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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (9641)11/16/2004 9:38:07 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
Fighting spreads to more towns as Falluja operation continues

Rory McCarthy in Baghdad
Tuesday November 16, 2004
The Guardian

US troops called in air strikes on the Iraqi city of Baquba
yesterday as they fought gun battles in the street with crowds of
insurgents.

Fallout from the week-long assault on the city of Falluja spread
in several towns across the country.

As well as the fighting in Baquba, a mixed Sunni and Shia town
north of Baghdad, there were clashes in Baghdad, Ramadi,
Buhriz, Mosul and Suwayra.


In a blow against the insurgency, the Iraqi prime minister, Ayad
Allawi, said members of a militant group known as Jaish
Muhammad (the Army of Muhammad), including its leader, had
been arrested during the assault on Falluja.

The group is one of around a dozen insurgent organisations
responsible for kidnappings and attacks on the US military and
Iraqi security forces.

Fighting in Baquba began early yesterday when fighters armed
with assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenades attacked
soldiers from the US 1st Infantry Division near a police station.

The soldiers then came under fire from a nearby mosque. Iraqi
forces stormed the mosque and found rocket-propelled
grenades, mortars and other weapons.

US troops then called in air strikes and two 500lb bombs were
dropped on "anti-Iraqi forces' positions", the military said.

Officials at the main police station in Baquba said 26 insurgents
and five Iraqi police had been killed in the fighting.

One Iraqi policeman and seven civilians died, a hospital official
said. Four American soldiers were injured.

In Buhriz at the same time, an attack on a police station killed
the town's police chief.

In Falluja, US troops continued to fight insurgents in the south of
the city. There were heavy bombing raids and artillery fire, with
aircraft making up to 30 bombing runs.

Colonel Michael Regner, operations officer for the 1st Marine
Expeditionary Force in Falluja, said at least 1,052 insurgents
had been taken prisoner during the assault, and more than
1,000 killed. No more than about two dozen were from outside
Iraq, he said.

The military previously estimated about 500 insurgents had been
taken prisoner.

Col Regner added that 38 US troops had been killed and 320
wounded in the operation.

"Falluja is no more a safe haven for the terrorists and killers.
This thing is over," the interior minister, Falah Hassan al-Naqib,
said in Baghdad.

Col Regner said some insurgents may have sought refuge in
Ramadi, 70 miles west of Baghdad, where there was heavy
fighting yesterday, and two car bombs detonated near a US
convoy.

Further north, in Mosul, which has seen serious violence in the
past week, five American soldiers were injured when a suicide
bomber detonated his car near a US military convoy.

"I expect the next few days will bring some hard fighting," the
US commander in the city, Brigadier General Carter Ham, said.

In Suwayra, south of Baghdad, two policemen and five National
Guardsmen were killed.

In an audiotape on an Islamist website, Jordanian terror leader
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi said the Americans were avoiding attacks
against some rebel strongholds while fighting in Falluja.

"The enemy is now avoiding fighting you for fear of dispersion
and attrition," the speaker said. "It has massed its capabilities
... to finish off Islam in Falluja. If it finishes Falluja, it will move in
your direction. Beware and deny it the chance to carry out this
plan."

He said that the Americans were overextended and "cannot
expand" their operations. "Shower them with rockets and
mortars and cut all the supply routes," he said.

· The Hungarian parliament yesterday rejected a government
proposal to extend the stay of 300 non-combat troops in Iraq by
three months until March 31 next year.

guardian.co.uk



To: Mephisto who wrote (9641)11/16/2004 9:49:19 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (38) | Respond to of 15516
 


Former G.I.'s, Ordered to War, Fight Not to Go

The New York Times
November 16, 2004

By MONICA DAVEY


The Army has encountered resistance from more
than 2,000 former soldiers it has ordered back
to military work, complicating its efforts to
fill gaps in the regular troops.


Many of these former soldiers - some of whom say they have not trained, held a gun, worn a uniform or even gone for a jog in years - object to being sent to Iraq and Afghanistan now, after they thought they were through with life on active duty.

They are seeking exemptions, filing court cases or simply failing to report for duty, moves that will be watched closely by approximately 110,000 other members of the Individual Ready Reserve, a corps of soldiers who are no longer on active duty but still are eligible for call-up.

In the last few months, the Army has sent notices to more than 4,000 former soldiers informing them that they must return to active duty, but more than 1,800 of them have already requested exemptions or delays, many of which are still being considered.
And, of about 2,500 who were due to arrive on military bases for refresher training by Nov. 7, 733 had not shown up.

