a Mosque for sale
                      or placeing a open bid on buying one, they just --KILL ALL-- of the present occupants and take it over.

                      AS to pray 5 five times a day to a rock
                      that fell out of the sky (pushed of course from the asteroid belt
                      between the earth and Mars) 1000 years ago.

                      There is it in a nut shell folks another group a our brothers makeing us all proud, Yeah God!! Yeah Allah! Yeah A FUKKINN METEORITE!

                      Comment

                      • thome
                        ROTH ARMY ELITE
                        • Mar 2005
                        • 6678

                        #12
                        Originally posted by BITEYOASS
                        first the ports, now this! getting closer to chimpeachment time!
                        Nothing personal BYA but in ref to your post. What about the last 5000
                        years of insanity that has lived constantly throughout the history of
                        the middle east is that Bushes fault also.?
                        Or is he just responding to what has happened during his time as our President..?

                        Comment

                        • Nickdfresh
                          SUPER MODERATOR

                          • Oct 2004
                          • 49203

                          #13
                          Well, he did committ our troops there...

                          Comment

                          • Hardrock69
                            DIAMOND STATUS
                            • Feb 2005
                            • 21888

                            #14
                            Originally posted by thome
                            Muslims are the coolest MF in the whole world, if a group of them get
                            together and decide they need a place to worship, instead of
                            getting ahold of a -Real Estate- agent and finding a Mosque for sale
                            or placeing a open bid on buying one, they just --KILL ALL-- of the present occupants and take it over.

                            AS to pray 5 five times a day to a rock
                            that fell out of the sky (pushed of course from the asteroid belt
                            between the earth and Mars) 1000 years ago.

                            There is it in a nut shell folks another group a our brothers makeing us all proud, Yeah God!! Yeah Allah! Yeah A FUKKINN METEORITE!

                            What do you think Moses (The Pharoah Akhenaten) did?

                            1. He comes down from the mountain in Saudi Arabia with the "10 Commandments", which are conveniently similar to the same commandments from the Egyptian Book Of The Dead.

                            2. Immediately disregards most of them, goes into Canaan, and destroys everything and kills everyone.

                            Comment

                            • Vanstonica
                              Roadie
                              • Jun 2004
                              • 165

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Hardrock69

                              ....only a matter of time before Baghdad becomes a vaporized radiation cloud....
                              How is this a bad thing??

                              Comment

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