Happy Anniversary, everyone!!!!

RRocket

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Just wanted to pop in and say congrats on the 4th year of your "Mission Accomplished" anniversary in Iraq!!!!

For your reading pleasure on today's sombre anniversary:

HERE'S WHAT OUR MISSION ACCOMPLISHED

By Derrick Z. Jackson, Globe Columnist | May 2, 2007

These are just some of the stories on the four-year anniversary of Mission Accomplished:


Washington Post: "The deaths of more than 100 troops in April made it the deadliest month so far this year for US forces in Iraq."

Los Angeles Times: "April was even more devastating for Iraqi civilians. More than 1,500 were killed in bombings, assassinations and sectarian violence."

New York Times: "In a troubling sign for the American-financed rebuilding program in Iraq, inspectors for a federal oversight agency have found that in a sampling of eight projects that the United States had declared successful, seven were no longer operating as designed because of plumbing and electrical failures, lack of proper maintenance, apparent looting, and expensive equipment that lay idle."

Boston Globe: "Deaths and injuries from terrorist attacks increased sharply last year, particularly in Iraq and Afghanistan, with government officials, police, and security guards coming under greater attack than ever before . . . more than 20,000 people died and more than 38,000 were injured . . . an increase of 6,000 deaths or more than 40 percent over 2005, according to [the State Department]."

This is four years after President Bush staged one of the gaudiest self-congratulations in American history. He landed on the USS Abraham Lincoln in a jet fighter, popped out in a flight jumpsuit and proclaimed major combat operations to be over in Iraq under the now-infamous banner, "Mission Accomplished." It is four years after Bush said, "We do not know the day of final victory, but we have seen the turning of the tide. No act of the terrorists will change our purpose, or weaken our resolve, or alter their fate. Their cause is lost."

Bush's cause is so lost that 71 percent of Americans disagree with his handling of Iraq in the latest New York Times/CBS poll and 64 percent say Bush should set a timetable for troop withdrawal in 2008. By a 57 percent-to-35 percent tally in that poll, Americans say Congress, not Bush, should have the final say about troop levels. Similarly, in the latest Wall Street Journal/NBC poll, Americans say by 56 percent to 37 percent they agree with the Democrats' push for a troop withdrawal deadline over Bush's refusal to set a deadline.

Bush's cause is so lost that people are turning on him wherever he turns, from former CIA director George Tenet to the family of Pat Tillman, who calls the military's glorification of his death in Afghanistan "utter fiction," and soldier Jessica Lynch, who said the military's glorification of her capture and rescue in Iraq was utterly unnecessary. "The American people are capable of determining their own ideals for heroes and they don't need to be told elaborate lies," she told a congressional oversight panel last week.

This, not to mention Abu Ghraib, was all inevitable in a war that itself was an elaborate lie. With no weapons of mass destruction, no proof that Saddam Hussein was tied to 9/11, Al Qaeda, or an imminent threat himself, America was led by fiction into a disaster that has now claimed 3,351 US soldiers, 3,211 of the deaths coming AFTER Bush declared major combat operations to be OVER.

The civilian toll will probably never be accurately known, since US military officials famously said "we don't do body counts." Numbers range from the conservative 60,000s of Iraq Body Count to the 600,000 of the medical journal Lancet. Last week, the United Nations criticized Iraqi officials for not providing civilian casualty figures. The United Nations estimates that the continuing violence claimed 34,452 civilian lives last year. The Iraqi government says the number was 12,357.

Yesterday, Bush continued to do violence to history by going to Central Command in Tampa to once again string together 9/11 and Al Qaeda and Nazis and communists into Saddam and Iraq. Bush said, "Four years ago, we confronted a brutal tyrant who had used weapons of mass destruction, supported terrorists, invaded his neighbors, oppressed his people, and tested the resolve and the credibility of the United Nations."

Four years later, we know what mission was truly accomplished. Bush destroyed the credibility of his presidency and degraded America's standing in the world for years to come. Whatever he tried to accomplish, America is saying the mission is over.
 
Iraq Probes Reports of Al-Masri's Death
Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Iraq's government received reports that the leader of al-Qaida in Iraq had been killed but officials said Tuesday the information had not been confirmed, and an insurgent coalition insisted he was alive.

Similar reports in the past proved inaccurate. U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker told reporters that American authorities in Baghdad were seeking more information.


