GI SPECIAL 4D15:

Stephen Joseph Perez, 22, with the U.S. Marine Corps, was
killed Wednesday in Iraq. (Courtesy photo)
“He Told Us
It Wasn't Like What Was On TV”
“He Said It
Was 10 Times Worse”
“It Was The
Worst Place Imaginable”
S.A. Family
Learns Young Marine Is Dead
04/14/2006 Michelle Mondo,
Express-News Staff Writer, KENS 5
The family of a local Marine
gathered at a Northwest Side home to grieve Thursday night
after learning their 22-year-old relative had been killed in
Iraq.
Few details were given to the
family concerning the death of Cpl. Stephen Joseph Perez,
his brother Kenneth said.
"Two Marines just came to our
door at 6:30 and told us that he died," Perez, 26, said.
Perez said he didn't know
which unit his brother was assigned to, but did know he was
based out of Camp Pendleton in California and had been
training Iraqi soldiers. He said Perez often traveled from
Karma to Fallujah, two known hotspots.
"When he was in Karma I would
talk to him at least twice a week and we would get a letter
every two weeks," Perez said. "He was always worried about
us worrying about him."
Perez said the Marines told
the family they would have more information in the coming
days. Then, they handed the family Perez's cell phone, his
brother said.
Perez joined the Marines after
the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks. He had been a freshman
at St. Mary's University studying engineering.
"He couldn't believe anyone
would do that to his country," he said. "He loved his
country so much."
Perez's mother was at the
house when the Marines delivered the news. Perez's father
and grandfather live in Eagle Pass.
Perez's
first tour in Iraq began in December 2004. He was sent to
Southeast Asia to help the tsunami victims but returned to
Iraq this January. He was due to come home in August. He
wanted to return to St. Mary's and get his teaching
certificate.
"He told us
it wasn't like what was on TV. He said it was 10 times
worse. It was the worst place imaginable," Perez said.
As the news of his death
spread Thursday night, cars lined both sides of the street
leading to Perez's house. Family and friends, carrying
plastic bags filled with food, consoled each other at the
end of the driveway.
"We're all in shock," Kenneth
Perez said. "It's like I've been dreaming, but it's not,
it's reality. You never think it would happen to one of
your own."
IRAQ WAR
REPORTS
TWO MARINES
KILLED,
22 WOUNDED
IN AL ANBAR PROVINCE
4/14/2006 HEADQUARTERS UNITED
STATES CENTRAL COMMAND NEWS RELEASE Number: 06-04-01CR
CAMP
FALLUJAH, Iraq: Two Marines died and 22 were wounded due to
enemy action while operating in al Anbar Province April 13.
One Marine, assigned to I
Marine Expeditionary Force Headquarters Group, died at the
scene of the attack. Another, assigned to Regimental Combat
Team 5, died at a medical facility in Taqqadum.
Eight wounded Marines, all
assigned to Regimental Combat Team 5, were evacuated by air
to a medical facility in Balad. Two were listed in critical
condition. Six were listed in stable condition.
Ten wounded Marines, all
assigned to Regimental Combat Team 5, were evacuated to a
medical facility at Camp Fallujah. Four were being held for
observation. Six were treated and returned to duty.
Four other Marines assigned to
Regimental Combat Team 5 received minor wounds.
Three Fort
Hood Soldiers Killed,
Another
Broke Back And Loses Both Legs
Apr 13, 2006 KCEN TV:
The soldiers were assigned to
the 4th Infantry Division, First Brigade Combat Team.
The soldiers killed are
Corporal Joseph Blanco of California, Private First Class
James Costello of Missouri, and Private First Class George
Roehl Junior of New Hampshire.
Private Devon Gibbons, was
severely burned during the insurgent attack. Gibbons father
told a newspaper in his home state of Washington Devon was
badly burned, broke his back and lost both legs.
The Defense Department says a
roadside bomb exploded near the soldiers' Bradley in Taji on
Tuesday. Then they were shot at.
The newspaper reports that
Gibbons is being transferred from a hospital in Germany to
Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio.
Local
Marine Killed

Lance Cpl. Marcus Glimpse
April 14, 2006 By JEFF ROWE,
The Orange County Register
Lance Cpl. Marcus Glimpse of
Huntington Beach was killed Wednesday when an improvised
bomb exploded at the security checkpoint where he was
deployed in Al Anbar province in Iraq.
Glimpse,
22, is the 26th Orange County resident to die in Afghanistan
or Iraq. He was a machine gunner and on his second tour in
Iraq.
Glimpse was born in Fort Sill,
Okla., and spent his elementary and junior high years in
Plano, Texas. He graduated from Huntington Beach Continuing
Education High School.
He enlisted in the Marine
Corps in October 2003 and had been stationed at Camp
Pendleton. His twin brother, Michael, was an Army
paratrooper. "He (Marcus) always needed to outdo his
brother," said his father, Guy Glimpse, speaking of Marcus'
decision to join the Marine Corps.
