Category Archives: The Shrub War

Shrub Manages To Pull Off A Modern Day Vietnam

That’s right! Not only is nobody going home, but were actually going to send more troops over there.
At least they’re admitting now that these guys might be a formidable enemy after all, calling them “well-trained militants that have been killing and injuring US forces.”
Unfortunately, that just means that more of our soldiers will die.
Bush foresees long, ‘massive’ role in Iraq
By Dana Milbank for The Boston Globe.

President Bush acknowledged yesterday that the United States faces a ”massive and long-term undertaking” in Iraq but said US troops would prevail over what his administration described as well-trained militants that have been killing and injuring US forces.
Bush delivered his statement of resolve, some of his most extensive remarks about Iraq in the two months since he declared heavy fighting was over, as Americans are expressing concern about the unrest in US-occupied Iraq and as some legislators are accusing the administration of understating the task ahead…
Bush cast the struggle in Iraq as part of the ongoing war against terrorism in Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, and elsewhere. He said that some of those attacking US forces in Iraq were from the terrorist group Ansar al-Islam and that the US government suspects fighters tied to Abu Musab Zarqawi, whom Bush called an Al Qaeda ”associate,” are preparing to attack. ”Less than two years ago, determined enemies of America entered our country, committed acts of murder against our people, and made clear their intentions to strike again” he said. ”As long as terrorists and their allies plot to harm America, America is at war.”
As part of the justification for the war in Iraq, Bush and his lieutenants described ongoing ties between Iraq and Al Qaeda. But a still-classified national intelligence report from that time raised doubts about those ties, intelligence officials have said.
According to a poll released yesterday by the University of Maryland’s Program on International Policy Attitudes, 71 percent said they believed the Bush administration implied that Hussein was involved in the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, while 25 percent believed Iraq was directly involved in the attacks…
Of the 195 US military personnel killed in combat and accidents since the Iraq war started on March 20 (42 British soldiers have been killed), nearly a third have died after May 1, when Bush, aboard the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier, declared major combat operations were over.
The messiness of postwar Iraq had provoked criticism that the administration did not adequately prepare for the difficult task of rebuilding. Before the war, Bush spoke optimistically about a clean transformation of Iraq, saying US troops would not remain in the region ”for one day longer than is necessary.”
Senator Richard G. Lugar, Republican of Indiana and chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said last week that the US presence in Iraq would be necessary for ”at least five years” and criticized Bush’s rhetoric. ”This idea that we will be in just as long as we need to and not a day more – we’ve got to get over that rhetoric,” he said. ”It is rubbish. We’re going to be there a long time. We must reorganize our military to be there a long time.”
The administration, which declines to forecast the duration of the US presence in Iraq, is due to decide later this month whether it needs more troops there. Bush’s press secretary, Ari Fleischer, yesterday played down the attacks on US soldiers as ”pockets of violence,” adding the media are ”ignoring the tremendous number of success stories” in Iraq.

Continue reading

Soldiers Still Waiting To Come Home Over A Month After Shrub Declares Fighting Over

Warning: The effect of this article is subtle and hard to explain, but I don’t recommend reading this if you’re at work or something and about to go into a meeting where it might be uncomfortable to be a tad emotional. Email yourself the link and read it at home later when you can get teary and it won’t interfere with the productive flow of your day. (Or just take a deep breath before you read it so you can have your guard up…or, of course, you can decide to just go ahead and get emotional. It is healthy and good for the soul and all. I just wanted to warn you and give you the option — Articles like this can really mess me up sometimes and screw up a group dynamic if they catch me off guard. — ed.)
Kudos to the team of writers at USA Today that worked on this one.
Nice job guys.
Troops, families await war’s real end
By Jack Kelley, Gary Strauss, Martin Kasindorf and Valerie Alvord for USA Today
(Kelley and Strauss reported from Fallujah and Baghdad; Kasindorf from Los Angeles; Valerie Alvord from San Diego).

For the 140,000 U.S. troops in Iraq, the war doesn’t seem to end. Some feel angry that they’re still here, guilty that they’re not with their families and perplexed that their reward for capturing Baghdad has been extra duty in a country they have grown to dislike.
Their families, who watched the liberation of Iraq on TV, expected a clean end to the a hard-fought war. Instead, they worry their loved ones could die keeping peace in a country where U.S. forces are widely regarded as occupiers, not liberators.
Iraq is still a dangerous place. During the 43-day war, 139 U.S. servicemembers died

Daily Show: Top Al Qaeda Operatives Say No Ties With Sadaam

So there’s no connection between Al Qaeda and the Iraqi government the U.S. just overthrew and the Shrub Administration has known this since last year?
So much for the “we had to invade Iraq because of 911” rationalization.
Daily Show: Osama and Sadaam Weren’t Buddies (Small – 4 MB)
This Daily Show clip is based on this story by the NY Times:

C.I.A.; Captives Deny Qaeda Worked With Baghdad

Two of highest-ranking leaders of Al Qaeda in American custody reportedly tell CIA in separate interrogations that Al Qaeda did not work jointly with Iraqi government of Saddam Hussein; Abu Zubaydah, Qaeda planner and recruiter until his capture in Mar 2002, is said to tell questioners that Osama bin Laden vetoed idea of working with Hussein’s government because he did not want to be beholden to Hussein; separately, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, Qaeda chief of operations until his capture this Mar, tells interrogators that group did not work with Hussein; spokesmen at White House, State Dept and Pentagon decline to comment on why Zubaydah’s debriefing report was not publicly disclosed by Bush administration last year

Continue reading

Troops Being Sucked Into Iraqi Quagmire

Resistance to occupation is growing
US and British troops are being sucked into an Iraqi quagmire
by Richard Norton-Taylor and Rory McCarthy for the Guardian U.K.

A sudden upsurge in violence in the past couple of weeks has killed at least 10 American soldiers and wounded more than 25 in a series of attacks against checkpoints and military convoys. Iraqi fighters yesterday brought down an Apache helicopter in the west of the country.
Far more more numerous than these incidents is the unpublicised number of attacks on American positions that do not injure or kill soldiers. Attacks occur daily – more than a dozen every day in the past week, according to some accounts. Troops patrolling even the calmest neighbourhoods in Baghdad still wear bullet-proof jackets and Kevlar helmets and raise their rifles, finger on the trigger, whenever approached. Attack helicopters are flying low over Baghdad day and night without lights.
The most experienced combat units from the 3rd Infantry, deployed away from home since September, have now been sent in to deal with Falluja, a town at the centre of a steadily growing resistance in the Sunni Muslim heartland just west of Baghdad.
Hostile residents are not shy of threatening more attacks, insisting they are not Saddam loyalists but angry at the US military occupation. Aggressive house searches and the killing by US troops of 18 protesters in a demonstration last month have provoked fury. Soldiers on the ground say the attacks they are facing, mostly from rocket-propelled grenades and mortars, are disciplined and skilled, not the random shootings of angry civilians. American generals admit that though the attacks may be locally organised there is no evidence yet of a reformed Ba’ath party centrally coordinating the assaults.

Continue reading

National Gulf Veterans and Families’ Association Claims British Soldiers Were Poisoned From Iraqi War Vaccines

This one comes right on schedule, unfortunately. Soldiers are starting to notice symptoms of “vaccine overload.” Such symptoms are similar to that of Gulf War Syndrome.
‘War vaccines poisoned us’
By Rebecca Mowling for the Evening Standard.

Four British soldiers who received jabs for the Iraq conflict are to sue the Ministry of Defence claiming they are suffering from a new form of Gulf War Syndrome.
The revelation comes as a veterans’ support group predicted today that thousands of UK servicemen will come forward with mystery illnesses linked to “vaccine overload”.
Tony Flint of the National Gulf Veterans and Families’ Association, confirmed he now anticipates a fresh wave of health cases. “We are expecting at least 6,000 new cases as a result of the Iraq conflict – about 30 per cent of the 22,000 troops who had the anthrax vaccination.”
Danger zone: Several troops claim vaccinations made them ill
The first four soldiers from the latest conflict who are set to sue – two reservists and two regulars – are blaming depression, breathing problems and eczema on injections they were given before being sent to the Middle East.
Professor Malcolm Hooper, chief scientific adviser to the veterans’ association, said the MoD did not seem to have learned from “the mistakes of the 1991 conflict” in relation to multiple vaccinations. “These guys are clearly suffering from vaccine overload,” he said.
The key concern centres on soldiers given anthrax vaccines on top of other more routine inoculations.
Professor Hooper added: “The problem was one which was there in 1991. Our studies have shown that these people have excessive symptoms – three to four-fold compared with people who have not been vaccinated in the same way.”
…Lawyer Mark McGhee, who is acting for the four men, said: “The symptoms that these four individuals are experiencing are identical to those of the individuals I represent in relation to the first Gulf war.” The High Court is due to rule within weeks on whether Gulf War Syndrome can be recognised in law.

Continue reading

A Little Trip Down Disinformation Lane

Let us not forget the extent of the fabrications about the Jessica Lynch rescue story. We are not talking about the fine points surrounding whether or not the hospital was occupied enough (or not) by enemy Iraq troops to warrant the Hollywood-type SWAT team recovery. Or how a rescue wouldn’t have been necessary if troops hadn’t opened fire on an ambulence trying to deliver Lynch.
I’m more upset about reports from “U.S. Officials”, such as this MSNBC story which embellishes about how Lynch shot several enemy soldiers before running out of ammunition after an ambush. How she “did not want to be taken alive.”
In fact, there was no ambush. No battle. Only a car accident.
No bullets. No stab wounds.
This from April 3, 2003:
Rescued POW put up fierce fight
Details emerge of W.Va. soldier

Christian Science Monitor Confirms Independently That Depleted Uranium Used In Iraq Is Leaving Radiation Behind

The Christian Science Monitor sent its own reporter with a radiation detector to verify whether or not the depleted uranium bullets used by U.S. forces in Iraq were leaving radiation behind.
The answer is a frighteningly loud and clear: yes! The whole place is contaminated and no one is warning or protecting the inhabitants.
Remains of toxic bullets litter Iraq
The Monitor finds high levels of radiation left by US armor-piercing shells.
By Scott Peterson for the Christian Science Monitor.

