Guest Jerry Okamura Posted August 15, 2007 Share Posted August 15, 2007 Is success in Iraq important or is it not important? Are you going to answer me one of these days? "Sid9" <sid9@verizon.net> wrote in message news:FsLwi.12933$jy5.2647@trnddc07... > August 15, 2007 > Death Toll in Iraq Blasts Rises to 250 > By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS > Filed at 6:23 p.m. ET > > BAGHDAD (AP) -- Rescuers used bare hands and shovels Wednesday to claw > through clay houses shattered by an onslaught of suicide bombings that > killed at least 250 and possibly as many as 500 members of an ancient > religious sect in the deadliest attack of the Iraq war. > > The U.S. military blamed al-Qaida in Iraq, and an American commander > called the assault an ''act of ethnic cleansing.'' > > The victims of Tuesday night's coordinated attack by four suicide bombers > were Yazidis, a small Kurdish-speaking sect that has been targeted by > Muslim extremists who consider its members to be blasphemers. > > The blasts in two villages near the Syrian border crumbled buildings, > trapping entire families beneath mud bricks and other wreckage. Entire > neighborhoods were flattened. > > ''This is an act of ethnic cleansing, if you will, almost genocide,'' Army > Maj. Gen. Benjamin Mixon, commander of U.S. forces in northern Iraq, told > CNN. He said that was evident from the fact Yazidis live in a remote part > of Ninevah province that has been far from Iraq's conflict. > > Mixon said last month that he proposed reducing American troop levels in > Ninevah and predicted the province would shift to Iraqi government control > as early as this month. It was unclear whether that projection would hold > after Tuesday's staggering casualties. > > Death estimates ranged widely. > > Zayan Othman, health minister for Iraq's nearby autonomous Kurdish region, > said 250 bodies had been pulled from the rubble and some 350 people were > injured. > > But the death toll was put as high as 500 by some local officials, > including Hashim al-Hamadani, a senior provincial security official; Kifah > Mohammed, director of Sinjar hospital; and Iraqi army Capt. Mohammed > Ahmed. They agreed with Othman that about 350 were wounded. > > None of the officials provided information on how they arrived at their > estimates. The figures could not be independently checked because the area > was under curfew and casualties had been taken to numerous hospitals. > > Even the lower death estimate far surpassed the previous bloodiest attack > of the war -- 215 people killed by mortar fire and five car bombs in > Baghdad's Shiite Muslim enclave of Sadr City last Nov. 23. > > U.S. officials believe insurgents have been regrouping across northern > Iraq after being driven from strongholds in and around Baghdad, and the > bombings coincided with the start of a major offensive by American and > Iraqi troops against militants in the Diyala River Valley. > > The carnage dealt a serious blow to the Bush administrations hopes of > presenting a positive picture in a progress report on Iraq to be delivered > by the top U.S. commander, Gen. David Petraeus, and U.S. Ambassador Ryan > Crocker in about four weeks. > > Petraeus warned that he expected Sunni Arab insurgents to stage more > spectacular attacks ahead of the report to Congress, whose members are > deeply divided over whether to begin withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraq. > > ''This is way out by the Syrian border, an area where we do think in fact > some suicide bombers are able to come across the border. It's an area that > is very, very remote -- quite small villages out there -- and it was > disheartening for us, too, obviously,'' Petraeus told The Associated Press > in an interview. > > ''We've always said al-Qaida would try to carry out sensational attacks > this month in particular,'' he added. ''We've had some success against > them in certain areas, but we've also said they do retain the capability > to carry out these horrific and indiscriminate attacks such as the ones > yesterday. There will be more of that, tragically.'' > > Minority sects such as the Yazidis are especially vulnerable as militants > seek new targets to avoid the strict security measures clamped on Baghdad > and surrounding areas to stop violence among warring Sunni and Shiite > factions. > > Some Muslims and Christians consider an angel figure worshipped by Yazidis > to be the devil, a charge the sect denies. The Islamic State in Iraq, an > al-Qaida front group, distributed leaflets a week ago warning residents > near the scene of Tuesday's bombings that an attack was imminent because > Yazidis are ''anti-Islamic.'' > > The sect also gained unwanted attention when some members stoned an > 18-year-old Yazidi woman to death in April after she converted to Islam > and fled her family with a Muslim boyfriend. Recent attacks on Yazidis > have been blamed on al-Qaida-linked Sunni extremists seeking to avenge her > death. > > The only Yazidi legislator in Iraq's 275-seat parliament called on the > government to do more to protect the country's small communities. > > ''The ethnic and religious minorities do not have militias while all the > powerful parties have strong militias in Iraq,'' Amin Farhan said. ''The > government should protect these minorities by giving them weapons so that > they can confront the terrorist groups.'' > > Officials in northwestern Iraq called on people to donate blood and > pleaded for aid as many families were left homeless after their houses > collapsed in the bombings near Sinjar. > > ''The residents are appealing now to governmental and non-governmental > organizations to help them with medicines, food, water and tents,'' Farhan > said. ''About 50 houses have completely collapsed over their families. > Many of the victims have been badly dismembered. Rescuers are only finding > pieces of dead bodies.'' > > Dakhil Qassim, the Sinjar mayor, said the four truck bombers approached > two areas in the town of Qahataniya, 75 miles west of Mosul, from dirt > roads and all exploded within minutes of each other. He said the casualty > toll was expected to rise. > > ''We are still digging with our hands and shovels because we can't use > cranes because many of the houses were built of clay,'' Qassim said. > > Hospitals across the region were overwhelmed and only emergency vehicles > were exempt from a curfew that was in place across towns west of Mosul, > 225 miles northwest of Baghdad. > > Nurses dabbed the bloodied face of a young boy and held his hand as he > wailed in pain. A toddler with bruised eyes had bandages wrapped around > his head and arms. > > ''The car bombs that were used all had the consistent profile of al-Qaida > in Iraq violence,'' a U.S. military spokesman, Brig. Gen. Kevin Bergner, > told reporters in Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone. > > Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki issued a statement blaming the > bombings on ''terrorism powers who seek to fuel sectarian strife and > damage our people's national unity.'' > > U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon issued a statement strongly condemning > the attack, saying ''nothing can justify such indiscriminate violence > against innocent civilians.'' He urged Iraqi leaders to set aside > political and religious differences to work together to protect civilians. > > Elsewhere in Iraq, at least 44 other people were killed or found dead > Wednesday, including 24 bullet-riddled bodies of apparent victims of > sectarian death squads usually run by Shiite militias. Five civilians also > died in separate car bombings in the northern cities of Mosul and Kirkuk > and the southern city of Hillah. > > Northeast of Baghdad, Iraqi civilians joined police to rise up against > suspected al-Qaida-linked gunmen after a mortar attack in Buhriz. Eight > gunmen and six civilians died in the fighting, police said. