Posted on 11/13/2004 8:46:42 AM PST by TexKat
I think it is the latter.....
No surprise but it does seem they are bent on destroying their country and killing their own...for power.
There is a thread I was on a couple of nights ago that was regarding the Kurds and the Turks. The topic is about the Turkish soldiers going into Iraq. It got very interesting. The Kurds have a lot at stack.
I'll see if I can find the thread and link it to this one.
Bring in the MOAB and let's get it over!
last post was to be to you also.. thanks for thread & all the linkages ... will be using your profile page as my reference point henceforth
We have to get the PKK under control...The communists...They kill Turks and other Kurds...They found a PKK training camp in the Netherlands for heavens sake.
good info.
A looter is seen inside the offices of a private company in the northern city of Mosul, 370 kms form Baghdad. Iraq said that the battle to retake the Sunni rebel bastion of Fallujah was over, with more than 1,000 insurgents killed, but that the country's most wanted man, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, had fled.(AFP/Mujahed Mohammed)
Iraqis crowd around the scene of a car bomb which targeted an Iraqi National Guard convoy in the northern city of Mosul, Iraq, Saturday, Nov. 13, 2004. The U.S. Army has diverted an infantry battalion from the fighting in Fallujah and sent them back to Mosul after an uprising there by insurgents, U.S. military officials said Saturday. Ten Iraqi National Guardsmen and one American soldier have died since Thursday in Mosul, the U.S. military said. (AP Photo)
A picture released by the US Army shows Marines with Regimental Combat Team 7 and Iraqi Forces Emergency Response Unit performing offensive operations during Operation Al Fajr (New Dawn) in the Iraqi restive city Fallujah, west of Baghdad. More than 1,000 rebels were killed in a six-day US-Iraqi assault on the Sunni Muslim bastion of Fallujah and about 200 fighters detained, Iraq's national security advisor said.(AFP/US Army-HO)
Smoke rises after dusk following a series of explosions across the capital of Baghad, Iraq, Saturday, Nov. 13, 2004, as heavy clashes broke out in the streets. Insurgents armed with rocket-propelled grenades reportedly attacked the Ministry of Education along Nidal Street, a densely populated commercial district. (AP Photo/Jim MacMillan)
Iraqis walk through the Abu Ghraib section of Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday Nov. 13, 2004, while an American tank blocks vehicle traffic through the area. Some roads were sealed after overnight clashes between U.S. forces and insurgents nearby. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)
Foxnews break, reports 1200 "insurgents " killed in Fallujah
Excellent start.. hope that figure will double - Pittsburgh folks take your mind of creaming the Browns & change it to creaming the terrorists !
Yep, Mosul's next. Not quite the hotbed Fallujah is, but troublesome just the same.
Mosul's way too far away for us to actually be able to see sound and light shows of the terrorist butt-kickings...
Some High value targets must be in one of these cities.
Lots of clean ups ahead.
Thanks for being "The FReeperette on the Ground" for us back home here! Love catching the REAL story when you post!
First time today, though. That's an improvement over the last few days.
Hope they don't put us on bugle call and make us bunker up...
Posted on Fri, Nov. 12, 2004
Foreign fighters now reviled by Fallujah residents
By Hannah Allam
Knight Ridder Newspapers
http://www.kansas.com/mld/kansas/news/special_packages/iraq/10166880.htm
A rebel-allied cleric who goes by the name Sheik Rafaa told Knight Ridder that Iraqi rebels were so infuriated by the disappearance of their foreign allies that one cell had "executed 20 Arab fighters because they left an area they promised to defend."
Other residents said foreign militants wore out their welcome months ago, when they imposed a Taliban-like interpretation of Islamic law that included public floggings for suspects accused of drinking alcohol or refusing to grow beards. Women who failed to cover their hair or remove their makeup were subjected to public humiliation. Those accused of spying for Americans were executed on the spot, residents said.
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