Posted on 10/30/2006 10:47:42 AM PST by TexKat
BAGHDAD, Iraq - The American death toll for October climbed past 100, a grim milestone reached as a top White House envoy turned up unexpectedly in Baghdad on Monday to smooth over a rough patch in U.S.-Iraqi ties. At least 80 people were killed across Iraq, 33 in a Sadr City bombing targeting workers.
A member of the 89th Military Police Brigade was killed in east Baghdad Monday, and a Marine died in fighting in insurgent infested Anbar province the day before, raising to 101 the number of U.S. service members killed in a bloody October, the fourth deadliest month of the war. At least 2,814 American forces have died since the war began.
Upon arriving on an unannounced visit, National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley went straight into meetings with Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and his security chief, Mouwafak al-Rubaie, telling them he "wanted to reinforce some of the things you have heard from our president."
The White House said Hadley was not on a mission to repair ragged relations, accounts of which it said had been "overblown" by the news media.
"Absolutely not," said Gordon Johndroe, spokesman for the National Security Council in Washington. "This is a long planned trip to get a first hand report of the situation on the ground from the political, economic and security fronts."
But the timing of the visit argued otherwise.
Last week Al-Maliki issued a string of bitter complaints at one point saying he wasn't "America's man in Iraq" after U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad unveiled adjustments in America's Iraq strategy.
The ambassador said the prime minister was in agreement. Al-Maliki angrily charged the White House with infringing on his government's sovereignty and said that he was not consulted.
By week's end, al-Maliki and President George W. Bush held a hastily convened video conference call and agreed to speed the training of Iraqi forces and the return of control over all territory to the Iraqi army.
With American voter support for the war at a low point and the midterm vote just days away, a top aide to al-Maliki said the Iraqi leader was using Bush and Republican vulnerability on the issue to leverage concessions from the White House particularly the speedy withdrawal of American forces from Iraqi cities to U.S. bases in the country.
The case of a kidnapped American soldier, meanwhile, took a curious turn when a woman claiming to be his mother-in-law said that the soldier was married to her daughter, a Baghdad college student, and was with the young woman and her family when hooded gunmen handcuffed and threw him in the back seat of a white Mercedes early last week. The marriage would violate military regulations.
The soldier's disappearance prompted a massive and continuing manhunt in Baghdad, with much of it focused on Sadr City, the sprawling Shiite slum in extreme northeastern Baghdad.
The military still had checkpoints surrounding the district Monday when a suspected Sunni insurgent bomber slipped in and set off a bomb among laborers assembled to find a day's work. The blast tore through food stalls and kiosks shortly after 6 a.m., killing at least 33 and wounding 59.
Sadr City, is a stronghold of the Mahdi Army loyal to radical anti-American Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr and has been the scene of repeated bomb attacks by suspected al-Qaida fighters in what were seen as attempts to incite Shiite revenge attacks and drag the country into full-blown civil war.
Al-Sadr, in a statement addressed to supporters in Sadr City Monday night, warned of unspecified action if the "siege" of the neighborhood continued and criticized what he called the silence of politicians over actions by the U.S. military in the district.
"If this siege continues for long, we will resort to actions which I will have no choice but to take, God willing, and when the time is right," he said in the statement, a text of which was obtained by The Associated Press.
Ali Abdul-Ridha, injured in the head and shoulders, said he was waiting for a job with his brother and about 100 others when he heard the massive explosion and "lost sight of everything."
He said the area had been exposed to attack because U.S. and Iraqi forces had driven into hiding Mahdi Army fighters who police the district.
"That forced Mahdi Army members, who were patrolling the streets, to vanish," the 41-year-old Abdul-Ridha said from his bed in al-Sadr Hospital, his brother lying beside him asleep.
However, Falih Jabar, a 37-year old father of two boys, blamed the militia forces for provoking extremists to attack civilians in the neighborhood of 2.5 million people.
"We are poor people just looking to make a living. We have nothing to do with any conflict," said Jabar, who suffered back wounds. "If (the extremists) have problems with the Mahdi Army, they must fight them, not us," he added.
The last major bombing in Sadr City occurred on Sept. 23 when a bomb hidden in a barrel blew up a kerosene tanker and killed at least 35 people waiting to stock up on fuel for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
Elsewhere in the capital, gunmen killed hard-line Sunni academic Essam al-Rawi, head of the University Professors Union, as he was leaving home. At least 156 university professors have been killed since the war began. Hundreds, perhaps thousands, more are believed to have fled to neighboring countries, although Education Ministry spokesman Basil al-Khatib al-Khatib said he had no specific numbers on those who had fled.
Police and security officials throughout Iraq reported that at least 45 other people, many of them police, were killed in sectarian violence Monday or found dead, many of them dumped in the Tigris River and a tributary south of the capital.
