-Caveat Lector- www.ctrl.org DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER ========== CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please! These are sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis- directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

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-Caveat Lector-

Kill four mercenaries who signed up to kill get paid to kill, put their body
parts on spikes haul 'em up into the fone wirs really kind of a middle eastern
cultural thing, I mean they eat shishkabobs daily over there spike all their
meat and waddya have? it's the crusades all over again. 1300 of theirs dead as
payback. Nazis did that kind of thing and we really raked them over the coals,
for decades after....you know the kind of Nazi thinkig where IF YOU Kill one of
ours ---l00 of yours go. They line'them up and shoot em all l00. They did it to
France, everywhere they were, Poland. ANy underground resistance, it was
understood. Line 'em up, l00 to one. By that yardstick This was THREE TIMES as
bad as the nazis.
#*#*#*#*#*#
US military crushes Iraqi uprising

By James Conachy
13 April 2004

A week of bloody repression by the US military and allied forces has killed at
least 1,300 Iraqis and left thousands
more wounded. Jet fighters, helicopters, tanks and artillery have been used
indiscriminately to try and crush the popular
uprising that began against the US-led occupation on April 3. Large numbers of
the dead and injured are women,
children and other noncombatants.

The city of Fallujah, which marines have surrounded and began assaulting on
April 5 in reprisal for the killing of four
American security guards on March 31, has become a symbol of both Iraqi defiance
and US brutality. By Friday, US
forces had only advanced several kilometres into the industrial suburbs. Marines
have described fighting �block by
block� and assessed the resistance as far greater than during the invasion of
Iraq last March. Over 75 percent of the
city is still being held by Iraqi fighters.

Hundreds of homes and other buildings in Fallujah, including two mosques, have
been damaged by US air strikes,
strafing runs by Apache helicopter gunships and artillery and mortar shells. The
city has no electricity, water supplies
have been disrupted and food is running out. The vicious operation has been
denounced as �heavy-handed� and
�collective punishment� even by British officers and Iraqi supporters of the US
occupation.

A temporary ceasefire was called on Friday. A further ceasefire was declared on
Sunday and was still largely holding
on Tuesday morning, despite periodic outbreaks of gunfire. The main motive of
the US military is to rest their
exhausted and overstretched troops, bring in reinforcements and prepare for
another bloody offensive. The head of
American Central Command, General John Abizaid, told the press: �I think you�ll
see a series of very clear military
moves over the next couple of weeks that will get ourselves into a position to
do what needs to be done.�

Associated Press described the tragic scenes in the city after the first
ceasefire took effect: �Many families, emerging
from their homes for the first time in days, buried slain relatives in the city
football stadium. A stream of hundreds of
cars carrying women, children and the elderly headed out of the city after
marines announced they would be allowed to
leave. Families pleaded to be able to take out men, but the marines refused.
Some entire families turned back.�

Doctor Rafa Hayd al-Issawim, the director of Fallujah�s hospital, told Al
Jazeerah: �I can say more than 600 have
been killed, but the number may not be correct as many families have already
buried their dead in their gardens.� Five
international non-government organisations (NGOs) estimated a minimum of 470
dead and 1,200 wounded, including
243 women and 200 children.

As many as 60,000 refugees have now fled Fallujah. Those entering Baghdad have
recounted numerous atrocities by
US troops. Abbas Ibrahim, a 30-year-old man who escaped on Friday, told the
Lebanese Daily Star: �As soon as
the Americans see a group of people in the streets, they shoot at them. People
venture out only if their homes risk
being bombarded or if they must carry the dead or wounded to the city�s
clinics.� A Red Crescent official who arrived
in the city on Thursday said: �Fallujah is a ghost town, a battlefield. The
streets were deserted, no cars, all the shops
were closed, homes and stores bombarded.�

The indiscriminate bombardment of Fallujah by the US military has fueled the
nation-wide opposition to the
occupation. It has strengthened the Iraqi people�s sense that they are fighting
a common struggle, against the attempts
by the US authority to promote sectarian differences between Shiite and Sunni
communities.