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Jerry Okamura Posted August 15, 2007 Share Posted August 15, 2007 "Verizon News Server" <sid9@bellsouth.net> wrote in message news:%TMwi.4490$jU4.2451@trnddc02... > Your question has a false premise. > > Success was never possible in Iraq. > bush,jr attacked the wrong country. > Then if success is not possible, then we should withdraw from Iraq IMMEDIATELY. Do you hear anyone making that demand? Do you hear the democrats who are the most vocal oppenent of the effort in Iraq make that demand? Do you hear any of the Democratic Presidential wannabees say that we should withdraw IMMEDIADETLY. Do you support the IMMEDIATE withdraw of our troops from Iraq? Why wait for the report from Patraeus? The longer you wait, more people die..... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Sid9 Posted August 15, 2007 Share Posted August 15, 2007 August 15, 2007 Death Toll in Iraq Blasts Rises to 250 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Filed at 6:23 p.m. ET BAGHDAD (AP) -- Rescuers used bare hands and shovels Wednesday to claw through clay houses shattered by an onslaught of suicide bombings that killed at least 250 and possibly as many as 500 members of an ancient religious sect in the deadliest attack of the Iraq war. The U.S. military blamed al-Qaida in Iraq, and an American commander called the assault an ''act of ethnic cleansing.'' The victims of Tuesday night's coordinated attack by four suicide bombers were Yazidis, a small Kurdish-speaking sect that has been targeted by Muslim extremists who consider its members to be blasphemers. The blasts in two villages near the Syrian border crumbled buildings, trapping entire families beneath mud bricks and other wreckage. Entire neighborhoods were flattened. ''This is an act of ethnic cleansing, if you will, almost genocide,'' Army Maj. Gen. Benjamin Mixon, commander of U.S. forces in northern Iraq, told CNN. He said that was evident from the fact Yazidis live in a remote part of Ninevah province that has been far from Iraq's conflict. Mixon said last month that he proposed reducing American troop levels in Ninevah and predicted the province would shift to Iraqi government control as early as this month. It was unclear whether that projection would hold after Tuesday's staggering casualties. Death estimates ranged widely. Zayan Othman, health minister for Iraq's nearby autonomous Kurdish region, said 250 bodies had been pulled from the rubble and some 350 people were injured. But the death toll was put as high as 500 by some local officials, including Hashim al-Hamadani, a senior provincial security official; Kifah Mohammed, director of Sinjar hospital; and Iraqi army Capt. Mohammed Ahmed. They agreed with Othman that about 350 were wounded. None of the officials provided information on how they arrived at their estimates. The figures could not be independently checked because the area was under curfew and casualties had been taken to numerous hospitals. Even the lower death estimate far surpassed the previous bloodiest attack of the war -- 215 people killed by mortar fire and five car bombs in Baghdad's Shiite Muslim enclave of Sadr City last Nov. 23. U.S. officials believe insurgents have been regrouping across northern Iraq after being driven from strongholds in and around Baghdad, and the bombings coincided with the start of a major offensive by American and Iraqi troops against militants in the Diyala River Valley. The carnage dealt a serious blow to the Bush administrations hopes of presenting a positive picture in a progress report on Iraq to be delivered by the top U.S. commander, Gen. David Petraeus, and U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker in about four weeks. Petraeus warned that he expected Sunni Arab insurgents to stage more spectacular attacks ahead of the report to Congress, whose members are deeply divided over whether to begin withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraq. ''This is way out by the Syrian border, an area where we do think in fact some suicide bombers are able to come across the border. It's an area that is very, very remote -- quite small villages out there -- and it was disheartening for us, too, obviously,'' Petraeus told The Associated Press in an interview. ''We've always said al-Qaida would try to carry out sensational attacks this month in particular,'' he added. ''We've had some success against them in certain areas, but we've also said they do retain the capability to carry out these horrific and indiscriminate attacks such as the ones yesterday. There will be more of that, tragically.'' Minority sects such as the Yazidis are especially vulnerable as militants seek new targets to avoid the strict security measures clamped on Baghdad and surrounding areas to stop violence among warring Sunni and Shiite factions. Some Muslims and Christians consider an angel figure worshipped by Yazidis to be the devil, a charge the sect denies. The Islamic State in Iraq, an al-Qaida front group, distributed leaflets a week ago warning residents near the scene of Tuesday's bombings that an attack was imminent because Yazidis are ''anti-Islamic.'' The sect also gained unwanted attention when some members stoned an 18-year-old Yazidi woman to death in April after she converted to Islam and fled her family with a Muslim boyfriend. Recent attacks on Yazidis have been blamed on al-Qaida-linked Sunni extremists seeking to avenge her death. The only Yazidi legislator in Iraq's 275-seat parliament called on the government to do more to protect the country's small communities. ''The ethnic and religious minorities do not have militias while all the powerful parties have strong militias in Iraq,'' Amin Farhan said. ''The government should protect these minorities by giving them weapons so that they can confront the terrorist groups.'' Officials in northwestern Iraq called on people to donate blood and pleaded for aid as many families were left homeless after their houses collapsed in the bombings near Sinjar. ''The residents are appealing now to governmental and non-governmental organizations to help them with medicines, food, water and tents,'' Farhan said. ''About 50 houses have completely collapsed over their families. Many of the victims have been badly dismembered. Rescuers are only finding pieces of dead bodies.'' Dakhil Qassim, the Sinjar mayor, said the four truck bombers approached two areas in the town of Qahataniya, 75 miles west of Mosul, from dirt roads and all exploded within minutes of each other. He said the casualty toll was expected to rise. ''We are still digging with our hands and shovels because we can't use cranes because many of the houses were built of clay,'' Qassim said. Hospitals across the region were overwhelmed and only emergency vehicles were exempt from a curfew that was in place across towns west of Mosul, 225 miles northwest of Baghdad. Nurses dabbed the bloodied face of a young boy and held his hand as he wailed in pain. A toddler with bruised eyes had bandages wrapped around his head and arms. ''The car bombs that were used all had the consistent profile of al-Qaida in Iraq violence,'' a U.S. military spokesman, Brig. Gen. Kevin Bergner, told reporters in Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone. Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki issued a statement blaming the bombings on ''terrorism powers who seek to fuel sectarian strife and damage our people's national unity.'' U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon issued a statement strongly condemning the attack, saying ''nothing can justify such indiscriminate violence against innocent civilians.'' He urged Iraqi leaders to set aside political and religious differences to work together to protect civilians. Elsewhere in Iraq, at least 44 other people were killed or found dead Wednesday, including 24 bullet-riddled bodies of apparent victims of sectarian death squads usually run by Shiite militias. Five civilians also died in separate car bombings in the northern cities of Mosul and Kirkuk and the southern city of Hillah. Northeast of Baghdad, Iraqi civilians joined police to rise up against suspected al-Qaida-linked gunmen after a mortar attack in Buhriz. Eight gunmen and six civilians died in the fighting, police said. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest jose Posted August 15, 2007 Share Posted August 15, 2007 On Aug 15, 4:52 pm, "Sid9" <s...