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Recent Appearances... Rantburg

Iraq
Iraqi leaders to meet Talabani to finalise cabinet
2006-05-09
BAGHDAD - Leaders of Iraq’s various parliamentary blocs were set to meet President Jalal Talabani on Monday to finalise the country’s first full-term post-Saddam Hussein cabinet, a Shiite MP said.

Bassem Sharif of the dominant Shiite United Iraqi Alliance said all the leaders were meeting at Talabani’s house to decide on the new cabinet. He said the leaders of the Shiite alliance were also meeting separately to choose its candidate to head the crucial interior ministry.

Another political source close to the negotiations said Shiite leaders were considering independent Shiite MP Qassem Daoud to head the ministry or retain the incumbent Bayan Jabr Solagh. Sunni Arab politicians have strongly criticised Solagh and accused his ministry’s Shiite-led forces of operating death squads that indulged in extra-judicial killings of Sunni Arabs.

Following his nomination as prime minister designate, Nuri al-Maliki has said he would form the new cabinet by May 10 and was also considering an independent candidate to head the interior ministry. The source also said that former parliament speaker Hajem al-Hasseni, a Sunni, was being considered to head the defence ministry.
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Iraq-Jordan
Iraqi troops rescue Shiite hostages in besieged town
2005-04-17
Update on the situation with some interesting background. BAGHDAD : Iraqi troops rescued several Shiite hostages after they battled their way into a town where Sunni extremists abducted dozens of people and threatened to kill the town's Shiite residents.

The hostage-taking in Al-Madain south of Baghdad has sparked fears of wider sectarian strife between Iraq's Shiite majority and the Sunnis at a time when leaders from both communities seek agreement on the make-up of a government. Parliament was meeting Sunday, but a new government was not expected to be announced before the end of the week.

"Police forces, backed by coalition forces, entered the town at 9:00 am (05H00 GMT) and encountered severe resistance from the terrorists", a defence ministry official told AFP.

Government forces have recaptured half of the town and freed 10 to 15 families held hostage by the gunmen, he said, adding that the clashes were continuing. Officials have suggested the number of Shiite hostages in town could be as high as 80. National Security Advisor Qassem Daoud told the Al-Arabiya satellite news channel: "Iraqi security forces have the situation under control and are dealing with the hostage takers in a serious manner."

Iraqi army special forces on Saturday surrounded the town, home to Shiites and Sunnis, in hopes of averting a sectarian bloodbath that could badly damage Iraq's ethnic and religious ties. On Saturday afternoon, gunmen blew up the building housing the Husseiniyat al-Rasul al-Adham mosque in Madain, a town 30 kilometres (18 miles) south of Baghdad built on the ruins of the ancient city of Ctesiphon, said a source at the interior ministry, adding that it was empty at the time.

The same source said events in Madain may be a tit-for-tat kidnapping of Shiites after the abduction of Sunnis from the powerful Dulaimi tribe, who have a presence in the area. A spokesman for radical Shiite cleric Moqtada Sadr, Abdul Hadi al-Darraji also suggested the incident may be part of a settling of scores among some families in the community.

"They have detained more than 80 people, including women and children, and they are threatening to kill them unless Shiites leave", one of the refugees, Captain Haitham Mohammed of the Iraqi army, told AFP on Friday.

The road linking Baghdad with Kut, 200 kilometres (120 miles) to the south, is among the most dangerous in the country where several beheaded bodies have surfaced in recent months. The area around Madain and neighbouring Salman Pak is home to several Sunni Arab tribes who follow the radical Wahabi brand of Islam that dominates Saudi Arabia and recent reports suggested that Shiites have set up vigilante groups for protection.

Daoud's fellow National Security Advisor Muwaffaq al-Rubaie blamed the rising wave of Islamic extremism around Madain on Saddam's policy of settling Sunni extremists in the stretch of towns just south of Baghdad after the 1991 Shiite uprising against the old regime. "Saddam started a policy of 'colonies' whereby he allowed and encouraged some of the Sunni extremists to live at the southern Baghdad borders ... basically to put a human barrier between Baghdad and the (Shiite) south and stop any future uprising in the south from reaching Baghdad."

Rubaie urged Iraq's 15-million-strong Shiite majority not to carry out reprisals against the country's Sunnis, dominant under Saddam Hussein and believed to form the backbone of the current insurgency. "We have called for people not to take the law into their own hands," Rubaie said. "In killing innocent Sunnis, this is what the extremist Salafists want. They want to draw the Shiites into a sectarian conflict. This is a fatal mistake."

