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63 Dead, 140 Wounded at Zafaraniyah - US Raids Ministry of Health

by juan cole (reposted)
...

Monday, August 14, 2006

63 Dead, 140 Wounded at Zafaraniyah
US Raids Ministry of Health


The Associated Press reports that after 7 pm on Sunday, Sunni Arab guerrillas suddenly attacked the Shiite Zaafaraniyah district of Baghdad. First they set off two car bombs in the neighborhood. Then another team, in the Dora district, fired up to nine rockets at Zafaraniyah. Among other things, the rockets hit three buildings, including a multi-story apartment building that collapsed as a result. The attack left at least 63 dead and 140 wounded, though one suspects those numbers will mount.

US troops have been engaged in a sweep of Dora, so it is possible that this attack was intended as a reprisal, hitting Shiite supporters of the Shiite government that unleashed the Marines on the Sunnis of Dora.

AP says,

' Muhanna Yassin, who lives in Zafraniyah, said the attack left the neighborhood "a total mess" with "bodies of the dead and injured scattered around in the streets — old, young, women and children."

"The ground shook underneath us and there was chaos everywhere," he said in a telephone interview. "Everyone was dazed and confused, looking for their families. Some children and grown-ups were crying. I can't even begin describing their state." '


Other violence, in Baquba, Mosul and elsewhere, is reported by Reuters.

Under threat of Turkish attack in the north, Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki closed the Baghdad offices of the Kurdish guerrilla group, the PKK. Since the PKK doesn't have much of a presence in Baghdad, the gesture was a symbolic one. Turkish officials have cited Israel's attack on Hizbullah as a precedent for their coming after the PKK inside Iraqi Kurdistan. They accuse the PKK of striking at targets inside Turkey from their safe haven in Iraqi Kurdistan.

Iran-Iraq oil deal.

US troops swept into the ministry of health, a portfolio held by supporters of Muqtada al-Sadr, and made 7 arrests. The ministry is denying that the captured men are Mahdi Army fighters or are involved in kidnapping other Iraqis for ransom.
§Saving Baghdad Like We Saved Fallujah
by juan cole (reposted)
A reader who was in Iraq recently writes:


'[Baghdad:] . . . The city is virtually shut down, and the population suffers from collective trauma. The good people of Iraq did not deserve this. Bush Team paved the way for monsters to take over, and still they call it progress.

The security plan for Baghdad . . . was supposed to be a coordinated effort between Iraqi forces and the Americans. The two would join forces and secure the city neighborhood by neighborhood, and Casey said that Sadr City would be last. But, as so often happens in this place bereft of leadership, the Americans decided to go into Sadr City early without informing the Iraqis. Thus, the anger of Malliki to the attack. [Someone who] lives in Sadr City noted that the attack of the other day began at about 1:00 am, and was ferocious. The suspicion of many is that the Americans will save Baghdad like it saved Fallujah and Tel Afar.

But the real news is in Kurdistan. The people of that region are angry, very angry. Gas (benzene) is purchased on the side of the road in jerry cans, but the stations are empty. Gas in Irbil is more than $1.00/liter. In Chamchamal, angry young men rioted over the price of gas and burned a gas station. More protests are planned. Massoud [Barzani] announced on television that he is doing his best and if someone thought he could do better he should volunteer to try. In the meantime, any type of demonstration is now considered illegal in Kurdistan . . .

The grumbling is not confined to gasoline. Poor water and sewerage, especially in the Barzani governorates, is a source of frustration in Kurdistan. Also, still there is no electricity, and with temperatures hovering at 50 degrees C, people are naturally unhappy. But, most important, it's the economy. In Kurdistan the rich, mainly the families, get richer and the poor get stiffed with high prices of everything, food, gas, real estate, clothes, everything.

