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Iraq
Weekly Report From State Department
2007-05-26
Anbar Province Still Dangerous, but Improving:

• Since January, attacks and murders against civilians and against Iraqi and Coalition security forces in Ramadi has decreased significantly, from a high of 108 in the week beginning February 23 to just seven in the week ending May 11.
If the MSM would publicize this, maybe the rest of the country would join in. Perhaps the Iraqi press IS reporting on this?
• Efforts and cooperation from local shaykhs and tribal leaders has dramatically increased Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) recruiting in Anbar, illustrated by an increase in 7,100 trained policemen in the province since December.
• Additionally, Iraqi citizens are increasingly providing information concerning insurgent operations to ISF.

Iraqi Defense Ministry to Buy $1.5 Billion in Weapons:

• The Iraqi Defense Minister announced May 21 that the Iraqi military will buy more than $1.5 billion in weapons, including helicopters and U.S. M-16 rifles.
• The purchases will be made possible by a 26% increase in the country’s defense budget, to $4.1 billion for the current fiscal year.
• To increase the country’s naval and air force capabilities, Iraq will purchase 29 Soviet-designed M-17 helicopters, six reconnaissance planes, 10 patrol boats from Italy, and 26 from the U.S.

IA Begins Training with U.S. Rifles:

• The Iraqi Army (IA) recently started what is expected to be a year-long process of training and equipping their entire force with U.S.-made M-16 rifles and M4 carbines. As the army transitions from the AK-47 to the new U.S. weapons, Iraqi soldiers attend a five-day training course where they are issued the weapons, undergo an identification verification and accountability process, and eventually zero and qualify with their new weapons.

Iraqi Leaders in the U.S for Medical Treatment:

• Iraqi President Jalal Talabani left Iraq May 20 “for a nearly three-week trip to the United States that was expected to include a medical checkup.”A senior Kurdish politician said May 19 that Talabani was to visit the Mayo Clinic for a check-up.
• Meanwhile, Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq leader ‘Abd al-Aziz al-Hakim arrived in the U.S. May 17 for medical tests, and departed two days later for treatment in Tehran where he can get Islamic Magic Mullah Medical™ (3M) Treatment and may be there for several weeks.


UN Special Representative Urges Consensus:

• U.N. envoy to Iraq Ashraf Qazi urged the Iraqi Constitutional Review Committee, which was established by the Iraqi Parliament in September 2006to determine whether the constitution should be amended, to build consensus among political blocs. Qazi added that “for a successful constitutional review process all groups will have to come to the table to make compromises and the process will need to be kept alive until it reaches a conclusion.”

Central Bank’s US Dollar (USD) Currency Auction:

• Since September, the Central Bank has slowly appreciated the dinar, as suggested by the IMF, in an effort to rein in galloping inflation. There are early signs that this effort may have begun to bear fruit, as year-to-date inflation is 2.8%, which projects a pace well below the IMF annual target of 30%.

Iraqi Foreign Minister Urges Incoming British Prime Minister to Stand Firm:

• Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari urged incoming British Prime Minister Gordon Brown to stand firm against domestic political pressures and maintain troop numbers in Iraq despite ongoing militia and insurgent violence. While citing progress being made in Iraq since the latest security crackdown began in mid-February, he stressed it was important there were no signs of weakness with Coalition forces.
HE gets it.

UNICEF To Launch Humanitarian Operation in Iraq:

• UNICEF has announced that they intend to launch one of the biggest humanitarian operations in Iraq in the last two years with nearly 8,000 vaccinators operating across the country to prevent a possible outbreak of measles amongst Iraq’s children. UNICEF also requested $42 million to provide water and sanitation for children inside Iraq, as well as education services for refugee children in Jordan and Syria.

Iraqi Vice President on Iran-U.S. Talks:

• Iraqi Sunni Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi spoke out against the U.S.-Iran talks on the situation in Iraq scheduled for May 28, saying the dialogue was “damaging to Iraq's sovereignty” and that he would have preferred that the subject of Iraq’s stability to be “tackled by Iraqis themselves.” It is reported that Iran’s outgoing envoy to the United Nations, Javad Zarif, is to represent Tehran in talks next week with Ambassador Ryan Crocker in Baghdad.

OIC Ministers Urge Withdrawal of Foreign Forces from Iraq:
But supports the Administration position!
• Foreign ministers from Muslim nations called on international forces to pull out of Iraq as soon as possible. The joint declaration came at the end of a three-day meeting in Islamabad of foreign ministers from the 57-member Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC). “We emphasize...accelerating the capacity of the Iraqi security forces and securing the earliest possible withdrawal of foreign forces from Iraq,” it said. The declaration also warned that Iraq should not be split along Sunni-Shiite lines.

