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View Full Version : IF you think the "surge" worked in Iraq, read on...


mhgaffney
03-08-2008, 08:48 PM
First turn OFF your television.

The only thing I don't get about this op ed is the title. The same will hold if a Democrap wins next November.

Patrick Cockburn has been writing from inside Iraq since the US invasion in 2003. This was posted today at Counterpunch. MHG

March 7, 2008

Why Iraq Could Blow Up in John McCain's Face

By PATRICK COCKBURN

In Baghdad the Iraqi government is eager to give the impression that peace is returning. “Not a single sectarian murder or displacement was reported in over a month,” claimed Brigadier Qasim Ata, the spokesman for the security plan for the capital. In the US, the Surge, the dispatch of 30,000 extra American troops in the first half of 2007, is portrayed as having turned the tide in Iraq. Democrats in Congress no longer call aggressively for a withdrawal of American troops. The supposed military success in Iraq has been brandished by Senator John McCain as vindication of his prowar stance.

Seldom has the official Iraqi and American perception of what is happening in Iraq felt so different from the reality. Cocooned behind the walls of the Green Zone, defended by everybody from US soldiers to Peruvian and Ugandan mercenaries, the government of prime minister Nouri al-Maliki pumps out alluring tales of life returning to normal that border on fantasy. For instance, Brigadier Ata made his claim that there had been no sectarian murders or expulsions in the capital over the previous month on February 15, but two weeks earlier, on February 1, suicide bombers, whom the government said were al-Qa’ida, had blown themselves up killing 99 people in two bird markets in Baghdad, both situated in largely Shia districts.

So keen are the authorities to show that Sunni and Shia have stopped killing each other and overall violence is down that many deaths with an obvious sectarian motive are no longer recorded. “I think the real figure for the number of people being killed is about twice what the government says it is,” said one local politician. He had just sent the death certificates of the victims of sectarian killers to the military authorities, who were steadfastly refusing to admit that anybody had died at the time and place that the bodies were discovered.

One day after Brigadier Ata claimed that there had been no sectarian killings or abductions over the previous month, prime minister Maliki himself went on a walk about in central Baghdad to demonstrate just how safe things have become. But it was the precautions taken by Maliki’s bodyguards which were more revealing about the real state of security in the city.

Maliki’s brief venture onto the streets and out of the Green Zone took place in the al-Mansur district of west Baghdad. This is an area of big houses and many embassies, but has been heavily fought over by Sunni and Shia in the past year. “I was in Mansur on Saturday afternoon,” an Iraqi friend told me, “when, at about 3.15pm, I noticed a strange movement in the street, which was suddenly flooded by soldiers in green uniforms, led by generals and colonels, who were checking parked cars and all the buildings.” Minutes later a large convoy of vehicles appeared, with three US army Humvees in front and behind, and, in the middle, five black armoured four wheel drives They stopped in front of a famous ice cream shop called al-Ruwaad, but for fifteen minutes nobody got out of the vehicles as soldiers searched all the shops nearby. When officials and their guards did begin to emerge Maliki was in the middle of them and began to walk around.

“Everybody was scared when they saw him because they thought his presence might lead to an attack,” reported my friend. “Some women began to run away and I thought it was too dangerous for me to stay. I heard that Maliki gave 500,000 Iraqi dinars [£200] each to a woman who said her husband had been killed in a bomb explosion and a blind beggar.” Maliki also bought two suits from a well-known shop called Mario Zengotti, which promptly shut down, the owner presumably calculating that Baghdad is full of people who might kill him for selling clothes to the prime minister.

Baghdad is ‘better’ than it was, but the improvement is only in comparison to the bloodbath of 2006 when 3,000 people were being killed every month. People stay inside their own Sunni or Shia ghettoes. I drove one night through west Baghdad at 8 pm, sitting in the back of a police car with a second military vehicle full of heavily armed soldiers and police behind. Though I was driving in the heart of the capital I saw only three civilian cars during a three or four mile journey through a maze of military checkpoints and fortifications. In Shia-dominated east Baghdad, where there has been less fighting, there are more shops open but few customers. Overall the city the city is still frozen in fear. The growth in the number of checkpoints is not entirely good news because it has always been a favorite tactic of kidnappers and death squads to set up fake checkpoints to stop and identify potential victims. More reassuring is the knowledge that the Mehdi Army militiamen, the military wing of Shia clerics Muqtada al-Sadr’s movement, who killed so many Sunni at the height of the slaughter, are still abiding by a strictly-enforced six month ceasefire on the orders of their leader. The killings have not stopped but there are less of them.

Baghdad is entirely divided between Sunni and Shia and the sectarianism is as deep seated as it was before fall in violence. In many areas, say Iraqis bitterly, “the killing stopped because there was nobody left to kill.” There are very few mixed neighborhoods left. Just beneath the surface the Mehdi Army still exists as a parallel government in Shia areas, which means most of the city. A friend who was trying to sell a large house for $300,000 had to pay a $25,000 bribe to government officials to get the sale registered. No sooner had he paid this than the Mehdi Army demanded a further $15,000 for the sale to go through, money he reluctantly paid on the grounds it was too risky to refuse. Baghdad remains the most dangerous city in the world. This explains why so few of the 2.2 million Iraqis who have fled abroad, mostly to Jordan and Syria, or the one million forced from their homes within Iraq, are coming home, despite the fact that many families exist miserably in a single rented room in Damascus or Amman.

Again, the Iraqi government has tried to prove the contrary. Last December it paid for a highly publicized convoy of buses to bring Iraqis home from Syria, the exercise geared to giving the impression that a flood of people was returning to peaceful Baghdad. Unfortunately, it never happened. Three months later, despite much tougher Syrian visa regulations, the flow is still out of Iraq. The latest figures from the UN High Commission for Refugees show that the number of Iraqis entering Syria from Iraq was 1,200 a day in late January “while an average of 700 are going back to Iraq from Syria.”

Baghdad is now divided along sectarian lines like Beirut or Belfast. The Surge, along with the Mehdi Army truce, the emergence of al-Sahwa, the anti-al-Qa’ida Sunni movement, have all helped to freeze in place the demographic outcome of the ferocious battle for control of Baghdad which took place after the bombing of the Shia shrine in Samarra on February 22, 2006. It was a struggle which was won by the Shia with the Sunni, always a minority, being pushed back into a few enclaves, mostly in west Baghdad or being forced to leave Iraq. They make up disproportionate number of the refugees in Syria and Jordan and many, particularly of the better educated, will never return. The Shia also suffered, but they outnumber the Sunni by three to one in Iraq as a whole and they now control 75 per cent of the capital. It was this crucial battle for Baghdad and central Iraq, which, far more than the Surge, has determined the political landscape of Iraq for the foreseeable future.

