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Seraphim
11-25-2003, 01:00 PM
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=540&e=2&u=/ap/20031125/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq


By HAMZA HENDAWI, Associated Press Writer

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Large explosions were heard in central Baghdad after sunset on Tuesday, followed by sirens and sporadic gunfire from the west bank of the Tigris River. The cause was not immediately known.

Meanwhile, top U.S. civilian and military leaders here said attacks on American troops in Iraq (news - web sites) have declined in the last two weeks and insurgents are increasingly targeting Iraqis working with the U.S.-led coalition in an effort to intimidate them.


In addition, another international humanitarian organization announced it was curtailing its operations in Iraq because of the deteriorating security situation.


Insurgents this month have fired mortars on the U.S. headquarters compound in central Baghdad, known as the "green zone." But there has been no firing in that area since the U.S. military launched "Operation Iron Hammer" to strike at guerrilla hideouts in the city.


Chief administrator L. Paul Bremer said the insurgents' recent attacks on the coalition itself were not having the desired effect, so they were turning to Iraqis who help occupation forces.


"The security situation has changed," Bremer said at a press conference with Gen. John Abizaid, the chief of the U.S. Central Command.


"They have failed to intimidate the coalition," he said. "They have now begun a pattern of trying to intimidate innocent Iraqis. They will not succeed ... If Saddam taught the Iraqis nothing else it was how to endure the depredations of thugs."


Abizaid said that the number of daily attacks on coalition forces were down by about half over the last two weeks. He gave no figures but U.S. officials have said U.S. forces were being attacked on average of 30-35 times a day.


"In the past two weeks, these attacks have gone down, attacks against coalition forces, but unfortunately we find that attacks against Iraqis have increased," Abizaid said. He said the attacks had increased not only in number but in severity.


Abizaid said there were some foreigners fighting with the insurgents but their numbers were small. He said the primary threat facing U.S. and coalition forces came from supporters of ousted leader Saddam Hussein (news - web sites).


"Foreign fighters are coming in, and it is not correct to say that there are floods of foreign fighters coming in or thousands. The number is small," he said.


The "main problem" facing the coalition, he added, is "agents of the former regime."


Bremer was referring to a series of attacks including two car bombs last weekend at police stations in Baqouba and Khan Bani Saad, the assassination Saturday of a police colonel in Mosul and the killing Sunday of a police chief in Latifiyah near Baghdad.


The shift toward attacking Iraqis follows a decision by the U.S. command to adopt an aggressive strategy of going after insurgents before they can strike. On Tuesday, the 4th Infantry Division said its soldiers arrested 18 Iraqis during nearly 200 raids over the past 24 hours in its sector north of Baghdad.


Troops also seized Kalashnikov rifles, grenades, blasting caps and other munitions during the raids.


Residents of Husaybah, located about six miles from Syrian border, said U.S. troops sealed off the town four days ago and have been searching houses for weapons and insurgents and detaining dozens of people. U.S. officials have long complained about movement of fighters and weapons from Syria into this country.


In Canberra, Australia, the aid agency Care Australia said it had pulled its six international staffers out of Iraq and told its 70 Iraqi employees to stay at home following a weekend rocket attack on its Baghdad office.





Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio said that Care Australia had also received a specific threat from a terror group that called itself the Iraqi Resistance.

"We are going to kill you and attack your places without any further notice," the warning reportedly said. "We are issuing this communique after we attacked the Care office and we are letting you know that the deadline for all such places, hotels, houses, oil companies, will be the third and the last day of Eid (al-Fitr). Otherwise these buildings will be totally destroyed."

Eid al-Fitr marks the end of the holy month of Ramadan this week. In Iraq, the end of Ramadan has varied with some groups marking it Monday, others Tuesday and still others probably Wednesday.

The international Red Cross, the United Nations (news - web sites) and other humanitarian groups have withdrawn international staff and sharply curtailed operations due to the security situation.