A U.S. soldier from 172nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team greets a boy in a car while patrolling a street in Baghdad, October 30, 2006. (Namir Noor-Eldeen/Reuters)
Ping!
" as a top White House envoy turned up unexpectedly in Baghdad on Monday to smooth over a rough patch in U.S.-Iraqi ties"
They've been told repeatedly that's not true, but they keep saying it anyway.
Typical B.S.
Hmmm...how many "insurgents" have been killed?
The tiresome and ghoulish MSM litany of the US body count continues. Meanwhile, they say nothing about how many terrorists have been killed there, again trying to create the illusion of invulnerability for the terrorist forces in Iraq. The MSM and the terrorists are clearly in open collusion and clearly working hand in hand to demoralize the US public. The sniper video given to CNN is only one of myriads of examples of this.
How many died in Detroit during October?..
What's really sad if this was done in America, the soldier would have to defend against charges of pedophilia.
The muslim terrorists struck in Spain prior to the elections. This is just a pressure tactic to change our course.
Don't surrender to Evil.
Every "insurgent" is a "civillian" because there is no formal army.
The terrorist media is in full "Blame America First" mode.
I don't know the answer to your question, but I do know whatever the number is for Detroit, they did not die trying to defend our freedom.
I agree Always Right.
They're popping corks over at CNN.
How many American servicemen died in say the first minute of D-Day, how about the first hour, the first day? And that was to take A BEACH, not a country the size of California. How about how many Americans (both Union and Confederate) died at the Battle of Antietam/Sharpsburg? (The answer is over 3600 dead in ONE DAY.) How about how many Americans died on September 11, 2001? Why won't this get put into perspective. This is war, people are going to die so that our Republic will survive.
Amen.
Iraq discusses reconciliation with exiles in Jordan Monday October 30, 06:34 PM By Kamal Taha
AMMAN (AFP) - An Iraqi government delegation held talks with Iraqi exiles in Jordan amid efforts to involve them in a reconciliation conference in November in violence-battered Iraq.
But at the end of two days of often heated discussions, many exiles insisted that any reconciliation talks must include Iraqi insurgents battling the US-led occupation of their country.
"We came to invite them to attend a conference of political forces to be held in the first half of November in Baghdad,
and hear their views on Iraqi reconciliation," delegation chief Faleh al-Fayad told reporters.
"The conference will be open to everyone regardless of their political positions," Fayad said.
Iraq's ambassador to Jordan, Saad Jassem al-Hayani, said the talks covered many thorny issues such as "the dissolution of the (former) Iraqi army, the de-Baathification process and the issue of prisoners.
"Those who will attend the conference will be totally free to express their views about anything that can contribute to rebuilding Iraq and restoring its stability," he said.
"We will provide protection to all the participants from the moment they set foot at the airport until the end of the conference and their return" to their host countries, Hayani said.
Earlier this month Iraq's embattled government postponed plans to hold the conference, initially due to take place October 21, amid a spate of deadly violence between rival Sunni and Shiite factions.
Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki hopes that a programme of national reconciliation designed to bring embittered national groups into a peace process and isolate extremist militants from popular support will halt Iraq's slide towards all-out civil war.
The conference of political leaders is seen as part of preparations for a long-awaited and oft-postponed National Reconciliation Conference, which the Arab League has been trying to convene.
But in Amman, the delegation, which heads next to Syria, Egypt and Arab Gulf countries, apparently failed to get clear support from the exiles, who included former Iraqi army officers, ex-members of the ousted Baath Party, intellectuals and businessmen.
"The only solution is through dialogue. No one can speak on behalf Iraq except for the noble resistance. Anyone who says otherwise is a liar," said Fawzi Farman al-Jburi, a Sunni Iraqi who said he has contacts with insurgents.
Muayed al-Windawi, an international consultant, said the exiles told the delegation "the solution to Iraq's woes can only be found inside the country".
"Outside Iraq we face no problems. Outside Iraq, all of us, Sunnis, Shiites, Arabs and Kurds, live as brothers," said Windawi.
Nseir al-Aani, a Sunni MP from the National Accord bloc, said the meetings aimed at "saving Iraq and steering the boat to a safe port".
"Everyone agrees that the Iraqis have no problems amongst themselves but they are all asking who is standing behind the killings and violence on the streets," Aani added.
Meanwhile Jordan's independent Al-Ghad newspaper reported Monday that US officials have held talks in Amman with representatives of Iraq's insurgency.
"The aim of this dialogue, if it succeeds, is to push forward the political process in Iraq," Al-Ghad said quoting unnamed Iraqi sources.
The US embassy in Amman said it could not confirm or deny the report.
But the Iraqi ambassador told AFP such contacts "have been taking place for a long time in Amman, in Baghdad and elsewhere," although the embassy was not involved them.
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/30102006/323/iraq-discusses-reconciliation-exiles-jordan.html
No bias there.
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