The shooting may have died down for the moment, but the butchery of 2006 and early 2007 has left a legacy of hatred and fear. Even the most liberal-minded Sunni and Shia no longer feel at ease in each other’s company. The history of one family from al-Khudat, a middle class Sunni neighborhood in west Baghdad, explains why city is going to remain divided. In this case the victims were Shia, but what happened to them, and how they reacted to it, is typical of refugee families elsewhere in Iraq. The family had lived in Khudat for thirty years and were well liked by their Sunni neighbors. The father of the family died two years ago leaving his fifty-five year old widow, Umm Hadi, who had been a primary school teacher, along with four sons and three daughters. Early in 2007 it became so dangerous for Shia in al-Khudat that the family fled to Syria after asking the neighbors to look after their house. Umm Hadi did not like it there. “We thought we were just going for a short time,” she says. “The Syrians mistreated us and charged us a lot of money, so we decided to come back to Baghdad at the beginning of 2008.”

On Umm Hadi’s return from Syria she and her family found that their house had been taken by a Sunni family from al-Amel, another embattled area, and they refused to leave. Umm Hadi and her sons, all grown up, were too frightened to call the police or the Americans. Instead they moved to Hurriya in north west Baghhdad, which once was mixed but is now controlled by the Mehdi Army and the Shia. Hadi, the eldest brother, who works as a carpenter was dispirited when asked on February 1 what he intended to do. “We were so surprised,” he said, “that our house was taken and our dear neighbors allowed this to happen. There is nothing we can do to force these people to leave because they might retaliate by attacking me or my brothers or even blow up the house.” He was interrupted by his mother, Umm Hadi, her face quivering with anger, who said she was not going to surrender so easily. “It is true,” said this former primary school teacher, “that we are poor people, but that does not mean that we are weak. We can call on our strong Shia arm [apparently referring to the Mehdi Army] to get our house back. I have information that one of the sons of the family that took it is working in a petrol station. It would be a good message to send his dead body to them if they insist on staying.” At this point her sons interrupted their mother saying that she had “suffered a lot since we came back to Iraq; she is a kind woman and does not mean what she says.” A week later, however, on February 8, the father of the Sunni family who had taken their house, was found shot dead in his car in west Baghdad.

Perplexity among non-Iraqis about what is going on in Iraq is stems primarily from a failure to understand that ever since fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003 there have been two wars being fought in the country. One was between the US occupation forces and the Sunni, rulers of Iraq down the centuries. This war had gone surprisingly well for the Sunni. They had inflicted significant losses, now approaching 4,000 dead, on the US army which, while not militarily crippling, were politically unsustainable in America. But the Sunni were also fighting a second war, this one against the Shia majority, and this war they were losing badly. They had lost control of the Iraqi state machine with the fall of the old regime. The elections of 2005 gave the Shia, in alliance with the Kurds, control of parliament, the government, army and police, though admittedly this was under partial American tutelage. The Sunni came to regard the Interior Ministry as the headquarters of the death squads. The Health Ministry was believed to have torture chambers for Sunni in its basement. If this was not enough, the Sunni were being squeezed by the murderous killers of al Qa’ida, who slaughtered all who opposed them, and were seeking to set up a Taliban-like enclave to be called the Islamic State of Iraq.

By the end of 2006 many Sunni leaders were coming to see that they could not afford so many enemies. The non-al-Qa’ida Sunni guerrilla groups were less fragmented than they looked, their common background as Baathists, former military and security officers, and tribal leaders, making it easier for them to make collective decisions. They formed al-Sahwa, the Awakening movement, which was against al-Qa’ida and allied to the Americans. It was also, though al Sahwa and the US military played this down, either against the Iraqi government or not under its control. The Americans themselves were surprised at the speed with which the movement spread until there are some 80,000 al-Sahwa fighters, armed and paid for by the US, which constitute a powerful Sunni militia.

The US called the al-Sahwa fighters ‘Concerned Local Citizens’ and later ‘Sons of Iraq’, seeking to give the impression that they were simple tribal folk who had turned on al-Qaida. In reality they are the same Sunni guerrillas who have been fighting the US for five years. Their leaders have a very clear idea about what they are doing and why. On 26 January I went to see Abu Marouf, whose full name is Karim Ismail Hussein al-Zubai, the leader of 13,000 al-Sahwa fighters between Fallujah and Abu Ghraib west of Baghdad, a strategically important area that has seen the heaviest fighting in the war. I counted 27 checkpoints between central Baghdad and Abu Marouf’s headquarters in a half-ruined villa, hastily fortified with heavy machine gun emplacements, down a rutted tracks running between irrigation canals and reed beds near the village of Khandari. He expressed anger with the Iraqi government for not giving him and his men ‘long term jobs in the security services’ and the Americans for not paying his men. He threatened to go to war against both in three months unless his demands were met. A thin faced man in a brown suit and a tie, he said he was a former security officer under Saddam and later a fighter against the Americans. He would not say which guerrilla group he belonged to, but he is believed to have been a commander in ‘the 1920 Revolution Brigades’. “If the Americans think they can use us against al Qa’ida,” he said, “and then push us to one side they are mistaken.” He expressed contempt for Nouri al-Maliki’s government as “the worst government in the world.” Of the 13 divisions in the Iraqi army most were Shia and half were made up of militiamen controlled by Iran.

There is no doubt that these former Sunni guerrilla are very much in control of the Fallujah as far south as an area which used to be known as ‘triangle of death’ near Yusufiyah. The city of Fallujah itself, scene of the climactic battle between Sunni fighters and US Marines in November 2004, is run by police Colonel Feisal Ismail Hussain al-Zubai who is Abu Marouf’s elder brother. Like him he candidly admits that up to the end of 2006, when he was appointed to his present job, “I was fighting the Americans,” he said. “If your country was occupied what would you do?” Beside him on his desk is a picture of himself in uniform as a young officer, along with other officers, in the Iraqi army’s Special Forces in which he served after 1983. He and his brother use the word ‘militia’ to describe Shia-dominated institutions. Asked why he had switched from fighting against the Americans to fighting with them, Colonel Feisal said: “We decided that, when we compared the Americans to the militia and al Qa’ida, we should choose the Americans.”

