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ConcernedP1964
Iraq: A bloody mess
By Patrick Cockburn
28 June 2005


A year ago the supposed handover of power by the US occupation authority to an Iraqi interim government led by Iyad Allawi was billed as a turning point in the violent history of post-Saddam Iraq.

It has turned out to be no such thing. Most of Iraq is today a bloody no-man's land beset by ruthless insurgents, savage bandit gangs, trigger-happy US patrols and marauding government forces.

On 28 June 2004 Mr Allawi was all smiles. "In a few days, Iraq will radiate with stability and security," he promised at the handover ceremony. That mood of optimism did not last long.

On Sunday the American Secretary of Defence, Donald Rumsfeld, told a US news programme that the ongoing insurgency could last "five, six, eight, ten, twelve years".

From: Independent UK

Read Whole Story
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle...sp?story=650186

From CP
ncMindy
QUOTE(ConcernedP1964 @ Jun 28 2005, 05:35 PM)
Iraq: A bloody mess
By Patrick Cockburn
28 June 2005
A year ago the supposed handover of power by the US occupation authority to an Iraqi interim government led by Iyad Allawi was billed as a turning point in the violent history of post-Saddam Iraq.

It has turned out to be no such thing. Most of Iraq is today a bloody no-man's land beset by ruthless insurgents, savage bandit gangs, trigger-happy US patrols and marauding government forces.

On 28 June 2004 Mr Allawi was all smiles. "In a few days, Iraq will radiate with stability and security," he promised at the handover ceremony. That mood of optimism did not last long.

On Sunday the American Secretary of Defence, Donald Rumsfeld, told a US news programme that the ongoing insurgency could last "five, six, eight, ten, twelve years".

From: Independent UK

Read Whole Story
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle...sp?story=650186

From CP
[right][snapback]79972[/snapback][/right]


QUOTE
Tonight President George Bush will make his most important address since the invasion, speaking to troops at the US army base at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. He is expected to seek to assure increasingly sceptical Americans that he has a plan to prevail in Iraq, and that the US is not trapped in a conflict as unwinnable as the one in Vietnam, three decades ago.

The news now from Iraq is only depressing. All the roads leading out of the capital are cut. Iraqi security and US troops can only get through in heavily armed convoys. There is a wave of assassinations of senior Iraqi officers based on chillingly accurate intelligence. A deputy police chief of Baghdad was murdered on Sunday. A total of 52 senior Iraqi government or religious figures have been assassinated since the handover. In June 2004 insurgents killed 42 US soldiers; so far this month 75 have been killed.

The "handover of power" last June was always a misnomer. Much real power remained in the hands of the US. Its 140,000 troops kept the new government in business. Mr Allawi's new cabinet members became notorious for the amount of time they spent out of the country. Safely abroad they often gave optimistic speeches predicting the imminent demise of the insurgency.


It's a bloodbath in Iraq! sad.gif
ConcernedP1964
QUOTE(ncMindy @ Jun 28 2005, 05:11 PM)
It's a bloodbath in Iraq! sad.gif
[right][snapback]79976[/snapback][/right]


Thank you ncMindy.

I wonder how long America, democrats and republicans, are going to put up with this abuse of power. mad.gif mad.gif

Thank you very much ncMindy for your response. smile.gif smile.gif

Sincerely,
CP
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