Besides his father and
brother, Marcus leaves his mother, Maryan, and sisters Mandy
and Megan.
On an earlier deployment,
Marcus had helped with tsunami relief in Sri Lanka in early
2005. He returned to Iraq in January.
THERE IS
ABSOLUTELY NO COMPREHENSIBLE REASON TO BE IN THIS EXTREMELY
HIGH RISK LOCATION AT THIS TIME, EXCEPT THAT A TRAITOR WHO
LIVES IN THE WHITE HOUSE WANTS YOU THERE, SO HE WILL LOOK
GOOD.
That is not
a good enough reason.

A US soldier at a police
station damaged in a blast in Mosul. (AFP/Mujahed
Mohammed)
Basra Bomb
Wounds 4 British Soldiers
4.14.06 Reuters
BASRA, Iraq: A roadside bomb
killed two Iraqis and wounded four British soldiers near the
southern Iraqi city of Basra on Friday, a British military
spokesman said.
Rockets,
Mortar Rounds Hit U.S. Base Near Fallujah
April 13, 2006 People's Daily
Insurgents
on Thursday fired rockets and mortar rounds at a U.S.
military base near the restive city of Fallujah, some 50 km
west of Baghdad, witnesses said.
"Insurgents
fired two rockets at 6:00 a.m. (0200 GMT) and three mortar
rounds 90 minutes later, at Habaniyah military base, which
houses U.S. and Iraqi forces," witnesses told Xinhua on
condition of anonymity.
They said they heard loud
explosions and sirens in the base and saw U.S. helicopters
hovering over the area around the base.
Notes From A Lost War:
Ramadi:
“It Seemed
Like We Were Fighting The Entire City”
[This is
supposed to be a news story about a lucky soldier. Read
between the lines: it’s really about a besieged occupation
army stuck in a losing war, and attacked on every side. T]
April 14, 2006 By Todd Pitman,
Associated Press
RAMADI, Iraq: The young Marine
had just shot a suspected insurgent and was walking back
across the villa’s rooftop when he keeled over from a
terrific thud to the back of his head.
A sniper had fired a single,
well-aimed bullet that tore through the top of Lance Cpl.
Richard Caseltine’s helmet, traced a path along the edge of
his skull and buried burning bullet fragments in the back of
his neck.
Less than a minute later, the
20-year-old from Aurora, Ind., was up on his feet —
crouching, shaking and miraculously, still alive.
“You expect when somebody gets
shot in the head, they’re dead,” the soft-spoken Caseltine
told The Associated Press in an interview, cradling the
battered camouflage helmet that saved his life Saturday. “I
consider myself very lucky.”
Caseltine was among two squads
from the 3rd Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment’s India Company
moving through the rocket-blasted streets of downtown Ramadi
on a joint foot patrol with the Iraqi army.
Caseltine and several others
were tasked with providing “overwatch,” finding a place from
where they could watch over the rest of the patrol.
They entered the front gate of
a two-story villa and herded a man, his wife and their
children into a room.
Four Marines then climbed the
stairs to a rooftop enclosed by shoulder-high walls, each
taking positions in separate corners to scan adjacent
buildings and streets.
Half an hour later, Lance Cpl.
Benjamin Congleton, 22, of Lexington, Ky., spotted a man in
a black T-shirt crouching on the ground near a light pole.
He was fiddling with a tangle of wires and looking from side
to side.
Congleton called Caseltine
over for a second opinion. They agreed the man was trying to
plant a bomb.
Congleton fired his M-16, but
missed. The startled man tried to stand up. Caseltine
fired his M-4 Carbine, hitting the man in the leg.
Congleton then shot the man in the head as he tried to flee
down an alleyway, apparently killing him.
Caseltine took three or four
steps back to his position in the rooftop corner when he
felt something strike the top backside of his helmet.
“It felt like somebody came
from behind and punched me in the back of the head as hard
as they could,” Caseltine said. “It just rocked me. I went
forward and my ears started ringing really bad. I couldn’t
hear anything.”
It wasn’t clear at first if
one of the Marines had misfired one of their weapons. But
in a split-second, they understood the sole shot had not
come from them.
Ducking to the ground, they
rushed to Caseltine’s aid.
“He was yelling, ‘I got hit! I
got hit!’ Congleton said.
A cursory check revealed blood
at the back of Caseltine’s neck but no serious wounds.
Caseltine was still
conscious. Able to walk, he got up and, crouching, moved to
the relative safety of a room downstairs, where a Navy
corpsman examined him.
The back of his neck burned,
but he was fine otherwise.
“He had this big smile on his
face,” said Lance Cpl. Jefferson Ortiz, 21, of Miami. “He
knew he’d gotten very, very lucky.”
As troops popped smoke
grenades, a Humvee arrived to evacuated the wounded Marine.
