Posted on 07/13/2005 1:41:28 PM PDT by NYer
Two people are killed in a mosque near the Iran-Iraq border, while ten Sunnis die in a Shiite neighbourhood in Baghdad.
Baghdad (AsiaNews/Agencies) A suicide bomber blew himself up at a Sunni mosque in Jalowla, near the Iraq-Iran border, killing two people. This is unusual because Shiite mosques are usually targeted. Local police, who identified the suicide bomber, said the man might have been inside the mosque preparing for an attack when the explosives detonated prematurely. Two of his brothers were arrested. The blast came at a time of growing sectarian tensions between Shiite and Sunni Arabs. Jordanian terrorist al-Zarqawi has added fuel to the flames claiming that Shiites are allies of the West and must therefore be killed. Tensions are likely to go even higher after the tragic death of ten young Sunni men when they were left inside a police van to suffocate under the sun. They had been arrested on Sunday in one of Baghdads Shiite neighbourhoods. Local authorities promised to investigate the incident, especially to avoid Sunni reprisals. Currently, interethnic and religious relations are at the heart of the debate over Iraqs new constitution. Sunni leaders had pushed their community to boycott the first post-Saddam elections to express their opposition to the Shiites and the Western presence. The Allawi government eventually chose to give Sunnis the possibility to take part in the process of constitutional reform. Now the task has fallen on the current Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari. The next deadline in the constitutional process is August 15 when Iraqs draft constitution will be presented. A national referendum is scheduled for October 15. If approved within the expected timeframe, new general elections will be held on December 15 and a new government sworn in no later than December 31, 2005. If the constitution fails the popular test, a new constituent assembly will have to be elected before December 15 to draft another Charter. |
Ping!
Rest In Pieces.
Mosque? Oh, I see, the writer is referring to an islamic munitions depot.
Eat your own. Bump!
Uh-oh. I hope no korans were injured.
maybe the bomber is dyslexic,,, urrr, make that was,, dyslexic.
Red wire goes to.......boom.
Another premature detonation.
Hey, I'm Darryl and this is my brother Darryl, and the other dumb sh&t half-brother that just twisted those two wires together, ah his name was Darryl.
Whew!! I was glad to read it was a muslim who blew up a mosque. I wonder what is considered moore offensive to Muslims, blowing up a mosque or an infidel handling the Koran without gloves.
mosque = military base
mosque = armory
WSJ.com OpinionJourna
THE REAL WORLD
Saddam and al Qaeda
There's abundant evidence of connections.
BY CLAUDIA ROSETT
Wednesday, July 13, 2005 12:01 a.m.
President Bush has given some good speeches lately, including his talk June 29 at Fort Bragg, N.C., in which he stressed some of the reasons for going into Iraq, and his address this past Monday at the FBI Academy at Quantico, Va., in which he talked about the role of intelligence in defeating terrorists and stressed that "the heart of our strategy is this: Free societies are peaceful societies."
But there's another speech Mr. Bush still needs to give. That would be the one in which he says: I told you so--there was a connection between Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda.
In some quarters, that would of course provoke the usual outrage. Since the U.S.-led coalition went outside the corrupt United Nations to topple the Baathist regime in Baghdad more than two years ago, it has become an article of faith that there was no such connection. Typical of the tenor in both the media and western politics is an article that ran last month in The Economist, describing Iraq as Mr. Bush's "most visible disaster" and opining that "even Mr. Bush's supporters admit that he exaggerated Saddam's ties to Al Qaeda."
If anything, Mr. Bush in recent times has not stressed Saddam's ties to al Qaeda nearly enough. More than ever, as we now discuss the bombings in London, or, to name a few others, Madrid, Casablanca, Bali, Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, or the many bombings in Israel--as well as the attacks on the World Trade Center in both 1993 and 2001--it is important to understand that terrorist connections can be real, and lethal, and portend yet more murder, even when they are shadowy, shifting and complex. And it is vital to send the message to regimes in such places as Syria, Saudi Arabia and Iran that in matters of terrorist ties, the Free World is not interested in epistemological debates over what constitutes a connection. We are not engaged in a court case, or a classroom debate. We are fighting a war.
