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DAILY PHOTO OF U.S. SOLDIERS

Family and friends walk behind the casket carrying the comingled
remains of Army Chief Warrant Officer Matthew G. Kelley, Chief
Warrant Officer Joshua M. Tillery, Chief Warrant Officer Benjamin
H. Todd, and Chief Warrant Officer Phillip E. Windorski carried
on a cason during funeral services at Arlington National Cemetery
in Arlington, Va., Thursday, March 18, 2010. The four Soldiers
died from wounds sustained in Iraq and were assigned to the
10th Mountain Division, Fort Drum, N.Y., at the time of their
deaths on Jan. 29, 2009. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen) March 19, 2010
more soldier photos>>
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DAILY PHOTO OF IRAQIS

Relatives mourn Iraqi policeman Mohammed Flayiey during his
funeral in Baghdad, Iraq, Wednesday, March 10, 2010. The officer
was killed Tuesday night when gunmen approached a police checkpoint
and opened fire, police said. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban). March
19, 2010

more Iraqi photos>>
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DAILY PHOTO OF AFGHANS

Afghan children look on U.S occupation forces with 293D Military
Police Company, 97th Military Police Battalion arrive at a
local police station on the outskirts of Kandahar, southern
Afghanistan March 18, 2010. (REUTERS/Shamil Zhumatov) March
19, 2010

more Afghan photos>>
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DAILY PHOTO OF PAKISTANIS

Police officers help a protester injured by a rubber bullet
police fired to disperse angry crowd in Islamabad, Pakistan
on Friday, March 19, 2010. Violence erupted in the capital's
outskirts when police tried to fight a mob of students protesting
the hike in public transport fares. (AP Photo/B.K.Bangash)
March 19, 2010

more Pakistan photos>>
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Sexual assaults in the U.S. military An annual report
from the Department of Defense reveals that over the past year,
reports of sexual assaults in the military have increased by 11
percent, including a 16-percent spike in reported incidents in combat
areas, principally in Iraq and Afghanistan. While 87 percent of
the reported assaults were male-on-female, seven percent were male-on-male.
.......[more]
posted 19 March 2010
>>
Say hello to Marjah ... or 'Little America' To Western
reporters, Helmand is the poppy-growing heartland of the Taliban
and the home of Marjah, the demonstration project for the Barack
Obama administration's new and improved Afghan strategy, "Operation
Moshtarak" (Together). To the locals, the irrigated heartland
of Helmand has another name: "Little America".
.......[more]
posted 16 March 2010
>>Pentagon
considers Afghanistan spy ring claim
The US Defence Department says it may look into an
official who allegedly ran a secret spy ring in Afghanistan and
Pakistan using its funds.......[more]
posted 16 March 2010
>>GI
bill of goods: Recession dries up job expectations for returning
vets
those who answered the call in the nation's most
recent wars have been hit harder by the staggering economy than
the rest of America.......[more]
posted 12 March 2010
>>
SoCal Marine, wife charged with Iraq scam A Marine
Corps captain and his wife have been charged with skimming $1.75
million from government contracts in Iraq.......[more]
posted 05 March 2010
recent news items >>
>>U.S. "Bling Bling" Embassy
The new U.S. Embassy is officially open for business in Baghdad.
And.... it was already built .... [more]
posted 30 june 2003
more news coverage about Iraq
 
 
 
 
 

 
Learn about a Texans for Peace initiative to assist women business
professionals and entrepreneurs in Baghdad.
Womens Business Center of Baghdad
Learn about Depleted Uranium (DU) and its effects on Iraq and our
soldiers:
International Coalition to
Ban DU
Uranium Medical Research Centre
Depleted
Uranium at the IAEA
Iraq War Images
more Iraq War photos>>
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Show your support...order an "End The War
in Iraq!" t-shirt today (we have yard signs and bumper stickers
too)
(reverse reads "Bring Our Troops Home Now!")
 