Congleton
said he believed the sniper had been providing “overwatch”
for insurgents planting bombs in preparation for a major
assault on the Marine-protected provincial government
headquarters. The attack began the minute the rest of the
squad exited the villa.
“We were
taking fire from every street corner,” Congleton said. “It
seemed like we were fighting the entire city.”
Bounding
across rubble-strewn intersections nearby, one Iraqi soldier
was hit by a bomb that blew other Iraqis into the air.
Some got up
and kept running, but one soldier lay writhing and bloodied;
one of legs was partially detached. A couple Iraqi soldiers
began dragging him by his clothes, but a Marine lifted the
soldier onto his back and carried him away, Congleton said.
Caseltine, meanwhile, was
flown to a military medical facility at nearby Balad Air
Base, where medics removed fragments from the bullet that
were lodged a quarter-inch into the back of his neck.
“They said I was lucky it
didn’t go in deeper. My luck was running pretty good that
day,” Caseltine said. “If I had bought a lottery ticket, I
probably would have won.”
AFGHANISTAN
WAR REPORTS
Two British
Soldiers Wounded In Lashkar Gah
14 April 2006 Reuters
Three
policemen were killed on Friday when a remote-control bomb
hit their truck on a main road outside the southeastern town
of Khost, said provincial police chief Mohammad Ayoub.
Earlier,
two British soldiers from a NATO-led peacekeeping force were
among three people wounded in suicide car-bomb attack in
Lashkar Gah, the provincial capital of the southern province
of Helmand.
The attacker died as he rammed
his car into a vehicle near the entrance of a base used by
foreign troops, said senior provincial official Mahaiuddin,
who uses one name. The Taliban telephoned Reuters to claim
responsibility.
Elsewhere on Friday, foreign
and Afghan forces, backed by air support, launched an
offensive against Taliban fighters hiding in Maiwand
district of Kandahar province, said Rahmatullah Raufi, a
senior Afghan National Army commander.
At least on Afghan soldier was
killed in the fighting, a provincial official said.
The Great
Afghan Stolen Secrets Farce Rolls On
The
troops hadn’t returned to the market by Friday afternoon
despite dozens of the flash drives still being
available.
April 14, 2006 By Daniel
Cooney, Associated Press & Washington Post
BAGRAM,
Afghanistan: Shopkeepers outside U.S. military headquarters
in Afghanistan said Friday that American investigators have
paid them thousands of dollars to return stolen computer
drives, many of which contained sensitive military data.
But dozens
of the memory sticks were still on sale in shops outside the
base and the shopkeepers let an Associated Press reporter
review about 40 of them on a laptop computer.
One shopkeeper, who spoke on
condition of anonymity because of fear of retribution, said
soldiers went around the market outside the base Thursday
carrying “a box full of afghanis (the Afghan currency),
buying all they could find.”
He said he sold about 50 for
$2,000, roughly about $40 each. A day earlier, he was
selling them for about half that price.
“They said they wanted them
all and price wasn’t important,” the shopkeeper said.
The troops
hadn’t returned to the market by Friday afternoon despite
dozens of the flash drives still being available.
Maps, charts and intelligence
reports on computer drives smuggled out of the main U.S.
base in Afghanistan and sold at a nearby bazaar appear to
detail how Taliban and Al Qaeda leaders have been using
southwestern Pakistan as a key planning and training base
for attacks.
In one
report contained in a flash memory drive, a U.S. handler
indicates that the United States discussed with two Afghan
spies the possibility of capturing or killing Taliban
commanders in Pakistani territory.
NEED SOME
TRUTH? CHECK OUT TRAVELING SOLDIER
Telling
the truth - about the occupation or the criminals
running the government in Washington - is the first
reason for Traveling Soldier. But we want to do more
than tell the truth; we want to report on the resistance
- whether it's in the streets of Baghdad, New York, or
inside the armed forces. Our goal is for Traveling
Soldier to become the thread that ties working-class
people inside the armed services together. We want this
newsletter to be a weapon to help you organize
resistance within the armed forces. If you like what
you've read, we hope that you'll join with us in
building a network of active duty organizers.
http://www.traveling-soldier.org/
And join
with Iraq War vets in the call to end the occupation and
bring our troops home now! (www.ivaw.net)
TROOP NEWS
THIS IS HOW
BUSH BRINGS THE TROOPS HOME:
BRING THEM
ALL HOME NOW, ALIVE

The casket of U.S. Marine Sgt.
David Kreuter in Spring Grove Cemetery, Aug. 20, 2005 in
Cincinnati. (AP Photo/David Kohl)
Rats
Abandon The Stinking Shit:
Two More
Retired Generals Demand Rumsfeld's Resignation,
Six This
Month, So Far.
The
difference this time is that those insisting that the
secretary should step down are recently retired flag
officers who appear to reflect widespread sentiment
among people still in uniform.
"The
senior civilian leadership is going to do everything it
possibly can to avoid having responsibility for the war
fixed on them, and the senior military leadership is
equally determined to have them left holding the bag,"
Mr Bacevich said.
