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The war goes on

Disagreeable

Well-known member
President Bush blames the media for Americans turning their back on this war. It's stuff like this that makes Americans wonder why we're spending our blood and money in Iraq.
Link below; my emphasis.

"Mohannad al-Azawi had just finished sprinkling food in his bird cages at his pet shop in south Baghdad, when three carloads of gunmen pulled up. In front of a crowd, he was grabbed by his shirt and driven off.
Mr. Azawi was among the few Sunni Arabs on the block, and, according to witnesses, when a Shiite friend tried to intervene, a gunman stuck a pistol to his head and said, "You want us to blow your brains out, too?"
Mr. Azawi's body was found the next morning at a sewage treatment plant. A slight man who raised nightingales, he had been hogtied, drilled with power tools and shot.
In the last month, hundreds of men have been kidnapped, tortured and executed in Baghdad. As Iraqi and American leaders struggle to avert a civil war, the bodies keep piling up. The city's homicide rate has tripled from 11 to 33 a day, military officials said. The period from March 7 to March 21 was typically brutal: at least 191 corpses, many mutilated, surfaced in garbage bins, drainage ditches, minibuses and pickup trucks. There were the four Duleimi brothers, Khalid, Tarek, Taleb and Salaam, seized from their home in front of their wives. And Achmed Abdulsalam, last seen at a checkpoint in his freshly painted BMW and found dead under a bridge two days later. And Mushtak al-Nidawi, a law student nicknamed Titanic for his Leonardo DiCaprio good looks, whose body was returned to his family with his skull chopped in half.
What frightens Iraqis most about these gangland-style killings is the impunity. According to reports filed by family members and more than a dozen interviews, many men were taken in daylight, in public, with witnesses all around. Few cases, if any, have been investigated.
Part of the reason may be that most victims are Sunnis, and there is growing suspicion that they were killed by Shiite death squads backed by government forces in a cycle of sectarian revenge. This allegation has been circulating in Baghdad for months, and as more Sunnis turn up dead, more people are inclined to believe it.
"This is sectarian cleansing," said Mahmoud Othman, a Kurdish member of Parliament, who has maintained a degree of neutrality between Shiites and Sunnis.
Mr. Othman said there were atrocities on each side. "But what is different is when Shiites get killed by suicide bombs, everyone comes together to fight the Sunni terrorists," he said. "When Shiites kill Sunnis, there is no response, because much of this killing is done by militias connected to the government."


More at the link:
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/26/international/ middleeast/26bodies.html?ex=1301029200&en= dd8fedf8798bbc1c&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt&emc=rss
 

jigs

Well-known member
while loss of life is bad, I for one am glad it is Iraqi's doing this to Iraqis, rather than Iraqis doing it to Americans in America.

and Bush is correct....the press ought to get its head out of its butt and show news, not opinion.
 

Disagreeable

Well-known member
jigs said:
while loss of life is bad, I for one am glad it is Iraqi's doing this to Iraqis, rather than Iraqis doing it to Americans in America.

and Bush is correct....the press ought to get its head out of its butt and show news, not opinion.

That article is not an opinion. It's facts.
 

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