The present American strategy may look like smart politics back in Washington. It is better to pay Sunni gunmen $300 a month to guard the road rather than have them planting bombs in it to blow up American Humvees. The US is losing one soldier dead a day compared to three or four killed each day a year ago. Since American casualties are the main barometer by which the US electorate views success or failure in Iraq these are important figures in an election year. The lower American casualties also reflect an important political change in Iraq. The Sunni and Shia now hate and fear each other more than they do the Americans. This puts the US in a stronger position because it can control the balance of power between the two communities. Sunni in Baghdad would prefer American soldiers to kick down their door in the middle of the night than the Shia-dominated Iraqi army and police who are likely to torture and kill them. In many ways the US position in Iraq is like Syria’s status in Lebanon, which resembles Iraq in its ethnic fragmentation, between 1976 and 2005 when it partly occupied the country. The Syrian army prevented the civil war escalating, but also stopped anything being resolved between the different communities.

Probably the US cannot play this intermediary role for so long. At the end of the day neither Sunni nor Shia Arabs in Iraq want the US to stay. It would be very easy for any of the myriad armed groups in Iraq to launch an offensive and send American military casualties soaring. With the rise of al-Sahwa, a powerful Sunni militia, the country is more divided than ever. The Sunni now have their own private army as do the Shia and the Kurds.

The greatest success of the Surge has been in terms of public relations. Suddenly there is a perception in the US that ‘things are getting better in Iraq’, though they are better only in terms of the mass killings of 2006. In the struggle over who will hold power in Iraq in the future nothing is decided and fighting, just as ferocious as anything we have seen in the past, could erupt at any moment.

Patrick Cockburn is the author of 'The Occupation: War, resistance and daily life in Iraq', a finalist for the National Book Critics' Circle Award for best non-fiction book of 2006. His forthcoming book 'Muqtada! Muqtada al-Sadr, the Shia revival and the struggle for Iraq' is published by Scribner in April.

cutthemdown
03-08-2008, 11:15 PM
All we care about is less soldiers dying. Death is the only thing that makes war unpopular in the USA. If they see less US casulties they could care less why, they are just happy about it. Honestly the war is like a non issue in this election so far. Like Clinton said before it's the economy stupid!!!!!

Bronco_Beerslug
03-08-2008, 11:56 PM
All we care about is less soldiers dying. Death is the only thing that makes war unpopular in the USA. If they see less US casulties they could care less why, they are just happy about it. Honestly the war is like a non issue in this election so far. Like Clinton said before it's the economy stupid!!!!!Geeezus, talk about out of the loop.

peacepipe
03-09-2008, 01:03 AM
All we care about is less soldiers dying. Death is the only thing that makes war unpopular in the USA. If they see less US casulties they could care less why, they are just happy about it. Honestly the war is like a non issue in this election so far. Like Clinton said before it's the economy stupid!!!!!
unpopular cause it was not neccessary & the war is McCains entire platform.

TailgateNut
03-09-2008, 01:21 AM
All we care about is less soldiers dying. Death is the only thing that makes war unpopular in the USA. If they see less US casulties they could care less why, they are just happy about it. Honestly the war is like a non issue in this election so far. Like Clinton said before it's the economy stupid!!!!!


Newsflash! We are not allowed to show the dead! Where have you been the last few years? This Goddamn war would be over if the realities were not being suppressed!

enjolras
03-09-2008, 01:57 AM
We don't need to parade caskets around to make the war 'real'. I've seen enough grieving families, both in media and in 'real' life to know just what the price we are paying is.

I don't think anyone is somehow unaware that sons and daughters are dying. We're not that callous as a people.

Honestly, if the people truly had any say in this we would no doubt have pulled out of Iraq in 2006. That election made the peoples position pretty damn clear.

cutthemdown
03-09-2008, 04:35 AM
if it was all about the war McCain wouldnt be as close as he is in the polls. It would be as lopsided as Bush approval rating. People are more worried about the economy and gas prices then what happens in Iraq.

Bronco_Beerslug
03-09-2008, 09:07 PM
if it was all about the war McCain wouldnt be as close as he is in the polls. It would be as lopsided as Bush approval rating. People are more worried about the economy and gas prices then what happens in Iraq.

If you think Iraq is forgotten by Americans you are nuts especially after the news came out today that Iraq is costing over 12 billion a month and will cost over 3 trillion dollars.

-------------------------------------------------------------
Survey of 800 Likely Voters (http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/election_20082/pt_survey_toplines/toplines_voting_issues_january_23_24_2008)
January 23-24, 2008

1* When thinking about how you will vote in the next presidential election, which of the following issues is most important—the economy, the War in Iraq, immigration, national security, health care, Social Security, or government ethics and corruption?

40% Economy

13% War in Iraq

8% Immigration

12% National security

14% Health care

4% Social Security

5% Government ethics and corruption

1% Some other issue

4% Not sure

-----------------------------------------------------------------

TheDave
03-09-2008, 09:17 PM
If you think Iraq is forgotten by Americans you are nuts especially after the news came out today that Iraq is costing over 12 billion a month and will cost over 3 trillion dollars.

-------------------------------------------------------------
Survey of 800 Likely Voters (http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/election_20082/pt_survey_toplines/toplines_voting_issues_january_23_24_2008)
January 23-24, 2008

1* When thinking about how you will vote in the next presidential election, which of the following issues is most important—the economy, the War in Iraq, immigration, national security, health care, Social Security, or government ethics and corruption?

40% Economy

13% War in Iraq

8% Immigration

12% National security

14% Health care

4% Social Security

5% Government ethics and corruption

1% Some other issue

4% Not sure

-----------------------------------------------------------------

Just for ****s and grins... Imagine where this country would be right now if $3 trillion was used domestically instead of pissed away in Iraq.

What could of been....

Bronco_Beerslug
03-09-2008, 09:24 PM
Just for ****s and grins... Imagine where this country would be right now if $3 trillion was used domestically instead of pissed away in Iraq.

What could of been....Exactly! I posted in the other thread about just that.