This photo released by the U.S. Military at a press conference in Baghdad, Iraq Thursday, June 15, 2006, purports to show Abu Ayyub al-Masri who is the al-Qaida in Iraq leader. Iraqi officials have received reports Tuesday May 1, 2007, that the leader of al-Qaida in Iraq was killed by Sunni tribesmen, but the chief government spokesman said Tuesday the information has not been confirmed. (AP Photo/U.S. Military)

An umbrella organization of Iraqi insurgent groups denied the al-Qaida leader had been killed, saying he was alive and safe, according to an Internet statement.

"The Islamic State of Iraq reassures the Ummah (nation) that Sheik Abu Hamza al-Muhajer, God protect him, is alive and he is still fighting the enemy of God," the umbrella group said on a Web site commonly used by insurgents.

A series of reports Tuesday said Abu Hamza al-Muhajer _ whom U.S. and Iraqi forces identify by another pseudonym, Abu Ayyub al-Masri _ had been killed, either by rivals in al-Qaida or Sunni tribesmen who have turned against al-Qaida.

A Pentagon spokesman, Col. Gary Keck, said he was aware of the reports from Iraq but had no confirmation.

"U.S. forces are working with Iraqi officials to determine if this is true," he said, adding that he did not know whether U.S. forces were at the site of the alleged killing.

In recent months, divisions among Sunni insurgent groups have sharpened, in part because of al-Qaida's attempt to dominate the "resistance," impose a harsh brand of Islam on ordinary people and use foreign fighters, U.S. officials say.

More than 200 Sunni Arab sheiks in Anbar province have decided to form a political party to oppose al-Qaida. Clashes have erupted in three Sunni provinces between al-Qaida and other insurgent groups, notably the nationalist 1920 Revolution Brigades, U.S. officers say.

Iraqi officials released conflicting accounts of when and where al-Masri was purportedly killed, and who was supposed to have killed him. It was also unclear whether Iraqi authorities had the body.

Chief government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh Al-Dabbagh told Al-Arabiya television that the report of al-Masri's death was based on "intelligence information," adding that "DNA tests should be done and we have to bring someone to identify the body."

But he refused to say unequivocally whether Iraqi security forces had the body, citing security restrictions.

The Interior Ministry spokesman, Brig. Gen. Abdul-Karim Khalaf, told state television that authorities did not have absolute confirmation al-Masri was dead but said reports indicated he was killed by fellow al-Qaida members in an ambush at the Safi bridge north of Baghdad.

"Sources of the Interior Ministry witnessed the killing of this criminal," Khalaf said.

Deputy Prime Minister Barham Saleh told The Associated Press that al-Masri was believed to have been killed Monday in the Taji area north of Baghdad.

"Preliminary reports said he was killed yesterday in Taji area in a battle involving a couple of insurgent groups, possibly some tribal people who have problems with al-Qaida. These reports have to be confirmed."

A U.S. spokesman, Lt. Col. Christopher Garver, said the U.S. command was looking into the reports.


This photo released by the U.S. Military at a press conference in Baghdad, Iraq Thursday, June 15, 2006, purports to show Abu Ayyub al-Masri who is the al-Qaida in Iraq leader. Iraqi officials have received reports Tuesday May 1, 2007, that the leader of al-Qaida in Iraq was killed by Sunni tribesmen, but the chief government spokesman said Tuesday the information has not been confirmed. (AP Photo/U.S. Military)

"Obviously I hope it's true," Garver said, pointing out that previous Iraqi claims had proven false. "We want to be very careful before we confirm or deny anything like that."

Al-Masri, an Egyptian militant, took over leadership of the terror network and was endorsed by Osama bin Laden after Abu Musab al-Zarqawi was killed last June by a U.S. airstrike in Diyala province.

During a teleconference with reporters in Washington, the U.S. ambassador said al-Masri's death would be a positive development but played down suggestions it would have any immediate impact on al-Qaida activity in Iraq.

"Clearly taking a major terrorist off the battlefield is an important thing and if we can confirm it, if this did happen, without question it would be a significant and positive development," Crocker said. "That said, I would not expect it to in any way bring to end al-Qaida's activities in Iraq."

The Islamic State of Iraq, the umbrella organization that includes al-Qaida in Iraq, said it published the denial of al-Masri's death "to reassure the hearts of Muslims."

"We warn that the enemy is still playing the tune of trying to break the ranks of Mujahedeen in Iraq; this is unattainable and it will not take place, God willing," the group's statement said.

Al-Qaida in Iraq is believed to be the strongest member of the umbrella group, which is officially led by Abu Omar al-Baghdadi.
 

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