At a roadside produce stand on the outskirts of Baghdad, business is brisk for Latifa Khalaf Hamid. Iraqi drivers pull up and snap up fresh bunches of parsley, mint leaves, dill, and onion stalks.
But Ms. Hamid’s stand is just four paces away from a burnt-out Iraqi tank, destroyed by – and contaminated with – controversial American depleted-uranium (DU) bullets. Local children play “throughout the day” on the tank, Hamid says, and on another one across the road.
No one has warned the vendor in the faded, threadbare black gown to keep the toxic and radioactive dust off her produce. The children haven’t been told not to play with the radioactive debris. They gather around as a Geiger counter carried by a visiting reporter starts singing when it nears a DU bullet fragment no bigger than a pencil eraser. It registers nearly 1,000 times normal background radiation levels on the digital readout.
The Monitor visited four sites in the city – including two randomly chosen destroyed Iraqi armored vehicles, a clutch of burned American ammunition trucks, and the downtown planning ministry – and found significant levels of radioactive contamination from the US battle for Baghdad.
In the first partial Pentagon disclosure of the amount of DU used in Iraq, a US Central Command spokesman told the Monitor that A-10 Warthog aircraft – the same planes that shot at the Iraqi planning ministry – fired 300,000 bullets. The normal combat mix for these 30-mm rounds is five DU bullets to 1 – a mix that would have left about 75 tons of DU in Iraq.
The Monitor saw only one site where US troops had put up handwritten warnings in Arabic for Iraqis to stay away. There, a 3-foot-long DU dart from a 120 mm tank shell, was found producing radiation at more than 1,300 times background levels. It made the instrument’s staccato bursts turn into a steady whine…
During the latest Iraq conflict Abrams tanks, Bradley fighting vehicles and A-10 Warthog aircraft, among other military platforms, all fired the DU bullets from desert war zones to the heart of Baghdad. No other armor-piercing round is as effective against enemy tanks. While the Pentagon says there’s no risk to Baghdad residents, US soldiers are taking their own precautions in Iraq, and in some cases have handed out warning leaflets and put up signs.
“After we shoot something with DU, we’re not supposed to go around it, due to the fact that it could cause cancer,” says a sergeant in Baghdad from New York, assigned to a Bradley, who asked not to be further identified.
“We don’t know the effects of what it could do,” says the sergeant. “If one of our vehicles burnt with a DU round inside, or an ammo truck, we wouldn’t go near it, even if it had important documents inside. We play it safe.”
Six American vehicles struck with DU “friendly fire” in 1991 were deemed to be too contaminated to take home, and were buried in Saudi Arabia. Of 16 more brought back to a purpose-built facility in South Carolina, six had to be buried in a low-level radioactive waste dump.
Television footage of the war last month showed Iraqi armored vehicles burning as US columns drove by, a common sign of a strike by DU, which burns through armor on impact, and often ignites the ammunition carried by the targeted vehicle.
“We were buttoned up when we drove by that – all our hatches were closed,” the US sergeant says. “If we saw anything on fire, we wouldn’t stop anywhere near it. We would just keep on driving.”

Continue reading

Shrub Dispatches New “More Expert” Team In The Hopes Of Foiling Sadam’s “Inspections Proof” System

Bush Officials Change Tune on Iraqi Weapons
By Alan Elsner for Reuters.

The change in rhetoric, apparently designed in part to dampen public expectations, has unfolded gradually in the past month as special U.S. military teams have found little to justify the administration’s claim that Iraq was concealing vast stocks of chemical and biological agents and was actively working on a covert nuclear weapons program.
“The administration seems to be hoping that inconvenient facts will disappear from the public discourse. It’s happening to a large degree,” said Phyllis Bennis of the Institute for Policy Studies, a liberal think-tank which opposed the war…
President Bush’s national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, told Reuters on Monday that Washington was sending a new team to Iraq to scour for evidence.
The new team will be “more expert” at following the paper trail and other intelligence. She said Iraq appeared to have had a virtually “inspections proof” system of concealing chemical and biological weapons by developing chemicals and agents that could be used for more than one purpose, but that could be put together as weapons at the last minute.
She said U.S. officials never expected that “we were going to open garages and find” weapons of mass destruction.

Continue reading