And come election Americans probably will be paying more than the 12 billion a month news released by the CBO and prize winning economist's today.

How exactly do Republicans think that's going to play out with McCain's statement of another 100 years of American occupation in November?

TheDave
03-09-2008, 09:31 PM
Exactly! I posted in the other thread about just that.

And come election Americans probably will be paying more than the 12 billion a month news released by the CBO and prize winning economist's today.

How exactly do Republicans think that's going to play out with McCain's statement of another 100 years of American occupation in November?

Exactly... The war is not a front page issue at this moment because the dems basically agree on the war so they are not attacking each other on it. Once this goes to the general election Obama/Hilary will slam McCain mercilessly on his "100 year" statement.

Spider
03-09-2008, 10:44 PM
LOL I still crack up at the we cant afford universal healthcare ....... besides I had 1 idiot here tell me if we got free healthcare we all would quit working

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
03-10-2008, 12:26 AM
Exactly! I posted in the other thread about just that.

And come election Americans probably will be paying more than the 12 billion a month news released by the CBO and prize winning economist's today.

How exactly do Republicans think that's going to play out with McCain's statement of another 100 years of American occupation in November?

They don't give a sh*t as long as they get a 'W' for Team GOP.

mhgaffney
03-10-2008, 10:40 PM
The crazy part is that McCain could actually win the election in November.

Of course, if the US media presented the true face of the war in Iraq and Afghanistan this would be impossible.

But they don't and won't -- and so, the average American fails to understand how bad it really is.

As a result, we could see a media driven election.

Obama looks to me like another Dukakis -- though I hope I am wrong. Certainly it will be Willie Horton to the nth degree:

I think it will be much closer than Bush's polls suggest. Next October we will see **** like we have never seen before. It will be Obama in the back seat of a car snorting coke. Obama in the back seat of a car soliciting oral sex from a man. Whether it's true or false won't matter.

Package this with rigged voting machines in a few key states -- and well, you get the picture. One can already sense the flight of white male voters to MCCain

This is what comes of our crazy political culture. We have not had a real candidate since Gary Hart, who had to bow out because he couldn't keep his wanger in his pants. yet, Hart would have made a fine president. Since then there has been zero.

Every election we hit a new low. And this cycle looks to continue that downward trend....

MHG

epicSocialism4tw
03-11-2008, 02:01 AM
The surge could be handled if we could only politik more with the light creatures of region X2.L53...their resonance technologies could be instrumental in creating a mass brain wave shift within the Israeli parliament, thus rendering them somnolescent long enough to allow every kid under 18 in Palestine to strap a bomb on and raid the Kenesset.

Just make sure that you're wearing your tinfoil cap.

mhgaffney
03-11-2008, 11:14 PM
Angryllama

has been watching too much TV. Too many hours before the tube absorbing 60 cycles per second -- the same resonant frequency used by hypnotists.

No wonder Angry and so many other Americans are walking ZOMBIES! The nation has been mesmerized.

Does this also explain the passivity of Americans?

Like I wrote up top -- The FIRST thing you can do for your country is TURN OFF THE TELEVISION.

cutthemdown
03-12-2008, 04:57 AM
how would no media make you better informed? True different media outlets lean different ways but to have none of them would make information dissemination pretty difficult. I guess we could just go to informationclearinghouse for some good unbiased reporting.

mhgaffney
03-12-2008, 11:53 PM
The problem is that the corporate media is just that -- it's owned by a tiny group of people who do not have your or my interests at heart.

They also lie a lot.

The problem is you probably won't be able to catch them at it -- because a lot of the information is subliminal. You won't even realize you are being programmed to think a certain way. It happens as a result of watching -- because as Marshall McLuhan said long ago -- the medium IS the message.

You won't be aware how one sided and biased what you are watching actually is -- in part because ALL of the other networks are just as bad -- or nearly as bad. Even public television. Turning channels does not help much.

There are lots of nut cases on the internet -- true -- but you can personally make use of the medium without being hypnotized. YOU are in command -- You can sift the good from the bad -- rather easily.

I visit a number of sites every day -- and have access to a wider cross section and deeper analysis -- than all of the TV networks combined.

We Americans need desparately to see ourselves as the rest of the world sees us -- rather than as the media portrays us -- which is often a lie.

The internet can help in this regard -- because information and news flow in every direction on the internet at the speed of light. It is the gate way to the wider world.

Take it for what it's worth.

mhgaffney
03-12-2008, 11:56 PM
Here's one BIG difference between the media and the internet. Everything you see on TV is filtered. The range is therefor as narrow as the people who own the networks.

Whereas the internet is like the wild west - -- largely un filtered -- with all kinds of possibilities and viewpoints. A huge cross section.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
03-13-2008, 01:08 AM
<embed style="width:400px; height:326px;" id="VideoPlayback" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" src="http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=-4437853756074043715&hl=en" flashvars=""> </embed>

cutthemdown
03-13-2008, 02:36 AM
the problem with the internet is no accountabilty for accuracy.

cutthemdown
03-13-2008, 02:37 AM
MHGAFFNEY sounds just like alec baldwin in Team America World Police.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
03-13-2008, 03:39 AM
MHGAFFNEY sounds just like alec baldwin in Team America World Police.

Wow - that was a well-thought-out, comprehensive rebuttal of everything he posted........................NOT.

:oyvey:

W*GS
03-13-2008, 08:39 AM
You rarely rebut anything, bub.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
03-13-2008, 09:11 AM
W*GS the one-man right-wing lie machine.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
03-13-2008, 09:35 AM
Report shows increase in Iraq violence since January

By David Morgan

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Iraq has seen some increased violence since January, including suicide and car bombings, despite a sharp overall decline in attacks in the past eight months, the Pentagon said on Tuesday.

The rise in violence was partly as a result of recent U.S.-led offensives against Islamist militants, including al Qaeda in Iraq, the Defense Department said in its latest quarterly report on the war.

The release of the report, which covers December through February, coincided with a surge of violence that killed 46 people across Iraq on Tuesday.

The Pentagon noted a rise in security incidents since January in Nineveh and Diyala provinces and other areas where it said al Qaeda in Iraq militants have flocked since being driven from former strongholds by U.S.-allied Sunni tribesmen.

The report called the increased violence a "short term" result of military operations against insurgents that began in January. Defense officials could not say how closely the violence sparked by the offensives was related to a rise in large bombings that are aimed at causing many deaths, described as "high-profile attacks."

