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  • THURSDAY AUGUST 16 2007 9:00 AM

Remember When There Weren’t Massive Terrorist Attacks In Iraq?



500 people. That is the number of dead from yesterday’s truck bomb attacks in the towns of Qahtaniya, al-Jazeera and Tal Uzair. The towns are near the Syrian border and all of those killed were from the Yazidi religious sect. The bombs wiped out entire families.

The Yazidi are an isolated sect of around 500,000 people, who believe Jesus and Mohammed were prophets, but worship an archangel named Malak Taus above all others. There is one big drawback to worshipping the archangel Melek Taus; his other name is Shaytan, which happens to be the name of Satan in the Koran. Big oops. Muslims consider the Yazidi to be devil worshippers, which has led to oppression of the sect for hundreds of years. The Yazidi avoid outsiders, do not allow converts and do not marry outside of their religion. You may recall a video of a young Iraqi woman being stoned to death in April because she was seen with a Sunni Muslim man. Her fellow Yazidi killed her, so they are not all that great.

The stoning inflamed tensions between the two religions. Muslims vowed revenge and they have apparently backed up their threats. The bombings are the worst the world has seen since 9/11. It is by far the worst attack since the war began. One witness said the damage looked like a “mini nuclear explosion.”


The blasts injured at least 350 others and pulverized about 400 mud-walled homes, burying victims and body parts in a gruesome landscape of gore and charred debris, local officials reported.

Many of the victims were blown to pieces, and grieving relatives were combing the ruins of their homes for limbs or other body parts and taking them to hospitals and morgues in hopes of identifying their lost loved ones.


That is about as fucked up as it gets. The US was, of course, quick to toss out the al-Qaeda card.


Iraqi and U.S. officials immediately blamed Al Qaeda-affiliated insurgents for the devastation near the Syrian border, claiming that the scope and sophistication of the coordinated detonations of four gas tankers bore the hallmarks of the militant group's followers.


That’s great, but don’t forget to blame yourselves, you stupid assholes. George Bush and the military leaders behind the surge can also be partly blamed for this hideous attack.

The surge is a load of shit. We put 25,000 soldiers into Baghdad in an attempt to quell violence in the city. So, what the fuck did they think the insurgents would do? Go hang out at the beach on the Red Sea and wait for the surge to end? Of course they left Baghdad and are now hitting soft targets far from the city. It’s a game of Whack-A-Mole, except we don’t win a stuffed animal when it’s over. A surge would only work if we sent a couple hundred thousand more soldiers to secure the entire nation. As it is, we are just forcing them to go somewhere else. In this case they found a town highly populated with very poor people.

I’d like to take one of those severed body parts and cram it in Bush’s mouth, to stop him from saying anything about these attacks. Preferably it would be a foot.

 

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Comments
Jace

Jace

San Francisco, CA
February 2004

AUG 16, 2007 09:11 AM

In Bush's mind, I bet Iraq is comprised of Baghdad, Fallujah, and a vast, unoccupied desert full of cow skeletons and sweet, sweet oil.

Saraphine

Saraphine

SUICIDEGIRL

Pennsylvania, USA

AUG 16, 2007 09:29 AM



A surge would only work if we sent a couple hundred thousand more soldiers to secure the entire nation.



Sounds familiar. I know I partially agreed with this rationale, but I was too busy protesting ANYONE being sent over, let alone 100,000.

Saraphine

Saraphine

SUICIDEGIRL

Pennsylvania, USA

AUG 16, 2007 09:32 AM

From the article:



McCain said, "The worst of all worlds would be a small, short surge of US forces. We've tried small surges in the past and they've been ineffective."

Gringo

Gringo

Spokane, WA
May 2006

AUG 16, 2007 09:54 AM

If Iraq is so happy to have us fight for their freedom, why is gas still $3.00 a gallon? You'd think they'd kick us some free oil here and there.

CZ

CZ

San Diego, CA
July 2006

AUG 16, 2007 10:08 AM

your kidding, right?

novalues

novalues

Lockport, IL
OLD SKOOL

AUG 16, 2007 10:18 AM

but there's so much good going on. That's what Bush will say. It seems everyday it gets worse and worse. It won't end until we leave.

