Bounty Placed on Iraqi Leaders

USMCDevilDog

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Jul 8, 2005
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This one little sentence in the article makes it worth reading:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050912/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq

Bounty Placed on Heads of Iraqi Leaders By STEVEN R. HURST, Associated Press Writer
Mon Sep 12, 5:56 PM ET

Iraqi insurgents, run out of their northern stronghold in Tal Afar for the second time in a year, counterattacked with an Internet propaganda offensive Monday that put a bounty of about $200,000 on the heads of top Iraqi leaders.

Violence flared again in the ancient city late Monday when Iraqi soldiers trapped insurgents in basement hideouts, killing 40 militants in fierce combat, the military said. Most insurgents had fled Tal Afar as the U.S.-backed offensive began Saturday, many escaping through tunnels.

The new fighting raised the insurgent death toll in Tal Afar to near 200, the government said. Officials said seven Iraqi soldiers and six civilians died in the three-day offensive, while the U.S. military said no American soldiers were hurt.

Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari flew to Tal Afar on Monday to congratulate his army, and Al-Iraqiya state television said he went despite insurgent threats "to attack the city with chemical and biological weapons."

There was no known public threat from the insurgents to use unconventional weapons in Tel Afar, but militants made two Internet postings in recent days vowing to stage chemical attacks on Baghdad's Green Zone — home to the U.S. Embassy, Iraq's parliament and government offices.

The Islamic Army in Iraq, which has previously claimed responsibility for kidnappings and killings of foreigners, made the bounty offer for the assassination of key Iraqi officials.

The militant group called in a Web posting for its "holy fighters to strike the infidels with an iron fist." It offered $100,000 to the killer of al-Jaafari, $50,000 for the interior minister and $30,000 for the defense minister.

Iraq's U.S.-trained forces and U.S.-backed government are waging their own media offensive, using the Tal Afar operation to position themselves as a confident and strong team now leading the fight to wipe out insurgent forces.

"I met today with the commander of the 3rd Division in Tal Afar and his officers and soldiers and found them in high spirits," al-Jaafari said. Hundreds of Iraqis danced, sang and waved flags as the prime minister toured the region.

The U.S. 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, which sent 3,500 soldiers in support of the 5,000-member Iraqi force, appeared to minimize its role in Tal Afar in favor of a high profile for the increasingly muscular Iraq military.

Interior Minister Bayan Jabr said the insurgents were turning to Internet threats because the Tal Afar offensive had badly shaken the militants.

"It was a great shock to al-Qaida. They were thrown off balance and issued this threat," he said at a news conference.

The insurgents' threat to use chemical weapons was not being taken lightly. Last month, U.S. troops raided an insurgent hideout in the north that the U.S. military said may have produced chemicals for use against coalition forces. About 1,500 gallons of various chemicals were found in the hideout in Mosul, which is 35 miles east of Tal Afar.

"There were 11 precursor chemicals, which are dangerous by themselves, and mixed together they would become even more dangerous," Lt. Col. Steve Boylan, a military spokesman, said at the time.

Defense Minister Sadoun al-Dulaimi kept up his recent verbal assaults on Syria, whose eastern border is about 50 miles from Tal Afar. "Syria is not only the loophole, but it is the evil's gateway on this country," he said.

U.S. and Iraqi officials complain Syria has failed to stop the influx of foreign fighters through its territory into Iraq, and al-Jaafari ordered the border crossing with Syria nearest to Tal Afar closed Saturday night.

"It looks like Syria has assumed the historic role of creating chaos in Iraq," al-Dulaimi said, claiming the Syrian government opposed the regime of Saddam Hussein and now seeks to undermine Iraq's U.S.-backed successor government.

Syria rejected the scolding, with a Foreign Ministry official calling the charges "absolutely untrue."

"Iraqi officials are fully aware that Syria is exerting all-out efforts to control the borders," Syria's official news agency quoted the unidentified official as saying.

In other developments Monday:

_A car bomb exploded outside a restaurant in Baghdad, killing at least two people and wounding 17.

_Police in the capital reported finding the bodies of 10 unidentified men who had been tied and shot to death.

_Two Kurdish security guards died and three were wounded when gunmen shot up their vehicle in Mosul. On the city's outskirts, police found two burned bodies.

_In the northern city of Kirkuk, gunmen killed two police officers.

___

Associated Press reporters Jacob Silberberg and Sinbad Ahmed near Tal Afar contributed to this story.



"no American soldiers were hurt.", what a great line, it's been awhile since I've read that and it feels great, hope its in many more articles to come.
 