"In January 2008, high-profile attacks rose for the first time in five months as a result of a slight increase in person-borne IEDs (improvised explosive devices) and a slight increase in vehicle-borne IED's," the report said.

Charts of attack data in the report showed the increase in such bombings extending into February with a small rise in civilian deaths for the same period.

Continues:

http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSN1160046720080312?feedType=RSS&feedName=topNews

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
03-13-2008, 10:11 AM
http://www.bartcop.com/ira-factions.jpg

mhgaffney
03-13-2008, 10:40 PM
Give that cartoonist a Pulitzer!

DBruleU
03-14-2008, 12:13 PM
Wow - that was a well-thought-out, comprehensive rebuttal of everything he posted........................NOT.

:oyvey:

Considering 99.9% of everything you post in rebuttal is a bartcop cartoon, you have no room to talk...typical hypocrisy from you.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
03-14-2008, 07:43 PM
Considering 99.9% of everything you post in rebuttal is a bartcop cartoon, you have no room to talk...typical hypocrisy from you.

99%?

I guess ridiculous statements like these are all people like you have left when you're trying desperately to defend a thoroughly discredited president and party.

kappys
03-14-2008, 08:20 PM
The problem is that the corporate media is just that -- it's owned by a tiny group of people who do not have your or my interests at heart.

They also lie a lot.

The problem is you probably won't be able to catch them at it -- because a lot of the information is subliminal. You won't even realize you are being programmed to think a certain way. It happens as a result of watching -- because as Marshall McLuhan said long ago -- the medium IS the message.

You won't be aware how one sided and biased what you are watching actually is -- in part because ALL of the other networks are just as bad -- or nearly as bad. Even public television. Turning channels does not help much.

There are lots of nut cases on the internet -- true -- but you can personally make use of the medium without being hypnotized. YOU are in command -- You can sift the good from the bad -- rather easily.

I visit a number of sites every day -- and have access to a wider cross section and deeper analysis -- than all of the TV networks combined.

We Americans need desparately to see ourselves as the rest of the world sees us -- rather than as the media portrays us -- which is often a lie.

The internet can help in this regard -- because information and news flow in every direction on the internet at the speed of light. It is the gate way to the wider world.

Take it for what it's worth.

The internet has helped, a lot. Take a look back at the early 1900's if you want to see what a true media empire could do. Stories were more or less made up with almost zero accoutability just to sell papers. Still, the people were more informed of current events than in past centuries, if presented through yellow tinted glasses.

I am always struck when people somehow act like media spin is a new phenomenon or force out there. I contend the spin has always been there, but thanks to sources such as the internet our ability to identify and refute it is better than ever.

mhgaffney
03-14-2008, 10:15 PM
Thanks Kappys -- but surely you know that Clinton supported legislation that resulted in concentrated ownership of the US media. Suddenly a very few people owned all of the networks -- and the last traces of objective reporting went out the window.

This is why we don't hear the truth about Iraq-- or the deteriorating dollar -- but a happy face on what is truly a disaster worse than anythikng we have ever seen in our lives.

Clinton also pushed through legislation -- removing the last regulation of the credit market -- thus preparing the way for the explosion of hedge funds and "alternative" credit mechanisms -- that caused the enormous speculative bubble that is now bringing about the destruction of the US dollar.

As P Craig Roberts has pointed out, the full impact has not yet hit Americans because the Chinese are still pegged to the dollar. When they cut us loose-- in the near future-- you will see consumer goods here (produced in China) go through the roof

reality will then hit home -- like it or not.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
03-14-2008, 11:58 PM
Thanks Kappys -- but surely you know that Clinton supported legislation that resulted in concentrated ownership of the US media. Suddenly a very few people owned all of the networks -- and the last traces of objective reporting went out the window.

This is why we don't hear the truth about Iraq-- or the deteriorating dollar -- but a happy face on what is truly a disaster worse than anythikng we have ever seen in our lives.

Clinton also pushed through legislation -- removing the last regulation of the credit market -- thus preparing the way for the explosion of hedge funds and "alternative" credit mechanisms -- that caused the enormous speculative bubble that is now bringing about the destruction of the US dollar.

Yep - those are two big concessions to the right Clinton made that have come back to bite us in the ass.

As P Craig Roberts has pointed out, the full impact has not yet hit Americans because the Chinese are still pegged to the dollar. When they cut us loose-- in the near future-- you will see consumer goods here (produced in China) go through the roof

reality will then hit home -- like it or not.

True that is - especially when you consider that consumer spending accounts for two-thirds of America's total economic activity.

Rohirrim
03-15-2008, 12:17 AM
The reason we don't get the truth on Iraq is because journalists are (rightfully) afraid to leave the Green Zone. Plus, if there is one thing the American military learned in Vietnam, you have to control the media.

kappys
03-15-2008, 12:23 AM
Thanks Kappys -- but surely you know that Clinton supported legislation that resulted in concentrated ownership of the US media. Suddenly a very few people owned all of the networks -- and the last traces of objective reporting went out the window.

This is why we don't hear the truth about Iraq-- or the deteriorating dollar -- but a happy face on what is truly a disaster worse than anythikng we have ever seen in our lives.

Clinton also pushed through legislation -- removing the last regulation of the credit market -- thus preparing the way for the explosion of hedge funds and "alternative" credit mechanisms -- that caused the enormous speculative bubble that is now bringing about the destruction of the US dollar.
the roof

As P Craig Roberts has pointed out, the full impact has not yet hit Americans because the Chinese are still pegged to the dollar. When they cut us loose-- in the near future-- you will see consumer goods here (produced in China) go through
reality will then hit home -- like it or not.

I agree. But my point was that essentially the same thing happened in the early 1900's where all media was owned by a few magnates. The wild card today is the internet where real information can be found but takes some effort to do so. Turn of the century was the same situation. I'm not saying I agreed with it, just how it is.

As for credit regulation I suppose we'll see when the bottom is out of the tub. The Japanese had a horribly speculative market in the 80's, leading them down a 10 year slow nose dive in their economy. Hopefully it won't be that bad here, but it might. Still the overall standard of living is still pretty good there and while the relative standard we have compared to other countries will worsen I think there is hope that the absolute standard of living may hold relatively still.

mhgaffney
03-16-2008, 02:22 AM
I'm not disagreeing with you about the internet. It's our big hope at the moment. There is no doubt that the internet spawned the 911 truth movement. Without the internet it would never have happened --

and it's ironic when you consider that the internet started as a US military program. It's one that got away from them -- and developed a life of its own.

