http://snipurl.com/6me1

A videotape obtained Sunday by Associated Press Television News captures a
wedding party that survivors say was later attacked by U.S. planes early
Wednesday, killing up to 45 people. The dead included the cameraman,
Yasser Shawkat Abdullah, hired to record the festivities, which ended
Tuesday night before the planes struck.

The U.S. military says it is investigating the attack, which took place in
the village of Mogr el-Deeb about five miles from the Syrian border, but
that all evidence so far indicates the target was a safehouse for foreign
fighters.  "There was no evidence of a wedding: no decorations, no musical
instruments found, no large quantities of food or leftover servings one
would expect from a wedding celebration," Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt said
Saturday. "There may have been some kind of celebration. Bad people have
celebrations, too."

But video that APTN shot a day after the attack shows fragments of musical
instruments, pots and pans and brightly colored beddings used for
celebrations, scattered around the bombed out tent.

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Morgue Records Show 5,500 Iraqis Killed

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May 24, 2004
New York Times

Did Somebody Say War?
By BOB HERBERT, OP-ED COLUMNIST

President Bush fell off his bike and hurt himself during a 17-mile
excursion at his ranch in Crawford, Tex., on Saturday. Nothing serious. A
few cuts and bruises. He was wearing a bike helmet and a mouth guard, and
he was able to climb back on his bike and finish his ride.

A little later he left the ranch and went to Austin for a graduation party
for his daughter Jenna. And then it was on to New Haven, where daughter
Barbara will graduate today from Yale. Except for the bicycle mishap, it
sounded like a very pleasant weekend.

Meanwhile, there's a war on. Yet another U.S. soldier was killed near
Falluja yesterday. You remember Falluja. That's the rebellious city that
the Marines gave up on and turned over to the control of officers from the
very same Baathist army that we invaded Iraq to defeat.

It's impossible to think about Iraq without stumbling over these kinds of
absurdities. How do you get a logical foothold on a war that was nurtured
from the beginning on absurd premises? You can't. Iraq had nothing to do
with Sept. 11. The invasion of Iraq was not part of the war on terror. We
had no business launching this war. Now we're left with the tragic
absurdity of a clueless president riding his bicycle in Texas while
Americans in Iraq are going up in flames.

How bad is the current situation? Gen. Anthony Zinni, the retired Marine
Corps general who headed the U.S. Central Command (which covers much of
the Middle East and Central Asia) from 1997 to 2000, was utterly
dismissive about the administration's "stay the course" strategy in Iraq.
"The course is headed over Niagara Falls," he said in an interview with
"60 Minutes," adding, "It should be evident to everybody that they've
screwed up."

When the weapons of mass destruction rationale went by the boards, the
administration and its apologists tried to justify the war by asserting
that the U.S. could use bullets and bombs to seed Iraq with an
American-style democracy that would then spread like the flowers of spring
throughout the Middle East.

Anthony Cordesman, a Middle East expert at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies in Washington, addressed that point last week in a
report titled, "The `Post Conflict' Lessons of Iraq and Afghanistan."

"At this point," the report said, "the U.S. lacks good options in Iraq —
although it probably never really had them in the sense the Bush
administration sought. The option of quickly turning Iraq into a
successful, free-market democracy was never practical, and was as absurd a
neoconservative fantasy as the idea that success in this objective would
magically make Iraq an example that would transform the Middle East."

The president's reservoir of credibility on Iraq is bone dry. His approval
ratings are going down. Conservative voices in opposition to his policies
are growing louder. And the troops themselves are becoming increasingly
disenchanted with their mission. Yet no one knows quite what to do.
Americans are torn between a desire to stop the madness by pulling the
plug on this tragic and hopeless adventure and the realization that the
U.S., for the time being, may be the only safeguard against a catastrophic
civil war.

The president is scheduled to give a speech tonight to lay out his "clear
strategy" for the future of Iraq. Don't hold your breath. This is the same
president who deliberately exploited his nation's fear of terrorism in the
aftermath of Sept. 11 to lead it into the long dark starless night of
Iraq.

As for the Iraqis, they've been had. We're not going to foot the bill in
any real sense for the reconstruction of Iraq, any more than we've been
willing to foot the bill for a reconstruction of the public school system
here at home. There's a reason why Ahmad Chalabi and the Bush crowd were
so simpatico for so long. They all considered themselves masters of the
con. They all thought that they could fool all of the people all of the
time.

There's a terrible sense of dread filtering across America at the moment
and it's not simply because of the continuing fear of terrorism and the
fact that the nation is at war. It's more frightening than that. It grows
out of the suspicion that we all may be passengers in a vehicle that has
made a radically wrong turn and is barreling along a dark road, with its
headlights off and with someone behind the wheel who may not know how to
drive.

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