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Iraq-Jordan
Arrest warrant for Allawi's defense minister --$1B missing
2005-09-20
IRAQ'S former defence minister is expected to be arrested in the coming days in connection with the disappearance of more than $1 billion from the country's defence budget, a senior corruption investigator said yesterday. Hazim Shaalan, who served in interim prime minister Iyad Allawi's government, ran a ministry which worked with intermediaries, rather than foreign companies or governments, for the supply of defence equipment including helicopters, armoured vehicles, bullets and weapons. Not only were contracts with intermediaries forbidden at the time, but the prices paid for the equipment were vastly inflated and the contracts often not fulfilled.

On one occasion, it is alleged more than $230 million had been spent on a collection of 28-year-old, second-hand Polish helicopters whose design life was just 25 years. Radhi al-Radhi, the head of Iraq's Commission on Public Integrity, said he handed a file of evidence against Shaalan to Iraq's central criminal court two months ago and expected a warrant for his arrest to be issued within ten days. "What Shaalan and his ministry were responsible for is possibly the second largest robbery in the world after the Oil-for-Food scandal," Mr Radhi said. "Our estimates begin at $1.3 billion and go up to $2.3 billion."

Shaalan, who lives in Jordan and also spends time in London, has denied any wrongdoing and has said that whatever he did was ultimately approved of by US authorities. Amer Hantouli, an aide, said: "These are politically motivated charges by his enemies. They are trying to distract the public from their glaring failure to improve security in Iraq. It's quite a low tactic. Defence ministry committees oversaw all deals and followed procedure."
"Lies! All lies!"
The current defence minister, Saadoun Dulaimi, said that when he took over in April there was next to nothing left of the $1 billion budget for procurement.
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Iraq-Jordan
US preparing further attacks on Iraqi insurgent strongholds
2005-09-16
U.S. forces are ready to launch air strikes on towns in western
Iraq as they search for Iraq's al Qaeda leader, who has declared war on the nation's Shi'ite Muslims in response to the Iraqi-U.S. offensive in Tal Afar.

U.S. army spokesman Major General Rick Lynch told a news briefing on Thursday that al Qaeda's Abu Musab al-Zarqawi was behind a series of suicide bombs and car bombs in Baghdad on Wednesday and Thursday which killed and wounded hundreds.

"We've got great intelligence which tells us where he (Zarqawi) is moving to and where he's trying to establish safe havens. People focus on the Euphrates river valley because that's where we believe he's coming through," Lynch said.

"Towns close to the Euphrates river valley, including Qaim and Haditha, are towns that we focus on. And as soon as we see him trying to establish a safe haven there, we will conduct operations just like we did in Tal Afar," he added.

His remarks followed a recent statement by Iraqi Defense Minister Saadoun Dulaimi that government forces were ready to hit insurgents in four other northwestern towns after the strike against the rebel stronghold of Tal Afar in northern Iraq.

Dulaimi singled out the towns of Ramadi, Samarra, Rawa and Qaim as targets for future attacks against insurgents, but gave no indication of when the attacks might take place.

Baghdad and Washington have long said arms and insurgents are moving into Iraq from
Syria, especially along the Euphrates, and spreading out from there to cities across Iraq.

Syria denies it but Iraq closed parts of the border on Sunday.

U.S. aircraft struck insurgent targets in the town of Karabila, beside Qaim and near the Syrian border, more than 10 times on Tuesday, a hospital source told Reuters.

Iraq's Shi'ite- and Kurdish-led government, and the occupying U.S. troops which support it, are facing an insurgency from the country's Sunni Arab minority.

Lynch said the insurgency was likely to become more violent in the run-up to an October 15 referendun on a draft constitution for Iraq, which Sunnis fear will institutionalize the loss of influence they have experienced since the U.S. invasion of 2003 to oust President
Saddam Hussein, himself a Sunni.

He added that the United States saw the insurgency as coming from three main sources: what he described as "terrorists and foreign fighters"; "Iraqi rejectionists," or people who do not accept the U.S. invasion; and "Saddamists."

"We believe we are experiencing great success against the most crucial element of the insurgency, which is the terrorists and the foreign fighters," Lynch said.