April 14,2006 By TOM RAUM
Associated Press Writer & Suzanne Goldenberg in Washington,
The Guardian
Retired
Army Major Gen. John Riggs told National Public Radio that
Rumsfeld fostered an "atmosphere of arrogance." Retired
Army Maj. Gen. Charles Swannack told CNN that Rumsfeld
micromanaged the war. "We need a new secretary of defense,"
he said.
Military experts say the
parade of recently retired military brass calling for
Rumsfeld's resignation is troubling and threatens to
undermine strong support Bush has enjoyed among the officer
corps and troops. [This
qualifies as the most out of touch with reality sentence in
a news story for April 2006, so far. The troops support
Bush like a rope supports a hanging man.]
With public anti-war sentiment
increasing, "the president and his team cannot afford to
lose that support," said Kurt Campbell, a former deputy
assistant secretary of defense.
[In that case, he’s truly
fucked. And Campbell must have his head fixed firmly up his
ass to have to failed to notice that a Zogby poll found 29%
of troops in Iraq are for immediate withdrawal, and 72% say
get out no later than Dec. 31, 2005. Duh.]
Yet for Bush to try to
distance himself from Rumsfeld “would call into question
everything about the last three years’ strategy in ways the
White House worries would send a very negative message,”
said Campbell, now with the Center for Strategic and
International Studies.
“It’s a
bursting of the dam in some ways of the frustration and
anger, not only with the policies but with the way that Mr
Rumsfeld has interacted with people, the disrespect he has
shown to the military,” said Richard Kohn, a military
historian at the University of North Carolina.
"You have a group now that is
looking back and saying: 'Wow. I should have said something
earlier.' I think as time goes on it is natural that more
and more generals after agonising over what they have seen
over the last three years might voice their concerns," said
Robert Work, a retired Marine colonel and an analyst at the
Centre for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments.
But some in the military are
anxious to avoid blame for the Iraq war.
"The senior
civilian leadership is going to do everything it possibly
can to avoid having responsibility for the war fixed on
them, and the senior military leadership is equally
determined to have them left holding the bag," Mr Bacevich
said.
Republicans in Congress have offered Rumsfeld little in the
way of public support.
The defense of Rumsfeld is a
perennial exercise for the White House whenever a fresh
round of Rumsfeld-must-go demands arise on Capitol Hill or
elsewhere in Washington.
The
difference this time is that those insisting that the
secretary should step down are recently retired flag
officers who appear to reflect widespread sentiment among
people still in uniform.
MORE:
Dumb General
“Batiste Is
Guilty Of Lapses In Judgment Just As Gross As Rumsfeld’s”
From: Don
Bacon, The Smedley Butler Society
To: GI Special
Sent: April 14, 2006
Subject: Dumb Generals
[Comment by
Don Bacon:]
ISN'T IT
ODD HOW GENERALS GET SMARTER WHEN THEY RETIRE?
BUT THEY'RE
STILL NOT SMART ENOUGH TO QUESTION THE FOLLY OF IMPERIALISM
GENERAL
BATISTE: "IRAQIS DO NOT UNDERSTAND THEIR RESPONSIBILITIES"
(LIKE BATISTE?)
LISTEN UP,
BATISTE: THEY UNDERSTAND THEIR RESPONSIBILITIES FULL
WELL--TO GET US OUT OF THEIR COUNTRY.
YOU WERE
WRONG A YEAR AGO AND YOU'RE WRONG NOW.
DO WHAT OLD
GENERALS ARE SUPPOSED TO DO AND JUST FADE AWAY.
****************************************
April 13, 2006 David Axe,
Defensetech.org
Army Maj. Gen. John Batiste, former commander of the 82nd
Airborne Division: this year:
Batiste, like (Army Maj. Gen.
Charles) Swannack, joined the fray (slamming Rumsfeld)
relatively late, in an interview with CNN's Miles O'Brien on
Wednesday.
The
interview opened with Batiste slamming Iraq's potential for
democracy: "Iraqis, frankly, in my experience, do not
understand democracy. Nor do they understand their
responsibilities for a free society."
The interview continued:
O'BRIEN:
So, you're suggesting a wholesale house cleaning (of Defense
Dept. leadership)?
BATISTE: I didn't say
wholesale. I said new leadership in the Pentagon, a fresh
start. You know, it speaks volumes that guys like me are
speaking out from retirement about the leadership climate in
the Department of Defense.
O'BRIEN:
What is going on that is -- what is it about that climate
that is leading to difficulties, leading to trouble, leading
to -- as you put it -- perhaps unnecessary bloodshed?
BATISTE: I
didn't say unnecessary bloodshed. But when decisions are
made without taking into account sound military
recommendations, sound military decision making, sound
planning, then we're bound to make mistakes.
When we
violate the principles of war with mass and unity of command
and unity of effort, we do that at our own peril.