Two Iraqi Journalists Killed:
Maybe they are telling the truth, over there, or too close to it.
• ABC News reported May 18 that two Iraqi journalists working for the television network were killed the previous day as they drove home from work. Cameraman Alaa Uldeen Aziz and soundman Saif Laith Yusuf were attacked by unknown assailants as they returned from the network’s Baghdad bureau.
Link


Iraq
Weekly Report on Iraq
2007-01-12
Back to the .pdf format. Highlights:

MNC-I Commander, LTG Odierno, Discusses Expectations for Iraq War:

• Lieutenant General (LTG) Raymond Odierno, who assumed command of the Multi-National Corps – Iraq (MNC-I) last month, said January 7 that even with the likely deployment of additional US combat troops expected as part of the President’s revised Iraq strategy, it might take another two or three years for Coalition and Iraqi forces to gain the upper hand in the war. LTG Odierno also emphasized the critical role additional Coalition and Iraqi Security Forces troops would play in protecting and securing the population in Baghdad.

IA Captures Four Murder And Kidnapping Cell Leaders in Sadr City Raid:

• Iraqi Army (IA) Special Forces with Coalition advisors captured four suspects January 3 in Sadr City during operations targeting perpetrators of violence against innocent Iraqis. The four suspects are believed to be leaders of a kidnapping and murder cell responsible for the deaths of Iraqi civilians, kidnapping, and conducting illegal trials and executions. They are also suspected of organizing and directing sectarian-based mortar attacks on neighborhoods surrounding Sadr City.

Eighty Percent of Iraq’s Army Divisions Are in the Lead:

• MNF-I spokesman Major General Caldwell announced January 3rd that 80% of Iraq’s Army divisions are in the lead. This is compared to a year ago on January 1, 2006, when only one of Iraq’s ten army divisions that's, uh ... 10%, right? was responsible for its own battlespace, meaning it could plan, coordinate and conduct security operations independent of Coalition Forces (CF).

2nd and 3rd IA Divisions to Take Charge in Ninewa Province:

• MNC-I Commander LTG Odierno announced January 7 that the 2nd Iraqi Army (IA) Division will take charge of security in Mosul and the 3rd IA Division will do the same in Tal Afar January 15. LTG Odierno stated that CF will then move to nearby cities and assume more of a combat support role.

Maliki to Launch “Non-Sectarian” Security Plan:

• Prime Minister Maliki aims to launch a new Baghdad security plan, which Defense Ministry spokesman Mohammed al-Askari said would start “very soon.”
• Maliki warned rival political parties against interfering in his plan, and stated that “the Baghdad security plan will not offer a safe shelter for outlaws, regardless of their ethnic and political affiliations, and we will punish anyone who hesitates to implement orders because of his ethnic and political background.”
• According to Maliki’s aides, the Prime Minister believes that if the additional troops can reduce violence over the next two months, then he can negotiate more effectively with Shia militia leaders in the city and improve his chances of disarming them.

SCIRI’s Hakim Applauds Saddam Execution:

• Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI) leader Abd al-Aziz al-Hakim defended the carrying out of the sentence against Saddam Hussein for the extrajudicial killing of 148 Iraqis in Dujail in 1982 as a “bold step” by the government. Hakim also urged authorities to expedite the execution of two former Hussein-era officials who were sentenced to death together with Hussein in November.
• Hakim also stated that his community was the victim of “sectarian genocide” under Hussein.

Iraqi Politicians Divided on Khalilzad’s Upcoming Nomination to Become US Permanent Representative to the UN:

• News of Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad’s upcoming nomination to become the US permanent representative to the UN split Iraqi politicians along sectarian lines, with members of the ruling Shia alliance voicing eagerness for him to leave and minority Sunnis expressing concern at the loss of him.
• US Embassy officials have said that they do not favor one sect over the other and that reducing the violence requires difficult compromises for all parties.
• Sunni lawmakers said Khalilzad's deep knowledge of Iraq's complex political landscape and his openness to Sunni concerns will be missed.

Electricity:

• Limited power imports from other regions and below-average production from local generating plants have limited Baghdad daily electricity service to six hours or less since December 29.
• On January 10, a further reduction in power from both sources made it necessary to direct all available power to the city’s essential services, leaving none for other demand.

Second Saddam Video Released:

• On January 9, a new video of Saddam Hussein's corpse, with a gaping neck wound, was shown on an Iraqi news website known to support the Baath party. The video appeared to have been taken by a mobile phone and was apparently taken shortly after the sentence was carried out.
• In a headline over a link to the video, the website said “A new film of the late immortal martyr, President Saddam Hussein.” So are they mocking him, or trying to immortalize him as a martyr? I'm confused.
• This video marks the second leaked to the public. The first showed Saddam being taunted before his hanging.
• Seven children are reported to have died worldwide after seeing video footage of the execution of Saddam, many in "play" hangings that ended in tragedy. The latest victim was a 12-year-old boy, who hanged himself in northeast Saudi Arabia January 7, the daily Al-Hayat reported January 8.