The latest incident in Madain came as the Shiites have been trying to woo the Sunnis, who largely boycotted the January 30 elections, to join the political process. "The more this process drags on, the more terrorist attacks and instability we'll see," said outgoing Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari told AFP.

In the latest insurgency attack, an Iraqi officer of the Wolf Brigade, who have taken a leading role in the fight against militants, was gunned down in Baghdad's al-Iskan neighbourhood on Saturday evening, an interior ministry official said. Two senior Iraqi police officers were also shot dead by insurgents Sunday morning and Saturday evening in the northern town of Mosul and in the capital, Baghdad, police and hospital sources said.
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Iraq-Jordan
A Close Look at Fallujah Insurgents' Lab
2004-11-30
Sarah Whalen, sawhalen@xula.com.edu
More by Sarah here.
The anonymous commenters at that site just have to be honorary Rantburgers.
It looks like a shelf in an elderly lady's bathroom, scattered with half-full and almost empty bottles so old the faded labels are peeling off. But Qassem Daoud, Iraq's national security adviser and Prime Minister Allawi's confidant, calls it a "chemical laboratory" where Fallujan insurgents supposedly made "deadly explosives and poisons," including anthrax. Noninsurgents probably have more chemical containers underneath the kitchen sink at home.
Most don't have any anthrax, though...
But Fallujah's where Al-Zarqawi, Jordan's notorious kidnapper, assassin, and reputed master poisoner, reportedly gave US Marines the slip. And so when Daoud claims Zarqawi left souvenirs behind, the world pays attention. But not everyone is impressed.
Especially not those who try real hard not to be...
Former UN weapons inspector Hans Blix urged restraint: "Let's see what the chemicals are.... Many of these stories evaporate when they are looked at more closely." Blix added that "the chances" soldiers had actually "found something" significant "are... relatively small. I would be surprised if it was something real."
Prob'ly nothing. Certainly the writer thinks it is.
Blixie could never be surprised. That's one reason why he never found anything.
Something real. That's the ticket, always has been. Those elusive weapons of mass destruction. And Daoud's perceptions aren't always the best. In an invasion interview, Daoud (then in Kuwait) assured CNN that US "military force(s) are (being) received with flowers and with very warm feeling toward them."
Some were. Some weren't. The writer's obviously trying really hard to forget the ones who were.
But actually, Daoud is uniquely qualified to assure the authenticity of the insurgents' "chemical laboratory" or, alternatively, create a hoax. Daoud is a scientist with a microbiology doctorate. In office and in Allawi's affections, he replaces another scientist-politician, Dr. Mowaffak Al-Rubaie, a neurologist. But Al-Rubaie inopportunely tested Allawi's patience by promoting reconciliation with radical cleric Moqtada Sadr when Allawi preferred a more radical solution.
So did Tater. He just didn't get the radical solution he wanted.
Daoud's proved infinitely more flexible. Originally opposing elections in January, 2005, Daoud seems to now have no serious objections. Initially willing to release Saddam Hussein's female science advisors "Dr. Germ" (Dr. Rihab Rashed Taha) and "Mrs. Anthrax" (Huda Salih Mahdi Ammash) so "that British guy," as Daoud called hostage Kenneth Bigley, could be saved, he bowed respectfully when Western officials resisted.
That's because we don't give in to terrorists. Trading Bigley for Dr. Germ would have resulted in more deaths than just that of Mr. Bigley.
Oh, so Sarah's actually against releasing Saddam's friends. I'm so confused!
And Daoud is reportedly a decorous neocon "Iraqi friend with ties to Mr. Franklin," meaning Larry Franklin of the US Defense Department who's under investigation for leaking secret documents to AIPAC — the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.
Ahah! The Jews are involved, are they? Somehow I thought they might be.
