Archive for the ‘No To War’ Category

23 Filed under (Internet, Entertainment, Tech News, No To War) by adfunk @ 11:58 pm

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03 Filed under (No To War) by adfunk @ 09:14 pm

A suicide bomber parked in a sedan at a crowded marketplace killed nine people this morning in the village of Balad Ruz, northeast of Baghdad, continuing a trend of violent attacks in Diyala province.

Seven more American troops were reported killed in Iraq on Saturday, all but one by improvised bombs, according to the American military command in Baghdad.

Three of the soldiers were killed around the capital: One during combat in western Baghdad by a bomb that also wounded two other soldiers; one shot to death while on patrol south of Baghdad; and one killed southwest of Baghdad by a bomber on foot who detonated an explosive device when a patrol of soldiers tried to question him.

Two soldiers were killed in Ninewa Province, the large northern region that includes Mosul.

And in Diyala, a bombing on Saturday killed one soldier and wounded four more troops, the American military command reported.

Another bomb blast in Diyala also killed one soldier and wounded two more. No other information was provided.

Large forces of Sunni insurgents in Diyala, just north and east of Baghdad, are battling thousands of American troops recently rushed in to calm the raging violence. The past month has been by far the deadliest for American soldiers in Diyala, an ethnically complex region of 1.5 million people about the size of Maryland that borders Baghdad, Iran and Kurdistan.

At least 22 American soldiers were killed in Diyala during May, more than any other province except Baghdad, where 60 died, according to Icasualties.org, which tracks troop deaths. It was the first month since October 2003 that saw more American troops killed in Diyala than in sprawling Anbar Province, according to the tally.

Altogether, 75 American troops have been killed so far this year in Diyala, compared to 20 during all of last year.

The bombing in Balad Ruz, 35 miles northeast of Baghdad, today also wounded 25 people, including seven children and two Iraqi policemen, the Iraqi authorities said. There was no immediate report of who carried out the attack, but Iraqi officials say such bombings are usually the work of Sunni Arab insurgents, especially those affiliated with Al Qaeda in Iraq or other radical Islamist groups.

Later today insurgents set up a fake checkpoint just west of Baquba, the provincial capital of Diyala, and raked a bus with gunfire, killing three people and wounding five more, the Iraqi police said. Two militants were also killed in Baquba during clashes with the Iraqi police. An improvised bomb also wounded three Iraqi policemen north of Baquba.

Nine corpses that had clear signs of torture and were handcuffed and shot at close range were discovered in Muradiya, a restive village south of Baquba where in the past Sunni militants have waged skirmishes against Iraqi police forces.

The attacks in Diyala came as American and Iraqi troops fought and raided Shiite militiamen south of Baghdad in strongholds of the Mahdi Army militia of Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.

Coalition troops arrested 10 Mahdi Army fighters during an operation today in Numaniya, a village west of Kut, and confiscated weapons, an Iraqi security official said. The official described the morning raid as the latest in a series of arrests targeting Mahdi fighters in the region. Police also discovered two corpses bearing signs of torture in Numaniya.

Iraqi police in Diwaniyah imposed a curfew after fighting erupted with Mahdi militiamen following an unsuccessful attempt to arrest a top Mahdi commander in the area, the Iraqi police there said. At least seven people were wounded, including two Iraqi policemen, they said.

Gunmen in Baghdad killed a director of the Iraqi Central Bank and one of his brothers in the Amel neighborhood, in the western part of the capital, a ministry of interior official said.

Also, three civilians were wounded during fighting between gunmen and Iraqi police in the dangerous Saidiya district of southwest Baghdad.



30 Filed under (No To War) by adfunk @ 11:21 pm



30 Filed under (No To War) by adfunk @ 11:05 pm

The Taliban said they brought the Chinook down
but it is not clear what weapon was used

A helicopter from the Nato-led force in Afghanistan has gone down in the southern province of Helmand, killing seven people, according to the force.

Five US soldiers were killed when their Chinook helicopter was apparently shot down in southern Afghanistan on Wednesday, a US military official said.

An International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) helicopter had “gone down” in southern Afghanistan at about 9pm local time (1630 GMT), an ISAF media statement said.

Yousuf Ahmadi, a Taliban spokesman, said the group’s fighters had shot down an aircraft in Helmand.

Major John Thomas, and IAF spokesman, said: “The helicopter burst into flames … It seems that no one on board could have survived.”

Small crew

The CH-47 Chinook, a heavy transport helicopter with two rotors, can carry up to around 40 troops plus a small crew.

The fact it was flying at night suggests the helicopter may have been carrying troops on a night-time air assault.

A British military spokesman in Helmand, where most of the group of about 5,200 British troops with ISAF is based, said there had been “an incident involving some casualties” but would give no details.

He said: “The foreign troops have cordoned the area and are in control of the crash site so we cannot have access to the area to determine the number of casualties.”

Taliban claim

Ahmadi, who regularly speaks to the media from an undisclosed location on behalf of the Taliban, said he had received the information from Taliban in Helmand.

He said he did not yet know exactly how the aircraft had been brought down.

Ahmadi said Taliban fighters have anti-aircraft weapons dating from the period of resistance to the Soviet occupation of the 1980s, but also that “they have received new anti-airplane weapons”.

He said: “At this stage I don’t have the exact information which weapons they used to bring down the aircraft.”

US assessment

Earlier in the day, a senior US military officer said Western forces in Afghanistan had the Taliban on the defensive after a series of spring battles that had also been blamed for a rising civilian death toll.

“We think that we have got the Taliban on their heels,” said Brigadier-General Perry Wiggins, deputy director for regional operations in the Joint chiefs of staff, a group which brings together the chiefs of all the branches of the US military.

Wiggins told a news briefing at the Pentagon that several senior Taliban leaders had been killed in clashes which had forced the anti-government group to further pursue smaller-scale “asymmetric” attacks such as suicide bombings.

He said: “Although it has not crippled them, it’ll set them back for a period of time.”