SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: i-node who wrote (177335)10/31/2003 10:46:29 AM
From: Road Walker  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1573426
 
DR, blindfold firmly in place,

re: That is clear. All of the information coming out of Iraq clearly shows the Iraqis are already, six months in, adopting this attitude.

Can you not read, or do you choose to ignore information that doesn't fit the dogma?

U.S. Troops Clash With Rioters in Baghdad
1 hour, 9 minutes ago

By SLOBODAN LEKIC, Associated Press Writer

BAGHDAD, Iraq - American troops clashed with rioters carrying Saddam Hussein's picture in a Baghdad suburb Friday, and heavy smoke billowed from the mayor's office in a city west of the capital following a big explosion.

AP Photo

AP Photo
Slideshow: Iraq




Latest headlines:
· Saddam may be coordinating anti-US attacks in Iraq: report
AFP - 9 minutes ago
· Four Iraqis killed, two US soldiers wounded in Baghdad
AFP - 18 minutes ago
· Iraq's fate tied to welfare of its women, says distaff congressional
AFP - 24 minutes ago
Special Coverage





In northern Iraq (news - web sites), American troops sealed off the village where Saddam was born and began issuing identity cards to the villagers to determine who can move in and out.

There were conflicting claims about what triggered the clash at Abu Ghraib, a suburb on the western side of the capital. Iraqis said it broke out when U.S. troops tried to clear market stalls from a main road. But a U.S. officer at the scene, 1st Lt. Joseph Harrison, said it began with a grenade attack against American soldiers that left two of them wounded.

Youths began throwing stones at troops and Iraqi police and set tires ablaze. Protesters carried Saddam's picture and shouted "Allahu Akbar," or "God is great."

After a three-hour interlude, gunfire erupted again as helicopters hovered overhead and U.S. armored vehicles moved into the area to control the crowd after hundreds of Iraqis emerged from Friday prayers.

Machine gunfire and 10 explosions were heard, and fleeing civilians said the U.S. troops had "come under attack." A photographer on the scene saw several civilian casualties being evacuated. Within a half hour the gunshots subsided.

Later, mortars fell on an Iraqi police station near the market. The Americans said they arrested two Iraqis carrying a mortar firing tube.

In Fallujah, a center of Sunni Muslim resistance 40 miles west of the capital, a strong explosion rocked the center of the city at midday. Heavy, black smoke could be seen billowing from the mayor's office.

Police said that following the explosion, residents shouted at the authorities that their neighborhood had become a target because the U.S.-appointed mayor and other officials worked there. Civil defense officer Ahmed Khalil said police shot and killed a resident during the ensuing argument.

Later, residents angered by the police action broke into the smoldering building and looted the mayor's office. They eventually dispersed when U.S. Humvees arrived with helicopters patrolling overhead.

An upsurge of attacks this week, coinciding with the start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, has killed scores of people, most of them Iraqis in a series of vehicle bombings in Baghdad on Monday. The upsurge prompted the international Red Cross and the United Nations (news - web sites) to remove foreign staff temporarily.

But on Friday, the European Union (news - web sites)'s head office in Brussels, Belgium, said it would not pull its humanitarian aid workers out of Iraq. EU spokesman Diego Ojeda said the current team of about 10 aid workers from the EU's humanitarian aid office would continue its work in Baghdad.

U.S. officials have variously blamed the violence on Saddam loyalists and Islamic extremists. The New York Times reported Friday that three senior American officials believe Saddam is actively planning and coordinating some of the attacks.

Defense, intelligence and national security officials sought Friday to minimize that possibility, however. Discussing the situation only on grounds of anonymity, they said some Iraqis have been asserting for several months that Saddam is involved. But these officials said they are not certain how reliable the information is and said there are no radio intercepts or other types of evidence to corroborate the reports.

American soldiers moved before dawn Friday to seal off Uja, the village where Saddam was born, surrounding it with razor wire and setting up checkpoints at the exits. They ordered all adults to register for identity cards in the village about 95 miles north of the capital.

"This is an effort to protect the majority of the population, the people who want to get on with their lives," said Lt. Col. Steve Russell, a battalion commander in the 4th Infantry Division. The village is the family home of many former Baathist regime members.

Elsewhere, insurgents mounted attacks on U.S. and Iraqi government targets in the northern city of Mosul, U.S. officers said Friday. There were no injuries in the overnight shelling of a U.S. base near Mosul, the explosion of a roadside bomb near a U.S. foot patrol on the city's outskirts, or in an attack by unidentified gunmen who sprayed Mosul's city hall with automatic fire, they said.



Those skirmishes came after a bomb exploded late Thursday near a military police convoy in northern Baghdad, wounding two Americans.

In Baghdad's neighborhood of Salhiya, Iraqi police and U.S. troops on Friday blocked a major street after residents informed authorities about a car parked under a pedestrian bridge, fearing it was booby-trapped. Bomb experts checked a white Mitsubishi parked a few hundred yards from the U.S. occupation authorities' headquarters zone.

___

Associated Press corespondents Katarina Kratovac in Tikrit, Bassem Mroue in Fallujah, Sameer N. Yacoub in Abu Ghraib and Mariam Fam in Mosul contributed to this report.



