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  • From ABC news:

    Raid Finds al-Qaida Tie to Iraq Militants

    A U.S.-led assault on a compound controlled by an extremist Islamic group turned up a list of names of suspected militants living in the United States and what may be the strongest evidence yet linking the group to al-Qaida, coalition commanders said Monday.

    The cache of documents at the Ansar al-Islam compound, including computer discs and foreign passports belonging to Arab fighters from around the Middle East, could bolster the Bush administration's claims that the two groups are connected, although there was no indication any of the evidence tied Ansar to Saddam Hussein as Washington has maintained.

    There were indications, however, that the group has been getting help from inside neighboring Iran.

    Kurdish and Turkish intelligence officials, some speaking on condition of anonymity, said many of Ansar's 700 members have slipped out of Iraq and into Iran putting them out of reach of coalition forces.

    The officials also said a U.S. missile strike on Ansar's territory on the second day of the war missed most of its leadership which crossed into Iran days earlier.

    U.S. officials said the government had reports some Ansar fighters could have made it into Iran and have been shuttling back and forth with fresh supplies.

    According to a high-level Kurdish intelligence official, three Ansar leaders identified as Ayoub Afghani, Abdullah Shafeye and Abu Wahel were among those who had fled into Iran. The official said the three were seen being detained by Iranian authorities Sunday.

    "We asked the Iranian authorities to hand over to us any of the Afghan Arabs or Islamic militants hiding themselves inside the villages of Iran," said Boorhan Saeed, a member of the pro-U.S. Patriotic Union of Kurdistan. "We asked them about it Sunday, and still don't have a response."

    Last week, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld warned the Iranians to stop meddling in the war. Tehran denied any involvement.

    Using airstrikes and ground forces, Kurdish soldiers and U.S. troops have cooperated in the past week to dislodge and crush Ansar militants in 18 villages surrounding the Iraqi city of Halabja about 160 miles northeast of Baghdad.

    "We actually believe we destroyed a significant portion of the Ansar al-Islam force there," Maj. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, vice director of operations on the Pentagon's Joint Staff, said Monday. He said forces were investigating the finds.

    Among a trove of evidence found inside Ansar compounds were passports and identity papers of Ansar activists indicating that up to 150 of them were foreigners, including Yemenis, Turks, Palestinians, Pakistanis, Algerians and Iranians.

    Coalition forces also found a phone book containing numbers of alleged Islamic activists based in the United States and Europe as well as the number of a Kuwaiti cleric and a letter from Yemen's minister of religion. The names and numbers were not released.

    "What we've discovered in Biyare is a very sophisticated operation," said Barham Salih, prime minister of the Kurdish regional government.

    Seized computer disks contained evidence showing meetings between Ansar and al-Qaida activists, according to Mahdi Saeed Ali, a military commander.

    It was unclear how strong Ansar remains.

    Officials from the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, one of two parties that share control of an autonomous Kurdish enclave in northern Iraq, say they killed 250 Ansar members during two days of intense fighting and aerial bombardments.

    "There was ferocious fighting," Saeed said. He said he chased 25 Ansar militants across the Iranian border and captured nine Ansar sympathizers belonging to a group called the Islamic Movement of Kurdistan.

    The remaining Ansar fighters are thought to be in the mountains along the Iraq-Iran border, U.S. and Kurdish military officials have said.

    Kurdish soldiers on Monday continued sporadic fighting in several villages around Halabja and along the Iran-Iraq border near the village of Sargat, site of a destroyed building once allegedly used by Ansar militants to produce poison.

    Gen. Richard Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Sunday the Sargat compound was probably the site where militants made a biological toxin, traces of which were later found by police in London.

    "We think that's probably where the ricin that was found in London came (from)" he told CNN's "Late Edition." "At least the operatives and maybe some of the formulas came from this site."

    British police raided a London apartment in January and found traces of ricin, a powerful poison made from castor plant beans. U.S. officials believe the poison and those arrested were linked to Ansar.

    The group's leader, Mullah Krekar, is being held in Norway on charges of kidnapping and aiding terrorists.

    Krekar has denied any links to Saddam or al-Qaida, but said he considers Osama bin Laden a "good Muslim."

    In a recent interview with Dutch television, Krekar said his fighters would use suicide attacks if U.S. troops went after the group.

    One such attack came three days into the war when an apparent car bomb killed at least five people, including an Australian cameraman, at a checkpoint near an Ansar training camp.

    Associated Press Writer Dafna Linzer contributed to this report from New York.

    Comment


    • BIYARE, Iraq (AP) - A U.S.-led assault on a compound controlled by an extremist Islamic group turned up a list of names of suspected militants living in the United States and what may be the strongest evidence yet linking the group to al-Qaida, coalition commanders said Monday.

      The cache of documents at the Ansar al-Islam compound, including computer discs and foreign passports belonging to Arab fighters from around the Middle East....

      Among a trove of evidence found inside Ansar compounds were passports and identity papers of Ansar activists indicating that up to 150 of them were foreigners, including Yemenis, Turks, Palestinians, Pakistanis, Algerians and Iranians.