"The face of that is Zarqawi and al Qaeda in Iraq. We're using all assets under our control in conjunction with the Iraqi security forces to find him and kill him."
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Iraq-Jordan
Militants offer bounty for Iraqi PM
2005-09-13
An Iraqi militant group has offered up to $US100,000 for killing Prime Minister Ibrahim Jaafari and top officials who launched an offensive on rebels in a northern town, an Internet statement says. The Islamic Army in Iraq, among several insurgent groups fighting US troops and Iraqi forces, says Mr Jaafari and the defence and interior ministers should die for the fighting in Tal Afar. "The leadership of the army has issued orders to all the mujahideen to intensify their attacks ... to avenge the mass extermination occurring in Tal Afar," the statement said, which was not dated but bore the group's logo. It put a $US100,000 price on Mr Jaafari, $US50,000 for Interior Minister Bayan Jabor and $US30,000 for Defence Minister Saadoun Dulaimi.

About 10,000 US and Iraqi troops are hunting rebels and foreign fighters in Tal Afar, a city of 200,000 near the Syrian border. Mr Jaafari said on Friday he had given the go-ahead for the assault after days of deadly clashes failed to dislodge the rebels. Inhabitants were told to leave before the all-out offensive started. The men who remained behind faced arrest.

On Sunday, the leader of Al Qaeda in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, accused the US army of using poison gas on the town to "finish off the mujahideen". A third Al Qaeda-linked group threatened to retaliate against US forces with chemical weapons. An Internet statement posted in the name of the Jaish al-Taefa al-Mansura, or Army of the Victorious Community, warned of reprisal attacks using "non-conventional and chemical weapons ... developed by the mujahedeen ... unless the armed onslaught against the city of Tal Afar stops within 24 hours".
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Iraq-Jordan
Iraqi reaction to Tal Afar
2005-09-12
EFL.
The joint operation has been heavily covered on state-controlled Iraqi television. For two days, the Al Iraqiya channel has frequently shown footage of Iraqi soldiers kicking in doors as they hunt for rebels in Tall Afar, which had been the site of insurgent attacks on American and Iraqi forces.

In Baghdad, Iraqi officials have provided regular updates on the fighting and announced plans to push into other cities along the border with Syria, including Sinjar, Rabia, Qaim and Akashat.

The offensive was assailed by some government critics. They charged that such operations served more to exacerbate tensions in a city with a mixed Shiite and Sunni Muslim population and divert attention from the government's failure to rebuild the country than to defeat the insurgency.

"What is going on there is nothing but a sectarian purge within an official cover," said Adnan Dulaimi, a Sunni Arab leader. "This kind of policy would bring nothing but more bloodshed, more chaos and more destruction to Iraq."

But in a televised news conference Sunday, Defense Minister Saadoun Dulaimi praised the offensive and the conduct of Iraqi troops.

"What is happening in Tall Afar is an example of what should happen in other troubled places of Iraq," said Dulaimi, a member of the same large tribe as Adnan Dulaimi. "The Tall Afar operation is a quality operation by all measures."

The government's upbeat assessments were reflected in the images on state-controlled television. Iraqis often criticize the nascent armed forces for firing their weapons wildly into the air.

But Sunday night, Al Iraqiya showed Iraqi soldiers in desert camouflage alertly marching through empty Tall Afar neighborhoods and calmly guarding about 20 bound, blindfolded suspected insurgents.

The station showed a demonstration of about 150 Tall Afar residents holding banners declaring: "We call on the government to kick out terrorists from Tall Afar."

One young man told an interviewer, "What we want from the Iraqi government is to kill those terrorists."

Inhabitants of the camp outside the city described dire conditions, with more than 550 families crowded into 500 tents set up by overburdened relief workers. They spoke of demolished homes and said children were killed in the fighting. They also complained of being harassed by Iraqi soldiers and going without medical care in the camp, which they said soldiers would not let them leave.

"The American forces and Iraqi soldiers ordered us to leave our houses," said Khudair Yas, a 50-year-old Tall Afar resident living in the camp.

"We left without extra clothes or food to a camp which has become like a prison."

A U.S.-led assault on Tall Afar almost a year ago also aimed to drive out insurgents. The government says foreign fighters have again turned the city into a haven.

Dulaimi, the defense minister, said "all terrorist infiltrators" had entered the country across Iraq's nearly 400-mile border with Syria.

But Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, speaking on CNN during a visit to the U.S., said the Syrian government was feeling pressure to crack down on Islamic militants.

"I think Syrians are also starting to feel that terrorism is their enemy also, and there are some activities of terrorists inside Syria," he said.

Maj. Gen. Adnan Abdul Hamza, a high-ranking Interior Ministry official, was gunned down Sunday morning as he headed to work from his home in the capital's Ghazaliya neighborhood, a site of frequent sectarian violence. A roadside blast in Fallouja killed an Iraqi soldier and injured four.

The U.S. military announced that its forces had killed an Al Qaeda operative nicknamed "Abu Zayd" during a raid near Mosul.

A news release said the man had coordinated "kidnappings, extortion, murder, intimidation of Mosul citizens and attacks against Iraqi security and coalition forces."
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Iraq-Jordan
Base Set Up to Curb Rebels
2005-07-31
American troops have established the first long-term military base along a major smuggling route near the Syrian border in a new effort to block potential suicide bombers from reaching targets in Baghdad and other major Iraqi cities.
A force of 1,800 U.S. troops, responding to continuing concerns that foreign fighters are crossing the Syrian border into
Iraq, recently began an operation that includes setting up the base, three miles from the crossroads town of Rawah.
By establishing for the first time a base north of the Euphrates River along the strategic route that connects the Syrian border to roads leading north toward Mosul and southeast to Baghdad, military strategists hope to prevent foreign fighters, who they say are aligned with Jordanian-born militant Abu Musab Zarqawi, from reaching their targets.
"Religious extremists entering Iraq are a threat to the government. They're being used to do to Iraqis what they are unwilling to do to themselves — commit mass murder of innocents. [Zarqawi] is trying to use them to foment civil war," Army Lt. Gen. John R. Vines, the top ground commander for the coalition in Iraq, said in an interview.
"So in addition to assisting the Iraqis in reestablishing control of the borders," Vines said, the military needs to deny access to "areas that are being used to train, indoctrinate and coordinate the movement of these religious extremists into areas where they're being used as suicide murderers in the eastern provinces, including Baghdad and Mosul."
The American forces began arriving July 16 in the region, where they occasionally have carried out incursions in the last two years to fight insurgents. The region has long been viewed as a key staging area for insurgent activities, but U.S. intelligence suggests that the problem has increased in recent months as foreign fighters have used it to smuggle an increasingly lethal variety of explosives, including car bombs...
U.S. military officials in Iraq say the operation near Rawah is their top priority. In the last two weeks, the military has been building structures at the new base and American troops have begun arriving at the facility. The base as been set up far enough from the town so that insurgents seeking to launch mortar and rocket attacks would have to do so from the open desert, where they are more likely to be seen.
A mission statement viewed by a Los Angeles Times reporter states the military's goal is to disrupt Zarqawi's organization, Al Qaeda in Iraq, and establish Iraqi government control of the border, driving a wedge between the militants and the Iraqi population and eliminating a "safe haven" for insurgents.
The battle plan calls for U.S. troops to launch a series of raids, secure the area and bring in Iraqi security forces. Iraqi Defense Minister Saadoun Dulaimi referred briefly to the operation after meeting Thursday with President Jalal Talabani.
"Our forces will start from the Syrian border 
 till we reach Ramadi, then to Fallouja," he said. "We have taken precise measures on the ground and acquired the president's approval to start the operation."
As in Fallouja, in western Iraq, where U.S. forces fought in November to oust insurgents, U.S. military officials have asked the Iraqi government to issue emergency laws that could include a curfew and a travel ban.
The operation, the largest in western Iraq since May when 100 alleged foreign fighters were killed in Operation Matador, is key to fulfilling an order from Casey: that Iraq's borders be secured by November.
Foreign fighters are believed to have been crossing into the country from Syria since the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in March 2003. After a recent crackdown along the rocky northern border near Mosul, they have been forced to enter farther south, U.S. officials said. Rawah is of strategic importance for insurgents seeking to reach Baghdad from that portion of Syria because it is just north of a bridge on the Euphrates River that links the area to the road to Baghdad.