To: i-node who wrote (177335)10/31/2003 6:51:49 PM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1573426
 
<font color=brown>Yup.......democracy is flourishing in Iraq. They're using their new found democracy to tell us we're *ssholes.

Do you know where are the Iraqis who love us and why are they not saying anything? Inquiring minds would like to know.<font color=black>

*********************************************************

U.S. Troops Clash With Rioters in Baghdad
Explosion Hits Pro-U.S. Mayor's Office in Fallujah

By SAMEER N. YACOUB, AP

ABU GHRAIB, Iraq (Oct. 31) - U.S. troops battled Iraqi rioters when a dispute over a marketplace exploded into anti-American fury Friday. Leaflets and rumored warnings called for a ''Day of Resistance'' Saturday at the start of a three-day general strike to protest U.S. occupation.

Two Iraqis were killed, and 17 others and two U.S. soldiers were reported wounded at the marketplace clashes outside Baghdad, as Iraqi rioters waved portraits of Saddam Hussein and shouted ''Allahu Akbar!'' - ''God is great!''




Men hurl stones at Iraqi police during clashes after a blast rocked Fallujah.

A bomb exploded Friday morning near an 82nd Airborne Division patrol outside Khaldiyah, west of Baghdad, killing one soldier and wounding four others, the U.S. military reported.

In Fallujah, also west of Baghdad and a center of the anti-U.S. resistance, an explosion and fire struck the office of the mayor, who has cooperated with the U.S. occupation. In a melee that followed, one Iraqi was killed. Later Friday, U.S. troops came under attack at the same spot.

Three or four American soldiers were wounded in the northern city of Mosul late Friday when assailants threw a grenade at them from a speeding car, Iraqi police said. The U.S. military confirmed an attack at the same time but declined to give details.

An Islamic clergymen's association, meanwhile, issued a statement for Friday prayer congregations denouncing as sinful any Muslim's support for the Americans. ''Supporting them is apostasy,'' it said, ''... a betrayal of religion.''




Rumors spread through Baghdad that bombings or other resistance action would strike the capital Saturday. A street leaflet attributed to the ousted Baathists declared it would be the ''Day of Resistance,'' and also called for a three-day general strike to begin Saturday.

As a result, U.S. officials urged Americans in the Iraqi capital to ''maintain a high level of vigilance.''

The fresh violence flared as U.S. forces contended with an upsurge in the 6-month-old campaign of ambushes and bombings by the shadowy resistance forces, who now strike almost three dozen times a day, mostly in central Iraq.

The U.S. command is grappling with unanswered questions of who is behind the harassing attacks, how coordinated they are, and how to bring them under control. American officials variously blame die-hard Saddam loyalists, foreign and local Islamic extremists, and even released criminals, and some suggest Saddam himself may be plotting some attacks.

Before dawn on Friday, U.S. troops sealed off Saddam's birthplace village of Uja, about 95 miles north of Baghdad, where relatives of Saddam and adherents of his Baath Party have long been suspected of maintaining contacts with the ousted leader.

The 4th Infantry Division troops ringed the village with razor wire, set up checkpoints and began issuing identity cards to villagers to control their movements.

The bloody, on-and-off clashes in Abu Ghraib, just west of Baghdad, broke out Friday morning when U.S. troops tried to clear market stalls from a main road, Iraqi police reported.

The reason for the U.S. action and the sequence of events remained unclear late Friday. But at some early point someone tossed a grenade at U.S. soldiers, slightly wounding two, Army 1st Lt. Joseph Harrison said at the scene, and mortar rounds fell on a nearby police station.

Young Iraqis threw stones at soldiers and tanks, set tires ablaze, and brandished Saddam portraits, shouting religious slogans.

Gunfire broke out sporadically, but then the Iraqis retired for midday prayers in nearby mosques. When they returned to the market, gunfire erupted again as more U.S. armored vehicles moved in. Ten explosions and machine-gun fire were heard, and American helicopters hovered overhead.




In late afternoon, the bodies of two Iraqi men - identified by friends as Mohammed Auweid, 45, and Hamid Abdullah, 41 - were carried from the sealed-off area.

''God damn America!'' shouted friend Ali Hussein, who said the men were passing by when the Americans opened fire on rock-throwers. ''U.S. soldiers are the real terrorists, not us!'' he said.

Nearby Shula Hospital received 17 wounded civilians, said the hospital's Dr. Imad Ali. He said three were in critical condition. The Americans said they arrested two Iraqis found carrying a mortar firing tube.

Some 40 miles to the west, an explosion rocked the center of Fallujah at midday, and thick, black smoke billowed from the mayor's office. The town hall had been the target of previous attacks as well, since its leadership began cooperating with the American military last April.

Firemen extinguished the flames, and no casualties were reported, but authorities said one Iraqi was killed and one wounded when residents converged on the scene outraged that their district was again the target of an attack because it was associated with the U.S. occupation. Police shot and killed the man during the argument, said civil defense officer Ahmed Khalil reported.

10/31/03 15:46 EST

Copyright 2003 The Associated Press.