Meanwhile, a grenade exploded near the entrance to a hotel used by U.S. civilian contractors in the northern oil center Kirkuk, injuring two guards, hotel staff said Tuesday.

The blast late Monday also shattered windows and damaged the entrance to the Kirkuk Palace Hotel, employees said by telephone. The hotel is used by U.S. civilian contractors, journalists and others and is located about yards from a police station.

Attacks have been fewer in the north than in the volatile "Sunni Triangle" to the south. Commerce flourishes, and Iraqis feel safe enough to venture out at night to a far greater extent than their countrymen in Baghdad and other cities.

Mosul was the site of the killings Sunday of two U.S. soldiers, shot as they drove through downtown. There were early reports the soldiers' throats were slashed, but Army Maj. Joe Yoswa, a Pentagon (news - web sites) spokesman, said Monday that there was no evidence of that.

Yoswa also said there was no indication the men were beaten with rocks or that their bodies were mutilated. The official said Iraqis robbed the car they were driving and stole personal effects from the soldiers' bodies.

Witnesses said that an Iraqi mob, most of them teenagers, dragged the two bloodied soldiers from the car, threw them to the ground and pummeled their bodies with concrete blocks — scenes reminiscent of the savagery in Somalia against American troops a decade ago.

On Monday, Iraq's Governing Council warned Arabic language media to avoid reports which incite violence and ordered the Dubai-based Al-Arabiya satellite television station to stop reporting from Baghdad until it agrees not to "encourage terrorism."

Near the northern city of Kirkuk, an oil pipeline was on fire Monday. Ghazi al-Talabani, chief regional security coordinator for the Northern Oil Co., said the fire was "another of the acts of sabotage to which our oil pipeline has been subject."



Edited for update

Roger Rabbit
11-25-2003, 01:03 PM
A number of loud explosions have rung out across the Iraqi capital Baghdad, sparking a security alert at the US-led administration's compound.
"Attack. Take cover. This is not a test," said announcements broadcast at the headquarters of the administration as sirens began to wail.

The blasts were heard after sunset at about 2000 (1700 GMT).

The compound on the west bank of the River Tigris has come under mortar attack several times this month.



Source:BBC


Saudi police have foiled a car bomb attack in the capital Riyadh, state television has reported.
A Saudi interior ministry official said two suspected militants were killed during a shoot-out with police.

He said the incident happened at noon (0900GMT), "as the terror operation... was about to be carried out".

The official said the attack was timed for the start of the three-day Eid al-Fitr holiday, which marks the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.



Source: BBC

Javehn
11-25-2003, 01:17 PM
Not exactly the kind of welcome that us forces expected in Iraq , ha ?
Us troops in Iraq started to throw out the "hart and mind" tactics allready , and started to use active methods of limited scale warfare as it used in Spain , or Israel

Roger Rabbit
11-25-2003, 01:25 PM
:roll:

In Spain? you mean with the Basques right? and that would be the Spanish and the Basques not the Americans in Spain?

Javehn
11-25-2003, 01:44 PM
yes , i mean basque separators

Trigger
11-25-2003, 03:08 PM
Not exactly the kind of welcome that us forces expected in Iraq , ha ?
:roll:
Another rider on the Short Bus of life...

Seraphim
11-25-2003, 05:34 PM
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=514&e=2&u=/ap/20031125/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq_680



Iraqi Civilians Now the Target of Attacks

By JIM KRANE, Associated Press Writer

BAGHDAD, Iraq - With U.S. troops heavily armed and bunkered behind concrete and razor wire, guerrillas are pointing their guns at softer targets like Iraqi police and civilians, top U.S. military and civilian officials said Tuesday.



American officials expect attacks on Iraqis working with the coalition to surge as the U.S.-led administration begins handing power to local leaders.


After dark, three large explosions shook the center of Baghdad from the city's western half. The blasts triggered a warning siren in the "Green Zone" housing the U.S. headquarters.


