Iraq |
Chemical Ali executed |
2010-01-25 |
![]() Iraq's government spokesman says Saddam Hussein's notorious cousin "Chemical Ali" was executed Monday about a week after being sentenced to death for the poison gas attacks that killed more than 5,000 Kurds in 1988. News of the hanging came shortly after three suicide car bombs struck downtown Baghdad. It was not immediately clear whether the attacks were linked the execution of Ali Hassan al-Majid. Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh confirmed the execution took place. Al-Majid - widely known as "Chemical Ali" for the gas attacks - was convicted on Sunday for ordering the poison gas to be dropped on the Kurdish town of Halabja in 1988 as part of a campaign against a Kurdish uprising. It was the fourth death sentence against him for crimes against humanity. |
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Iraq |
11 killed in two bombings in Iraq |
2009-07-31 |
![]() The first bomb exploded inside a political party office in Baquba, killing seven people and wounding eight, said Lieutenant Colonel Abdul Hameed al-Shimari, the head of an emergency police unit in restive Diyala province. Hours later, a suicide bomber drove a car packed with explosives into a police station in Qaim, near the Syrian border in western Iraq, killing four people and wounding seven. Separately, Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki is due to meet Kurdish President Masoud Barzani next week, a rare encounter between two leaders whose standoff over territory, power and oil threatens renewed bloodshed in Iraq. Maliki may also meet with Barham Salih, a Kurd who is Iraq's deputy prime minister, who Kurdish officials say is set to become Kurdistan's new prime minister. Meanwhile, Iraq's government admitted on Thursday that seven Iranian exiles were killed when Iraqi forces took control of their camp north of Baghdad. Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh had earlier denied anyone died in clashes on Tuesday between police and demonstrators who tried to block their entry into Camp Ashraf, which has been home to the People's Mujahideen of Iran for about two decades. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran | |||||
CIA led mystery Syria raid that killed terrorist leader | |||||
2008-10-28 | |||||
A CIA-led raid on a compound in eastern Syria killed an al Qaida in Iraq commander who oversaw the smuggling into Iraq of foreign fighters whose attacks claimed thousands of Iraqi and American lives, three U.S. officials said Monday.
"It was a successful operation," a second U.S. official told McClatchy. "The bottom line: This was a significant blow to the foreign fighter pipeline between Syria and Iraq." A senior U.S. military officer said the raid was launched after human and technical intelligence confirmed that al Mazidih was present at the compound close to Syria's border with Iraq. "The situation finally presented itself," he said. The three U.S. officials, who all spoke on the condition of anonymity because the operation was classified, declined to reveal other details of the raid. A CIA spokesman declined to comment.
On Feb. 28, the Treasury Department announced a freeze on any U.S. assets belonging to al Mazidih and three of his associates, charging that they were smuggling "money, weapons, terrorists, and other resources through Syria to al Qaida in Iraq, including to (al Qaida) commanders." The Treasury Department announcement identified al Mazidih as a Sunni Muslim who was born in the late 1970s in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul and was a lieutenant of al Qaida in Iraq leader Abu Musab al Zarqawi, who was killed in 2006. He was believed to be living in the Syrian town of Zabadani. "Former al Qaida in Iraq leader Abu Musab al Zarqawi appointed Badran (al Mazidih) as the group's Syrian commander for logistics in 2004," the Treasury said. "After Zarqawi's death, Badran began working for the new AQI leader, Abu Ayyub al Masri. As of late-September 2006, Badran took orders directly from Masri, or through a deputy. "Badran obtained false passports for foreign terrorists, provided passports, weapons, guides, safe houses, and allowances to foreign terrorists in Syria and those preparing to cross the border into Iraq," it said. "As of the spring of 2007, Badran facilitated the movement of AQI operatives into Iraq via the Syrian border. Badran also directed another Syria-based AQI facilitator to provide safe haven and supplies to foreign fighters," the Treasury said. "This AQI facilitator, working directly for Badran, facilitated the movement of foreign fighters primarily from Gulf countries, through Syria into Iraq." The Bush administration, which for years has expressed frustration over what it charges have been Syria's lackluster efforts to stop foreign Islamic fighters from crossing into Iraq, refused to publicly acknowledge the operation. It wasn't immediately clear whether an order that President Bush signed in July allowing U.S. commandos from Afghanistan to attack a suspected terrorist base in Pakistan also authorized cross-border operations in other countries. Pentagon officials were tight-lipped about the operation. But they were quick to defend the decision to cross the border, with one saying that if nations that sponsor terrorist networks won't go after them, "we will."