      Coalition forces also found a phone book containing numbers of alleged Islamic activists based in the United States and Europe as well as the number of a Kuwaiti cleric and a letter from Yemen's minister of religion. The names and numbers were not released.

      "What we've discovered in Biyare is a very sophisticated operation," said Barham Salih, prime minister of the Kurdish regional government.

      Seized computer disks contained evidence showing meetings between Ansar and al-Qaida activists, according to Mahdi Saeed Ali, a military commander.

      http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

      Comment


      • Hey Lincoln! I took the time to cut it down a bit.
        http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

        Comment


        • I'm sure it will be ignored anyway. Someone must have planted the evidence...

          Comment


          • (Chilean Time Zone)

            Emol.com
            22:33. - KUWAIT- After 15 Iraqi missiles penetrated their airspace, Kuwait announced that it will send a cabinet minister to the United Nations to request support against Baghdad's agression to the permanent members of the Security Council.

            23:11. - EL CAIRO/Egypt. - Forces of the Iraqi army and British troops fight bloody battles in the city of Basora, informed the Arab network Al Jazeera. The report, mentions eyewitnesses, indicating that the confrontations is taking place in the district of Al Baaz, in the east zone of that city.

            Todas las noticias de Último Minuto. Entra e informate de los últimos acontecimientos ocurridos en nuestro país en Emol.com



            (French Time Zone)
            Le Monde

            03. 45: In Baghdad, a huge explosion destroy some buildings in downtown. At the first hours of Tuesday, a huge blast was heard in Baghdad. Reuters agency indicates that the sound of the explosion took 4 minutes

            04. 35: New incident with a road stopping in A Samawa (southern of Baghdad), an Iraqi combatant, whose truck sank on an American military field, was killed.

            05. 00: Six air raids in North. The combat fighters of the American aircraft carrier Theodore Roosevelt carried out this night six raids in the north of the country, according to a spokesman of the ship.

            International, Economie, Environnement … La référence, partout, tout le temps.
            >>> El cine se lee en dvdplay <<<

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            • Deserter tells of desperation

              The soldier covered his face and wept.

              I'm so sorry. Excuse me. I just can't stop," wept the soldier who fled Saddam Hussein's army and was taken Monday into the hands of U.S.-allied Iraqi Kurdish fighters. "Could this terrible time be over soon? Please, tell me."

              "The army knows I ran away. They could come and take revenge," he said in the central police barracks in Kalak, about 20 miles northwest of the Kurdish administrative center Irbil. "My only hope is that I'm not alone. There are so many deserters and those who want to run. They cannot attack all these families with a war going on."

              "We knew nothing. We were told only that America was trying to take over Iraq," Ali said. "But we are not so stupid. We know how Saddam rules the country. We know in our hearts we'd be better off without him."

              "I don't see Saddam as a hero anymore," Ali said.

              U.S. bombs killed at least five members of his unit. About the same number were wounded, he said. "There is no medical help," he added. "They are left to die."

              "The spirit of the soldiers is very low," he said. "We were not really mad at the Americans. We just want to save our lives."

              "I can say now what I always felt: Saddam led to this war," Ali said. "We don't want to fight America. We don't want to fight for Saddam. We just want an end to all this."
              http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

              Comment



              • Muslim world urged to boycott US 3-31-03 ISLAMIC leaders at the biggest anti-war rally in Pakistan so far have called for a Muslim economic boycott of the United States and for the Islamic world to sever ties with countries in the US-led assault on Iraq. Witnesses said around 300,000 protesters flooded into the northwestern city of Peshawar for the rally organised by the six-party Islamic Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA). Police said the crowd numbered 250,000. "For the first time in its history, America is isolated internationally and an economic boycott by Muslims the world over would herald its ultimate collapse," MMA deputy secretary-general Fazlur Rehman told the responsive crowd. "This century will witness the destruction and disintegration of America." The protesters gathered on the main Peshawar-Islamabad highway and packed more than 2km of the key road to express solidarity with the people of Iraq. They chanted slogans and burned effigies of US President George. W Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair while demanding an immediate end to "aggression against innocent Iraqis". "This massive rally conveys a message to the world that the policy pursued by the government on the Iraq issue does not reflect the feelings of Pakistan's 140 million Muslims," Rehman declared. "We are with the oppressed people of Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere in the world, we are not with the American lackeys."
                http://monkspider.blogspot.com/

                Comment


                • Capt. Chris Carter winced at the risks his men would have to take. Engaged in a lightning-fast raid for this Euphrates River town, they were battling for a bridge when -- through the smoke -- they saw the elderly woman. She had tried to race across the bridge when the Americans arrived, but was caught in the crossfire.

                  At first, peering through their rifle scopes, they thought she was dead, like the man sprawled in the dust nearby. But then, during breaks in the gunfire that whizzed over her head, she sat up and waved for help.

                  Carter, a 32-year-old Army Ranger, ordered his Bradley armored vehicle to pull forward while he and two men ran behind it. They took cover behind the bridge's iron beams.

                  Carter tossed a smoke grenade for more cover and approached the woman, who was crying and pointing toward a wound on her hip. She wore the black chador, common among older women in the countryside. The blood soaked through the fabric, streaking the pavement around her.