A coalition spokeswoman said the blasts occurred outside of the zone at a police station, a bus station and a third, unknown location. She had no information on casualties. The area is less than a half-mile from the "Green Zone."


"The security situation has changed," said top U.S. administrator L. Paul Bremer at a press conference with Gen. John Abizaid, the chief of the U.S. Central Command whose area of responsibility includes Iraq (news - web sites).


Bremer said coalition troops would do their best to protect upcoming leadership debates and caucuses.


"We have to anticipate that there will be a level of terrorism in the months ahead," he said. "As the process of democracy moves forward over the next several months, they may try to attack the institutions of democracy."


Abizaid said the number of daily attacks on coalition forces dropped by about half over the past two weeks.


But another U.S. military official, Col. William Darley, said attacks peaked at more than 40 per day about two weeks ago and have since dropped to about 30 per day — about the same as in October and well over the number in August and September.


More than five dozen U.S. troops were killed by hostile fire in November, more than any other month since the end of major combat in Iraq on May 1.


Hotspots Fallujah and Ramadi, two Sunni-dominated cities west of Baghdad, have seen fewer attacks recently, but unrest has persisted in the capital and spread north to Mosul and Kirkuk.


The guerrillas, whom Abizaid described as regional cells of ex-Baath Party loyalists, have launched devastating strikes on the Iraqi police. The intent, the officials said, is to intimidate Iraqis.


"If they can't reach the coalition, they go after the people they can touch," Darley said.


Those attacks include two car bombs at police stations last weekend, the assassination Saturday of a police colonel and the killing Sunday of a police chief.


The shift in guerrilla targets follows a decision by the U.S. command to aggressively pursue insurgents before they can strike. On Tuesday, the 4th Infantry Division said its soldiers arrested 18 Iraqis during nearly 200 raids over the past 24 hours in its sector north of Baghdad.


Troops from the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment were encircling three towns along the Syrian border in a search for weapons and fighters, according to a U.S. News and World Report correspondent who returned from the area Tuesday.


The troops established a cordon Thursday around the towns of Husaybah, Karabilah and Sadah, total population 120,000, and haven't let anyone in or out, the reporter said, adding that troops were conducting sweeps through the encircled territory.





The reporter, Bay Fang, said soldiers have detained more than 300 people and discovered several weapons caches, including one that held about 800 World War II-era torpedoes.

Also Tuesday, the aid agency CARE Australia said it had pulled its six international staffers out of Iraq and told its 70 Iraqi employees to stay home after a weekend rocket attack on its Baghdad office.

Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio said CARE Australia received a specific threat from a group calling itself the Iraqi Resistance.

"We are going to kill you and attack your places without any further notice," the warning reportedly said. "We are issuing this communique after we attacked the CARE office and we are letting you know that the deadline for all such places, hotels, houses, oil companies, will be the third and the last day of Eid (al-Fitr). Otherwise these buildings will be totally destroyed."

Eid al-Fitr marks the end of the holy month of Ramadan. In Iraq, the end of Ramadan varies, with some Muslim groups marking it Monday, others Tuesday and still others Wednesday.

The Red Cross, the United Nations (news - web sites) and other humanitarian groups have withdrawn international staff and sharply curtailed operations due to the security situation in Iraq.

Abizaid described the insurgency as a principally homegrown campaign involving "agents of the former regime" of ousted leader Saddam Hussein (news - web sites) aided by a few foreigners.

"Foreign fighters are coming in and it is not correct to say that there are floods of foreign fighters coming in or thousands. The number is small," he said.

Abizaid concurred with statements from regional U.S. military commanders that Iranians weren't thought to be among the insurgents.

"I wouldn't characterize any Iranian I know of as a foreign fighter," the general said.

After the briefing, Darley characterized the 70 or so Iranians among some 300 foreigners in U.S. custody in Iraq as "spies" or "suspected anti-coalition people."