Army officials say the call-up is proceeding at rates they anticipated, and they are trying to fill needed jobs with former soldiers as they did in the Persian Gulf war of 1991.
Still, the resistance puts further strain on a military that has summoned reserve troops in numbers not seen since World War II and forced thousands of soldiers in Iraq to postpone their departures when their enlistment obligations ended.

Tensions are flaring between the Army and some of
its veterans, who say they are surprised and confused
about their obligations and unsure where to turn.


"I consider myself a civilian," said Rick Howell, a major from Tuscaloosa, Ala., who said he thought he had left the Army behind in 1997 after more than a decade flying helicopters. "I've done my time. I've got a brand new baby and a wife, and I haven't touched the controls of an aircraft in seven years. I'm 47 years old. How could they be calling me? How could they even want me?"

Some former soldiers acknowledge that the Army has every right to call them back, but argue that their personal circumstances - illness, single parenthood, financial woes - make going overseas impossible now.

Others say they do not believe they are eligible to be returned to active duty because, they contend, they already finished the obligations they signed up for when they joined the military. A handful of such former soldiers, scattered across the country, have filed lawsuits making that claim in federal courts.

These former soldiers are not among the part-time soldiers - reservists and National Guard members - who receive paychecks and train on weekends, and who have been called up in large numbers over the last three years.

Instead, these are members of the Individual Ready Reserve, a pool of former soldiers seldom ordered back to work. Ordinarily, these former soldiers do not get military pay, nor do they train. They receive points toward a military retirement and an address form to update once a year.

When soldiers enlist, they typically agree to an eight-year commitment to the Army but often are allowed to end active duty sooner. Some of them join the Reserves or National Guard to complete their commitment; others finish their time in the Individual Ready Reserve.

For officers, the commitment does not expire unless they formally resign their commissions in writing, a detail some insist they did not know and were not told when they signed their contracts, although Army officials strongly dispute that.
Lt. Col. Pamela Hart, a spokeswoman for the Army, said people in the service are well aware of the provision. "We all know about it," Colonel Hart said.

She said problems with the call-ups of former soldiers have involved a relatively small number of people, are being worked out, and are hardly unique to this conflict. In the first gulf war, she said, more than 20,000 former soldiers were called up. With medical problems and no-shows, only about 14,400 were actually deployed, she said.

Most of the deployments in the first gulf war lasted 120 days, the Army said. The current call-ups are more likely to last a year.

Of those seeking exemptions now, the Army is studying each person's case individually, Colonel Hart said, and has no set rule on what allows a person to avoid deployment. Army officials are still weighing more than half of the requests. So far, only 3 percent of requests for exemptions have been turned down, while 45 percent have been approved.

As for the former soldiers who failed to appear at bases by their assigned dates, the Army is trying to reach them, one by one, to discuss their circumstances, Colonel Hart said. In late September, some Army officials suggested that they would pursue harsher punishments - declaring people AWOL and possibly pursuing military charges - but the Army has since taken a quieter, more conciliatory approach.

"These are challenging times in their lives," Colonel Hart said, adding that some former soldiers who failed to report might have moved and not received the Army's notice. "We're contacting them as best as possible."

For the rest, though, some questions linger over who really qualifies for the callback.

Colette Parrish said she burst into tears the evening that her husband, Todd, walked into their house in Cary, N.C., with a letter from the Army calling him back to service. "We had no idea this could happen," she said. "We hadn't been preparing for any of it because we thought it wasn't possible."

At first, Mr. Parrish, 31, said he was convinced that the letter was just an administrative error because he believed that his time in the Individual Ready Reserve had ended.
He had gone to college on an R.O.T.C. scholarship, then served four years as a field artillery officer. He said he resigned his commission after that, became an engineer, and still owed the Army four years in the Individual Ready Reserve to complete his total obligation.

To Mr. Parrish, who has filed a lawsuit against the Army in federal court in North Carolina, that obligation ended on Dec. 19, 2003. But the Army apparently does not agree, and says that it never accepted Mr. Parrish's resignation as an officer.

As the court fight has continued, Mr. Parrish's date to report to Fort Sill, Okla., has been pushed back, again and again, one month at a time. Instead of thinking about long-term plans, for his wife and their future family, he is living in 30-day increments.

He said he always looked back on his service years fondly, and with a deep sense of patriotism.

"I guess I feel disillusioned now," he said. "This isn't about being for or against the war. It's not about Democrats or Republicans. It's just a contract, and I don't think this is right. If they need more people, shouldn't they get them the right way? How many more like me are there?"

Mark Waple, Mr. Parrish's lawyer, said he had received calls from 30 other former soldiers in recent months, all of whom had heard of Mr. Parrish's case and had similar stories.

At least two other former soldiers have filed suit over the question.