However, it is too soon to be celebrating. My web master -- who is a computer wizard -- tells me that most of the large servers that support the internet in the US are located on the grounds of the CIA at Langley, VA. I have no way to know if it's true.

But I did read that after 911 the US government shut down 500 Islamic web sites.

So they can pull the plug if they choose to do so. I do not see it happening in the near future -- but hey ....

mhgaffney
03-16-2008, 10:44 PM
The reason we don't get the truth on Iraq is because journalists are (rightfully) afraid to leave the Green Zone. Plus, if there is one thing the American military learned in Vietnam, you have to control the media.

What you are saying is true of most US journalists.

However there is one who still goes outside the green zone -- and he has been doing this since the invasion in 2003.

I refer to Patrick Cockburn. I have no use for this brother Alexander (who runs Counterpunch) -- but Patrick I do read -- closely.

Check out Patrick's op ed today on Iraq:

http://www.counterpunch.org/

W*GS
03-16-2008, 10:50 PM
My web master -- who is a computer wizard -- tells me that most of the large servers that support the internet in the US are located on the grounds of the CIA at Langley, VA. I have no way to know if it's true.

He's completely wrong - and that you think he's a wizard just shows how gullible you are.

W*GS
03-16-2008, 10:52 PM
There is no doubt that the internet spawned the 911 truth movement. Without the internet it would never have happened --

Yeah - kinda like genuine terrorists wouldn't be able to communicate with each other and influence others as easily as they do without the Internet. Just goes to show that the 'net is just a tool - it can be used and abused. The 9/11 Troofer ****heads are abusers - not just of the Internet, but of facts, reason, evidence and reality.

Bronco_Beerslug
03-16-2008, 11:16 PM
I'm not disagreeing with you about the internet. It's our big hope at the moment. There is no doubt that the internet spawned the 911 truth movement. Without the internet it would never have happened --

and it's ironic when you consider that the internet started as a US military program. It's one that got away from them -- and developed a life of its own.

However, it is too soon to be celebrating. My web master -- who is a computer wizard -- tells me that most of the large servers that support the internet in the US are located on the grounds of the CIA at Langley, VA. I have no way to know if it's true.

But I did read that after 911 the US government shut down 500 Islamic web sites.

So they can pull the plug if they choose to do so. I do not see it happening in the near future -- but hey ....You and George Bush have this Internets thing figured out don't you?

Pseudofool
03-16-2008, 11:55 PM
The crazy part is that McCain could actually win the election in November.

Of course, if the US media presented the true face of the war in Iraq and Afghanistan this would be impossible.

But they don't and won't -- and so, the average American fails to understand how bad it really is.

As a result, we could see a media driven election.

Obama looks to me like another Dukakis -- though I hope I am wrong. Certainly it will be Willie Horton to the nth degree:

I think it will be much closer than Bush's polls suggest. Next October we will see **** like we have never seen before. It will be Obama in the back seat of a car snorting coke. Obama in the back seat of a car soliciting oral sex from a man. Whether it's true or false won't matter.

Package this with rigged voting machines in a few key states -- and well, you get the picture. One can already sense the flight of white male voters to MCCain

This is what comes of our crazy political culture. We have not had a real candidate since Gary Hart, who had to bow out because he couldn't keep his wanger in his pants. yet, Hart would have made a fine president. Since then there has been zero.

Every election we hit a new low. And this cycle looks to continue that downward trend....

MHGI agree with a lot of what you are suggesting, but I don't necessarily see Obama as the proverbial Democratic candidate just yet.

Clinton presents a much better instrument of power than McCain; to dress corporatism in the clothes of liberal-ism makes corporatism much more dangerous.

I hope Obama gets the nomination and narrowly loses (as you suggest) amid much publicized voting troubles. A candidate like Obama might put actually drive Americans away from the TV and into the streets ala Ukraine or Rodney King (to use to disparate but vivid examples).

missingnumber7
03-18-2008, 04:42 PM
Report shows increase in Iraq violence since January


I can name at least 15 named operations in the last 3 weeks alone, but since Jan there has been a gigantic effort to rid many of the outlaying areas, especially in the Diyala province in and around BahQubah, of the AlQueda in Iraq. Thus the increase of violence. They are forced to move. They are forced to kidnap more locals in different areas to get places to live and operate out of. As they move they have to attack and set up the intimidation. The biggest sign of success is lack of Sunni on Shia violence.

Almost nothing has been made of Al' Sadr's extension of the cease fire. Also I think Al Sadr has realized that his role in the new Iraq will not be military or from a popular government vote. He has now moved to become a Ayatolah(sp?). He has done much religious study and that is why the ceasefire has been extended, he wants to study he does not have time to take charge of the massive offensive that it would take to counter the CLC(concerned local citizens) checkpoints that have been set up all over Iraq which have been very highly successful in rooting out the problems.

So when they say the surge isn't working and that the violence is increasing...stop listening to the liberal media who doesn't know why they are saying what they are saying, other than trying to get one of two unqualified democrats elected and listen to soldiers who are saying because of the surge soldiers have been able to reach out to small communities of Iraqis and help them take care of themselves.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
03-18-2008, 04:52 PM
So when they say the surge isn't working and that the violence is increasing...stop listening to the liberal media who doesn't know why they are saying what they are saying...

:stupid:

Did you even read the article?

The source was a report by the Defense Department.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
03-19-2008, 09:06 PM
http://www.bartcop.com/5-yr-occupation.jpg

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
03-19-2008, 09:10 PM
http://www.bartcop.com/iraq-off-radar.jpg

Bronco Jamus
03-19-2008, 09:43 PM
Violence has decreased overall. And more and more Iraqi's are pitching to help secure their country. They should be proud.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
03-19-2008, 09:51 PM
Violence has decreased overall.

Report shows increase in Iraq violence since January

http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSN1160046720080312?feedType=RSS&feedName=topNews

http://www.bartcop.com/clarify-bloody-banner.jpg

sirhcyennek81
03-19-2008, 10:52 PM
The surge is working. Period. Fewer people are dying now then this time a year ago, including US servicemen. Spin it anyway you like but it wont change reality.