One wonders why Daoud rushes to conclude the musty shelf scattered with aged containers is a covert laboratory. Surely Daoud knows that much, much more is required even for a primitive weapons operation. If insurgents planned to make anthrax, as Daoud implies, they needed more kit. Where are the incubators? Anthrax and most biological agents need a warm, stable place to grow at a very specific temperature. Refrigerators, dry ice, and vacuum pumps are also needed. Where's the fermentor, necessary for the growth of large quantities of bacteria and pathogens? Where's the sterilizing autoclave? Where's the centrifuge spinning anthrax spores, concentrating them for weaponization?
In another building, perhaps? Or on order from France?
Maybe over at the Fallujah "hospital".
And such equipment requires copious, steady amounts of electricity. Sporadic surges would make short work of insurgents' scientific efforts, unless they had generators. But generators require fuel, which in Iraq is in notoriously unreliable supply.
Unlike arms and ammunition, which are plentiful...
Serious insurgents would need yeast extract, tryptone, sporulation medium, glucose, and salts — all of which make biological nasties grow. Insurgents would also need glass flasks, tubes, and Petri dishes to handle nasties safely. A pH meter would be needed for measuring acidity, although this could run off a battery. But where is it?
Out back in the shed? Or down the street, in the mosque?
I could order all this stuff from Fisher Scientific tomorrow and have it by Friday afternoon.
And to make sure the insurgents live long enough to make their toxic cocktails, decent ventilation is essential. And then an assortment of extra rubber gloves, masks, and protective clothing. Finally, for anthrax, insurgents would need a drying apparatus, ideally less windy than a hair dryer, and a grinding apparatus — silicate placed in a tumbler of anthrax spores and mechanically churned. Could one do it by hand? Conceivably, answered a Washington, D.C. National Institutes of Health scientist, but it would take days of constant shaking to humanly replace the machine.
I notice she's not talking about ricin, or about various gases. So what was it, lady? Little Mahmoud's chemistry set?
For about $10K I could have everything Sarah's said we need. Wonder if anyone in jihadi-land has that kind of walking around money.
What might those dusty jars tell us? Each bottle of chemical or agent will have a label lot number indicating where and when it was made, and from what larger batch it derives. The manufacturer could conceivably determine where smaller batches were shipped or repackaged, and to whom they were sold. A National Science Foundation-funded scientist examining Daoud's lab picture declared: "The chemicals look like they've been taken from a university laboratory. The lone glove appears to be planted. The most recognizable bottle is fourth from the left with the light blue top. This is a Fluka chemical bottle in an old style." Daoud's Fluka bottle is square-shaped, whereas contemporary Fluka bottles are noticeably rounded. Ironically, the country nearest Iraq that's done the most anthrax weaponizing research is Israel.
Yep. Those damned Jews again. She just can't get away from it. It's as plain as the nose on her face...
Look at Daoud's shelf, look at what's not there, then look at the clock and check the time. Time to examine Daoud's "friendly ties to Mr. Franklin." Time to look at something real.
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Iraq-Jordan
Fallujah rebels claim to have regrouped
2004-11-26
Insurgents in Fallujah claim that they have reorganised after a massive US-Iraqi onslaught against the rebel city and are resuming their attacks. "After reorganising, the Mujahedeen resumed their attacks on Wednesday with the aim of shattering the myth of the invincibility of the coalition forces, and the traitors and collaborators who are under the orders of Allawi and Naqib," a statement said. The statement, issued by the Mujahedeen Council, refers to Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi and Interior Minister Falah Naqib. Both are staunch supporters of the vast operation, which was launched on November 8 to root out insurgents entrenched in Fallujah.