AQI Releases Internet Statement:

• Al-Qaida in Iraq (AQI) released in Internet statement January 8, urging Sunni Arabs in Baghdad to prepare to face the government’s new security plan, calling the Prime Mnister’s new plan for Baghdad a cover for “annihilating” Sunnis. As long as you believe that since all Al-Qaida are Sunni, then all Sunni are Al-Qaida.
Link


Iraq
Iraqi premier, Kurd leader strike deal
2006-01-03
Ibrahim al-Jaafari, the Iraqi interim prime minister, has held a long closed-door meeting with Massoud Barzani, president of the Iraqi Kurdistan province, in Salah al-Din resort in northern Iraq. The Sunday meeting started in the morning and carried on until the evening, with the two politicians holding a news conference afterwards in which they announced they had agreed to form a broad-based national unity government.

The visit of al-Jaafari, who leads the Shia al-Dawa party, to predominantly Kurdish northern Iraq came after the visit of Abd al-Aziz al-Hakim, chairman of the Iran-backed Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), the dominant Shia party in Iraq. Kurdish parties had shown dissatisfaction with al-Jaafari's performance and accused him of neglecting his partners in the political process. Sunday's visit was the first by the prime minister since he was elected in mid-2004. The race to meet and discuss the political situation in Iraq after December's parliamentary elections included the Iraqi Sunni Arab political parties.
Link


Iraq-Jordan
Three Sunni MPs quit Iraqi alliance
2005-04-27
Three key Sunni Arab lawmakers have resigned from the dominant United Iraqi Alliance (UIA), Aljazeera has learned. The three, Fawaz al-Jarba, Mudhar Shawkat and Abd al-Rahman al-Niaimi, announced their resignation on Tuesday from the UIA which is led by Abd al-Aziz al-Hakim.
Fine. Seethe and be damned.
The three MPs said they were resigning in protest against the attempt to marginalise Sunni Arabs.
Seems to me the Sunnis are the ones doing all the marginalizing.
They also expressed resentment against what they called foreign interference in ministry-making decisions, reported Aljazeera. The three Sunni MPs had fought the 30 January elections on the UIA platform which won 140 of the 275 seats. Al-Jarba was in the running for vice-president before Ghazi al-Yawir was chosen for the post.
Hmmm. They're members of a party that controls 140 seats out of 275. Sounds pretty darn marginal to me.
Their decision to quit came even as the five-man committee representing Sunni Arabs and headed by Vice-President al-Yawir held a meeting with Prime Minister-designate Ibrahim al-Jafari to review allocation of ministerial portfolios, Aljazeera said, quoting informed Iraqi sources. The meeting discussed the possibility of including another ministerial portfolio for the Sunni Arabs. "The ministries offered to us, that of culture, governorate affairs, labour and social affairs should be replaced with that of education, commerce, planning, public works and housing, for example."
Sorry. Sunnis are not to be trusted with education. And the Sunni clans can't have all the public works projects. Thanks for playing, better luck next time.
Sunni Arabs have demanded the post of deputy prime minister, the portfolio of education besides six other ministries. Spokesman of the Iraqi National Front Tariq al-Hashimi told Aljazeera there were intense negotiations with al-Jafari. "We received an offer for six portfolios to our demand for seven. The basic problem relates to the portfolios," he said.
Link


Iraq-Jordan
Senior cleric says Shi'i militia foiled "terrorist" plots
2004-04-12
Text of report by Iranian Students News Agency (ISNA) web site, salt to taste:
Tehran, 12 April: The political adviser to Abd al-Aziz al-Hakim has said: The Badr Corps has taken appropriate security measures and foiled terrorist attacks and prevented explosions planned over the last two days and prior to the Arba'in ceremony [anniversary of the fortieth day after the anniversary of the martyrdom of the third Shi'i Imam, Imam Husayn] in Karbala.
Well, that's nice of them.

Announcing the news in an interview with the correspondent of the Iranian Students News Agency (ISNA), Sayyid Abd al-Aziz al-Hakim, who is a political adviser to the chairman of the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq [SCIRI], Sayyid Abd al-Aziz al-Hakim, said: As a result of this measure, the Badr Corps managed to discover 10 Katyusha rockets, a large quantity of TNT and C-4 and explosives which were going to be used in Karbala.
Badr Boyz being the Sistani backed mob. Wonder if someone was planning on booming more Shiites and trying to pin it on the US?
Link



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