 
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Antiwar protests continue;
Iraq violence; 10,000 Marines can't pacify Helmand; Pakistan refusing
to hand over Taliban
Antiwar protests are scheduled throughout the U.S. and around
the world on Saturday - the 7th anniversary of the start of the
U.S. invasion of Iraq. The Iraq war has already outlasted World
War II, World War I, and the U.S. Civil War and, along with the
war in Afghanistan, could end up being the costliest in U.S. history.
In the words of Texan Molly Ivins, "every single day, every
single one of us needs to step outside and take some action to
help stop this war. Raise hell. ...We need people in the streets,
banging pots and pans and demanding, 'Stop it, now!'" More
and more military vets are joining in the protests along with
a wide variety of peace and human rights organizations. In Washington,
DC, a protest against the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan,will begin
with a noon rally in Lafayette Park across the street from the
White House, followed by a march led by Cindy Sheehan whose son
was killed in Iraq in 2005. Maggie Pondolfino, a representative
of Military Families Speak Out whose son is currently in Afghanistans
says, "I'm the proud mother of an active-duty infantry soldier.
. . . We love and support our troops. And it is because we do
that we will vocally show our opposition whenever our government
sends them to ill-advised, immoral, unwinnable wars."
Never about bringing democracy, improving the living conditions
of Iraqis and Afghans, nor eliminating weapons of mass destruction,
these battlefields are part of the U.S.'s "projection of
force" around the world in a vain attempt to establish mlitary
and political dominance over a region with vast oil and natural
gas resources and to break the OPEC cartel. The citizens of the
impacted countries are only pawns in a global chess game.
In a visit to Hong Kong on Friday, former U.S. Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice said she "regretted" the Bush administration
failed to work closer with Iraqis to rebuild the war-torn country.
Rice served George W. Bush as national security adviser and later
as America's chief diplomat. She now is a senior fellow at the
conservative Hoover Institution research group at Stanford University.
The invasion, and its aftermath, destabilized the entire nation
and created escalating levels of violence.
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On Friday in Baghdad, a bomb on a motorcycle went
off near a market in Sadr City, killing three people and wounding
seven. Rice served Bush as national security adviser and later as
America's chief diplomat. Gunmen stormed an off-duty policeman's
house and killed him in the Doura district. In Mosul, a roadside
bomb targeting an Iraqi army patrol killed one soldier and wounded
three others. Iraqi soldiers accompanied by U.S. advisers claim
they killed a senior leader of al-Qaeda and captured six of his
associates on Thursday.
In Afghanistan, continued militancy and conflicts
are claiming more than 100 people's lives with overwhelming of them
non-combatants as the U.S. occupation continues into its 9th year.
Much has changed, but much remains the same.. The facts on the ground
today are that the Taliban (or the insurgency) now controls large
swathes of the country - even running parallel administrations.
U.S. political and military leaders keep claiming "progress".
Meanwhile, ordinary Afghans continue to suffer in this nation -
one of the poorest on earth.
In Helmand Province, 10,000 marines are apparently
not enough to pacify the Taliban. Operation Moshtarek continues,
there are reports that 3 of the 13 districts still remain in Taliban
control. The newly-appointed police chief of Baghran district can't
even get to his job and phones in commands out of an office in Lashkar
Gah. In Musa Qala district, the government controls the main town
but the Taliban hold weekly court sessions in the rest of the district
to settle property and other disputes. "The Taliban are not
gone (from Marjah). They have only gone to the other districts of
Grishk and Sangin," says former Helmand Gov. Sher Mohammed
Akhundzada.
Michael D. Furlong, the senior Defense Department
employee under investigation for allegedly running an unauthorized
intelligence-gathering operation in Afghanistan, says his now-suspended
program was fully authorized by top U.S. military commanders. According
to Furlong, the program, which began in late 2008, was requested
by Army Gen. David D. McKiernan, the former top U.S. commander in
Afghanistan, and approved by the U.S. Central Command. Most of the
contractors hired by Furlong for the $24.8 million program -- one
of the military's many "information operations" programs
in the region -- were, like Furlong, Special Operations retirees.
In Pakistan on Friday, two people were killed and
two wounded when suspected separatist militants fired at a mini-bus
belonging to a military training school in the southwestern province
of Baluchistan. Militants fired rocket-propelled grenades at a police
checkpoint in the Mohmand region on the Afghan border but there
were no casualties.
Pakistan is refusing to hand over captured Taliban
leaders to Afghanistan on the grounds that they could be released
or transferred to the U.S. The refusal to extradite Abdul Ghani
Baradar, the Taliban's deputy leader and military commander, together
with several regional insurgent commanders seized by Pakistani forces
in recent weeks, has deepened uncertainty over Islamabad's motives.
Mediators involved in back-channel talks with the Taliban say that
Baradar took part in the dialogue and appeared interested in a negotiated
peace. There had been speculation that Pakistan's Inter Services
Intelligence agency (ISI) had arrested Baradar in Karachi last month
