Neocons Admit to Slaughtering Shia Worrshipers

darkbeaver

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Jan 26, 2006
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Neocons Admit
Slaughtering Shia Worshippers

Kurt Nimmo

Another Day in the Empire
March 31st 2006

According to U.S. News & World Report, the slaughter of worshippers at a mosque in the Ur neighborhood of Baghdad was intended to serve as a message “to radical Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr,” an influential force in post-Saddam politics. Earlier in the week deputy US commander in Iraq, Lt. Gen. Peter Chiarelli, “dismissed reports that a mosque had been hit, or that the 50 Iraqi Special Operations forces, backed up by 25 US advisers, had chosen the wrong target. Besides capturing some weaponry, they released an Iraqi dental technician who had been kidnapped 12 hours earlier,” according to the Christian Science Monitor.

It would appear the life of one dental technician is more important than the lives of nearly 20 Shia worshippers. Of course, this explanation is nothing more than a flimsy excuse. In fact, the mosque was attacked and the worshippers massacred for a simple reason—it was part of a continuing effort to foment “civil war” in Iraq, as planned by the Straussian neocons. It should be noted that “U.S. officials had been quietly praising Sadr’s group in recent weeks because of its calls for calm in the wake of the bombing of a Sunni mosque in Samarra that sparked a wave of sectarian violence,” praise at odds with the plan to divide Iraq into at least three Bantustans based along ethnic and religious lines.

If the attack on the mosque accomplished anything, it increased support for Moqtada al-Sadr. “They came and killed the young people, and we want the Imam Mahdi Army to protect us, because they are from us, they are Iraqi people,” Souad Mohammad, a school director, told the Monitor. “When the Mahdi Army is here, it’s very quiet, no one is assassinated in this area, there are no car bombs, and at night there are checkpoints to protect us.” Naturally, if Iraq is to be dissolved and ethnic and religious animosity brought to the boiling point, a strong and bloody message will need be sent to the Mahdi Army and al-Sadr and this appears to be what happened earlier in the week. As expected, the corporate media characterized the victims as “insurgents” and the grisly aftermath of the attack as a scene set-up by deceitful al-Sadr loyalists.

Indeed, a message was sent to al-Sadr and the Shia majority in Iraq and the result is feeding the Shia opposition to the occupation and presence of “coalition of the killing” soldiers. As Robert Dreyfuss notes, not only has a “Shiite insurgency” emerged but “the two insurgencies [Sunni-Shia] are also battling each other, in what can only be called Iraq’s civil war” and there is “little chance that they will unite against their common foe, the United States,” as planned by the neocons. Zalmay Khalilzad, the neocon ambassador to Iraq, “declared war on the second insurgency” last week and fit the situation into the neocon game plan. “Our judgment is that training and supplying, direct or indirect, takes place, and that there is also provision of financial resources to people, to militias, and that there is presence of people associated with [Iran’s] Revolutionary Guard and with [Iran’s] MOIS [Ministry of Intelligence and Security],” said Khalilzad. “More Iraqis in Baghdad are dying—if you look at the recent period of two, three weeks—from the [Shiite] militia attacks than from the terrorist car bombings.”

Never mind that last September two SAS operatives were discovered, dressed as members of the al-Sadr’s Badr Brigade, readying a terrorist bombing in Basra and Iraqi officials have arrested in Tikrit a “security contractor working for a private company” in possession of explosives, likely for the same reason. One need look no further than Rumsfeld’s neocon infested Pentagon to find affirmation of this covert approach, as documented by Seymour Hersh. “In some cases, according to the Pentagon advisers, local citizens could be recruited and asked to join up with guerrillas or terrorists. This could potentially involve organizing and carrying out combat operations, or even terrorist activities,” Hersh writes for the New Yorker. Of course, in the absence of reliable Iraqi traitors and murderous thugs, it is conceivable Special Forces, British SAS, and “security contractor” operatives would pull off such terrorism. In fact, I believe we can count on it.

As I have noted for months now—to the distress of some folks who are irritated by my redundancy—the Straussian neocon plan for the Muslim Middle East is ever-escalating violence and misery resulting in a map replete with small and malleable Bantustans ruled by brutal proxies controlled by the neoliberal banksters and their neocon allies.

“No stages,” John Pilger reported Richard Perle declaring. “This is total war. We are fighting a variety of enemies. There are lots of them out there. All this talk about first we are going to do Afghanistan, then we will do Iraq… this is entirely the wrong way to go about it. If we just let our vision of the world go forth, and we embrace it entirely and we don’t try to piece together clever diplomacy, but just wage a total war… our children will sing great songs about us years from now.” Perle’s children may “sing great songs,” but for the rest of us the coming conflict will portend misery and sacrifice, a societal condition long dreamed of by the Straussian neocons who fancy themselves Platoian princes, the heirs to Machiavelli’s grim vision.
 

jimmoyer

jimmoyer
Apr 3, 2005
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Winchester Virginia
www.contactcorp.net
Democracy Comes to Wynot, Iraq

Village Residents Elect City Council Representatives

WYNOT, Iraq, Sept. 15, 2004 — Ahmed Mutlok Oda creases his ballot slowly, seemingly worried he will fold it wrong. He starts to place it in the cardboard-and-tape ballot box, then pulls it back, unsure if he’s doing it right.

