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Politics : Impeach George W. Bush

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To: Orcastraiter who wrote (75277)12/1/2006 7:52:11 PM
From: tonto  Read Replies (2) of 93284
 
You know how stupid your comment was that there were no AQ in Iraq. Now you are moving a little closer to reality and honesty by admitting that they are there. Good for you.

Tonto keeps saying there are AQ in Iraq. I asked him how many AQ are there, but he did not respond. The answer is probably somewhere between 0 and a few hundred foreign AQ.

In Iraq
Al-Qaeda in Iraq denounces Jordan's king, Iraqi Sunni leaders

By Maamoun Youssef
ASSOCIATED PRESS

4:09 p.m. November 30, 2006

CAIRO, Egypt – Al-Qaeda in Iraq on Thursday denounced Iraqi Sunni politicians who met recently with Jordan's King Abdullah II, calling them and the monarch “traitors.”

The statement, posted on an Islamic militant Web site, did not mention a summit Thursday between Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and President Bush. Both leaders met separately with King Abdullah before their talks in Amman, Jordan.


Instead, al-Qaeda in Iraq – the country's most feared Sunni Muslim militant group – lashed out at a string of Iraqi Sunni Arab politicians who held talks with Abdullah ahead of the summit.

“The traitors of Jordan's meetings, whether they know it or not, have entered today in a pact with Satan to fight the men of God,” al-Qaeda in Iraq said in its statement.

The authenticity of the statement could not be confirmed. It was posted on a Web forum often used to issue militant statements and was signed by the “Islamic state in Iraq,” the so-called Islamic government that the group declared earlier this year and that now issues all its messages.

Al-Qaeda has long demonized the U.S.-allied Jordanian monarch and in the past has targeted Iraqi Sunnis it sees as cooperating with the Shiite-led Iraqi government or the United States.

The statement called on “the lions and free men of Jordan” to prepare themselves to confront the king.

Abdullah met earlier this week in Amman with Harith al-Dhari, head of the influential Association of Muslim Scholars, a hardline Sunni Arab group known to have links to some factions within Iraq's 3-year-old Sunni-led insurgency. The king also met with Iraq's Sunni Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi and Iraq's most powerful Shiite politician, Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim.
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