"The Americans do it in the daylight. This means it was not a mistake. It is by blunt determination," Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al Moallem charged Monday at a news conference in London. "For that, we consider this criminal and terrorist aggression."
The Iraqi government defended the raid. Government spokesman Ali al Dabbagh said that Syria had refused to hand over foreign fighters who'd taken refuge there after killing 13 Iraqi border guards. However, al Dabbagh said, a proposed accord governing the status of U.S. forces in Iraq "will limit this type of operation. It will limit the United States from using Iraqi land to attack others." This was a very special, five star operation. He literally got the Yamamoto treatment. | |||||
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Iraq |
Abu Ghraib prison to become museum - Panties on heads too shocking to show |
2008-09-03 |
![]() The jail, which is situated 15 miles west of Baghdad, has been closed since September 2006 after the US military handed it over to the Iraqi authorities in the wake of a prisoner abuse scandal. Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said: "A part of it will be kept as a museum for showing the crimes committed by the previous regime." However, it is thought that no references to the facility's recent controversy will be made. A committee of interior, defence and justice ministries will oversee the reconstruction, the spokesman added, but he was unable to give a timetable for completion. Abu Ghraib housed approximately 2,000 inmates when it was closed in 2006. |
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Iraq | ||
Iraqi PM disputes report on withdrawal plan | ||
2008-07-20 | ||
Nuri al-Maliki told Der Spiegel that he favors a "limited" tenure for coalition troops in Iraq. "U.S. presidential candidate Barack Obama talks about 16 months," he said in an interview with Der Spiegel that was released Saturday. "That, we think, would be the right time frame for a withdrawal, with the possibility of slight changes," he said.
In the magazine interview, Al-Maliki said his remarks did not indicate that he was endorsing Obama over presumptive Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain. "Who they choose as their president is the Americans' business. But it's the business of Iraqis to say what they want. And that's where the people and the government are in general agreement: The tenure of the coalition troops in Iraq should be limited," he said. "Those who operate on the premise of short time periods in Iraq today are being more realistic," al-Maliki said. The interview's publication came one day after the White House said President Bush and al-Maliki had agreed to include a "general time horizon" in talks about reducing American combat forces and transferring Iraqi security control across the country. The Bush administration has steadfastly refused to consider a "timetable" for withdrawing troops from Iraq. In a statement issued Friday after a conversation between Bush and al-Maliki by closed-circuit television, the White House said that conditions in Iraq would dictate the pace of the negotiations and not "an arbitrary date for withdrawal." The two men "agreed that the goals would be based on continued improving conditions on the ground and not an arbitrary date for withdrawal," the White House said. In an interview to air Sunday on "Late Edition," Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told CNN's Wolf Blitzer that "those goals are being achieved now, as we speak. And so, it's not at all unusual to start to think that there is a horizon out there, in the not too distant future, in which the roles and responsibilities of the U.S. forces are going to change dramatically and those of the Iraqi forces are going to become dominant." White House spokesman Scott Stanzel said al-Maliki had made it clear that such decisions will be based on continuing positive developments. "It is our shared view that should the recent security gains continue, we will be able to meet our joint aspirational time horizons," he said. McCain does not think American troops should return to the United States until Iraqi forces are capable of maintaining a safe, democratic state. He has been a strong advocate of the 2007 "surge" to escalate U.S. troop levels and says troops should stay in Iraq as long as needed. McCain says Obama is wrong for opposing the increased troop presence, and Obama says McCain's judgment is flawed. | ||
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Iraq |
Tater's followers grimace fearsomely, make blood-curdling threats |
2008-04-22 |