It is largest military operation in Iraq since last year's 2003 US-led invasion. It aimed to crush the main hub of the insurgency in the country, which has been seen as one of the main obstacles to holding viable polls in January 2005. While the bulk of the operation is over, the US military has reported there are pockets of insurgents in some parts of Fallujah. It is trying to prevent the rebels from regrouping inside and outside the city. Iraq's national security adviser, Qassem Daoud, claims that more than 2,000 people have been killed in the assault and more than 1,600 captured. The Mujahedeen statement, posted on an Islamist web site, claims that clashes took place in northern Fallujah in recent days. "The Mujahedeen will teach a memorable lesson to the collaborators who sold Iraq and prove to Arab regimes that only the language of guns and martyrs makes a difference," it said.
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Iraq-Jordan
Iraq says top Zarqawi aide arrested in Mosul
2004-11-25
One of the leaders of the top US foe in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, was arrested in the northern city of Mosul, national security adviser Qassem Daoud said. "We arrested a few days ago Abu Said, one of the leaders of the Zarqawi network in the city of Mosul," Daoud told reporters. He did not elaborate on the identity of the rebel leader and his rank in Zarqawi's Al-Qaeda linked organisation, but said information which led to the arrest came partly from local residents.

Zarqawi has a 25-million-dollar bounty on his head and his organisation -- which has claimed responsibility for a string of deadly bombings and kidnappings -- was said to be headquartered in Fallujah before US and Iraqi forces launched a massive offensive against the city on November 8. US military officials fear that many Fallujah rebels may have fled the Sunni city before the onslaught and are regrouping elsewhere. According to a government report published in December, Mosul was home to the second largest concentration of Zarqawi operatives in Iraq, with a contingent of close to 400. US troops backed by Iraqi commandos are currently involved in a vast operation to root out the insurgency in Mosul, the country's third largest city.
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Iraq-Jordan
US forces fail to capture Zarqawi
2004-11-15
Oh. Well. It was all wasted effort then, wasn't it? Never mind...
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, whose supporters had allegedly made Fallujah their base, and a militant cleric who was one of his top aides have escaped the US-led offensive on the city, Iraq's secretary of state for national security, Qassem Daoud, has said. "Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and Abdullah Junabi have fled, leaving their supporters to taste death," he said.
"We are outta here! Feet, don't fail us now!"
US and Iraqi officials claimed that Zarqawi was holed-up in Fallujah and had given residents an ultimatum to hand him over or face attack.
They didn't, and we did...
Sunni clerics in the city repeatedly denied Zarqawi was in Fallujah.
"No, no! Certainly not!"
US and Iraqi officials provided no evidence that Zarqawi, who has a $US25 million bounty on his head, was in Fallujah.
So that means he wasn't there, right?
US forces launched numerous "precision" air strikes on targets in the city near Baghdad and claimed to have killed many Zarqawi associates before the all out assault on the city.
They never claimed to have killed him, though...
A rebel spokesman told Arab television station Al-Jazeera on Saturday that US forces were in an impasse in Fallujah, and denied the offensive had succeeded. "The announcement of the end of the military offensive is proof that American forces are in an impasse, the American criminals and the Iraqi apostates have suffered more than 150 killed and more than 270 wounded," said Abu Saad al-Dlimi.
We're all dead. Finished. Washed up. Our stomaches are roasting in hell.
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Iraq-Jordan
Iraqi rebels slip away to fight another day ( / are rotting in the streets)
2004-11-14
Families fleeing the besieged city of Fallujah say that rebel fighters have slipped through the American and Iraqi military cordon and have been driven away in Mercedes cars to rejoin the battle elsewhere in Iraq. The fighters, said to include foreign militants using satellite telephones, are believed to be heading for Baghdad and the northern city of Mosul, to open a new front.

Abu Haider, 47, a mechanic who escaped with his family on Friday, said: "I saw many fighters with their faces covered, coming out beside us, carrying light weapons and their telephones. "I asked one how he had managed to arrange a lift to the city. He replied, 'It is the order. We have to choose another field to fight on outside Fallujah.'" He said that homes in the al-Shuhada district of southern Fallujah had been destroyed by US bombs. "It is like a hell in there," he said. "There are many people dead on the streets. There is a very bad smell." He said that rebel fighters had made their way from central Fallujah to his neighbourhood using a network of tunnels because it was the best way out of the city. They used a back route through villages to the south of Fallujah, passing through farmland and orchards, until they reached the town of al-Nouaimia. "When we got there I saw two Mercedes cars waiting for these fighters," he said. The fighters took a back road, too narrow for American tanks, to drive to Baghdad. He and his family managed to rent a car in the town and used the same route, he said.

American commanders admitted that many insurgents fled before the battle began, but insisted that escape routes were blocked. Capt Raymond Pemberton, an intelligence officer for the US Army's Task Force 2-2, which has been in the thick of the fighting for almost a week, said: "A solid cordon was established about five days prior to the attack."

Other families who escaped to al-Nouaimia by the same route as rebel fighters described the devastation they had left behind. Hussain Khudiar Al-Dolaimy, 67, ran away with nine family members. "Bodies are everywhere in the streets," he said. "The electricity is switched off and the water has been cut for three days." Sa'ad Al-Dolaimy, 25, said he had seen "hundreds of bodies" thrown in the streets.

Iraq's national security adviser, Qassem Daoud, said yesterday that more than 1,000 rebels had been killed and 200 fighters detained. He claimed that only "'malignant pockets" remained but confirmed that Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the terror mastermind behind the kidnap of westerners who made Fallujah his base, had escaped.
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Iraq-Jordan
Saddam trial 'before election'
2004-09-05
THE trial of ousted Iraqi president Saddam Hussein and his cronies, including number two Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri whose arrest was announced today, will begin before elections due in January, an Iraqi minister said today. "The trial of Saddam Hussein and the rest of his clique, including Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri, will start before the Iraqi elections scheduled for January," said State Minister Qassem Daoud, who is on a visit to Kuwait. Mr Daoud said that "between 150 and 200 terrorists whom Douri supervised and financed" were arrested along with Ibrahim. Iraqi officials said earlier today that Ibrahim had been arrested on the outskirts of the town of Tikrit after fierce clashes with his supporters that left about 70 people dead or injured.
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