@verizon.net> wrote: > August 15, 2007 > Death Toll in Iraq Blasts Rises to 250 > By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS > Filed at 6:23 p.m. ET > > BAGHDAD (AP) -- Rescuers used bare hands and shovels Wednesday to claw > through clay houses shattered by an onslaught of suicide bombings that > killed at least 250 and possibly as many as 500 members of an ancient > religious sect in the deadliest attack of the Iraq war. > > The U.S. military blamed al-Qaida in Iraq, and an American commander called > the assault an ''act of ethnic cleansing.'' > > The victims of Tuesday night's coordinated attack by four suicide bombers > were Yazidis, a small Kurdish-speaking sect that has been targeted by Muslim > extremists who consider its members to be blasphemers. > > The blasts in two villages near the Syrian border crumbled buildings, > trapping entire families beneath mud bricks and other wreckage. Entire > neighborhoods were flattened. > > ''This is an act of ethnic cleansing, if you will, almost genocide,'' Army > Maj. Gen. Benjamin Mixon, commander of U.S. forces in northern Iraq, told > CNN. He said that was evident from the fact Yazidis live in a remote part of > Ninevah province that has been far from Iraq's conflict. > > Mixon said last month that he proposed reducing American troop levels in > Ninevah and predicted the province would shift to Iraqi government control > as early as this month. It was unclear whether that projection would hold > after Tuesday's staggering casualties. > > Death estimates ranged widely. > > Zayan Othman, health minister for Iraq's nearby autonomous Kurdish region, > said 250 bodies had been pulled from the rubble and some 350 people were > injured. > > But the death toll was put as high as 500 by some local officials, including > Hashim al-Hamadani, a senior provincial security official; Kifah Mohammed, > director of Sinjar hospital; and Iraqi army Capt. Mohammed Ahmed. They > agreed with Othman that about 350 were wounded. > > None of the officials provided information on how they arrived at their > estimates. The figures could not be independently checked because the area > was under curfew and casualties had been taken to numerous hospitals. > > Even the lower death estimate far surpassed the previous bloodiest attack of > the war -- 215 people killed by mortar fire and five car bombs in Baghdad's > Shiite Muslim enclave of Sadr City last Nov. 23. > > U.S. officials believe insurgents have been regrouping across northern Iraq > after being driven from strongholds in and around Baghdad, and the bombings > coincided with the start of a major offensive by American and Iraqi troops > against militants in the Diyala River Valley. > > The carnage dealt a serious blow to the Bush administrations hopes of > presenting a positive picture in a progress report on Iraq to be delivered > by the top U.S. commander, Gen. David Petraeus, and U.S. Ambassador Ryan > Crocker in about four weeks. > > Petraeus warned that he expected Sunni Arab insurgents to stage more > spectacular attacks ahead of the report to Congress, whose members are > deeply divided over whether to begin withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraq. > > ''This is way out by the Syrian border, an area where we do think in fact > some suicide bombers are able to come across the border. It's an area that > is very, very remote -- quite small villages out there -- and it was > disheartening for us, too, obviously,'' Petraeus told The Associated Press > in an interview. > > ''We've always said al-Qaida would try to carry out sensational attacks this > month in particular,'' he added. ''We've had some success against them in > certain areas, but we've also said they do retain the capability to carry > out these horrific and indiscriminate attacks such as the ones yesterday. > There will be more of that, tragically.'' > > Minority sects such as the Yazidis are especially vulnerable as militants > seek new targets to avoid the strict security measures clamped on Baghdad > and surrounding areas to stop violence among warring Sunni and Shiite > factions. > > Some Muslims and Christians consider an angel figure worshipped by Yazidis > to be the devil, a charge the sect denies. The Islamic State in Iraq, an > al-Qaida front group, distributed leaflets a week ago warning residents near > the scene of Tuesday's bombings that an attack was imminent because Yazidis > are ''anti-Islamic.'' > > The sect also gained unwanted attention when some members stoned an > 18-year-old Yazidi woman to death in April after she converted to Islam and > fled her family with a Muslim boyfriend. Recent attacks on Yazidis have been > blamed on al-Qaida-linked Sunni extremists seeking to avenge her death. > > The only Yazidi legislator in Iraq's 275-seat parliament called on the > government to do more to protect the country's small communities. > > ''The ethnic and religious minorities do not have militias while all the > powerful parties have strong militias in Iraq,'' Amin Farhan said. ''The > government should protect these minorities by giving them weapons so that > they can confront the terrorist groups.'' > > Officials in northwestern Iraq called on people to donate blood and pleaded > for aid as many families were left homeless after their houses collapsed in > the bombings near Sinjar. > > ''The residents are appealing now to governmental and non-governmental > organizations to help them with medicines, food, water and tents,'' Farhan > said. ''About 50 houses have completely collapsed over their families. Many > of the victims have been badly dismembered. Rescuers are only finding pieces > of dead bodies.'' > > Dakhil Qassim, the Sinjar mayor, said the four truck bombers approached two > areas in the town of Qahataniya, 75 miles west of Mosul, from dirt roads and > all exploded within minutes of each other. He said the casualty toll was > expected to rise. > > ''We are still digging with our hands and shovels because we can't use > cranes because many of the houses were built of clay,'' Qassim said. > > Hospitals across the region were overwhelmed and only emergency vehicles > were exempt from a curfew that was in place across towns west of Mosul, 225 > miles northwest of Baghdad. > > Nurses dabbed the bloodied face of a young boy and held his hand as he > wailed in pain. A toddler with bruised eyes had bandages wrapped around his > head and arms. > > ''The car bombs that were used all had the consistent profile of al-Qaida in > Iraq violence,'' a U.S. military spokesman, Brig. Gen. Kevin Bergner, told > reporters in Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone. > > Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki issued a statement blaming the bombings > on ''terrorism powers who seek to fuel sectarian strife and damage our > people's national unity.'' > > U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon issued a statement strongly condemning > the attack, saying ''nothing can justify such indiscriminate violence > against innocent civilians.'' He urged Iraqi leaders to set aside political > and religious differences to work together to protect civilians. > > Elsewhere in Iraq, at least 44 other people were killed or found dead > Wednesday, including 24 bullet-riddled bodies of apparent victims of > sectarian death squads usually run by Shiite militias. Five civilians also > died in separate car bombings in the northern cities of Mosul and Kirkuk and > the southern city of Hillah. > > Northeast of Baghdad, Iraqi civilians joined police to rise up against > suspected al-Qaida-linked gunmen after a mortar attack in Buhriz. Eight > gunmen and six civilians died in the fighting, police said. We are killing them as fast as we can and they are helping us to accomplish the annihilation of the radicals by committing suicide. It's a matter of attrition. The more of them that die the sooner we'll see peace on this Planet. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Sid9 Posted August 15, 2007 Share Posted August 15, 2007 jose wrote: > On Aug 15, 4:52 pm, "Sid9" <s...