![]() Nassar al-Rubaie said the rival parties that dominate Iraq's government failed to meet conditions al-Sadr laid down in his March 30 declaration that temporarily halted fighting between Shiite militias and government forces in the southern city of Basra. He said responses from members of the United Iraqi Alliance who have served as mediators in the confrontation have not met "the level of seriousness required by the Sadrists." "We reviewed reactions to Sayyed Muqtada al-Sadr's latest statement, and we are ready for all options," said al-Rubaie, one of the 30 Sadrist lawmakers in Iraq's 275-member parliament. Al-Sadr ordered his fighters in Basra to stand down and cooperate with government forces in the March 30 declaration, but called on the government to free non-convicted prisoners from his movement, stop what he called "illegal" raids on his followers and launch new public works projects across the country. The warning comes amid renewed clashes between government troops and police and al-Sadr's followers south of Baghdad. Saturday, al-Sadr issued what he called a last warning to the government and told his followers to fight the "occupier" in his Baghdad stronghold of Sadr City. Al-Maliki's government has called on the cleric to disband his militia, the Mehdi Army, or see his supporters barred from public office. Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh warned Sunday that "Iraq cannot be the new Somalia," with armed groups overshadowing its politics. But al-Sadr's followers say the government's U.S.-backed crackdown on militia fighters in Basra and Baghdad is an effort to weaken the cleric's movement ahead of provincial elections scheduled for August. Sadrist lawmaker Fawzi Tarzi said Sunday that calls to disband the Mehdi Army "will mean the end of al-Maliki's government." |
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Iraq | |
Iraqi cabinet seeks to ban militias from elections | |
2008-04-14 | |
BAGHDAD - Iraqs cabinet has agreed a draft law on provincial elections that bans any party from the polls if they have militias, officials said on Sunday, a move that could inflame tensions with Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr. Foreign Minister Hoshiyar Zebari said the draft had set Oct. 1 as the election date. The law would be given to parliament for approval very soon, he told Reuters after a cabinet meeting. Zebari said Sadr was not the target of the provision on militias in the draft law, adding it applied to all parties. Its absolutely crystal clear. It says any parties that enter this election should not have or should not retain any paramilitaries or militias operating outside the law, he said.
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Iraq |
Iraq PM demands execution of Chemical Ali |
2007-12-01 |
![]() What constitutes such a request is at the centre of a row between Prime Minister Nuri al-Malikis Shiite-led government and President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, and Sunni Arab Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi. Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh told Reuters on Friday Maliki had sent a letter to Bush last week in which he demanded the three convicts be handed over. The US forces do not have the right to interfere in a judicial case and decide whether it was legal or not, Dabbagh said. Only Iraqi authorities have the right to do so. The US embassy in Baghdad had no comment on the letter. Maliki has said the US embassy in Baghdad has played an unfortunate role in preventing the handover of the three. Talabani and Hashemi say Iraqs constitution stipulates that the three-man presidency council - made up of the president and two vice presidents - should sign the order. |
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Iraq |
Iraq to send team to Turkey to discuss border standoff |
2007-10-17 |
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki said Tuesday he was dispatching a "high-level" political and security team to Turkey to try to defuse tensions on the Iraqi-Turkish border. Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh, meanwhile, said authorities intend to expel guerrillas of the separatist Kurdistan Workers' Party from Iraqi territory, but that their numbers and their whereabouts were not known to the government. He did not elaborate. |
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Iraq |
Violence in Iraq kills 56, bombs target officials |
2007-10-10 |
BAGHDAD - Two suicide car bombs killed 22 people in northern Iraq on Tuesday in attacks targeting a police chief and a tribal leader working with US forces, part of an upsurge in violence that killed 56 across the country. In Baghdad, foreign security guards escorting a convoy of four vehicles through the city centre killed two women when they opened fire on a car, the government said. Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said private US security firm Blackwater was not involved in the deaths of the two women in Baghdad. There has been an incident, an attack on civilians. Two Iraqi women were killed, Dabbagh said, adding the company was also not Iraqi, but declining to give more details. One witness said the guards fired a warning shot when a car carrying two women and children pulled out of a side road. But the driver edged forward and the security guards opened fire. US embassy spokeswoman Mirembe Nantongo, referring to the incident, said there may be a contractual relationship with a US non-governmental organisation (NGO). She did not elaborate. In the northern town of Baiji, officials said the police chief was wounded and the condition of the Sunni Arab tribal leader was unknown after the two suicide car bombings. Baiji, 180 km (110 miles) north of the capital in Salahuddin province, is a major oil refining centre fed with crude oil and gas from the vast fields under the nearby city of Kirkuk. We were standing beside the mosque waiting for sunrise. We saw a blue minibus approaching, the imam of Baijis Abdullah al-Nami mosque told Reuters Television. One of those killed told me earlier that he wanted to lead prayers tomorrow. Police said the other bomb was in a pick-up truck aimed at Baijis police chief, Colonel Saad Nifous, who was wounded in the blast. Police and the US military both said the bomb by the mosque had targeted a Sunni Arab tribal leader. |
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Iraq |
Iraq: Blackwater guards fired unprovoked - Claim they have video |
2007-09-23 |
BAGHDAD - Iraqi investigators have a videotape that shows Blackwater USA guards opened fire against civilians without provocation in a shooting last week that left 11 people dead, a senior Iraqi official said Saturday. He said the case was referred to the Iraqi judiciary. Yeah, just driving down the street with some diplomatic offical in tow and picking off innocent bystanders to pass the time. Iraq's president, meanwhile, demanded that the Americans release an Iranian arrested this week on suspicion of smuggling weapons to Shiite militias. The demand adds new strains to U.S.-Iraqi relations only days before a meeting between President Bush and Iraq's Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. Good one, Maliki. Reasons? Interior Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Abdul-Karim Khalaf said Iraqi authorities had completed an investigation into the Sept. 16 shooting in Nisoor Square in western Baghdad and concluded that Blackwater guards were responsible for the deaths. He told The Associated Press that the conclusion was based on witness statements as well as videotape shot by cameras at the nearby headquarters of the national police command. He said eight people were killed at the scene and three of the 15 wounded died in hospitals. Doesn't seem good at all. Blackwater, which provides most of the security for U.S. diplomats and civilian officials in Iraq, has insisted that its guards came under fire from armed insurgents and shot back only to defend themselves. Does the diplomat back this up? Blackwater spokeswoman Anne Tyrrell said Saturday that she knew nothing about the videotape and was contractually prohibited from discussing details of the shooting. Otherwise I'm sure you'd say something chock-full of useful information. Like "No comment." Khalaf also said the ministry was looking into six other fatal shootings involving the Moyock, N.C.-based company in which 10 Iraqis were killed and 15 wounded. Among the shootings was one Feb. 7 outside Iraqi state television in Baghdad that killed three building guards. "These six cases will support the case against Blackwater, because they show that it has a criminal record," Khalaf said. Khalaf said the report was "sent to the judiciary" although he would not specify whether that amounted to filing of criminal charges. Under Iraqi law, an investigating judge reviews criminal complaints and decides whether there is enough evidence for a trial. Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh denied that authorities had decided to file charges against the Blackwater guards and said Saturday that no decision had been taken whether to seek punishment. "The necessary measures will be taken that will preserve the honor of the Iraqi people," he said in New York, where al-Maliki arrived Friday for the U.N. General Assembly session. "We have ongoing high-level meetings with the U.S. side about this issue." Al-Maliki is expected to raise the issue with Bush during a meeting Monday in New York. Might be a good time for W to bring up that Iranian Quds smuggler, too. It is doubtful that foreign security contractors could be prosecuted under Iraqi law. A directive issued by U.S. occupation authorities in 2004 granted contractors, U.S. troops and many other foreign officials immunity from prosecution under Iraqi law. Security contractors are also not subject to U.S. military law under which U.S. troopers face prosecution for killing or abusing Iraqis. Iraqi officials have said in the wake of the Nisoor Square shooting that they will press for amendments to the 2004 directive. Not gonna happen. A senior aide to al-Maliki said Friday that three of the Blackwater guards were Iraqis and could be subject to prosecution. The aide spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the case. Shortly after the Sept. 16 shooting, U.S. officials said they "understood" that there was videotape, but refused to give more details. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not supposed to release information to the media. Following the Nisoor Square shooting, the Interior Ministry banned Blackwater from operating in Iraq but rolled back after the U.S. agreed to a joint investigation. The company resumed guarding a reduced number of U.S. convoys on Friday. The al-Maliki aide said Friday that the Iraqis were pushing for an apology, compensation for victims or their families and for the guards involved in the shooting to be held "accountable." First: Let's see the video. Hadi al-Amri, a prominent Shiite lawmaker and al-Maliki ally, also said an admission of wrongdoing, an apology and compensation offered a way out of the dilemma. "They are always frightened and that's why they shoot at civilians," al-Amri said. "If Blackwater gets to stay in Iraq, it will have to give guarantees about its conduct." Frightened? I thought they were mostly ex-military. Anybody know? I have, however, seen footage of security forces firing shots out of the back of an SUV into the hood of a Mercedes they thought (and probably rightly so) was following too closely. They were laughing about it. Not very professional. Allegations against Blackwater have clouded relations between Iraq and the Americans at a time when the Bush administration is seeking to contain calls in Congress for sharp reductions in the 160,000-strong U.S. military force. Adding to those strains, President Jalal Talabani demanded the immediate release of an Iranian official detained Thursday by U.S. forces in the Kurdish city of Sulaimaniyah. Why? The U.S. military said the unidentified Iranian was a member of the Quds force an elite unit of Iran's Revolutionary Guards accused of arming and training Shiite militias in Iraq. A statement issued Saturday by Talabani's office said the arrest was carried out without the prior knowledge or the cooperation of the Kurdish regional government. Weak. And the smuggler was there without anyone's knowledge, too, I'll bet. Does that count for anything? This is a very difficult pre-condition to meet it seems. I smell treachery. "This amounts to an Wait a minute, aren't we the occupying force? Find something else to prove your manhood with, Maliki, before someone rolls a grenade into your office. Talabani said Iran had threatened to close the border with the Kurdish region if the official were not freed a serious blow to the economy in the president's political stronghold. What? $10,000 a month or something for walnuts and flying carpets? Pay them to STFU. "I want to express to you our dismay over the arrest by American forces of this official civilian Iranian guest," Talabani wrote to Petraeus and Crocker. Guest? That nobody knew about? Did the Iraqi government officially know about them beforehand? Why don't we know about these things, too? Seems odd we would allow that kind of incident to occur more than once, if at all. Five Iranians said to be linked to the Quds force were arrested in the Kurdish city of Irbil and remain in U.S. custody. Make it six now. |
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Iraq |
Maliki defends plan to stop sectarian violence in Baghdad |
2007-01-26 |
![]() Outside, fighting raged on. Along Haifa Street, where Iraqi forces with American support have been battling suspected Sunni insurgents since Jan. 9, residents reached by phone said helicopters were circling the area and that bodies had been left in the street. A car bomb in the central Baghdad neighborhood of Karada killed 25 and injured 50. Two roadside bombs in the Baiyaa neighborhood killed three civilians. A bomb attached to a motorcycle killed two civilians and wounded 12 others near the Shorga market in downtown Baghdad. The U.S. military reported one soldier killed and three wounded from a roadside bomb northwest of the capital on Thursday. Police said 42 bodies bearing signs of torture were found scattered throughout the capital. At least two mortar rounds landed in the fortified Green Zone, where U.S. and Iraqi officials are headquartered. No one was injured and there was little damage, said Lou Fintor, a spokesman for the U.S. Embassy. Abdul Nasir al-Janabi of the Iraqi Accord Front, a Sunni Islamist party, demanded that U.S. and Iraqi forces allow residents of the Haifa Street area to leave. "We demand an end to the siege of Haifa Street," he said. "Kill whoever you call a terrorist, but don't blockade the civilians." Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh declined to say when the campaign would end. Al-Maliki, in presenting his security plan to Iraq's 275-member parliament, the Iraqi Council of Representatives, dismissed suggestions that it was dictated by the United States. "First, I want to confirm that it's a 100-percent Iraqi plan under Iraqi command," he said. "For the first time the Iraq forces and command hold the responsibility of such a big operation." Al-Maliki attacked critics who said that the Shiite-led government won't crack down on the Shiite militias that have been terrorizing Sunnis. "Some say that the plan targets Shiites, and others say it targets Sunnis. I want to say it targets all, but all those who break the law," al-Maliki said. |
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