In Hawaii, David Miyasato, a former enlisted soldier who served in the first gulf war, said he would never go AWOL; he would have gone to Iraq, he said, if need be.

But Mr. Miyasato also said that his eight-year commitment ended nearly a decade ago. After he received his letter calling him back to service, he said, he called the Army repeatedly to argue that he was not eligible. Finally, he said, with his date to report to a base in South Carolina just days away, he contacted a lawyer and filed suit on Nov. 5.

"This was actually my last resort," said Mr. Miyasato, a former truck driver and fuel hauler who said that, at 34, he led an entirely different life, with an 8-month-old daughter and a window-tinting company to run. "I had been calling around everywhere for help."

On Nov. 10, Mr. Miyasato said, he learned that the Army had rescinded his orders.

In New York, Jay Ferriola, a former captain in the Army, filed a suit saying he had resigned his officer's commission in June and no longer qualified for call-up in the Individual Ready Reserve. On Nov. 5, the Army rescinded his orders and honorably discharged him.

"This shows that the system works," Colonel Hart said. "If the soldiers bring their situations to our attention, we're going to do what's right."

Barry Slotnick, Mr. Ferriola's lawyer, said he wondered how many other soldiers might be in similar positions, but without the money, the contacts or the certainty to sue. Mr. Slotnick said he had received numerous calls from others since he filed Mr. Ferriola's case in late October.

"We might as well add another phone bank," Mr. Slotnick said. "What I can see is that there are many, many cases of people being called up that shouldn't have been. This is a backdoor draft. I also have to wonder how many are already in Iraq who shouldn't be there, who just didn't think to question it."

The Army's current plan is to fill 4,400 jobs through March from among 5,600 former soldiers ordered to duty. But an Army official said last month that more former soldiers, perhaps in similar numbers, might be called on later next year, as well.
For now, those being sent to Iraq and Afghanistan are being asked to handle a variety of support positions, including truck drivers and fuel and food suppliers.

Months ago, the Army said some of the former soldiers would be needed to play the French horn, the clarinet, the euphonium, the saxophone and the electric bass as part of the military's bands, but the notion drew criticism from members of Congress who questioned the need to order people to give up their civilian lives to play instruments. Colonel Hart said the Army has since filled the musician jobs with volunteers.

Before going to Iraq, former soldiers are receiving as many days of training as they need, an Army spokesman said. Some of the soldiers said they were worried, though, about the prospect and safety of trying to get up to speed in a few months.

"These guys like me are basically untrained civilians now," said Mr. Howell, the former helicopter test pilot. Mr. Howell said he left the Army years ago with an injured back, knee and elbow, leaving him wondering about his own physical condition.
"I don't even have a uniform anymore," he said. "But they don't have any more reserves left, so we're it. All they want is some bodies to go to Iraq, just someone to be there, to sit on the ground."

When he left the military in 1997 as part of a reduction in forces, Mr. Howell said, he saw a note in the "little print" in his annuity agreement about a future commitment. But he said he was told that his obligation to the Individual Ready Reserve would be brief and meant little anyway. "They said it was just a way of having me on the books," he said.

After that, Mr. Howell said, he jumped into the civilian world. He got married. He and his new wife began building a house. They struggled to have children.

In September, his first child, Clayton, was born. Just before that, his orders arrived.

"It does rip my heart out that these young men and women are over there, and there is part of me that wants to be with them," he said recently. "But I have responsibilities here now."

Mr. Howell said he had applied to the Army for an exemption but was recently turned down. If he loses his appeal, he will be given a new reporting date. His best hope, he said, is that his appeal is buried somewhere at the very bottom of a big stack of them.

nytimes.com
Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company



To: Mephisto who wrote (9641)11/17/2004 12:19:50 AM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
Shooting in Iraq mosque angers Muslims
Tuesday, November 16, 2004 · Last updated 7:29 p.m. PT

By ROBERT H. REID
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD, Iraq -- The fatal
shooting of a wounded and
apparently unarmed man in a
Fallujah mosque by a U.S.
Marine angered Sunni Muslims
in Iraq on Tuesday and raised
questions about the protection
of insurgents once they are out
of action.


International legal experts said
the Marine may have acted in
self-defense because of a
danger that a wounded
combatant might try to blow up
a hidden weapon; a key issue
was whether the injured man
was a prisoner at the time.

The shooting happened Saturday, one day after the Marine,
who has not been identified, was wounded in the face and
after another man in his unit was killed by the booby-trapped
body of an insurgent.

However, the incident could cause major political problems for
the government of Prime Minister Ayad Allawi and his U.S.
backers at a time when Iraqi authorities are seeking to
contain a backlash among Sunnis to the invasion of the former
insurgent stronghold of Fallujah.