because of those talks, and because he had bypassed Pakistan. posted
19 March, 2010
War in Pakistan heats
up; 6 US casualties in Iraq, 2 UK in Afghanistan; New "Northern
Offensive"; IED attacks up
At least two civilians, one of them a woman, were killed by
firing from Pakistani security forces in north-west Pakistan
on Thursday. The incident happened in the tribal region of Darra
Adamkhel, when troops fired at two passenger buses that were
breaking a curfew. On Wednesday night, more than 50 militants
armed with heavy weapons attacked a checkpoint on the border
between Darra Adamkhel and the north-western city of Peshawar.
The security forces returned fire, sparking clashes that continued
all night. On Thursday morning, the security forces imposed
a curfew on the road through Darra Adamkhel and started a search
operation. Officials say the two buses were presumably unaware
of the curfew.
Two missile strikes by pilotless U.S. drone aircraft on Wednesday
killed at least nine "militants" in Pakistan's North
Waziristan. Pakistani security forces on Wednesday killed five
militants including two Taliban commanders who were wanted over
an uprising in the northwestern Swat valley.
Imran Khan has warned that the Pakistani army's offensive in
the tribal areas is pushing the country to the brink of civil
war. He also blamed US-Pakistan military attacks in the
areas bordering Afghanistan for creating the Pakistan Taliban,
in the comments in London's Evening Standard paper on Wednesday.
They were like a bull in a china shop, fighting one or
two guerrillas with aerial bombing of villages. That turned
people against the army and a new phenomenon was created: the
Pakistan Taliban. For Khan, who leads a marginal force
in Pakistani politics Tehrik-i-Insaf (Movement for Justice),
the way to deal with militants is through boosting state help
for the poor. You will have no problem with extremists
in Pakistan if you have democracy with a welfare state,
he told an audience in London.
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One U.S. soldier has been killed in combat in Baghdad
on Thursday.
On Wednesday, the U.S. military said two American
pilots died in a helicopter crash in Iraq on Saturday, during
a "hard landing" in the Salahuddin province north of
Baghdad as the U.S. occupation extends into it 7th year. Also,
the one soldier died and three more were injured during a roll-over
accident while on patrol in northern Iraq on Monday. Two British
soldiers were killed by an IED in Southern Afghanistan on Tuesday.
On Thursday in Iraq, the decapitated bodies of a
policeman and a soldier were found about an hour after they were
abducted by gunmen in the town of Shirqat. Gunmen killed a truck
driver and wounded his son in southern Mosul. Two boys were wounded
when they were playing with an explosive object in northern Mosul.
Gunmen stormed a house and killed a 24-year-old woman in eastern
Mosul. Gunmen threw a hand grenade at an Iraqi army patrol wounding
two civilians on Wednesday. In Baghdad, Gunmen killed a man in
the Shaab district. Two roadside bombs wounded six people near
an Iraqi army patrol, including two soldiers, on Wednesday in
Baghdad's northern Waziriya district. Gunmen using silencers wounded
an official working with the Iraq Human Rights ministry in the
Ghazaliya district. Gunmen also detonated a bomb near a house
and wounded two civilians in Abu Ghraib.
In Afghanistan, Afghan forces shot dead two would-be
suicide bombers who planned to storm an office used by foreigners
in the provincial capital of southern Helmand on Wednesday. An
unidentified gunman shot dead a senior Afghan provincial official
in Ghazni's town late on Tuesday. At least 12 people were killed
in a series of explosions in various parts of Afghanistan on Monda.
The NATO military alliance is planning a large-scale
offensive in northern Afghanistan this year against Taliban insurgents
in Kunduz Province, a senior German general was quoted as saying
on Thursday. He declined to give details but said that it would
be on a "similar" scale to the offensive currently underway
in the southern province of Helmand involving 15,000 US, NATO
and Afghan troops. Operations to push the Taliban out of their
iconic Afghan stronghold of Kandahar are also underway, the commander
of US and NATO troops in Afghanistan, US General Stanley McChrystal,
said Wednesday.
Taliban fighters more than doubled the number of
homemade bombs they used against U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan
last year, relying on explosives that are often far more primitive
than the ones used in Iraq. The embrace of a low-tech approach
by Taliban-trained bombmakers -- they are building improvised
explosive devices, or IEDs, out of fertilizer and diesel fuel
-- has stymied a $17 billion U.S. counteroffensive against the
devices in Iraq and Afghanistan, military officials say. Electronic
scanners or jammers, which were commonly deployed in Iraq, can
detect only bombs with metal parts or circuitry. U.S. military
officials said they expected the number of IED attacks to climb
further this year as 40,000 U.S. and NATO esclate the war in Afghanistan.
posted
18 March, 2010
US prison turned over
to Iraqis; USAF drone kills 10; Sahil Saeed released; Obama
escalation will be "difficult"; War for TAPI Gas pipeline
The U.S. military handed over a $107 million prison with 2,900
inmates to the Iraqi government on Monday as it prepares to
leave Iraq seven years after the initial invasion. The formal
transfer of the detention center at Camp Taji, a sprawling U.S.
base north of Baghdad, is part of a plan to unwind a U.S. occupation
detention program in Iraq that cost $500 million a year at its
peak and incarcerated tens of thousands of Iraqi citizens. U.S.
officials did not allow reporters to tour the facility. U.S.
forces have taken into custody about 90,000 people since the