****************************************
[David Axe
writes:]
Ahem.
I met
Batiste a year ago when he was commander of the 1st Infantry
Division in Iraq. We spoke for an hour
about the insurgency, the Iraqi Army and the upcoming
January election for an interim national assembly.
The
difference between Batiste's attitude then and his attitude
now is surprising.
Last year,
he said the insurgency was "not an impressive effort",
insisted that Al Qaeda was behind the worst attacks in Iraq
and predicted that everyday Iraqis would soon turn against
insurgents.
And the kicker: he described
the chunk of the World Trade Center that he kept in his
office to remind himself why we had to invade Iraq.
From the
safety of retirement, and with his buddies watching his
back, Batiste has lashed out at Rumsfeld.
But Batiste
is guilty of lapses in judgment just as gross as Rumsfeld's.
The only difference is that
Rumsfeld ranks higher, so his lapses have greater
consequences. I'm not defending Rummy.
But if Batiste were Secretary
of Defense instead, I doubt we'd be much better off.
Below are
excerpts of my interview with Batiste:
Q: What is
the insurgent strategy?
BATISTE: I
haven't seen an insurgent strategy. I've seen disparate
efforts. A piece of me says that we give them too much
credit.
Q: What is
the gravest threat (in the 1st Infantry Division area of
operations)?
BATISTE: Al Qaeda.
Q: How are
Iraqi security forces shaping up?
BATISTE: The enemy ... he's a coward, is what he is.
It's not an impressive effort, and these great Iraqi
security forces are figuring that out. [Carve that
world class idiocy on his tombstone.]
Q: What
does a successful election mean for Iraq?
BATISTE: A good election is a
huge victory. Our challenge is to give Iraqis an
alternative to an insurgency. You know, I carry a piece of
the World Trade Center ... to remind me why we're here.
Q: Why are
we here?
BATISTE: To
end radical Islamic fundamentalism.
Q: But wasn't Saddam Hussein's regime hostile to radical
Islamists?
BATISTE: We
could argue about that all night.
[end of interview]
David Axe
MORE:
When
Batiste Kissed The Rumsfeld Ass
April 14, 2006 Washington
Times
On a chilly
December night in 2004, General Batiste introduced Rumsfeld
to his soldiers thus: "This is a man with the courage and
the conviction to win the war on terrorism."
MORE:
“Are There
Really Thousands And Thousands Of American Admirals And
Generals Alive Right Now?”
From: A
To: GI Special
Sent: April 14, 2006
Why are all
the generals asking Rumsfeld to remove himself? Does shit
flush itself down the toilet?
"The fact that two or three or
four retired people have different views, I respect their
views," Rumsfeld said.
"But
obviously if, out of thousands and thousands of admirals and
generals, if every time two or three people disagreed we
changed the secretary of defense of the United States, it
would be like a merry-go-round." 4.14.06
TOM RAUM, Associated Press Writer
Question:
Are there really thousands and thousands of American
admirals and generals alive right now?
Do you
have a friend or relative in the service? Forward this
E-MAIL along, or send us the address if you wish and
we’ll send it regularly.
Whether in Iraq or stuck on a base in the USA, this is
extra important for your service friend, too often cut
off from access to encouraging news of growing
resistance to the war, at home and inside the armed
services.
Send requests to address up top.

Oh Please!
They Can’t
Find Him, If He Exists At All, But He Sent General Vines His
Travel Schedule?
April 14, 2006 Washington
Times
Al Qaeda in Iraq and its
presumed leader, Abu Musab Zarqawi, have conceded strategic
defeat and are on their way out of the country, a top U.S.
military official contended.
The group's failure to disrupt
national elections and a constitutional referendum last year
"was a tactical admission by Zarqawi that their strategy had
failed," said Lt. Gen. John R. Vines, who commands the XVIII
Airborne Corps.
IRAQ
RESISTANCE ROUNDUP
Elaborately
Planned Resistance Ambush Wipes Out Occupation Cop Convoy:
U.S. Troops
Help The Insurgents Set It Up:
Heavy
Losses For Collaborator Regime
4.14.06 By Nelson Hernandez
and Saad Sarhan, WASHINGTON POST & Omaha World-Herald &
Aljazeera & Reuters & AP & BAKU TODAY
The assault on a convoy of 50
to 60 police cars erupted outside the town of Taji, 12 miles
north of Baghdad, said 1st Lt. Mouayiad Shukor in Najaf.
Shukor said approximately 90
officers from four stations in Najaf had just picked up new
cars in Taji and were traveling south to get new weapons and
ammunition when they found the main road blocked by U.S.
troops.
The
Americans told the Iraqis that they had discovered a bomb on
the road and told them to take a detour through the
countryside, following them part of the way before letting
them go on alone, Shukor said.