But in the debates over Iraq, that part of the communication has become far too muddied. Documents found in Iraq are doubted; confessions by detainees are received as universally suspect; reports of meetings between officials of the former Iraqi regime and al Qaeda operatives are discounted as having been nothing more than empty formalities, with such characters shuttling between places like Iraq, Afghanistan and Sudan, perhaps to share tea and cookies. Any conclusions or even inferences about contacts between Saddam's regime and al Qaeda are subjected these days to the kind of metaphysical test in which existence itself becomes a highly dubious philosophical problem, mired in the difficulty of ever really being certain about anything at all.
Certainty is then imposed in the form of assurances that there was no connection. This notion that there was no Saddam-al Qaeda connection is invoked as an argument against the decision to go to war in Iraq, and enjoined as part of the case that we were safer with Saddam in power, and that, even now, the U.S. and its allies should simply cut and run.
Actually, there were many connections, as Stephen Hayes and Thomas Joscelyn, writing in the current issue of the Weekly Standard, spell out under the headline "The Mother of All Connections." Since the fall of Saddam, the U.S. has had extraordinary access to documents of the former Baathist regime, and is still sifting through millions of them. Messrs. Hayes and Joscelyn take some of what is already available, combined with other reports, documentation and details, some from before the overthrow of Saddam, some after. For page after page, they list connections--with names, dates and details such as the longstanding relationship between Osama bin Laden's top deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri, and Saddam's regime.
Messrs. Hayes and Joscelyn raise, with good reason, the question of why Saddam gave haven to Abdul Rahman Yasin, one of the men who in 1993 helped make the bomb that ripped through the parking garage of the World Trade Center. They detail a contact between Iraqi intelligence and several of the Sept. 11 hijackers in Malaysia, the year before al Qaeda destroyed the twin towers. They recount the intersection of Iraqi and al Qaeda business interests in Sudan, via, among other things, an Oil for Food contract negotiated by Saddam's regime with the al-Shifa facility that President Clinton targeted for a missile attack following the African embassy bombings because of its apparent connection to al Qaeda. And there is plenty more.
The difficulty lies in piecing together the picture, which is indeed murky (that being part of the aim in covert dealings between tyrants and terrorist groups)--but rich enough in depth and documented detail so that the basic shape is clear. By the time Messrs. Hayes and Joscelyn are done tabulating the cross-connections, meetings, Iraqi Intelligence memos unearthed after the fall of Saddam, and information obtained from detained terrorist suspects, you have to believe there was significant collaboration between Iraq and al Qaeda. Or you have to inhabit a universe in which there will never be a demonstrable connection between any of the terrorist attacks the world has suffered over the past dozen years, or any tyrant and any aspiring terrorist. In that fantasyland, all such phenomena are independent events.
Mr. Bush, in calling attention to the Iraq-al Qaeda connection in the first place, did the right thing. For the U.S. president to confirm that clearly and directly at this stage, with some of the abundant supporting evidence now available, might seem highly controversial. But reviving that controversy would help settle it more squarely in line with the truth.
Ms. Rosett is a journalist-in-residence with the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies. Her column appears here and in The Wall Street Journal Europe on alternate Wednesdays.
There rarely seems to be any outrage in the Islamic world when Muslims themselves desecrate their so-called holy sites.
Work accident?
I can't help noting that a disturbingly similar dynamic is in play when Democrats are confronted by the misdeeds of their party colleagues.
If the infidel is handing out anything, that means the infidel is breathing. And that is the greatest affront to Islam there is.
Sounds like another item for Farm Film Report!
Their constant harping is going to look siditious to future generations.
I believe you may have meant to say "seditious" Mr. John Adams
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.