McCain: War through 2013;
Baghdad mayor target; Olbermann: "Murderous deceit"
Republican presidential candidate John McCain said
on Thursday he believes the Iraq war will last at least four more
years but that eventually "victory" will be achieved.
"By January 2013, America has welcomed home most of the servicemen
and women who have sacrificed terribly so that America might be
secure in her freedom," McCain said in Columbus, Ohio. McCain
also says any decades-long presence of U.S. troops would be aimed
at maintaining stability in the region and has likened it to the
U.S. military presence in Japan, South Korea and Germany.
A roadside bomb targeted Baghdad's mayor on Thursday,
killing one escort and wounding seven others. The bomb attack occurred
as the motorcade passed through central Baghdad, but the mayor,
Hussein al-Tahan, was not in the vehicle at the time.
Also on Thursday, seven people were killed and 19
others wounded overnight Thursday from continuing fighting in Baghdad's
Sadr City district. Spokesman of the Sadr movement in the central
shrine city of Najaf, Salah Al-Obeidi, said continuing US air strikes
against Sadr City were impeding implementation of the truce.
The Iraqi army said it arrested the manager of the
Nineveh governor's office in a raid in southern Mosul. The U.S.
military said it killed four militants in clashes on Wednesday afternoon
in the Kadhimiya district of northwestern Baghdad.
Iraqi security forces carried out mass arrests in
the main northern city of Mosul as a new crackdown against Al-Qaeda
entered its second day on Thursday, officials said. About 275 people
were detained overnight on top of 560 people seized since Tuesday,
defence and interior ministry officials said. The US military said
it was providing logistics and intelligence support for the Iraqi-led
offensive.
On Wednesday's Countdown, MSNBC host Keith Olbermann's
latest "Special Comment" attack on President Bush accused
the President of "panoramic and murderous deceit," and
of "creating" an America that "includes 'cold-blooded
killers who will kill people to achieve their political objectives,'"
contending that "they are those in, or formerly in, your employ,
who may yet be charged some day with war crimes." He further
accused Bush, whom he referred to as having an "addled brain,"
of "laying waste to Iraq to achieve your political objectives"
in an "insurance-scam, profiteering, morally bankrupting war."
He also accused the President of forming in Iraq "an American
viceroyalty, enforced by merciless mercenaries who shoot unarmed
Iraqis and then evade prosecution in any country by hiding behind
your skirts, sir," and charged: "Terrorism inside Iraq
is your creation, Mr. Bush!"
posted 15 May, 2007
Maliki in Mosul;
Peace group sues on war powers
Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki flew to Mosul
on Wednesday to take charge of a big offensive in what the
U.S. military says is insurgent's last major urban stronghold
in Iraq along with National Security Advisor Mowafaq al-Rabeiy.
It was unclear how long Maliki would stay, but his visit
is similar to when he flew to the southern city of Basra
in late March to oversee a crackdown on militias there.
More than 500 men have been rounded up and placed in prison
during the first week of Operation Lion's Roar. U.S. and
Iraqi troops are conducting house by house searches throughout
Mosul.
Fighting continued in Baghdad and elsewhere
throughout Iraq. There were more than 100 casualties on
Tuesday - including an American soldier - and at least 100
more on Wednesday.
Four mortar rounds into the Iraqi interior
and justice ministries in central Baghdad on Thursday. The
Ministry of Justice suffered heavy fire damage. A Baghdad
market was also destroyed by fire overnight. There was also
an explosion in the Green Zone that resulted in casualties.
Five people were killed and 22 wounded in
clashes overnight in Sadr City, the two main hospitals there
said. Two people were killed and six wounded in the western
Shula district. Three people were killed and seven wounded
when a roadside bomb exploded near the convoy of Abdul-Kareem
al- Samarrai, a prominent figure in the Iraqi Islamic Party.
A car bomb exploded in western Baghdad near the headquarters
of the Iraqi Islamic Party, killing two people and wounding
15. A civilian and four Iraqi soldiers were wounded when
a roadside bomb exploded near an Iraqi army patrol close
to the al-Shaab national stadium.
Twenty-five people were killed and dozens
more wounded in a bomb attack in Fallujah. Police said they
killed four insurgents who were trying to plant a bomb on
the road near the city of Samarra.