A roadside
bomb exploded, and attackers hidden in the orchards and
farmhouses flanking the road opened fire on the convoy with
Kalashnikov assault rifles and RPK machine guns. Over the
course of a two-hour firefight, all the police cars were
destroyed, Shukor said, and survivors fled to a nearby
military base on foot and by hitching rides.
Shukor said that only five of
the 22 men in his unit returned to Najaf alive.
As ambulances loaded with
wounded police trickled back into Najaf, a team of special
police commandos guarded the entrance to the local hospital
and refused to allow journalists inside.
A senior Najaf police
official, General Abbas Mohammad, said that at least 17 were
killed, 10 were wounded and 50 missing after the bombing.
Authorities were still trying
to determine casualties, Interior Ministry and police
sources said on Friday.
Most of the police vehicles
were destroyed, officials said.
The sources said they feared
at least 30 policemen were either dead or missing after
Thursday's attack.
In Najaf, a senior official in
the governor's office said only 35 of 80 members of the
police convoy had returned to the Shiite city 100 miles
south of Baghdad.
Assorted
Resistance Action
4.14.06 KUNA & Aljazeera &
Reuters & KUNA
Police major from the northern
oil centre of Kirkuk was killed in drive-by shooting Friday.
Another Iraqi Police officer
was assassinated on Friday by guerrillas in Kirkuk.
Chief of Aqdhiya Police,
Brigadier Sahrad Qader told Kuwait News Agency (KUNA) that
they opened fire on Lieutenant Marwan Yousef on a road
between Kirkuk and Tikrit, killing him instantly.
Resistance fighters captured
police Superintendent Maytham Abas Ali in Dor Al-Faylaq west
of Kirkuk, taking him to an unknown destination, said the
source.
Five police officers and a
civilian were wounded early on Friday when a car bomb
exploded at a police station in the northern city of Mosul,
police said.
Five Iraqi policemen were
wounded, including a lieutenant, when an explosive device
went off targeting their patrol in Hawijah district west of
Kirkuk.
The attack occurred at 7am.
Police opened fire on the car,
detonating its explosives. The vehicle was metres away from
hitting the main station building when it exploded, police
said.
The station sustained heavy
damage from the blast, and nearby shops were destroyed.
Guerrilla fighters in cars
killed three Iraqi contractors working for a U.S. military
base in Taji, 20 km (12 miles) north of Baghdad, police
said.
IF YOU
DON’T LIKE THE RESISTANCE
END THE
OCCUPATION
“A
Statement From Iraqi Armed Forces General Command”
“This
Command Declares The Names Of Its Factions On The Operations
Field Level”
The
bloodthirsty Occupation machine was never able to
eradicate your heroic army, rather here is your army
with its officers, all the ranks of its soldiers, and
includes within its ranks all the components of
dignified Iraqi people.
4th April 2006, Translated
from Arabic by Abu Assur, www.uruknet.info
Dignified Iraqi people!
Our brothers, our sisters and
our cousins in the Arab nation!
Since the sacred land of Iraq
has been maculated by the invaders-occupiers and by those
who collaborated with them from inside and outside Iraq,
your brothers belonging to the heroic Armed Forces were
absolutely determined and resolute, first because they
deeply believe in God Almighty and second, they stood
steadfast defying and resisting this occupation and its
creations which led to the present sectarian strife fomented
and inflamed but still denied by the US occupation, its
stooges and those with filthy intentions.
Since that very time your
brothers and your sons and daughters in the Armed Forces
came forward with their field command to combat the enemy on
our soil according to a clear strategy and in a successful
tactical style, which made the enemy lick its wounds, drink
the venomous cup of his deeds and of his wicked plotting..
We got
organized in an extremely secretive way as you can imagine
to avoid infiltration and early uncovering for our factions
and commands which always provided the heroic armed Jihadi
Resistance brigades, with the qualified combatants, who are
able to plan, to maneuver and to execute the operations in
the field.
We in the General Command of
the Iraqi Armed Forces, we do declare our responsibility
concerning many heroic operations undertaken by your sons
and your brothers on the most beloved soil of Iraq -we shall
in the appropriate time confirm what we say through
documents - and declare to the whole world that the Iraqi
resistance is pure Iraqi in blood and identity undertaken by
dignified Iraqis from the Armed Forces and the heroic
national armed Resistance factions.
Moreover
the Command declares its condemnation of whatever act, which
targets defenseless civilians.
Sons and daughters of the Arab
nation!
Sons of Great Iraq!
The
bloodthirsty Occupation machine was never able to eradicate
your heroic army, rather here is your army with its
officers, all the ranks of its soldiers, and includes within
its ranks all the components of dignified Iraqi people.
This Army
doesn't belong to any party, doesn't represent any side or
any community at the expense of the other.. It is the United
Army for the united Iraq which was and will always be, God
willing, the shield for this homeland cooperating with all
the good people from our Arab and Islamic nation and the
freedom loving people from around the world until achieving
the objectives, which we can summarize as the following:
1- To liberate Iraq from the
Occupation's rapacious claws and assert its sovereignty, its
independence, and its unity and achieving its liberty to use
its economical riches in order to insure a dignified life
for the people in general.