Across the country, Sunni and Shiite Iraqis have rallied to appeals for food and
blood donations to assist the people of
Fallujah and other cities under attack by coalition forces. A Shiite cleric
collecting supplies at the Kadhimiya mosque in
Baghdad told the Washington Post: �This is strong proof that the people of Iraq
will end wars between Sunni and
Shiite before they begin. And we welcome Iraqis of all religions�Jews,
Christians, everyone�to come and help the
people of Fallujah and Karbala and Mosul and Nasiriyah and Basra.�

The first convoy of humanitarian relief arrived on the outskirts of the besieged
city last Thursday. Thousands of
unarmed Iraqis�both Sunni and Shiites�pelted American troops blocking their path
with rocks. A former United
Nations aid worker told the Washington Post that the US military eventually
allowed food supplies to enter, but
refused blood and other medical necessities.

There have been a number of reports of Shiite militiamen infiltrating past
American lines to join the Sunni fighters in
Fallujah who are defying the US. A teacher in the �Mehdi Army� militia of
Moqtada al-Sadr told the New York
Times: �We have orders from our leader to fight as one and to help the Sunnis.
We want to increase the fighting,
increase the killing and drive the Americans out. To do this, we must combine
forces.�

Moqtada al-Sadr, who has fortified himself and thousands of his supporters in
the holy Shiite city of Najaf, issued a
statement on Friday: �I direct my speech to my enemy Bush and I tell him that if
your excuse was that you are fighting
Saddam, then this is past and now you are fighting the entire Iraqi people.�

After days of operations to win back the suburbs of Baghdad and the southern
Iraqi cities taken over by Shiite
militiamen loyal to al-Sadr, the US military claimed yesterday that the
coalition had killed at least 700 Iraqi fighters. US
casualties in April so far stand at 76 dead and over 250 wounded.

Fighting is continuing in Sadr City, in the Sunni Baghdad suburb of Adhimiya,
and on the western and southern fringes
of the capital, where Iraqi fighters are launching determined attacks to disrupt
the attempts of the US military to
resupply the marines besieging the city of Fallujah. At least three American
convoys have been ambushed and an
Apache helicopter was shot down on Sunday.

A US commander in Baghdad told the press that �full security has not yet been
established� in the capital. Over
200,000 people took part in a joint Sunni-Shiite prayer vigil against the US
occupation on Friday. Most of the
US-recruited police in �Sadr City� �the working class districts of eastern
Baghdad�are wearing photos of Moqtada
Sadr over their badges. Most of the city shut down over the weekend, as
shopkeepers and workers responded to an
appeal by Sunni and Shiite religious leaders for a strike.

The Wall Street Journal commented on April 12: �Despite US officials� claims
that the uprisings have no grass-roots
support, the public adherence to a cleric�s call for a general strike
demonstrates just how much the relationship
between Americans and Iraqis has deteriorated over the past few weeks. The
streets of Baghdad were largely empty
over the weekend, with the majority of businesses closed. Schools, universities
and government buildings also shut
down.�

The uprising has utterly shattered the claims of the Bush administration that
the US presence in Iraq is aimed at
�liberation�. The occupation does not have the support of any significant
section of the population. Every institution the
US has attempted to create as part of its agenda to plunder Iraq and turn it
into a client state, has broken apart under
the pressure of a popular uprising of the Iraqi people.

The US military reported on the weekend that at least 25 percent of the Iraqi
police and Civil Defence Corp (ICDC)
was either refusing to fight the uprising or had joined it. One of the
US-trained battalions of the new Iraqi Army
mutinied on the weekend and refused to obey orders to join the attack on
Fallujah.

By the end of the last week, members of the handpicked Iraqi Governing Council
(IGC) were openly denouncing the
conduct of the US military. Adnan Pachachi, who sat beside Laura Bush during the
State of the Union address in
January and was named by Bush as one of the closest US allies in Iraq, appeared
on Al Arabiya on Friday to
denounce the siege of Fallujah as �unacceptable and illegal.� Adbul Karim Mahoud
al-Mohammedawi, a leader of the
Shiite Marsh Arabs, announced he was resigning from the ICG until �the bleeding
stops in Iraq.� At least two other
members of the council threatened to resign.

Preparations are being made, however, for further repression. Despite news of a
negotiated settlement between
representatives of the IGC and Sadr for his militia to hand back control of
official buildings to the Iraqi police, the US
is building up its forces on the outskirts of Najaf.

In the murderous language one has come to expect from American political and
military leaders, General Ricardo
Sanchez told journalists yesterday: �The mission of US forces is to kill or
capture Moqtada al-Sadr.�

www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:

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<A HREF="http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
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