. . . The talk on the street is not demonstrations or protests. The talk is about revolution! No one takes it seriously . . . '

http://www.juancole.com/2006/08/saving-baghdad-like-we-saved-fallujah.html
§Khalilzad and Iran: Guest Comments
by juan cole (reposted)

Sunday, August 13, 2006

Khalilzad and Iran: Guest Comments

An informed observer writes:


' Ambassador Khalilzad made statements in Baghdad regarding Iran, perhaps for US and Western consumption and seemingly timed in relation to events in Lebanon, based upon this reported context:

“Privately, some senior U.S. officials are skeptical the Iranian government is doing more than providing money to select Shiite groups. Others insist Iran is providing weapons and training to some Shiite factions.” (AP)

The theories adduced as purposes for the alleged actions of Iran’s Government – “pressure,” “distraction” – do not make entire sense. The claims are inflammatory in the context of a tragically dangerous situation in Iraq.

The regime in Iran, or one or more parts thereof, is either doing something or they are not.

[Iran denied Khalilzad's charge and said unrest in Iraq is the fault of poor US policy-making.]

It is reported to be generally believed that the regime is providing funds for one or more of the Shia parties. Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim recently spent ten days in Tehran and Qom meeting with the senior leadership of the Iran government. Oil Minister Shahristani is in Tehran now meeting with counter-parts. Muqtada al-Sadr has been there, but not recently, as have others in the Iraqi leadership. There are clear personal and other relationships between the Iraqi Shia leaderships and those in high positions in the Iran Government, many resulting from years of residence in exile. There are clear identifications relating to shared religious doctrine. There is also a clear difference of political-philosophical views with respect to the participation of the clergy in government affairs.

At the moment, most intensely in Basra, there are disputes within the UIA involving SCIRI and the Sadr Movement, and the Sadr spin-off Fadhila, sometimes resulting in violent confrontations, relating to control of Provincial governments.

The remarks of the Ambassador are most clearly consistent with the position and supporting rhetoric of the Bush Administration with respect to the involvement of the regime in Iran in the war in Lebanon. As far as press and media reports show, there is little or no direct evidence of the involvement of the Iran Government in that war, except for a conventional wisdom belief that Hezbollah has been provided financial support of $100 million per year, and weapons which are transported to southern Lebanon through Syria. It is obvious that the advanced weapons deployed by Hezbollah have been purchased from, or provided by, someone. It is publicly known that the US Government provides the State of Israel with approximately $2 billion per annum of military assistance and weaponry. The Israel Air Force consists of US-made fighter aircraft. If Hezbollah were an instrumentality of the Lebanese Government, which it is by intention and demonstrable practice in the case of this war, there would be no legal difference under international law between the weapons contributions of the US Government to the State of Israel and any contributions made by the regime in Iran in Lebanon.

The President of Iran has clearly stated his and his Government’s position on the State of Israel and the nuclear fuel enrichment affair. Other than periodic expressed hopes that the situation in Iraq would become stabilized in the context of the Constitutional institutions that have been established, no public positions have been taken with respect to Iraq politics.

Unless there is more evidence, or a clearer, legitimate purpose, the Ambassador’s remarks in Baghdad regarding Iran appear to be irresponsible. The result of the remarks cannot possibly be positive for the US Government’s position in Iraq, which is probably declining from an already uncertain base.

One would have thought that, by now, it would have been determined that the way to deal with Muqtada al-Sadr and the Sadr Movement is not to attempt to “capture or kill” him and his followers. One would think, now that there has been a clear military defeat of the Israel IDF in Lebanon, that alternative strategies might be considered for dealing with Shaikh Nasrullah and Hezbollah.

Iraq is not proximate to Israel’s borders. From Grand Ayatollah al-Sistani to substantially all of those in the Iraqi government and the leaderships of the major parties, there is clear identification with the position of Shaikh Nasrullah and Hezbollah regarding the State of Israel, but no evidence that any of them intend to do anything serious about that situation.

In the case of Iraq, leave it alone would appear to be the obvious best policy.

It would seem especially odd for the US Government in Iraq to take the side of the loser in Lebanon.

If there is no evidence one way or the other, it is obvious that, notwithstanding the expenditure of more than $2 billion, the CIA and the DIA are not doing effective work in Iraq. '

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