2- To re-organize the Iraqi
army on the patriotic, quality and loyalty basis, and
provide it with the most advanced arms and equipment
according to the Iraqi army's doctrine.
3- To liberate all the
prisoners and detainees held in the Occupation and its
collaborators imprisonment's camps, those who were held and
jailed because of their patriotic stand, which rejects the
Occupation.
4- To
combat all sectarianism and ethnic phenomenon fomented and
inflamed by the Occupation and its collaborators in order to
tear down Iraq, and its national unity; the Army will do
whatever possible to ensure security and peaceful life for
all its sons.
5- To demand compensation for
all the damages suffered by Iraq on the material, and moral
level due to the Occupation and due to the embargo which led
to its occupation.
Ye Iraqis!
Be reassured!
You have brothers who vowed
and took an oath in front of God and the Nation and they
promise you to sacrifice their blood to achieve the
objectives above.
Here we would like to increase your confidence in what we
said above, that is why this Command declares the names of
its factions on the operations' field level and they are:
1- "Al
Mansour Forces Command" In Baghdad district
2- "Saad
Ibn Abi Waqqas Forces Command" in Diyala district
3- "Al
Hamza Forces Command" Salah al Din's district
4- Dhu al
Fuqar Forces Command" Dhi Qar district
5- Abu
Ubaida Forces Command" in Central Euphrates
6- Al
Hussein Forces Command" in al Anbar district
7- Mohammad
al Qassim Forces Command" in al Basrah district
8- "Al
Rashid Forces Command" in Al Ta'amim district
9- "Amurya
Forces Command" in Nineveh district
Dignified Iraqis!
When we announce this, we have
profound confidence that we do act in amongst our family and
brothers and for their sake; and we swear by the great
gracious God, by the immaculate soil of Iraq, by the blood
of our innocent martyrs, by the honor of the freedom loving
honorable men and women of Iraq, by the innocence of our
infants, and by the suffering of our mothers and our elderly
that we will remain prepared to sacrifice ourselves and
ready for martyrdom until liberation and until achieving our
objectives.
God is the Greatest and
victory for Iraq!
God is the Greatest and
dignity for Iraq!
God is the Greatest and unity
for Iraq!
General
Command of the Armed Forces
Iraq on the
4th April 2006
FORWARD
OBSERVATIONS
On Iran
4.12.06 Lt.-Gen. Gennady
Yevstafiyev (Ret.), Foreign Intelligence Service, for RIA
Novosti
MOSCOW
The Iranian
authorities and elite are busy transferring their bank
accounts from Europe to Asia, or to Switzerland, whose
territory is usually outside sanctions. These are
multi-billion sums.
Many analysts see this as
Tehran's precaution ahead of a potential armed clash with
the U.S. and its allies, which may take place if the attempt
to settle the situation around Iran's nuclear program falls
through.
Apparently, the Iranians have
learnt their own lessons well and remember the sad
experience of neighboring Iraq, which was attacked for its
alleged attempt to hide the weapons of mass destruction from
the world community.
For all the
differences between the two regimes and their political and
economic potentialities the Washington-drafted plan of
action against Iran is strangely similar to the U.S.
scenario for Iraq. But there are some indications that the
U.S. strategists have lost some of their confidence since
the cruel lesson in Iraq. This fact creates an additional
chance for a diplomatic settlement of the problem.
According to U.S. political
tradition, George W. Bush is an outgoing president, a lame
duck. It would seem nothing should prevent him from being
totally reckless in foreign policy, except for a natural
desire to go down in history with a more positive image.
The problem is that his entourage is not motivated to make
a positive contribution to history.
To the
contrary, it is obsessed with a messianic idea to prove
single-handed the prevailing military force of the U.S.
super power, and its readiness to bear the heavy cross of
the only propagator of American democracy, the only true
democracy in the world.
It is this entourage that sets
the pace of the attempts to step up the preparations for a
strike against the Iranian regime. Clearly, the latter is
no bargain either to professional diplomats or international
officials who are trying to find a compromise on the Iranian
nuclear problem.
U.S.
long-term goals in Iran are obvious: to engineer the
downfall of the current regime, establish control over
Iran's oil and gas, and use its territory as the shortest
route for the U.S.-controlled transportation of hydrocarbons
from the regions of Central Asia and the Caspian Sea
bypassing Russia and China. This is not to mention Iran's
intransient military and strategic significance.
It is not yet clear what
long-term goals are in the minds of the Iranian leaders,
whose positions are far from flexible.
Of course, for starters, they
would like to have nuclear weapons like their second-rate
neighbor Pakistan. Incidentally, it was the U.S., a
vigorous fighter for the non-proliferation of the weapons of
mass destruction, that allowed Pakistan to get the bomb
without a problem. Now it is making declarations of love to
its enemy India.