2003 invasion, in Abu Ghraib, Camp Bucca and other prisons.
The last, Camp Cropper located near Baghdad airport, will be
turned over to Iraq on July 15.
Violence continued in Iraq on Tuesday. Eight people were killed
and 11 wounded when two sticky bombs exploded in separate attacks
five minutes apart in the town of Mussayab, 40 miles south of
Baghdad. A soldier was killed by a gunman at a checkpoint in
western Mosul. In Baghdad, a bomb attached to a car wounded
three people. One roadside bomb wounded three policemen in northern
Baghdad and another roadside bomb wounded two civilians in Baghdad's
central Karrada district.
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A US drone missile strike and clashes between gunmen
and tribesmen killed at least 20 "militants on" Tuesday
in northwest Pakistan near the Afghan border. The five missiles
hit a compound near Datta Khel village, 12 miles west of Miranshah,
the main town of North Waziristan, killing at least 10 people.
More than 830 people have been killed in more than 90 US strikes
in Pakistan since August 2008, with a surge in the past year by
President Barack Obama as he escalates the war. Elsewhere in the
tribal belt, a gunfight between militants and local tribesmen
killed at least 10 rebels and wounded another seven in the Kurram
district.
Kidnappers released 5-year-old Sahil Saeed unharmed
Tuesday almost two weeks after abducting him from his grandparents'
house in central Pakistan. Saeed was found in a small village
in Punjab province, some 20 miles southeast of Jhelum city where
armed robbers seized him on March 4. The boy was examined by a
doctor, Hafeezur Rehman, who said he looked "healthy and
happy." "There was no sign of depression on his face,"
Rehman told The Associated Press. "He was playing with toys
at a government rest house when I examined him."
Gen. David Petraeus says that the Obama Administrations
war escalation plans in Afghanistan will result in fighting that
is "likely get harder before it gets easier" and predicts
2010 will be a difficult year. Petraeus, who heads the U.S. Central
Command, testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee
Tuesday. He said he "expects" U.S. forces will be able
to reverse the momentum gained by Taliban militants in Afghanistan,
but Petraeus also said he envisions "tough fighting and periodic
setbacks," in the war already in its 9th year.
Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top U.S. commander
in Afghanistan, has brought most U.S. special-operations forces
under his direct control for the first time, out of concern over
continued civilian casualties and disorganization among units
in the field. "What happens is sometimes at cross-purposes
you got one hand doing one thing and one hand doing the
other, both trying to do the right thing but working without a
good outcome," McChrystal said. Critics, including Afghan
officials, human-rights workers and some field commanders of conventional
U.S. forces, say that special-operations forces have been responsible
for a large number of the civilian casualties in Afghanistan and
operate by their own rules. U.S. Vice Adm. Greg Smith says the
move will integrate almost all of the 20,000 U.S. troops serving
in eastern Afghanistan under Operation Enduring Disaster into
the 90,000-strong NATO-led International Security Assistance Force.
Smith said Tuesday that Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top NATO
and U.S. commander in Afghanistan who leads both forces, wants
to bring "unity of command" to the war and avoid having
allied elements working at cross-purposes.
Efforts are underway to revive the TAPI gas pipeline
project involving India, Pakistan, Turkmenistan and Afghanistan
during a meeting in Ashkhabad next month. Experts from the four
countries will meet in Turkmenistan's capital on April 17-18 to
discuss the $4 billion pipeline's route and the volume of gas
that Turkmenistan can supply to India and Pakistan. The pipeline
is one reason for the U.S. invasion and occupation of Afghanistan.
It will stretch nearly 1,000 miles from Turkmenistan's southeastern
Daulatabad gas field to the Indian city of Bikaner and run through
Afghanistan's Helmand province and Pakistan's Waziristan province.
Several Texas energy companies are expected to participate in
the project as well.
Iran and Pakistan signed a deal in Turkey on Tuesday
paving the way for construction to start on a much-delayed natural-gas
pipeline connecting the two nations in a move that has been opposed
by Washington as undermining sanctions efforts against Tehran.
Pakistan has argued the pipeline, which will connect Iran's South
Pars gas field with Pakistan's Baluchistan and Sindh provinces,
is crucial to averting a growing energy crisis that is already
causing severe electricity shortages. posted
16 March, 2010

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Call to End the Wars in Afghanistan and
Iraq
Texans for Peace actively tried
to prevent the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and is now working
to bring them to an end and make sure that amends are made.
The continuing war in Iraq and Afghanistan
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 Afghanistan, 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 Wars - Bring Our Troops Home Now!" Answer the
call.
Charlie
Jackson, Texans for Peace
Charlie
Jackson, founder of Texans for Peace, has made four trips
to Iraq already during this war...spending time entirely outside
of the "Green Zone" protected areas. (2002-03, 2003,
2005, 2009). Jackson has traveled throughout 17 of Iraq's
18 provinces. During his most recent trip he visited Kurdistan,
Erbil and Kirkuk. He also sponsored 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 various trips to Iraq
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