@verizon.net> wrote: >> August 15, 2007 >> Death Toll in Iraq Blasts Rises to 250 >> By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS >> Filed at 6:23 p.m. ET >> >> BAGHDAD (AP) -- Rescuers used bare hands and shovels Wednesday to >> claw through clay houses shattered by an onslaught of suicide >> bombings that killed at least 250 and possibly as many as 500 >> members of an ancient religious sect in the deadliest attack of the >> Iraq war. >> >> The U.S. military blamed al-Qaida in Iraq, and an American commander >> called the assault an ''act of ethnic cleansing.'' >> >> The victims of Tuesday night's coordinated attack by four suicide >> bombers were Yazidis, a small Kurdish-speaking sect that has been >> targeted by Muslim extremists who consider its members to be >> blasphemers. >> >> The blasts in two villages near the Syrian border crumbled buildings, >> trapping entire families beneath mud bricks and other wreckage. >> Entire neighborhoods were flattened. >> >> ''This is an act of ethnic cleansing, if you will, almost >> genocide,'' Army Maj. Gen. Benjamin Mixon, commander of U.S. forces >> in northern Iraq, told CNN. He said that was evident from the fact >> Yazidis live in a remote part of Ninevah province that has been far >> from Iraq's conflict. >> >> Mixon said last month that he proposed reducing American troop >> levels in Ninevah and predicted the province would shift to Iraqi >> government control as early as this month. It was unclear whether >> that projection would hold after Tuesday's staggering casualties. >> >> Death estimates ranged widely. >> >> Zayan Othman, health minister for Iraq's nearby autonomous Kurdish >> region, said 250 bodies had been pulled from the rubble and some 350 >> people were injured. >> >> But the death toll was put as high as 500 by some local officials, >> including Hashim al-Hamadani, a senior provincial security official; >> Kifah Mohammed, director of Sinjar hospital; and Iraqi army Capt. >> Mohammed Ahmed. They agreed with Othman that about 350 were wounded. >> >> None of the officials provided information on how they arrived at >> their estimates. The figures could not be independently checked >> because the area was under curfew and casualties had been taken to >> numerous hospitals. >> >> Even the lower death estimate far surpassed the previous bloodiest >> attack of the war -- 215 people killed by mortar fire and five car >> bombs in Baghdad's Shiite Muslim enclave of Sadr City last Nov. 23. >> >> U.S. officials believe insurgents have been regrouping across >> northern Iraq after being driven from strongholds in and around >> Baghdad, and the bombings coincided with the start of a major >> offensive by American and Iraqi troops against militants in the >> Diyala River Valley. >> >> The carnage dealt a serious blow to the Bush administrations hopes >> of presenting a positive picture in a progress report on Iraq to be >> delivered by the top U.S. commander, Gen. David Petraeus, and U.S. >> Ambassador Ryan Crocker in about four weeks. >> >> Petraeus warned that he expected Sunni Arab insurgents to stage more >> spectacular attacks ahead of the report to Congress, whose members >> are deeply divided over whether to begin withdrawing U.S. troops >> from Iraq. >> >> ''This is way out by the Syrian border, an area where we do think in >> fact some suicide bombers are able to come across the border. It's >> an area that is very, very remote -- quite small villages out there >> -- and it was disheartening for us, too, obviously,'' Petraeus told >> The Associated Press in an interview. >> >> ''We've always said al-Qaida would try to carry out sensational >> attacks this month in particular,'' he added. ''We've had some >> success against them in certain areas, but we've also said they do >> retain the capability to carry out these horrific and indiscriminate >> attacks such as the ones yesterday. There will be more of that, >> tragically.'' >> >> Minority sects such as the Yazidis are especially vulnerable as >> militants seek new targets to avoid the strict security measures >> clamped on Baghdad and surrounding areas to stop violence among >> warring Sunni and Shiite factions. >> >> Some Muslims and Christians consider an angel figure worshipped by >> Yazidis to be the devil, a charge the sect denies. The Islamic State >> in Iraq, an al-Qaida front group, distributed leaflets a week ago >> warning residents near the scene of Tuesday's bombings that an >> attack was imminent because Yazidis are ''anti-Islamic.'' >> >> The sect also gained unwanted attention when some members stoned an >> 18-year-old Yazidi woman to death in April after she converted to >> Islam and fled her family with a Muslim boyfriend. Recent attacks on >> Yazidis have been blamed on al-Qaida-linked Sunni extremists seeking >> to avenge her death. >> >> The only Yazidi legislator in Iraq's 275-seat parliament called on >> the government to do more to protect the country's small communities. >> >> ''The ethnic and religious minorities do not have militias while all >> the powerful parties have strong militias in Iraq,'' Amin Farhan >> said. ''The government should protect these minorities by giving >> them weapons so that they can confront the terrorist groups.'' >> >> Officials in northwestern Iraq called on people to donate blood and >> pleaded for aid as many families were left homeless after their >> houses collapsed in the bombings near Sinjar. >> >> ''The residents are appealing now to governmental and >> non-governmental organizations to help them with medicines, food, >> water and tents,'' Farhan said. ''About 50 houses have completely >> collapsed over their families. Many of the victims have been badly >> dismembered. Rescuers are only finding pieces of dead bodies.'' >> >> Dakhil Qassim, the Sinjar mayor, said the four truck bombers >> approached two areas in the town of Qahataniya, 75 miles west of >> Mosul, from dirt roads and all exploded within minutes of each >> other. He said the casualty toll was expected to rise. >> >> ''We are still digging with our hands and shovels because we can't >> use cranes because many of the houses were built of clay,'' Qassim >> said. >> >> Hospitals across the region were overwhelmed and only emergency >> vehicles were exempt from a curfew that was in place across towns >> west of Mosul, 225 miles northwest of Baghdad. >> >> Nurses dabbed the bloodied face of a young boy and held his hand as >> he wailed in pain. A toddler with bruised eyes had bandages wrapped >> around his head and arms. >> >> ''The car bombs that were used all had the consistent profile of >> al-Qaida in Iraq violence,'' a U.S. military spokesman, Brig. Gen. >> Kevin Bergner, told reporters in Baghdad's heavily fortified Green >> Zone. >> >> Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki issued a statement blaming the >> bombings on ''terrorism powers who seek to fuel sectarian strife and >> damage our people's national unity.'' >> >> U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon issued a statement strongly >> condemning the attack, saying ''nothing can justify such >> indiscriminate violence against innocent civilians.'' He urged Iraqi >> leaders to set aside political and religious differences to work >> together to protect civilians. >> >> Elsewhere in Iraq, at least 44 other people were killed or found dead >> Wednesday, including 24 bullet-riddled bodies of apparent victims of >> sectarian death squads usually run by Shiite militias. Five >> civilians also died in separate car bombings in the northern cities >> of Mosul and Kirkuk and the southern city of Hillah. >> >> Northeast of Baghdad, Iraqi civilians joined police to rise up >> against suspected al-Qaida-linked gunmen after a mortar attack in >> Buhriz. Eight gunmen and six civilians died in the fighting, police >> said. > > We are killing them as fast as we can and they are helping > us to accomplish the annihilation of the radicals by committing > suicide. It's a matter of attrition. The more of them that die > the sooner we'll see peace on this Planet. Time for Petraeus, under bush,jr and Cheney's instructions, to declare victory and redeploy our soldiers out of harms way. Petraeus another gutless ass kissing general who all told bush,jr what he wanted to hear Franks Bremer Garner Casey Abazaid Petraeus No one spoke out. No one asked for more troops (according to bush,jr) Each and every one of them failed at their mission. But, in fact this fish stinks from the head. This failure is bush,jr's failure. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Verizon News Server Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 Your question has a false premise. Success was never possible in Iraq. bush,jr attacked the wrong country. He should apologize, get our troops out of Iraq and promptly resign immediately after Cheney. President Pelosi should preside over a unity government until the next regular election. "Jerry Okamura" <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote in message news:46c391f7$0$28893$4c368faf@roadrunner.com... > Is success in Iraq important or is it not important? Are you going to > answer me one of these days? > > "Sid9" <sid9@verizon.net> wrote in message > news:FsLwi.12933$jy5.2647@trnddc07... >> August 15, 2007 >> Death Toll in Iraq Blasts Rises to 250 >> By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS >> Filed at 6:23 p.m. ET >> >> BAGHDAD (AP) -- Rescuers used bare hands and shovels Wednesday to claw >> through clay houses shattered by an onslaught of suicide bombings that >> killed at least 250 and possibly as many as 500 members of an ancient >> religious sect in the deadliest attack of the Iraq war. >> >> The U.S. military blamed al-Qaida in Iraq, and an American commander >> called the assault an ''act of ethnic cleansing.'' >> >> The victims of Tuesday night's coordinated attack by four suicide bombers >> were Yazidis, a small Kurdish-speaking sect that has been targeted by >> Muslim extremists who consider its members to be blasphemers. >> >> The blasts in two villages near the Syrian border crumbled buildings, >> trapping entire families beneath mud bricks and other wreckage. Entire >> neighborhoods were flattened. >> >> ''This is an act of ethnic cleansing, if you will, almost genocide,'' >> Army Maj. Gen. Benjamin Mixon, commander of U.S. forces in northern Iraq, >> told CNN. He said that was evident from the fact Yazidis live in a remote >> part of Ninevah province that has been far from Iraq's conflict. >> >> Mixon said last month that he proposed reducing American troop levels in >> Ninevah and predicted the province would shift to Iraqi government >> control as early as this month. It was unclear whether that projection >> would hold after Tuesday's staggering casualties. >> >> Death estimates ranged widely. >> >> Zayan Othman, health minister for Iraq's nearby autonomous Kurdish >> region, said 250 bodies had been pulled from the rubble and some 350 >> people were injured. >> >> But the death toll was put as high as 500 by some local officials, >> including Hashim al-Hamadani, a senior provincial security official; >> Kifah Mohammed, director of Sinjar hospital; and Iraqi army Capt. >> Mohammed Ahmed. They agreed with Othman that about 350 were wounded. >> >> None of the officials provided information on how they arrived at their >> estimates. The figures could not be independently checked because the >> area was under curfew and casualties had been taken to numerous >> hospitals. >> >> Even the lower death estimate far surpassed the previous bloodiest attack >> of the war -- 215 people killed by mortar fire and five car bombs in >> Baghdad's Shiite Muslim enclave of Sadr City last Nov. 23. >> >> U.S. officials believe insurgents have been regrouping across northern >> Iraq after being driven from strongholds in and around Baghdad, and the >> bombings coincided with the start of a major offensive by American and >> Iraqi troops against militants in the Diyala River Valley. >> >> The carnage dealt a serious blow to the Bush administrations hopes of >> presenting a positive picture in a progress report on Iraq to be >> delivered by the top U.S. commander, Gen. David Petraeus, and U.S. >> Ambassador Ryan Crocker in about four weeks. >> >> Petraeus warned that he expected Sunni Arab insurgents to stage more >> spectacular attacks ahead of the report to Congress, whose members are >> deeply divided over whether to begin withdrawing U.S. troops from Iraq. >> >> ''This is way out by the Syrian border, an area where we do think in fact >> some suicide bombers are able to come across the border. It's an area >> that is very, very remote -- quite small villages out there -- and it was >> disheartening for us, too, obviously,'' Petraeus told The Associated >> Press in an interview. >> >> ''We've always said al-Qaida would try to carry out sensational attacks >> this month in particular,'' he added. ''We've had some success against >> them in certain areas, but we've also said they do retain the capability >> to carry out these horrific and indiscriminate attacks such as the ones >> yesterday. There will be more of that, tragically.'' >> >> Minority sects such as the Yazidis are especially vulnerable as militants >> seek new targets to avoid the strict security measures clamped on Baghdad >> and surrounding areas to stop violence among warring Sunni and Shiite >> factions. >> >> Some Muslims and Christians consider an angel figure worshipped by >> Yazidis to be the devil, a charge the sect denies. The Islamic State in >> Iraq, an al-Qaida front group, distributed leaflets a week ago warning >> residents near the scene of Tuesday's bombings that an attack was >> imminent because Yazidis are ''anti-Islamic.'' >> >> The sect also gained unwanted attention when some members stoned an >> 18-year-old Yazidi woman to death in April after she converted to Islam >> and fled her family with a Muslim boyfriend. Recent attacks on Yazidis >> have been blamed on al-Qaida-linked Sunni extremists seeking to avenge >> her death. >> >> The only Yazidi legislator in Iraq's 275-seat parliament called on the >> government to do more to protect the country's small communities. >> >> ''The ethnic and religious minorities do not have militias while all the >> powerful parties have strong militias in Iraq,'' Amin Farhan said. ''The >> government should protect these minorities by giving them weapons so that >> they can confront the terrorist groups.'' >> >> Officials in northwestern Iraq called on people to donate blood and >> pleaded for aid as many families were left homeless after their houses >> collapsed in the bombings near Sinjar. >> >> ''The residents are appealing now to governmental and non-governmental >> organizations to help them with medicines, food, water and tents,'' >> Farhan said. ''About 50 houses have completely collapsed over their >> families. Many of the victims have been badly dismembered. Rescuers are >> only finding pieces of dead bodies.'' >> >> Dakhil Qassim, the Sinjar mayor, said the four truck bombers approached >> two areas in the town of Qahataniya, 75 miles west of Mosul, from dirt >> roads and all exploded within minutes of each other. He said the casualty >> toll was expected to rise. >> >> ''We are still digging with our hands and shovels because we can't use >> cranes because many of the houses were built of clay,'' Qassim said. >> >> Hospitals across the region were overwhelmed and only emergency vehicles >> were exempt from a curfew that was in place across towns west of Mosul, >> 225 miles northwest of Baghdad. >> >> Nurses dabbed the bloodied face of a young boy and held his hand as he >> wailed in pain. A toddler with bruised eyes had bandages wrapped around >> his head and arms. >> >> ''The car bombs that were used all had the consistent profile of al-Qaida >> in Iraq violence,'' a U.S. military spokesman, Brig. Gen. Kevin Bergner, >> told reporters in Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone. >> >> Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki issued a statement blaming the >> bombings on ''terrorism powers who seek to fuel sectarian strife and >> damage our people's national unity.'' >> >> U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon issued a statement strongly condemning >> the attack, saying ''nothing can justify such indiscriminate violence >> against innocent civilians.'' He urged Iraqi leaders to set aside >> political and religious differences to work together to protect >> civilians. >> >> Elsewhere in Iraq, at least 44 other people were killed or found dead >> Wednesday, including 24 bullet-riddled bodies of apparent victims of >> sectarian death squads usually run by Shiite militias. Five civilians >> also died in separate car bombings in the northern cities of Mosul and >> Kirkuk and the southern city of Hillah. >> >> Northeast of Baghdad, Iraqi civilians joined police to rise up against >> suspected al-Qaida-linked gunmen after a mortar attack in Buhriz. Eight >> gunmen and six civilians died in the fighting, police said. >> >> > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Al E. Gator Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 "Jerry Okamura" <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote in message news:46c391f7$0$28893$4c368faf@roadrunner.com... > Is success in Iraq important or is it not important? Are you going to > answer me one of these days? > conservatives can not be successful, and hillbilly conservatives can do nothing but lose and fail Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Al E. Gator Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 we should send all of you war supporting, gutless, yellow, cowards to iraq to quell the violence sort of a put up or shut up dose of reality "Jerry Okamura" <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote in message news:46c3aa88$0$18976$4c368faf@roadrunner.com... > > "Verizon News Server" <sid9@bellsouth.net> wrote in message > news:%TMwi.4490$jU4.2451@trnddc02... >> Your question has a false premise. >> >> Success was never possible in Iraq. >> bush,jr attacked the wrong country. >> > Then if success is not possible, then we should withdraw from Iraq > IMMEDIATELY. Do you hear anyone making that demand? Do you hear the > democrats who are the most vocal oppenent of the effort in Iraq make that > demand? Do you hear any of the Democratic Presidential wannabees say that > we should withdraw IMMEDIADETLY. Do you support the IMMEDIATE withdraw of > our troops from Iraq? Why wait for the report from Patraeus? The longer > you wait, more people die..... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Rich Travsky Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 Jerry Okamura wrote: > > Is success in Iraq important or is it not important? Are you going to > answer me one of these days? Define success. Are you going to answer me one of these days? > "Sid9" <sid9@verizon.net> wrote in message > news:FsLwi.12933$jy5.2647@trnddc07... > > August 15, 2007 > > Death Toll in Iraq Blasts Rises to 250 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest z Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 "Jerry Okamura" <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote in news:46c3aa88$0$18976$4c368faf@roadrunner.com: > > "Verizon News Server" <sid9@bellsouth.net> wrote in message > news:%TMwi.4490$jU4.2451@trnddc02... >> Your question has a false premise. >> >> Success was never possible in Iraq. >> bush,jr attacked the wrong country. >> > Then if success is not possible, then we should withdraw from Iraq > IMMEDIATELY. Do you hear anyone making that demand? Do you hear the > democrats who are the most vocal oppenent of the effort in Iraq make > that demand? Do you hear any of the Democratic Presidential wannabees > say that we should withdraw IMMEDIADETLY. Do you support the > IMMEDIATE withdraw of our troops from Iraq? Why wait for the report > from Patraeus? The longer you wait, more people die..... > Thats because democrats suck. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Bokonon Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 "Jerry Okamura" <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote in message news:46c3aa88$0$18976$4c368faf@roadrunner.com... > Then if success is not possible, then we should withdraw from Iraq > IMMEDIATELY. Why? -- "History! Read it and weep!" -Bokonon _______________________________________________ When your only tool is a hammer, everything looks like a nail. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Jerry Okamura Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 "Rich Travsky" <traRvEsky@hotmMOVEail.com> wrote in message news:46C3D47C.17097B7E@hotmMOVEail.com... > Jerry Okamura wrote: >> >> Is success in Iraq important or is it not important? Are you going to >> answer me one of these days? > > Define success. Are you going to answer me one of these days? > You either have not been reading my messages, or you have chosen to ignore my responses. I have defined success a lot of times on these newsgroups. Besides, you don't need my definition of success. Use your own definition of success, then answer the question. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Jerry Okamura Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 "Bokonon" <seattledemocracy@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:13c7pnhnp2imkd9@corp.supernews.com... > > "Jerry Okamura" <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote in message > news:46c3aa88$0$18976$4c368faf@roadrunner.com... > >> Then if success is not possible, then we should withdraw from Iraq >> IMMEDIATELY. > > Why? > You need me to explain why? Beccause if success is not possible, then we are putting our military men and women in harms way, some of them dying everyday, trying to achieve something, that cannot be achieved. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Al E. Gator Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 "Jerry Okamura" <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote in message news:46c43f99$1$16472$4c368faf@roadrunner.com... > > "Bokonon" <seattledemocracy@hotmail.com> wrote in message > news:13c7pnhnp2imkd9@corp.supernews.com... >> >> "Jerry Okamura" <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote in message >> news:46c3aa88$0$18976$4c368faf@roadrunner.com... >> >>> Then if success is not possible, then we should withdraw from Iraq >>> IMMEDIATELY. >> >> Why? >> > You need me to explain why? Beccause if success is not possible, then we > are putting our military men and women in harms way, some of them dying > everyday, trying to achieve something, that cannot be achieved. "WE" ??? you delusional armchair warrior gutless conservative hillbillies have been doing that for 4 1/2 years and we're not letting you losers,failures, and fuckups off the hook Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Al E. Gator Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 "Rich Travsky" <traRvEsky@hotmMOVEail.com> wrote in message news:46C3D47C.17097B7E@hotmMOVEail.com... > Jerry Okamura wrote: >> >> Is success in Iraq important or is it not important? Are you going to >> answer me one of these days? > > Define success. Are you going to answer me one of these days? these conservatives have been losing,failing, and fucking up for 6 1/2 years they got theyselves onea them thar hillbilly presichimps and a hillbilly congress and things was gonna be a whole lot difrent from now on yall hear ?? then they proceeded to do what retarded,bow legged,cross eyed goobers always do they fucked up everything they touched, stole everything they could, tried to turn America into the Hillbilly Reich and the results ? same as always, they got and are still getting their asses whipped where are those arrogant,know it all,insulting, denigrating,loud mouth faggots now ?? sordo,frederick,stevens,marib,nixon, etc. trying to blame it all on liberals, and in their desperation and angst their true nature is starting to show Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Sid9 Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 Jerry Okamura wrote: > "Bokonon" <seattledemocracy@hotmail.com> wrote in message > news:13c7pnhnp2imkd9@corp.supernews.com... >> >> "Jerry Okamura" <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote in message >> news:46c3aa88$0$18976$4c368faf@roadrunner.com... >> >>> Then if success is not possible, then we should withdraw from Iraq >>> IMMEDIATELY. >> >> Why? >> > You need me to explain why? Beccause if success is not possible, > then we are putting our military men and women in harms way, some of > them dying everyday, trying to achieve something, that cannot be > achieved. Not we. You. bush,jr supporters of his fiasco. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest wbyeats@ireland.com Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 On Thu, 16 Aug 2007 02:13:47 -0700, "Jerry Okamura" <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote: > >"Bokonon" <seattledemocracy@hotmail.com> wrote in message >news:13c7pnhnp2imkd9@corp.supernews.com... >> >> "Jerry Okamura" <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote in message >> news:46c3aa88$0$18976$4c368faf@roadrunner.com... >> >>> Then if success is not possible, then we should withdraw from Iraq >>> IMMEDIATELY. >> >> Why? >> >You need me to explain why? Beccause if success is not possible, then we >are putting our military men and women in harms way, some of them dying >everyday, trying to achieve something, that cannot be achieved. I guess we need to make it simple. Success is not possible. The invasion of Iraq was stupid, unnecessary, ill-planned, and poorly executed. The US destabilized a country and had little if any plans for the consequences of what anyone with half a brain and a knowledge of the region knew would occur - sectarian strife. So the US has succeeded in starting an internal war and putting the US military right smack-dab in the middle. The stabilization of Iraq is a political battle - not military. If the soldiers leave then all hell breaks loose. If the soldiers stay, they continue to die for political (not military) reasons. Success is next to impossible so the soldiers should come home. That leaves the US in the untenable position of taking down a regime (no matter how evil and corrupt) and leaving nothing in return. It's our fault that Iraq is in the position we see today. WB Yeats Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Jerry Okamura Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 typical response. Avoid answering a question you do not want to answer at all cost....make it into a personal attack, by attacking the messenger.... "Al E. Gator" <ho.ho@yahoo.net> wrote in message news:T8Zwi.2480$3x.1396@newssvr25.news.prodigy.net... > > "Rich Travsky" <traRvEsky@hotmMOVEail.com> wrote in message > news:46C3D47C.17097B7E@hotmMOVEail.com... >> Jerry Okamura wrote: >>> >>> Is success in Iraq important or is it not important? Are you going to >>> answer me one of these days? >> >> Define success. Are you going to answer me one of these days? > > these conservatives have been losing,failing, and fucking up for 6 1/2 > years > > they got theyselves onea them thar hillbilly presichimps and a hillbilly > congress and things was gonna be a whole lot difrent from now on yall hear > ?? > > then they proceeded to do what retarded,bow legged,cross eyed goobers > always do > > they fucked up everything they touched, stole everything they could, > tried to turn America into the Hillbilly Reich and > > the results ? > > same as always, they got and are still getting their asses whipped > > where are those arrogant,know it all,insulting, denigrating,loud mouth > faggots now ?? > > > sordo,frederick,stevens,marib,nixon, etc. > > trying to blame it all on liberals, and in their desperation and angst > their true nature is starting to show > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Jerry Okamura Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 "Sid9" <sid9@verizon.net> wrote in message news:i8_wi.7400$xc5.5582@trnddc06... > Jerry Okamura wrote: >> "Bokonon" <seattledemocracy@hotmail.com> wrote in message >> news:13c7pnhnp2imkd9@corp.supernews.com... >>> >>> "Jerry Okamura" <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote in message >>> news:46c3aa88$0$18976$4c368faf@roadrunner.com... >>> >>>> Then if success is not possible, then we should withdraw from Iraq >>>> IMMEDIATELY. >>> >>> Why? >>> >> You need me to explain why? Beccause if success is not possible, >> then we are putting our military men and women in harms way, some of >> them dying everyday, trying to achieve something, that cannot be >> achieved. > > Not we. > You. > bush,jr supporters of his fiasco. > Total foolishness. The "we" are the members of Congress, who "we" elected to represent us. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Jerry Okamura Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 <wbyeats@ireland.com> wrote in message news:f3r8c35j2esfp2h8g5hgois0ggc0dfa56a@4ax.com... > On Thu, 16 Aug 2007 02:13:47 -0700, "Jerry Okamura" > <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote: > >> >>"Bokonon" <seattledemocracy@hotmail.com> wrote in message >>news:13c7pnhnp2imkd9@corp.supernews.com... >>> >>> "Jerry Okamura" <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote in message >>> news:46c3aa88$0$18976$4c368faf@roadrunner.com... >>> >>>> Then if success is not possible, then we should withdraw from Iraq >>>> IMMEDIATELY. >>> >>> Why? >>> >>You need me to explain why? Beccause if success is not possible, then we >>are putting our military men and women in harms way, some of them dying >>everyday, trying to achieve something, that cannot be achieved. > > I guess we need to make it simple. Success is not possible. The > invasion of Iraq was stupid, unnecessary, ill-planned, and poorly > executed. The US destabilized a country and had little if any plans > for the consequences of what anyone with half a brain and a knowledge > of the region knew would occur - sectarian strife. So the US has > succeeded in starting an internal war and putting the US military > right smack-dab in the middle. The stabilization of Iraq is a > political battle - not military. If the soldiers leave then all hell > breaks loose. If the soldiers stay, they continue to die for political > (not military) reasons. Success is next to impossible so the soldiers > should come home. That leaves the US in the untenable position of > taking down a regime (no matter how evil and corrupt) and leaving > nothing in return. It's our fault that Iraq is in the position we see > today. > So, you agree that we should pull out of Iraq IMMEDIATELY? Is that what the democrats are forcing the President to do? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Jerry Okamura Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 "Sid9" <sid9@verizon.net> wrote in message news:sW%wi.4651$jU4.2563@trnddc02... > wbyeats@ireland.com wrote: >> On Thu, 16 Aug 2007 02:13:47 -0700, "Jerry Okamura" >> <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote: >> >>> >>> "Bokonon" <seattledemocracy@hotmail.com> wrote in message >>> news:13c7pnhnp2imkd9@corp.supernews.com... >>>> >>>> "Jerry Okamura" <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote in message >>>> news:46c3aa88$0$18976$4c368faf@roadrunner.com... >>>> >>>>> Then if success is not possible, then we should withdraw from Iraq >>>>> IMMEDIATELY. >>>> >>>> Why? >>>> >>> You need me to explain why? Beccause if success is not possible, >>> then we are putting our military men and women in harms way, some of >>> them dying everyday, trying to achieve something, that cannot be >>> achieved. >> >> I guess we need to make it simple. Success is not possible. The >> invasion of Iraq was stupid, unnecessary, ill-planned, and poorly >> executed. The US destabilized a country and had little if any plans >> for the consequences of what anyone with half a brain and a knowledge >> of the region knew would occur - sectarian strife. So the US has >> succeeded in starting an internal war and putting the US military >> right smack-dab in the middle. The stabilization of Iraq is a >> political battle - not military. If the soldiers leave then all hell >> breaks loose. If the soldiers stay, they continue to die for political >> (not military) reasons. Success is next to impossible so the soldiers >> should come home. That leaves the US in the untenable position of >> taking down a regime (no matter how evil and corrupt) and leaving >> nothing in return. It's our fault that Iraq is in the position we see >> today. >> >> WB Yeats > > > Well said. > > Looking out for American interests, we need to get out now. > > bush,jr wrecked America's reputation > > Out now, we can start to rebuild > our military and, with a new > administration, rebuild our place in the world. Why do we "have to rebuild" our military? What is the purpose of having a military? The purpose of having a military is (1) to defend our country it attacked, (2) to protect our access to vital resources, and (3) to use the military for humanitarian reasons. We do not have to have such a large military to defend this country. We do need a large military to protect our access to vital resouces. We "could" use our super power status to do some good. But, Iraq does have a vital resource called oil....and we do not seem wiling to protect our access to that vital resource, then the logical question is, what vital resource are we willing to protect? And if we are not willing to use our super power status, while we are in the catbirds seat to try to make the people of the world live a better life, what does that say about our moral values? Besides, we don't seem to have the stomach for a fight, so what good is having a military when you do not have the stomach for the fight, that will happen when you use our military? > > Iraqis need to fend for themselves > and resolve their issues without > Americans in the crossfire. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Jerry Okamura Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 "Sid9" <sid9@verizon.net> wrote in message news:sN%wi.4645$jU4.315@trnddc02... > Jerry Okamura wrote: >> "Rich Travsky" <traRvEsky@hotmMOVEail.com> wrote in message >> news:46C3D47C.17097B7E@hotmMOVEail.com... >>> Jerry Okamura wrote: >>>> >>>> Is success in Iraq important or is it not important? Are you going >>>> to answer me one of these days? >>> >>> Define success. Are you going to answer me one of these days? >>> >> You either have not been reading my messages, or you have chosen to >> ignore my responses. I have defined success a lot of times on these >> newsgroups. Besides, you don't need my definition of success. Use >> your own definition of success, then answer the question. > > > There is no "success" in an > ill conceived enterprise that > was doomed from the it's > flawed concept > If you cannot achieve success, and if success is not important then we should not be there in the first place, and we should get the helll out of Dodge IMMEDIATELY. If success is not important, then it does not matte what Patreus has to say about progess, because success is not imporant or we cannot achieve success in any event, so why should the democrats wait until they hear from Patreus? Why aren't they taking aciton to get us our of Dodge IMMEDIATELY? Why do they keep throwing money at a problem that cannot be successful? Why didn't they cut off all funding for the effort in Iraq? Perhaps becuase they do not share your belief that success is not important, or because they do not share your belief that success in not possible? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Sid9 Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 Jerry Okamura wrote: > "Rich Travsky" <traRvEsky@hotmMOVEail.com> wrote in message > news:46C3D47C.17097B7E@hotmMOVEail.com... >> Jerry Okamura wrote: >>> >>> Is success in Iraq important or is it not important? Are you going >>> to answer me one of these days? >> >> Define success. Are you going to answer me one of these days? >> > You either have not been reading my messages, or you have chosen to > ignore my responses. I have defined success a lot of times on these > newsgroups. Besides, you don't need my definition of success. Use > your own definition of success, then answer the question. There is no "success" in an ill conceived enterprise that was doomed from the it's flawed concept Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Sid9 Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 wbyeats@ireland.com wrote: > On Thu, 16 Aug 2007 02:13:47 -0700, "Jerry Okamura" > <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote: > >> >> "Bokonon" <seattledemocracy@hotmail.com> wrote in message >> news:13c7pnhnp2imkd9@corp.supernews.com... >>> >>> "Jerry Okamura" <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote in message >>> news:46c3aa88$0$18976$4c368faf@roadrunner.com... >>> >>>> Then if success is not possible, then we should withdraw from Iraq >>>> IMMEDIATELY. >>> >>> Why? >>> >> You need me to explain why? Beccause if success is not possible, >> then we are putting our military men and women in harms way, some of >> them dying everyday, trying to achieve something, that cannot be >> achieved. > > I guess we need to make it simple. Success is not possible. The > invasion of Iraq was stupid, unnecessary, ill-planned, and poorly > executed. The US destabilized a country and had little if any plans > for the consequences of what anyone with half a brain and a knowledge > of the region knew would occur - sectarian strife. So the US has > succeeded in starting an internal war and putting the US military > right smack-dab in the middle. The stabilization of Iraq is a > political battle - not military. If the soldiers leave then all hell > breaks loose. If the soldiers stay, they continue to die for political > (not military) reasons. Success is next to impossible so the soldiers > should come home. That leaves the US in the untenable position of > taking down a regime (no matter how evil and corrupt) and leaving > nothing in return. It's our fault that Iraq is in the position we see > today. > > WB Yeats Well said. Looking out for American interests, we need to get out now. bush,jr wrecked America's reputation Out now, we can start to rebuild our military and, with a new administration, rebuild our place in the world. Iraqis need to fend for themselves and resolve their issues without Americans in the crossfire. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Jerry Okamura Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 "Sid9" <sid9@verizon.net> wrote in message news:fn2xi.10228$Ns6.6825@trnddc01... > Jerry Okamura wrote: >> "Sid9" <sid9@verizon.net> wrote in message >> news:i8_wi.7400$xc5.5582@trnddc06... >>> Jerry Okamura wrote: >>>> "Bokonon" <seattledemocracy@hotmail.com> wrote in message >>>> news:13c7pnhnp2imkd9@corp.supernews.com... >>>>> >>>>> "Jerry Okamura" <okamuraj005@hawaii.rr.com> wrote in message >>>>> news:46c3aa88$0$18976$4c368faf@roadrunner.com... >>>>> >>>>>> Then if success is not possible, then we should withdraw from Iraq >>>>>> IMMEDIATELY. >>>>> >>>>> Why? >>>>> >>>> You need me to explain why? Beccause if success is not possible, >>>> then we are putting our military men and women in harms way, some of >>>> them dying everyday, trying to achieve something, that cannot be >>>> achieved. >>> >>> Not we. >>> You. >>> bush,jr supporters of his fiasco. >>> >> >> Total foolishness. The "we" are the members of Congress, who "we" >> elected to represent us. > > The "Unitary Executive", a role > which bush,jr has taken for himself > is the "Uniter-Decider-Commander-in-Chief" > > He need only face up to facts > of the situation` on the ground > and take action. > > But, NO! You do not seem to have a basic understanding of how your own government works. The Congress holds the ultimate trump card. It does not matter what Bush wants to do, or does not want to do, in Iraq. "If" the Congress wants to stop the President, they can do that with one simple move....defund the money that is required to fund the effort. Have they done that? No, they have not... They did just the opposite, they provided the funding that the President requested. So, don't make such dumb statements. > > He waits for Petraeus to declare > victory and redeploy our troops > in the plan proposed over two > years ago and 1,500 death fewer > by John Murtha. And if he doesn't do that, then what are you going to say? Are we going to hear from you that your prediction was wrong? > > Your role here is a desperate > attempt to shift the blame away > from bush,jr and the Republicans. > > It wont work. > > The polls tell the story. > The polls do not tell anything. The "people" do not know if success is possbile or not possible. These are the same people who cannot tell you who the Vice President of the United States are, or cannot name most of the members of the US Supreme Court, or tell you who is the current Speaker of the House, or who is the majority leader in the Senate, much less who the minority leaders of both houses are. Besides, the polls also tell us that "we" do not want to lose either.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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