USMCDevilDog said:
This one little sentence in the article makes it worth reading:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050912/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq

Bounty Placed on Heads of Iraqi Leaders By STEVEN R. HURST, Associated Press Writer
Mon Sep 12, 5:56 PM ET

Iraqi insurgents, run out of their northern stronghold in Tal Afar for the second time in a year, counterattacked with an Internet propaganda offensive Monday that put a bounty of about $200,000 on the heads of top Iraqi leaders.

Violence flared again in the ancient city late Monday when Iraqi soldiers trapped insurgents in basement hideouts, killing 40 militants in fierce combat, the military said. Most insurgents had fled Tal Afar as the U.S.-backed offensive began Saturday, many escaping through tunnels.

The new fighting raised the insurgent death toll in Tal Afar to near 200, the government said. Officials said seven Iraqi soldiers and six civilians died in the three-day offensive, while the U.S. military said no American soldiers were hurt.

Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari flew to Tal Afar on Monday to congratulate his army, and Al-Iraqiya state television said he went despite insurgent threats "to attack the city with chemical and biological weapons."

There was no known public threat from the insurgents to use unconventional weapons in Tel Afar, but militants made two Internet postings in recent days vowing to stage chemical attacks on Baghdad's Green Zone — home to the U.S. Embassy, Iraq's parliament and government offices.

The Islamic Army in Iraq, which has previously claimed responsibility for kidnappings and killings of foreigners, made the bounty offer for the assassination of key Iraqi officials.

The militant group called in a Web posting for its "holy fighters to strike the infidels with an iron fist." It offered $100,000 to the killer of al-Jaafari, $50,000 for the interior minister and $30,000 for the defense minister.

Iraq's U.S.-trained forces and U.S.-backed government are waging their own media offensive, using the Tal Afar operation to position themselves as a confident and strong team now leading the fight to wipe out insurgent forces.

"I met today with the commander of the 3rd Division in Tal Afar and his officers and soldiers and found them in high spirits," al-Jaafari said. Hundreds of Iraqis danced, sang and waved flags as the prime minister toured the region.

The U.S. 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, which sent 3,500 soldiers in support of the 5,000-member Iraqi force, appeared to minimize its role in Tal Afar in favor of a high profile for the increasingly muscular Iraq military.

Interior Minister Bayan Jabr said the insurgents were turning to Internet threats because the Tal Afar offensive had badly shaken the militants.

"It was a great shock to al-Qaida. They were thrown off balance and issued this threat," he said at a news conference.

The insurgents' threat to use chemical weapons was not being taken lightly. Last month, U.S. troops raided an insurgent hideout in the north that the U.S. military said may have produced chemicals for use against coalition forces. About 1,500 gallons of various chemicals were found in the hideout in Mosul, which is 35 miles east of Tal Afar.

"There were 11 precursor chemicals, which are dangerous by themselves, and mixed together they would become even more dangerous," Lt. Col. Steve Boylan, a military spokesman, said at the time.

Defense Minister Sadoun al-Dulaimi kept up his recent verbal assaults on Syria, whose eastern border is about 50 miles from Tal Afar. "Syria is not only the loophole, but it is the evil's gateway on this country," he said.

U.S. and Iraqi officials complain Syria has failed to stop the influx of foreign fighters through its territory into Iraq, and al-Jaafari ordered the border crossing with Syria nearest to Tal Afar closed Saturday night.

"It looks like Syria has assumed the historic role of creating chaos in Iraq," al-Dulaimi said, claiming the Syrian government opposed the regime of Saddam Hussein and now seeks to undermine Iraq's U.S.-backed successor government.

Syria rejected the scolding, with a Foreign Ministry official calling the charges "absolutely untrue."

"Iraqi officials are fully aware that Syria is exerting all-out efforts to control the borders," Syria's official news agency quoted the unidentified official as saying.

In other developments Monday:

_A car bomb exploded outside a restaurant in Baghdad, killing at least two people and wounding 17.

_Police in the capital reported finding the bodies of 10 unidentified men who had been tied and shot to death.

_Two Kurdish security guards died and three were wounded when gunmen shot up their vehicle in Mosul. On the city's outskirts, police found two burned bodies.

_In the northern city of Kirkuk, gunmen killed two police officers.

___

Associated Press reporters Jacob Silberberg and Sinbad Ahmed near Tal Afar contributed to this story.



"no American soldiers were hurt.", what a great line, it's been awhile since I've read that and it feels great, hope its in many more articles to come.

http://michaelyon.blogspot.com/2005/09/battle-for-mosul-progress-report.html

Friday, September 09, 2005
Battle for Mosul: Progress Report

“Bad timing," explained LTC Erik Kurilla, lying in his hospital bed at the Madigan Army Hospital in Fort Lewis, Washington, recovering from gunshot wounds suffered in combat in Mosul on 19 Aug, 2005. Titanium replaces part of his shattered femur, while the wounds in his other leg and arm are healing quickly. Kurilla, whose warrior stature on the battlefield is fast becoming legendary, is expected to make a full recovery with no limitations. He will return to his command of 1st Battalion, 24th Infantry Regiment (better known as "Deuce Four") when they return from Iraq in late September. "I wanted to be there with my soldiers until the end, keeping our boot on the enemy's neck and pushing his back up against a wall, right until the very last minute," Kurilla said.