The ayatollahs believe that
nuclear weapons would make Iran invulnerable to foreign
pressure, and turn it into the number one nation of the
Persian Gulf.
Well-known Swedish diplomat
Rolf Ekeus thinks that the Iranian nuclear program is not
anti-Western, but was a response to Saddam Hussein's nuclear
bid.
But now that Saddam is no
longer in the picture, and that Tehran has declared that its
nuclear program is exclusively civilian, why repeat all
these loud statements about the need to erase Israel like
Carthage from the face of the Earth?
Why make them sound as if
Tehran already has nuclear weapons?
It seems that if Tehran's
policy were peaceful and well balanced, it would bring it
many more benefits and allies against the background of the
aggressive line adopted by the U.S., and would rule out any
military initiatives.
In the
absence of this line anything may happen; all the more so if
the Americans or Israelis decide to provoke some
particularly malicious act of terror in the Middle East
through their local agents (Israel has more of them than the
U.S.), and blame it on the verbose ideologists from Tehran.
The
mentality of the current U.S. Administration officials
suggests the following tentative scenario.
First, they will persuade the
world that the talks with Iran are a thing of the past, and
that priority should be given to sanctions against it. A
Security Council resolution on the imposition of any
sanctions will be a key element.
Once adopted, the sanctions
will be followed by a chain of consistent steps, which,
regardless of what the world might think, would result in
the use of military force to overthrow the current regime.
But this far from simple task
requires a lot of effort.
To begin with, it is necessary
to consolidate the Western alliance. It seems that although
British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw has said more than once
that military solution is unthinkable, Prime Minister Tony
Blair is, as usual, in Mr. Bush's pocket, and already taking
part in drafting a plan of joint action as a junior partner.
It may be
that the Brits have been told to deal with the Shiites in
Iraq because without at least some appeasement of this group
it will be very difficult to guarantee success in the
operation against Iran, which may use the Shiite lever any
time for an asymmetrical but very painful response.
Incidentally, this is evidence of the fact that the
second-stage task - Iran's complete isolation - is far from
being fulfilled.
Therefore, now the focus of
attention is still on exerting heavy psychological pressure
on Iran, as well as on those countries, which do not give
the U.S. complete carte blanche.
Last January the Director of
the U.S. National Intelligence John Negroponte appointed Ms.
S. Leslie Ireland as the Mission Manager for Iran. She was
involved in intelligence in the Middle East for more than 20
years.
It is easy to see what this
mission is all about. Obviously, some Gulf nations already
have their own Gateway, which became so infamous during the
effort of the Security Council Special Commission to disarm
Iraq.
Moreover, Joseph Sirinsione, a
major expert on the non-proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction, admitted that he was not right when he thought
that the Bush Administration was not going to deal a
military blow at Iran. Now he is sure that it will strike.
When told that the Iranians
have many underground nuclear and military installations,
the Pentagon proudly responds that it is already testing
700-ton precision bombs designed to destroy facilities
(bunkers and depots) deep underground.
The U.S. has inspired the leak
that the Iranian rulers are trying to persuade Turkmenbashi
to let them stay in Turkmenistan during hostilities.
Even the Pentagon's latest
attack on Russian security services for alleged transfer of
information about a future U.S. aggression to Iraq, is
obviously aimed at creating a political atmosphere where
nobody would even think of backing Tehran.
And what
about a resolution submitted to the Senate in early 2006
with the demand of a ban (to be imposed by whom?) on Russian
and Chinese arms supplies to Iran?
And what to do about Ukraine,
which has ostensibly supplied Iran with 250 nuclear charges?
What kind of an Orange ally is it?!
In general, the Americans have
started playing the bear, like they did in Iraq.
Needless to
say, Condoleezza Rice would like Iran to surrender, but this
seems to be wishful thinking. Tehran has its own hawks. So
the remaining options are to engineer a coup, preferably
velvet, or to go for a blitz-intervention, or a completely
disarming sudden attack.
It is
clear that the Administration will try to minimize its
military casualties, and will focus on the use of cruise
missiles, and pilotless reconnaissance and assault
aircraft.
This is
exactly why the Iranian hawks defiantly demonstrated
their military arsenal not long ago. But they will
fight the U.S. with other instruments, and their
asymmetrical response may cost Washington dearly. Its
allies will pay even more.
The situation is developing in
fits and starts with monthly intervals.
One more moment of truth is
approaching today.
The Iranians took a step when
their Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki announced at the
disarmament conference on March 30 Tehran's readiness to
consider the formation of regional uranium-enrichment
consortiums where all interested parties will take an equal
part.
Apparently, it is necessary to
quickly analyze this step. What is it - a proposal of
compromise, or an attempt to gain time?
Meanwhile, another IAEA
inspection is at work in Iran (all in all, IAEA inspectors
have already spent 1,700 working inspection days in Iran,
but the evidence of its involvement in the military program
is not yet there).