Reported Security Incidents
Baghdad
A suicide bomber attacked Sahwa members as they lined up to be paid outside an Iraqi military base, killing 39 and injuring 41, in Radwaniya in the Baghdad suburbs. All of the dead are reported to be Sahwa, but 2 soldiers are among the injured according to an Interior Ministry source, who also gives the death toll as 43. AP's account differs somewhat, saying 6 Iraqi soldiers are among the dead.
Another Sahwa fighter is killed by an IED in Abu Ghraib.
The Iraqi army raids the headquarters of the Iraqi Central Federation for Soccer, leaves without finding wanted men. No, I don't know exactly what this is all about, but disputes between the government and the football federation go back a couple of years. At one point the government disbanded the federation, but was ordered by FIFA to restore it. The federation operates the national team.
Qaim, Anbar Province
Four Sahwa killed, 7 injured by a suicide bomber inside a house. Again, the AP account is slightly different, saying the attacker first opened fire on the house, then blew himself up as the Sahwa gathered around him. AP also gives the death toll of Sahwa as 3.
Tal Afar
Four Katyusha rockets strike 2 different neighborhoods, injuring 2 people and damaging numerous houses.
Mosul
A former Iraqi army intelligence officer is shot dead on Saturday, and another civilian is killed in front of his house. (These incidents were reported too late for yesterday's post.)
Other News of the Day
Former Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz is on trial yet again for "wasting public funds." He has been held by the United States, and was recently handed over to Iraqi custody. If that was a crime in the United States we wouldn't be in Iraq, for one thing. -- C
Shwan Mohammed reports on smuggling of petroleum products from Kurdistan into Iran. This is not a new story but it adds a bit of local color.
Kurdistan Islamic Scholars Union issues a fatwa that female genital mutilation is not prescribed by Islam. However, the fatwa does not prohibit it. Excerpt from Human Rights Watch:
The fatwa notes that the practice is not prescribed in Islam, but predates it. The fatwa does not absolutely prohibit "female circumcision." It says parents may choose to "circumcise" their daughters but that it is better to avoid the practice because of the negative health consequences. FGM has been internationally recognized as a violation of children's and women's rights, including their rights to life, health, and bodily integrity.
"This fatwa on female genital mutilation is an important effort by the Kurdish religious community to dissociate this practice from Islam, but it is not enough," said Nadya Khalife, Middle East women's rights researcher at Human Rights Watch. "FGM is a degrading and damaging practice, and letting parents choose this procedure for their daughters is simply unacceptable."
Iraqi government presses international oil companies to speed development of 11 oil fields for which they have concessions.
Afghanistan Update
Amid preparations for an international conference on Tuesday, a suicide bomber on a bicycle kills 3 and wounds dozens in Kabul. "The blast shattered windows, gutted nearby vehicles and left the street littered with body parts, said an AFP photographer." As for the conference:
Kabul is to host a major gathering of its international partners -- including US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and about 40 foreign ministers -- on Tuesday, when the government will lay out is plan for the future. Security forces have thrown a ring of steel around the city to head off any Taliban attacks, with police stationed every few metres (yards) along key streets and thousands of extra police officers on duty, authorities said.
Up to 70 international representatives are due to attend the conference, to be co-chaired by President Hamid Karzai and UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon. It has been presented as a bid by the Afghan government to start a process of transition from dependence on Western backers to running the country alone.
A U.S. combatant is killed by a roadside bomb southern Afghanistan. No further details at this time.
In Farah Province, attackers free 20 Taliban from prison. According to Alissa J. Rubin, Abdul Waheed Wafa and Taimoor Shah of the NYT:
the prison break was a sophisticated and highly coordinated operation that started at 11 Saturday night when a suicide bomber attacked a police patrol. He was killed by the police before he detonated himself but created confusion and a number of police rushed to site of the attack. An hour later the Taliban attacked four security checkpoints in two districts around the capital, said Gen. Faqir Askar, the provincial police chief.
Then at 3 a.m., the Taliban attacked the prison gate, blowing it up while Taliban prisoners used explosives that had been smuggled in to the prison to blow the locks off the gates of their cells. One policeman was killed and four inmates were injured, said General Askar.
He blamed the Taliban for smuggling in the explosives, but provincial council members and elders said the police had done a poor job and corruption had played a major role in the ability of the Taliban to smuggle explosives into the prison. In addition the prison is extremely overcrowded and hard to manage with almost four times as many inmates as the prison was built for.
Hillary Clinton is in Pakistan, the start of an Asian tour aimed in part at "refining the goals" of the war in Afghanistan. (Not specified exactly what that means.) She will announce a half-billion package of development assistance to Pakistan, and work to overcome anti-American sentiment in that country. She will then attend the Kabul conference, and go on to South Korea and Vietnam.
Bush Administration State Department official with the Afghanistan portfolio Richard Haass, writing in Newsweek, says it's time to get out. Just read it. However, he doesn't really have any attractive options to tout -- just what he considers the least bad ones. He concludes:
All this argues for reorienting U.S. Afghan policy toward decentralization—providing greater support for local leaders and establishing a new approach to the Taliban. The war the United States is now fighting in Afghanistan is not succeeding and is not worth waging in this way. The time has come to scale back U.S. objectives and sharply reduce U.S. involvement on the ground. Afghanistan is claiming too many American lives, requiring too much attention, and absorbing too many resources. The sooner we accept that Afghanistan is less a problem to be fixed than a situation to be managed, the better.
A man claiming to be the Afghan soldier who killed 3 British soldiers on Tuesday has contacted the BBC. "he man, introduced as 21-year-old Talib Hussain, said he had been angry at the conduct of British troops in Helmand province, accusing them of killing civilians, including children. He said the shooting of British soldiers had been his own idea, and before that he had no contact with the Taliban, Iran or Pakistan. He added during the ten-minute interview that he had joined the Taliban only after the shooting."
Media Update: Quqnoos.com will be moving to www.TOLOnews.com -- update your bookmarks.
Quote of the Day
The insurgents were holed up in a small building the size of a shack, with thick, mud brick walls, where farmers normally dry grapes. When they tried to escape, and commanders had no doubt the men were combatants, their war was over.
The grinding noise of a chopper’s motorized machine gun, capable of mincing a target with at least 2,000 bullets a minute, echoed across the desert plain. It sounded like a wood chipper dicing up tree limbs.
“Oh ya, baby!” one soldier shouted up at the sky as the airborne gatling gun spewed repeated bursts. Whoops and cheers rippled across the dust-blown camp.
From a non-bylined story in Military News (If anybody can track down the provenance of this story, I will be pleased to give proper credit.)
Update: Story reported by Paul Watson of the Toronto Star
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