:Broncos:

Bronco_Beerslug
03-19-2008, 11:02 PM
The surge is working. Period. Fewer people are dying now then this time a year ago, including US servicemen. Spin it anyway you like but it wont change reality.
:Broncos:Actually, violence has been increasing again but the thing that people who say it's working don't understand is the Iraq government is doing basically nothing to unite the radical religious factions of the country so the Shiite cease fire is crumbling and infrastructure remains in ruins.

How many people want to see the American military remain in Iraq as it's policemen for a hundred years?

Bronco Jamus
03-20-2008, 12:51 AM
There a many positive things going on there. Proof is the total lack of news coverage there.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
03-20-2008, 01:14 AM
There a many positive things going on there.

Many?

Like what?

List them.

(And show how they even begin to mitigate the damage done.)


Proof is the total lack of news coverage there.

:oyvey:

You've gotta be sh*ttin' me.

You really think the lack of news coverage somehow implies that there is nothing bad to report?

The coverage by the U.S. corporate media has always been a joke, i.e., the American people have been shielded from the ugly realities of the war since day one.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
03-20-2008, 02:04 AM
Blix calls Iraq War a 'tragedy,' says leaders ignored the facts

Wed Mar 19, 9:33 PM ET

LONDON (AFP) - Hans Blix, the former chief UN weapons inspector, slammed the Iraq war as a "tragedy" and blamed it on leaders ignoring the facts, in a comment piece published Thursday.

Writing in The Guardian on the five-year anniversary of the US-led invasion of Iraq, Blix, who clashed with Washington in the run-up to the Iraq war, described the war as "a tragedy -- for Iraq, for the US, for the UN, for truth and human dignity."

In the sub-headline to the comment piece, Blix, who headed the UN Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission, wrote that responsibility for the war "must lie with those who ignored the facts five years ago".

At the time of the Iraq war, Blix accused the US and Britain of exaggerating the threat from Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein's alleged "weapons of mass destruction" -- traces of which have never been found.

In his comment piece, he said the war was a "setback in the world's efforts to develop legal restraints on the use of armed force between states" and added that in 2003, "Iraq was not a real or imminent threat to anybody."

Blix wrote that had coalition troops not deposed Saddam, "he would, in all likelihood, have become another Kadhafi or Castro; an oppressor of his own people but no longer a threat to the world."

He said that one positive sign to emerge from the conflict was that "it may be that the spectacular failure of ensuring disarmament by force, and of introducing democracy by occupation, will work in favour of a greater use of diplomacy and 'soft power'."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080320/wl_mideast_afp/iraqwar5yearsunnuclearblix

baja
03-20-2008, 02:21 AM
Blix calls Iraq War a 'tragedy,' says leaders ignored the facts

Wed Mar 19, 9:33 PM ET

LONDON (AFP) - Hans Blix, the former chief UN weapons inspector, slammed the Iraq war as a "tragedy" and blamed it on leaders ignoring the facts, in a comment piece published Thursday.

Writing in The Guardian on the five-year anniversary of the US-led invasion of Iraq, Blix, who clashed with Washington in the run-up to the Iraq war, described the war as "a tragedy -- for Iraq, for the US, for the UN, for truth and human dignity."

In the sub-headline to the comment piece, Blix, who headed the UN Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission, wrote that responsibility for the war "must lie with those who ignored the facts five years ago".

At the time of the Iraq war, Blix accused the US and Britain of exaggerating the threat from Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein's alleged "weapons of mass destruction" -- traces of which have never been found.

In his comment piece, he said the war was a "setback in the world's efforts to develop legal restraints on the use of armed force between states" and added that in 2003, "Iraq was not a real or imminent threat to anybody."

Blix wrote that had coalition troops not deposed Saddam, "he would, in all likelihood, have become another Kadhafi or Castro; an oppressor of his own people but no longer a threat to the world."

<b>He said that one positive sign to emerge from the conflict was that "it may be that the spectacular failure of ensuring disarmament by force, and of introducing democracy by occupation, will work in favour of a greater use of diplomacy and 'soft power'."</b>

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080320/wl_mideast_afp/iraqwar5yearsunnuclearblix

Evidently Hans has missed Bush's take on Iran.

mhgaffney
03-20-2008, 11:53 PM
The local Klamath Falls paper where I live -- the Herald and News (we call it the Herald and Shnooze) ran a story recently about US soldiers passing out soccer balls and candy to Iraqi kids.

Well yeah some of that probably goes on --but what about the rest of the story?

For instance -- I saw a story the other day on the internet about US troops who said it is common to simply murder Iraqi civilians. US troops make a practice of carrying shovels to bury these corpses -- so no questions will be asked.

Sometimes the US troops carry extra weapons -- If they murder an Iraqi they will leave the gun -- planted evidence that the victim was a terrorist.

One soldier was so ashamed of what he had seen and done he ripped the medals off his chest and ther them on the ground.

So where is the US press? The answers is: still in denial -- like much of the nation...

MHG

cutthemdown
03-21-2008, 12:09 AM
I sure hope it's helping. One thing I haven't heard is a good explanation how leaving Iraqis to no security would help more. Trust me if I thought we could pull out and things wouldn't plunge into radicals controlling everything I would be all for it. The country just isn't ready yet unless the UN is willing to send in a force.

The Lone Bolt
03-21-2008, 11:27 AM
The local Klamath Falls paper where I live -- the Herald and News (we call it the Herald and Shnooze) ran a story recently about US soldiers passing out soccer balls and candy to Iraqi kids.

Well yeah some of that probably goes on --but what about the rest of the story?

For instance -- I saw a story the other day on the internet about US troops who said it is common to simply murder Iraqi civilians. US troops make a practice of carrying shovels to bury these corpses -- so no questions will be asked.

Sometimes the US troops carry extra weapons -- If they murder an Iraqi they will leave the gun -- planted evidence that the victim was a terrorist.

One soldier was so ashamed of what he had seen and done he ripped the medals off his chest and ther them on the ground.

So where is the US press? The answers is: still in denial -- like much of the nation...

MHG



While I don't doubt that some of this occurs, are you sure that the internet sources you cite are fair and unbiased? There are a lot of far-left anti-war web pages out there manufacturing spin and disinformation for political purposes (and, for that matter some far-right ones as well).