He looks to an interpreter for the 1st Infantry Division, who tells Oda he’s doing it correctly. Reassured, Oda drops the ballot in.

If Oda seems unnecessarily timid, consider that no one in Wynot has ever voted before. Oda has no predecessor, no way to know if he’s doing it right.

After Oda, another 145 voters came through, representing almost every household in this tiny village about 15 miles outside of Tikrit. The Wynot City Council elections of Sept. 13 came after months of work and planning by soldiers of Company A, 1st Battalion, 18th Infantry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division.

The strong turnout completed a turnaround in how Wynot residents view the U.S., according to the company commander, U.S. Army Capt. David Krzycki.

“This was probably the most anti-coalition town in sector when we first got here,” he said. “Kids and adults were throwing rocks at us and calling us names. But we established a knock-and-talk program, where we’d go to six to eight houses per night. We’d ask people what they needed and what they thought of us. Eventually they realized we’re here to make their way of life a little bit better.”

Krzycki credited 2Lt. Scott Robinson and Sgt. 1st Class Todd Carlsrud with helping to spearhead the election effort. Robinson cited perseverance as the key to bringing democracy to Wynot.

“We…had meetings once a week and explained what we are trying to do and why having a city council would be good,” Robinson said. “Initially they weren’t too favorable, but we explained that with a city council, you could solve your own problems.”

Building up to the elections, soldiers encouraged teamwork among the Wynot residents and urged them to set goals. One week, for instance, they encouraged everyone to clean their front yards so the residents could see the benefits of working together.

All voters were male, but such decisions were left up to the Iraqis, according to 1Lt. Matthew Angliss, a fire support officer. “We didn’t want to impose an American style of democracy on them,” he said. “We let them decide how to run it.”

The evening had a few quirks that might be expected for a town’s first election. Just as the sun set, the electricity went


Ahmed Mutlok Oda becomes the first resident of Wynot, Iraq, to vote. The town's city council elections were held Sept. 13, with the assistance of the 1st Infantry Division's Company A, 1st Battalion, 18th Infantry Regiment. U.S. Army photo by Sgt. W. Wayne Marlow

out. But the soldiers weren’t about to be deterred. Flashlights and Humvee headlights were used to provide the illumination necessary to continue Wynot’s foray into democracy.

Later, persons from another town attempted to vote, but they were pointed out by Wynot residents. Few of those residents have identification cards, so company officers relied on common sense and honesty to determine if a would-be voter was 18.

Prior to helping run the Wynot elections, Alpha 1-18 soldiers had helped bring city council elections to the nearby town of Owja. Krzycki thinks success there helped bring around Wynot residents.

“In Owja, people are happy because they get police patrols through town and they coordinated and funded a city cleanup program,” Krzycki said. “And people here can see the effects city councils are having.”

Wynot residents elected new leaders to seven positions: director, vice director, city manager, and directors of agriculture, education, transportation, and utilities. Krzycki said the company will help the city council in its nebulous stage, but the long-term goal is for the council to be self-sufficient.

And Oda has no doubt that it will be. “It feels good to vote,” he said. “A city council will help our community.”
 

Sassylassie

House Member
Jan 31, 2006
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Wow Jim a rational intelligent post. Sassy looking around the forum to check if she's lost.
 

Johnny Utah

Council Member
Mar 11, 2006
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Re: RE: Neocons Admit to Slaughtering Shia Worrshipers

jimmoyer said:
It won't be until another 20 to 40 years will we realize
the effects of this war in Iraq.

By then all the stupidity and mistakes will be minor.

We're watching the painful birth of a new nation.
Look how long it took Canada and the United States to get it's act together. It takes time to build a country, this is something the Liberals and Anti-War Moonbats do not understand or don't want to understand because it undermines their political agendas.

History will be the ultimate judge on the Iraq War and when History judges it Bush could be proven right or wrong.
 

cortez

Council Member
Feb 22, 2006
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thanks for the post beaver
again the depravity of the american and british military is evident
ill give em this much--- at least they are consistent
lets hope this whole thing doesnt blow back on them
i mean once they get the country built-- with a puppett government-- and pseudo elections-- they may turn on their benefactors
 

cortez

Council Member
Feb 22, 2006
1,260
0
36
Re: RE: Neocons Admit to Slaughtering Shia Worrshipers

jimmoyer said:
It won't be until another 20 to 40 years will we realize
the effects of this war in Iraq.

By then all the stupidity and mistakes will be minor.

We're watching the painful birth of a new nation.

we are watching the painfull torture and destruction of a nation
in another 20 or 40 years this mess will simply be yet another item on the list with vietnam etc

wow-- 100,000s of thousands dead-- yes very minor
indeed-- because they aint sacred americans

this will all blow back
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
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RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
RE: Neocons Admit to Sla

Americans are priceless Cotez everyone knows that, God made em outa gold, apple pie and milk and mom I'm starting to cry at the thought of those brave American's bleeding for our sins.