Chainlink

Chainlink

Key West, FL
August 2005

AUG 16, 2007 10:30 AM

Looks like that attack has already been brushed under the carpet to last page news here. blackeyed

ThisIsWhoWeAre

ThisIsWhoWeAre

Oakland, CA
July 2004

AUG 16, 2007 10:41 AM

Why are you always focusing on the NEGATIVE news coming out of Iraq. What about all the good news? I read a report there was a fluffy little kitten over there that played with a ball of string for over 45 minutes! Of course you don't hear anything about THAT in the mainstream media... whatever

OpticNerve

OpticNerve

Arlington, MA
November 2003

AUG 16, 2007 11:28 AM

I wonder how long it will be before people start looking back on the days of Saddam with nostalgia.

Zarth

zarth

Seattle, WA
December 2004

AUG 16, 2007 11:34 AM

OpticNerve said:
I wonder how long it will be before people start looking back on the days of Saddam with nostalgia.


I think it already happened.

VinnyVidiVici

VinnyVidiVici

Orange Park, FL
February 2006

AUG 16, 2007 11:43 AM

As terrible as it is, the crime is the responsibility of the criminal who committed it, not George Bush.

FearTheReaper

FearTheReaper

NEWSWIRE

I'm lost

AUG 16, 2007 11:53 AM

Vinny_Blaze said:
As terrible as it is, the crime is the responsibility of the criminal who committed it, not George Bush.



In a black and white world of limited thinking, yes.

Zarth

zarth

Seattle, WA
December 2004

AUG 16, 2007 11:54 AM

Vinny_Blaze said:
As terrible as it is, the crime is the responsibility of the criminal who committed it, not George Bush.


Specifically he said:

FearTheReapersaid:
George Bush and the military leaders behind the surge can also be partly blamed for this hideous attack.


That's not necessarily unfair. It was this administration's military adventurism and incompetence that established the conditions under which these actions are even possible.

figmentation

figmentation

I'm lost
December 2003

AUG 16, 2007 11:55 AM

Zarth said:

OpticNerve said:
I wonder how long it will be before people start looking back on the days of Saddam with nostalgia.


I think it already happened.



That's what I was gonna say.
At least before they knew who their enemy was...
they had schools and jobs and ways to get food.
They gathered for holidays and weren't worried about getting blown up in the street.

graphicsman77

graphicsman77

Pasadena, MD
June 2007

AUG 16, 2007 12:05 PM

There's good news from Iraq, which has produced almost nothing but bad news since the 2003 invasion. The U.S. military surge, widely denounced as a last-ditch effort by an embattled, lame-duck president fighting an un-winnable civil war, is working. Even as vocal a war critic as Deputy Senate Majority Leader Dick Durbin, D-Ill., has now acknowledged as much, telling CNN that the U.S. military is "making real progress."

The surge is also having a positive impact on Iraq's political equation, according to Petraeus: "We're also heartened by the number of Iraqi tribes and local citizens who have rejected al Qaeda. We cannot attribute that to the surge but the surge certainly enabled that to move much more rapidly, we believe, than it otherwise would have."

Military and political progress is heartening but with it comes a critical decision for war critics, especially Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-NV, who declared the war lost months ago, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who last week pledged to continue seeking withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq. Public support for the war effort has been growing in recent weeks and the expected positive report from Petraeus to Congress in mid-September will likely generate additional support for giving victory a chance. In other words, the political ground on which Reid and Pelosi are standing is shifting beneath them. Do they now really want to bring our boys home just when they are poised to win?

This is not the time to let arm-chair generals on Capitol Hill second-guess Petraeus by demanding arbitrary withdrawal dates, abruptly cutting off funding for the counterinsurgency, or interfering with his military decisions. If true bipartisanship was ever needed in Washington, it's now _ while our nation is engaged in a military struggle with a dangerous, determined enemy.

The violent acts in Qahtaniya are the cowardly acts of a cowardly enemy...and WE MUST NOT GIVE THEM SOLACE.....EVER! Even if one wants to go so far as to say that by removing Saddam (who employed rapists on the government payroll) we've allowed a systematic civil war to begin, one cannot argue that we've given the Iraqis the opportunity to fight for a lasting freedom. Freedom has never been free. It is only the complacency of lazy Americans that has made it seem so, and for us here at home the cost of freedom is measured by the number of obscene characters we can wear on our clothing. But in Iraq it is, as it was during Saddam's reign of terror, a matter of life and death.



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