Posted on 08/30/2006 4:01:59 PM PDT by Gucho
Click Daily World Weather Video Forecast
The current time in (UTC/GMT) is Here.
#1 Old Radio Shows ~~ 10:00pm EST - 2:00am EST
#2 More OTR Shows ~~ (24/7) ~~ Windows Player or Real Player or Winamp
Iraqi and U.S. forces provided medical treatment to nearly 200 residents of a Baghdad neighborhood.
Residents of the Ghazaliya neighborhood of Baghdad wait in line Aug. 26 , 2006 for medical treatment conducted by Iraqi doctors of the 6th Company, 1st Battalion, 1st Brigade, Iraqi National Guard, along with U.S. Multi-National Division Baghdad doctors. (U.S. Navy photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Brett Cote)
By 2nd Brigade Combat Team Public Affairs - 1st Armored Division
BAGHDAD, Aug. 30, 2006 Soldiers from the 1st Brigade, 6th Iraqi Army Division, along with U.S. Army soldiers from the 1st Battalion, 23rd Infantry Regiment, 3rd Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, attached to 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division, Multi-National Division Baghdad (MND-B), provided medical treatment to residents of Ghazaliya during Operation Ghazaliya Aid.
The medical operation in the Baghdad neighborhood attracted nearly 200 residents, who were treated for a variety of medical conditions.
The medical operation was a great event that helped a lot of people in Ghazaliya, said U.S. Army Capt. Robert Callaghan. It showed what could be accomplished by the neighborhood council, Iraqi police and the National police, when they work together in the best interest of the people.
Iraqi army medical personnel, supported by MND-B soldiers, treated each person who waited in line and referred future medical concerns to the Ghazaliya Primary Care Clinic, which recently reopened in the neighborhood.
Along with medical aid, the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) and MND-B soldiers worked to build support and cooperation with the local population. Sgt. 1st Class Cesar Valdez, HHC, was among the MND-B soldiers who worked with the ISF as Ghazaliya residents waited to receive medical care.
The Iraqi Security Forces were instrumental in managing the long line of residents who showed up to take advantage of this opportunity, said Valdez.
By Jim Garamone - American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Aug. 30, 2006 The primary threats to Iraq's security are terrorists and death squads, the coalition commander in the country said today, and both must be addressed if Iraq is going to progress.
Army Gen. George W. Casey Jr. said the Iraqi people aren't going to have the security that they want until the Iraqi security forces are the primary and dominant providers of security in the country. That won't happen until all militias and insurgents are disbanded.
Casey spoke to reporters this morning in Baghdad. He said the Iraqi security forces are developing and continue to evolve and that soon they will turn into security forces that the Iraqi people can be proud of.
The Iraqi forces are receiving the equipment they need to deal with the enemy they face, Casey said. But they will receive more armored vehicles, more aircraft and more logistical capabilities in the coming months.
Casey said that while he does not know when Iraqi forces will be able to take over the security mission, theyll be able to take on security missions with very little coalition support over the next year to 18 months.
The coalition and Iraqi government have a three-step process to develop the security forces, he said. The first step involved recruiting and training the army and police. This included giving the soldiers and police the weapons and equipment they need.
The second step was to put them into the lead, still with our support, Casey said. When they're in the lead, they're responsible for the area, and we still help them. That process is almost 75 percent complete.
The final step will be to get the forces to the stage where they can provide security independently. That step becomes primarily building institutional capacity, building ministerial capacity and building the key enabling systems logistics, intelligence, medical support, those kinds of things that can support and sustain the armed forces in place for a longer period of time.
Casey stressed that the Iraqi army forces in Diwaniyah acquitted themselves quite well in fighting against militia forces in the city. They had losses, but they gave much better than they got, he said. And that battle is not finished yet. There were (Iraqi) soldiers that were killed there. There is clearly an illegal armed force that is attempting to control areas of Diwaniyah, and I believe that the Iraqi division commander down there is going to continue to work to restore Iraqi governmental control to that city.
Disarming the militias is key to success in Iraq, Casey said, noting that the militias have to be confronted both politically and militarily. He said dealing with the militias is fairly sophisticated and delicate, but both those tracks have to be pursued if we're going to stand the militias down in an appropriate fashion.
The experience in Baghdad illustrates the way to take down the militias. What we're seeing in Baghdad, as these neighborhoods are cleared, is the Iraqi security forces that go in and hold the security in those neighborhoods, he said. I think when the people begin to feel more confidence in their security forces, they'll feel less need to rely on the militias.
Militias are a problem, with some militias no better than murdering, criminal gangs that flout the rule of law every day, Casey said. Those need to be dealt with firmly by the government, because no government can stand to have criminal groups terrorizing their population.
Casey said he has great hopes for the establishment of the Iraqi ground force headquarters and joint headquarters, both to begin operations in the next few days. This will give Iraqi security forces the oversight from their government that has been missing, he said.
Casey praised the work of the soldiers of the 172nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team in Baghdad. He extended the brigades tour of duty in Iraq for four months to help combat sectarian violence in the capital. It puts our most capable force at the decisive point in the campaign, and that's what we needed, he said. They are magnificent young men and women, and their families are also magnificent for the support that they give these solders. I know it was difficult for the families. These soldiers are making a decisive difference here on the ground in Baghdad.
By B.K. BANGASH
TARTARI, Pakistan Aug 31, 2006 (AP) Pakistani soldiers searching a cave found the body of a fugitive tribal leader whose death in a military raid sparked large-scale unrest, but it was pinned under a boulder and will take days to retrieve, army officials said Thursday.
Nawab Akbar Bugti, 79, was killed when an explosion Saturday destroyed his mountain cave hide-out in the Tartari area of Kohlu district in southwestern Baluchistan province. His son has said the violence that has gripped southern Pakistan since his death would continue until his father's body was returned.
Two senior army officials, who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the search for the remains, said soldiers working at the cave on Wednesday spotted Bugti's head and shoulders protruding from underneath a giant boulder.
It would take at least three days to remove his body from underneath the boulder, said one of the officials, who works in army intelligence.
Bugti's death has sparked days of rioting and protests led by his supporters in Baluchistan, a fiercely independent and restive region bordering Iran and Afghanistan. Bugti had led an often violent political campaign against the Pakistani government to win a greater share of wealth obtained from natural resources, like gas and oil, extracted in the region.
On Wednesday, hundreds of protesters blocked highways across Baluchistan, cutting Quetta off from major cities like Karachi in the south and Lahore to the east. Hundreds of people were prevented from going to work and scores of businesses and offices shut for the day.
Officials said Thursday that all the roads had reopened.
Bugti's son, Jamil, had warned that the unrest would continue until his father's body is returned to his family for burial. "We need my father's body. It is very important for us according to Islam and our culture," the son said Wednesday while greeting people expressing their condolences at his father's home in Quetta.
Pakistani officials initially said the military did not know Bugti was in the cave during Saturday's attack. But on Tuesday, the military's top spokesman said army officers "rushed" into the cave for talks with Bugti after one of the tribal leader's guides told officers he was there.
An unexplained explosion occurred, killing five soldiers, whose bodies were later retrieved. Bugti and several supporters were believed to have been crushed inside the cave.
For decades, Bugti worked as a governor and elected lawmaker seeking greater rights for the impoverished region's people. But the government accused him of ordering bombings on government installations, running an illegal militia and operating a private jail in his ancestral home of Dera Bugti.
Associated Press writers Munir Ahmad and Paul Garwood in Islamabad and Abdul Sattar in Quetta contributed to this report.
Associated Press
bump
Thank you Deetes.
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.