An peace activist group sued President Bush
in U.S. District Court in Newark on Tuesday, seeking a declaratory
judgment that the war in Iraq is illegal and unconstitutional.
The suit, New Jersey Peace Action et al. v. Bush,
represented by the Constitutional Law Clinic at Rutgers
University Law School-Newark, alleges that the war violates
article I, section 8 of the U.S. Constitution, which assigns
to Congress the authority to declare war.
The plaintiffs seek a declaration that the
president's unilateral decision to launch a full-scale invasion
without congressional approval is "capable of repetition."
Askin pointed to suggestions that the Bush administration
is considering some type of military action against Iran
because of allegations that country is attempting to build
nuclear weapons. "The Framers deliberately chose to
locate the war-initiating power in the most representative
branch of government," he said. "They recognized
that there is always much at stake in war ... and they wanted
to make the process through which the nation could become
immersed in war difficult and cumbersome."
posted 14 May, 2007
Clashes
continue despite cease-fire; Dept. of State accused
of aiding corruption
An agreement aimed at ending fighting
in the Baghdad district of Sadr City is on the verge
of collapse on Tuesday as U.S. troops and freedom
fighters continue to launch attacks on one another.
Clashes flared overnight, raising questions over how
much control Moqtada al-Sadr has over some of the
Mehdi Army militiamen who profess allegiance to him.
There were also been intense gun battles between Iraqi
security forces and militiamen on Tuesday in Shula,
a Sadr stronghold in northwestern Baghdad.
Clashes in Sadr City on Tuesday killed
11 peopile and wounded 20 others, mainly in U.S. air
strikes. Homes and shops were also destroyed. Gunmen
killed an army officer, Brigadier-General Nibras Fadhil
Abbas, in a drive-by shooting on Monday in Nisoor
square in central Baghdad. A roadside bomb wounded
five civilians in the Karrada district.
Elsewhere in Iraq, a bomb blast wounded
two children in south-eastern Mosul. Also in Mosul,
five Iraqi soldiers were killed and four more injured
in a bomb blast. Gunmen abducted six university students
from a minibus near Baqouba on Monday. A roadside
bomb attack on a police patrol killed one policeman
and wounded three others near Mahmudiya. A mortar
attack killed a woman and wounded three people including
a child in Nassiriya.
Two former U.S. State Department officials
say the Bush administration has done little to fight
corruption in Iraq. In testimony to a congressional
panel Monday. Arthur Brennan briefly served as director
of the State Department's Office of Accountability
and Transparency in Baghdad last year. In testimony
before a Democratic Policy Committee hearing, which
no Republicans attended, Brennan accused the Bush
administration of thwarting the efforts of his office
to probe and fight corruption in Iraq. He said the
administration did not aggressively pursue corruption
out of concern that that could undermine its relationship
with the Iraqi government.
"The Department of State's actual
policy not only contradicted the anti-corruption mission,
but indirectly contributed to and has allowed corruption
to fester at the highest levels of the Iraqi government,"
he said. Brennan also said U.S. ambassador to Iraq,
Ryan Crocker, has avoided addressing the problem.
"If he does not know than he is negligent. If
he does know, then he is intentionally misleading
Congress and the American public."
posted 13 May, 2007
previous news items >>

|
Call to End the War in Iraq
Texans for Peace actively tried
to prevent the war in Iraq and is now working to bring it
to an end and make sure that amends are made. The
continuing war in Iraq exceeds the bounds of decency and diplomacy
and those who started this disaster are unlikely to end it
... unless we demand it.
Texans for Peace continues
to call attention to this war, send "peace ambassadors" directly
to Iraq, and bring you the latest information on what is really
going on over there. We call on you to work with us for peace;
"End The War in Iraq, and Bring Our Troops Home Now!"
Answer the call.
Charlie
Jackson, Texans for Peace
Charlie
Jackson, founder of Texans for Peace, has made three trips
to Iraq already during this war...spending it entirely outside
of the "Green Zone" protected areas. (2002, 2003,
2005) During his most recent trip he traveled throughout Baghdad,
Kerbala, and Najaf. He also recently completed a trip to Jordan
(2007) to visit with Iraqi refugees living there. Jackson
reports daily on conditions and issues surrounding the Iraq
war as a volunteer peacemaker.


photos
from three trips within Iraq
|
|