                  Medics placed the woman on a stretcher and into an ambulance; Carter stood by, providing cover with his M16A4 rifle. Then she was gone, and Monday's battle for this town of 80,000, 50 miles south of Baghdad, raged on.

                  http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

                  Comment


                  • (French Time Zone)

                    Le Monde

                    6. 07: Two huge explosions in the southern periphery of Baghdad.
                    Two explosions shook the southern periphery of Baghdad this Tuesday, putting an end to a three hours pause in the British American bombardments of the Iraqi capital, brought back a journalist of Reuters present on the spot.

                    7. 01: A British soldier killed in the south of Iraq
                    A British soldier was killed Monday night in the south of Iraq, changing to 26 the number of British soldiers killed since the beginning of the conflict on March 20, announced Tuesday the British ministry of defense.
                    International, Economie, Environnement … La référence, partout, tout le temps.



                    (Chilean Time Zone)

                    Emol.com

                    01:03. - LONDON. The British newspaper "The Guardian" says that President Bush secretly prepares in Kuwait a government of 22 secretaries, headed by North Americans, to assume the control as the troops occupy the Iraqian territory.

                    Todas las noticias de Último Minuto. Entra e informate de los últimos acontecimientos ocurridos en nuestro país en Emol.com
                    >>> El cine se lee en dvdplay <<<

                    Comment


                    • Uday torture centre bombed 07:51, Apr 1 2003

                      Coalition aircraft have bombed a complex that serves as the office of the Iraqi National Olympic Committee.

                      It also houses, according to critics of the Iraqi president, a torture centre run by Saddam Hussein's eldest son Uday.

                      Get the latest news, sport, celebrity gossip, TV, politics and lifestyle from The Mirror. Big stories with a big heart, always with you in mind.
                      http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

                      Comment


                      • Here is a bit on the controversy on the interrim government:

                        "Decisions on the government's composition appear to be entirely in US hands, particularly those of Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy secretary of defence. This has annoyed Gen Garner, who is officially in charge but who, according to sources close to the planning of the government, has had to accept the inclusion of a number of controversial Iraqis in advisory roles.

                        The most controversial of Mr Wolfowitz's proposed appointees is Ahmed Chalabi, the head of the opposition Iraqi National Congress, together with his close associates, including his nephew.

                        During his years in exile, Mr Chalabi has cultivated links with Congress to raise funds, and has become the Pentagon's darling among the Iraqi opposition. The defence secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, is one of his strongest supporters. "

                        A disagreement has broken out at a senior level within the Bush administration over a new government that the US is secretly planning in Kuwait to rule Iraq in the immediate aftermath of the overthrow of Saddam Hussein.
                        http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

                        Comment


                        • Last week, some Congressmen were calling for an investigation of the State Dept. for not funding the Iraqi National Congress. The funds were authorized by Congress, but they have not been distributed by State.

                          Why is it that State is opposed to the INC? A link to a story on this would be appreciated.
                          http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

                          Comment


                          • Iranian people will rejoice when Saddam is gone. Clerics worry about rival Shi'ite clerics in a "moderate" Iraq.

                            "The 'Great Satan' has invaded Iraq but students at Tehran University seem pleased at the prospect.

                            "It will be a good thing to have American troops in Iraq. Perhaps that will bring change to Iran," said Namin, a lanky engineering student strolling to class.

                            "Maybe that will put more pressure on the regime here." Unlike fellow Muslims in the Middle East or their predecessors 23 years ago who seized the United States embassy, students today are not seething with anger against America and are unmoved by the government's daily references to "the enemy" in Washington.

                            "I think only about the consequences of a war. If the war has good consequences, let it be," said another student, Mohammad. "We're not protesting like European students. We don't have a democratic government like they do. We're not acting like them because we're not in European shoes."

                            While Iran's political and religious leaders have condemned Washington's move against Iraq, much of the country will be celebrating if Saddam Hussein's regime is overthrown, writes Dan De Luce.
                            http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

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                            • Dressing as civilians to lure enemy into an ambush is a war crime according to human rights organizations. They specifically condemned the perfidy of the Iraqi car bomber. Dressing as civilians in this manner endangers all civilians

                              Rights organisations supported the US government yesterday in condemning the use of suicide bombings as a strategy in Iraq, saying they constituted a breach of the Geneva convention.
                              http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

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                              • A US delegation arrived in Amman in its way to Baghdad for ceasefire negotiations



                                Abu Dhabi, Alittihad Daily, 3/26/2003 -- The UAE leading semi-official daily newspaper, Alittihad, reported today that a US government delegation has arrived in Amman, Jordan, yesterday in its way to Baghdad for negotiations with the Iraqi government about an immediate ceasefire.

                                A diplomatic source told Alittihad that the US government delegation included four leading members of Congress as well as Elizabeth Cheney, the daughter of the US Vice President Cheney, representing the US Department of State, where she works as an Assistant to the Deputy of the Secretary of State for Middle Eastern Affairs.

                                Porque nada pueden bombas donde sobra corazón...

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