American and Iraqi authorities tried to prevent rage from
spreading among Sunnis, many of whom watched dramatic
footage of the shooting that aired throughout the day on
Al-Jazeera television, a Qatar-based satellite station.

"Look at this old man who was slain by them," said Ahmed
Khalil, 40, as he watched the video in his Baghdad shop. "Was
he a fighter? Was anybody who was killed inside this mosque
a fighter? Where are their weapons? I don't know what to say."

It was unclear to what extent other Iraqis, particularly the
majority Shiite Muslims, cared about the shooting.

Maysoun Hirmiz, 36, a Christian merchant in Baghdad, said
she was not satisfied by an announcement by the U.S.
military that it had removed the Marine from the battlefield
and will investigate whether he acted in self defense.

"They will say or do the same thing they did with the soldiers
who committed the abuses against Iraqis detainees in Abu
Ghraib prison, and they are still free, enjoying their lives
while they destroyed other peoples' lives," Hirmiz said.

The central figures who allegedly carried out the physical
abuse and sexual humiliation of inmates at the notorious
prison west of Baghdad are currently on trial, facing trial or
have already been sentenced.

The Abu Ghraib scandal, which erupted last spring when
photos of the abuse became public, generated a worldwide
wave of revulsion that raised questions about the treatment of
Muslim prisoners in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere as part
of the Bush administration's war on terror.

The shooting in the Fallujah mosque became public Monday
with the airing of the footage taken Saturday by pool
correspondent Kevin Sites of NBC News. In his report, Sites
said the man who was killed didn't appear to be armed or
threatening in any way, with no weapons visible in the
mosque.

In a statement Tuesday, the 1st Marine Division said it
launched its investigation "to determine whether the Marine
acted in self-defense, violated military law or failed to comply
with the Law of Armed Conflict."

It was unclear from the statement whether the incident was
reported through the chain of command Saturday or only
when the pool footage became generally available two days
later.

Sites said three other insurgents wounded Friday in the
mosque were also shot again Saturday by the Marines.

International legal experts said protection of injured
combatants once they are out of action is a basic rule in
warfare but that the Marine shown in the video may have
acted in self-defense.

Charles Heyman, a British infantry veteran and senior
defense analyst with Jane's Consultancy Group in London,
defended the Marine, saying soldiers are taught that the
enemy "is at his most dangerous when he is severely injured."

Other experts contacted by The Associated Press were careful
to avoid a public judgment because of the dangerous and
uncertain situation in Fallujah, where U.S. troops were still
fighting insurgents.

"It's clearly recognized that people in combat situations are
under enormous strain," international Red Cross spokesman
Florian Westphal said in Geneva. "Obviously, we were not on
the spot so we cannot judge the precise circumstances of
what was being shown here."

Westphal said the Geneva Conventions are clear: Protection of
wounded combatants once they are out of action is an
absolute requirement.

However, the status of the wounded man was unclear. A
different Marine unit had come under fire from the mosque on
Friday. Those Marines stormed the building, killing 10 men
and wounding five, according to Sites. He said Marines
treated the wounded and left them.

The same five men were in the mosque Saturday when
Marines from another unit arrived. Westphal said he couldn't
say for sure from NBC's account whether the man was a
prisoner.

Heyman said there is a danger that a wounded enemy may try
to detonate a hidden firearm or a grenade, and if the man
made the slightest move "in my estimation they would be
justified in shooting him."

However, legal distinctions are unlikely to carry much weight
among many Iraqis, especially Sunnis already angry over the
Fallujah offensive. Allawi said he ordered the assault after
Fallujah's leaders refused to hand over Jordanian terror
mastermind Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and other foreign fighters.

But Sunni militants saw the invasion of the city 40 miles west
of Baghdad as a plot by the Americans and the Shiites, such
as Allawi, against religious Sunnis - an allegation both
governments deny.

"The troops not only violated our mosques with their sins and
their boots but they stepped on our brothers' blood," said
Khalil, the shop owner. "They are criminals and mercenaries.
I feel guilty standing here and not doing anything."

At a news conference Tuesday, Iraqi Interior Minister Falah
Hassan al-Naqib, himself a Sunni, said that although "killing a
wounded person is rejected by us," Fallujah militants were
"killers and criminals" who committed brutal acts.

That meant little to Hameed Farhan, 51, who works for the
Transportation Ministry in Baghdad.

"I did not see it because there was no electricity at home, but
my wife was at her parents and she described it for me,"
Farhan said. "She was crying. Tears welled up in my eyes. I
wanted to scream."

---

Associated Press reporters Omar Sinan in Baghdad and
Alexander G. Higgins in Geneva contributed to this report.
seattlepi.nwsource.com