Smugglers who for years trafficked in cigarettes, gasoline and sheep are now being paid to bring in foreign fighters, explosives and weapons, senior military officials said. Commanders are especially eager to seize members of Zarqawi's group who are believed to have escaped there from Fallouja in November.
The 2nd Infantry Division's Stryker Brigade Combat Team is leading the operation and is the first to take up a permanent presence in the area. Officials say it has been difficult, if not impossible, for U.S.-led forces to control the region without such a commitment.
"It's a huge, desolate place and if somebody wanted to hide out it would be a good place to hide out," Marine Maj. Gen. Stephen T. Johnson, commander of coalition forces in western Iraq, said in an interview in Fallouja.
As the operation unfolds, Marines would continue to hold the region south of the Euphrates, while the Stryker Brigade, which has been based in Mosul, pushes south, putting insurgents in a "vice," a senior U.S. military strategist said.
The unfamiliar whoosh of helicopter rotors and the sight of the Army brigade's Stryker vehicles engaged in battles along largely rural roadways have prompted hundreds and possibly thousands of the estimated 20,000 people in Rawah to flee in fear of an attack similar to the one in Fallouja, officials said.
Local media have reported that as many as 80% of the residents have left. American military leaders say that the actual number appears to be far lower.
U.S. military surveillance photos said to be of the area near the town of Qaim separating Syria from Iraq show breaks in a massive berm. U.S. military strategists say the photos also show "personnel loading trucks" and a lookout point atop one building with a view across the border.
Troops from the Stryker Brigade recently chased a suspected car bomber across the river at Rawah and forced him out of the car, a senior military officer said, speaking on condition of anonymity. A second car arrived and apparently detonated the first vehicle, killing the bomber before driving off.
A U.S. military official said the incident revealed the extent to which "handlers" monitored would-be suicide bombers to prevent them from backing out. In the first four days of the military operation, U.S. troops encountered two car bombers and several mortar and rocket attacks, officials said.
Military spokesmen did not release any information on whether there had been any injuries or deaths related to the operation.
The effort to install more Iraqi border posts and seal the frontier with Syria would have its limitations, commanders acknowledged.
Even then, "there'll probably still be smuggling across the border, as there are on a lot of borders," said Johnson, the Marine commander.
But American military strategists say insurgents will have to work harder and travel farther as a result of the operation.
"They want an area where they can plan, train, indoctrinate terrorists before they are employed elsewhere in country. In western Al Anbar they were less likely to be disrupted before they are ready to be employed, due to the relatively small presence of coalition and Iraqi security forces," said Vines, the coalition's ground commander. "Insurgents must not be allowed sanctuaries where they feel safe and operate with impunity. Indicators are that terrorists felt that parts of western Al Anbar had become a sanctuary."
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Iraq-Jordan
Iraq finally completes Cabinet proposal
2005-04-27
Iraq's prime minister-designate on Tuesday proposed a 36-member Cabinet - including three deputy premiers from the country's Shiite, Sunni and Kurdish factions. Ibrahim al-Jaafari discussed his proposal Tuesday with President Jalal Talabani, said the premier's spokesman, Abdel-Razak al-Kadhi. Talabani's three-member presidential council must sign off on the list before it is submitted to the 275-member National Assembly for a vote. Talabani has already indicated he would not exercise his veto and a vote could take place as soon as Wednesday, lawmakers said.

Late Tuesday, Jaafari met Abdel-Aziz al-Hakim, head of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq, a leading member of the winning United Iraqi Alliance (UIA), Kadhi said. Under Jaafari's proposal, Iraq's majority Shiites would get 17 ministries, according to Ali al-Adib and Hadi al-Ameri, two lawmakers from the UIA, which controls 148 seats in Parliament. Eight ministries would go to the alliance's Kurdish allies, six to Sunnis and one to a Christian, the lawmakers said. Fouad Massoum, a senior member of Talabani's Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, confirmed most of the breakdown, but was not aware that a ministry would go to a Christian faction.

Hoping to end months of haggling, Jaafari has also decided to appoint three deputy prime ministers - one each from the country's main ethnic and religious groups - lawmakers said. According an earlier report by Al-Iraqiyya television, Roj Nouri Shaways, a Kurd, former Pentagon favorite Ahmad Chalabi, and Sunni MP Saad al-Lehebi were all named as deputy premiers. It also said Saadoun Dulaimi, a Sunni, was named as defense minister.
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