TailgateNut
03-21-2008, 11:30 AM
While I don't doubt that some of this occurs, are you sure that the internet sources you cite are fair and unbiased? There are a lot of far-left anti-war web pages out there manufacturing spin and disinformation for political purposes (and, for that matter some far-right ones as well).


Your post, once again shows how "out of touch" you are with the reality of war, regardless of location. Serve some time, or actually sit down and get to know some soldiers who serve or served "in the trenches".

The Lone Bolt
03-21-2008, 11:50 AM
Your post, once again shows how "out of touch" you are with the reality of war, regardless of location. Serve some time, or actually sit down and get to know some soldiers who serve or served "in the trenches".

Once again, I don't doubt that these things happen. I'm not denying that. I'm just pointing out that there are some web sources that are politically biased and not reliable on this issue.

Rohirrim
03-23-2008, 04:00 PM
If the surge is working in Iraq, why are the insurgents able to carry on a sustained mortar attack on the Green Zone?
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/24/world/middleeast/24iraq.html?hp

baja
03-23-2008, 04:53 PM
Would you quit with the pesky details, Mr. Bush doesn't like details and he is the decider.

mhgaffney
03-23-2008, 10:11 PM
I sure hope it's helping. One thing I haven't heard is a good explanation how leaving Iraqis to no security would help more. Trust me if I thought we could pull out and things wouldn't plunge into radicals controlling everything I would be all for it. The country just isn't ready yet unless the UN is willing to send in a force.

This is a phony argument. But you have it half right. Radicals are in control at present -- but they happen to be Americans.

We have seen the enemy and he is us.

We had no right to bomb and invade the country in the first place. We were in the wrong from the start. Best to admit this -- and bring the troops home. This is the best way to support thr troops.

MHG

Dukes
03-23-2008, 11:11 PM
This is a phony argument.

How?

Bronco_Beerslug
03-23-2008, 11:18 PM
If the surge is working in Iraq, why are the insurgents able to carry on a sustained mortar attack on the Green Zone?
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/24/world/middleeast/24iraq.html?hp

The Surge (increased troop numbers) is only suppressing some of the violence right now and mostly because of the Shiite cease fire which starting to crumble now.

----------------------------------------------------------------
Attacks kill 57 in Iraq; Green Zone hit (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080323/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq_67)
By ROBERT H. REID, Associated Press Writer Sun Mar 23, 6:43 PM ET

BAGHDAD - Rockets and mortars pounded Baghdad's U.S.-protected Green Zone Sunday and a suicide car bomber struck an Iraqi army post in the northern city of Mosul in a surge of attacks that killed at least 57 people nationwide.


http://d.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/ap/20080323/capt.1a8c209e4c9d48d1bbd1e7d99c30406f.iraq_violenc e_bag128.jpg?x=400&y=266&sig=dp7eLSWfhYkb2akFVTR91Q--
A US soldier stands guard in the area where a suicide car bomber detonated his load in Shula, Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, March 23, 2008. At least seven died and 14 were wounded in the blast.
(AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)

The latest violence underscored the fragile security situation and the resilience of both Sunni and Shiite extremist groups as the war enters its sixth year and the U.S. death toll in the conflict approaches 4,000.

Attacks in Baghdad probably stemmed from rising tensions between rival Shiite groups — some of whom may have been behind the Green Zone blasts. It was the most sustained assault in months against the nerve center of the U.S. mission.

The deadliest attack of the day was in Mosul when a suicide driver slammed his vehicle through a security checkpoint in a hail of gunfire and detonated his explosives in front of an Iraqi headquarters building, killing 13 Iraqi soldiers and injuring 42 other people, police said.

Iraqi guards opened fire on the vehicle but couldn't stop it because the windshield had been bulletproofed, said an Iraqi army officer. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not supposed to release the information.

Mosul, Iraq's third largest city about 225 miles northwest of Baghdad, has been described as the last major urban area where the Sunni extremist al-Qaida group maintains a significant presence.

In Baghdad, rockets and mortars began slamming into the Green Zone about sunrise, and scattered attacks persisted throughout the day, sending plumes of smoke rising over the heavily guarded district in the heart of the capital.

A U.S. public address system in the Green Zone warned people to "duck and cover" and to stay away from windows.

At least five people were injured in the Green Zone, a U.S. Embassy statement said without specifying nationalities. The zone includes the U.S. and British embassies as well as major Iraqi government offices.

A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to release the information, said those injured included an American and four third-country nationals, meaning they were not American, British or Iraqi.

Iraqi police said 10 civilians were killed and more than 20 were injured in rocket or mortar blasts in scattered areas of eastern Baghdad — some of them probably due to misfired rounds.

Also in the capital, seven people were killed and 14 wounded in a suicide car bombing Sunday in the Shiite area of Shula in the capital, police reported. Such attacks are the hallmark of Sunni religious extremists.

Gunmen opened fire on passengers waiting for buses in a predominantly Shiite area in southeastern Baghdad, killing at least seven men and wounding 16 people, including women and children, according to police.

Police also found the bullet-riddled bodies of 12 people — six in Baghdad, four in Mosul and two in Kut, scene of clashes between government troops and Shiite militiamen.

Elsewhere, several mortars or rockets struck a U.S. base in the Shiite city of Hillah, about 60 miles south of Baghdad, Iraqi police said. The American military did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the attack.

No group claimed responsibility for the Green Zone attacks, but suspicion fell on Shiite extremists based on the areas from which the weapons were fired.

The attacks followed a series of clashes last week between U.S. and Iraqi forces and factions of the Mahdi Army, the biggest Shiite militia loyal to radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.

Al-Sadr led two uprisings against U.S.-led coalition forces in 2004. Last August he declared a six-month cease-fire to purge the militia of criminal and dissident elements.

U.S. officials have cited the truce, which al-Sadr recently extended, among the reasons behind a 60 percent drop in violence since President Bush ordered 30,000 U.S. reinforcements to Iraq early last year.

But the cease-fire has come under severe strains in recent weeks. Al-Sadr's followers have accused the Shiite-dominated government of exploiting the cease-fire to target the cleric's supporters in advance of provincial elections expected this fall.

Al-Sadr recently told his followers that although the truce remains in effect, they were free to defend themselves against attacks. Al-Sadr followers have demanded the release of supporters rounded up in recent weeks.

CONT.