Kurilla worries that a premature military withdrawal from places like Mosul could give the enemy a chance to regroup. "Without a strong Coalition military presence in the near term, all our gains would be eroded," Kurilla predicted, "Worse, we'd be consigning our Iraqi allies, who have become increasingly effective fighting side by side with us, to a brutal civil war against an enemy that is savagely intent on clinging to a power they should never have possessed."

The Deuce Four is a Stryker infantry battalion comprised of about 700 soldiers, and has lost 12 men and earned over 150 purple hearts in some of the most intense urban combat of this war. When the battalion arrived in Mosul, the mostly-Sunni city had already devolved into an insurgent stronghold. When the home-base for organized kidnap and beheading squads swelled with the steady stream of fighters fleeing the crackdown in Falluja, the local police simply abandoned their stations. Mortar rounds and rockets fell by the hundreds, scores of car bombs attacked Deuce Four, the ISF, and later crowds of people, and IEDs made the roads literal minefields. In December, a terrorist slipped into the dining facility on FOB Marez and detonated his explosives vest during a crowded meal, killing 22 people.

Kurilla’s aggressive battle plan brought the fight to the enemy. Every new evolution in terrorist tactics was met with a ferocious counter blow that not only destroyed the immediate target, but also signaled frightened civilians that the US Army meant business in Mosul. Equally important civil affairs projects generated electricity virtually around the clock, built schools and parks, and brought top medical care to civilians. Within months, increasingly desperate to maintain control over the population, terrorists began launching attacks straight through groups of children, leaving many horribly burned. Their savagery further alienated civilians who were beginning to see the benefits of change. When top insurgent leaders were killed and captured, largely based on tips from Iraqi citizens, enemy attacks fell precipitously.

As the Deuce Four heads home this week, they leave behind a Mosul that, while not yet in the clear, is much closer to security and prosperity than anyone would have considered possible eight months ago. In between the daily secret reports Kurilla has brought to his hospital room so he can track his battalion, the Commander watches television news, increasingly frustrated by what he sees as a clear, and inaccurate, negative bias. “When you get the news back here in the states, it’s all doom and body counts. I only wish the American public could see the incredible progress that is being made every day in Iraq, particularly in places like Mosul.”
 
USMCDevilDog said:
This one little sentence in the article makes it worth reading:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050912/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq

Bounty Placed on Heads of Iraqi Leaders By STEVEN R. HURST, Associated Press Writer
Mon Sep 12, 5:56 PM ET

Iraqi insurgents, run out of their northern stronghold in Tal Afar for the second time in a year, counterattacked with an Internet propaganda offensive Monday that put a bounty of about $200,000 on the heads of top Iraqi leaders.

Violence flared again in the ancient city late Monday when Iraqi soldiers trapped insurgents in basement hideouts, killing 40 militants in fierce combat, the military said. Most insurgents had fled Tal Afar as the U.S.-backed offensive began Saturday, many escaping through tunnels.

The new fighting raised the insurgent death toll in Tal Afar to near 200, the government said. Officials said seven Iraqi soldiers and six civilians died in the three-day offensive, while the U.S. military said no American soldiers were hurt.

Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari flew to Tal Afar on Monday to congratulate his army, and Al-Iraqiya state television said he went despite insurgent threats "to attack the city with chemical and biological weapons."

There was no known public threat from the insurgents to use unconventional weapons in Tel Afar, but militants made two Internet postings in recent days vowing to stage chemical attacks on Baghdad's Green Zone — home to the U.S. Embassy, Iraq's parliament and government offices.

The Islamic Army in Iraq, which has previously claimed responsibility for kidnappings and killings of foreigners, made the bounty offer for the assassination of key Iraqi officials.

The militant group called in a Web posting for its "holy fighters to strike the infidels with an iron fist." It offered $100,000 to the killer of al-Jaafari, $50,000 for the interior minister and $30,000 for the defense minister.

Iraq's U.S.-trained forces and U.S.-backed government are waging their own media offensive, using the Tal Afar operation to position themselves as a confident and strong team now leading the fight to wipe out insurgent forces.

"I met today with the commander of the 3rd Division in Tal Afar and his officers and soldiers and found them in high spirits," al-Jaafari said. Hundreds of Iraqis danced, sang and waved flags as the prime minister toured the region.

The U.S. 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, which sent 3,500 soldiers in support of the 5,000-member Iraqi force, appeared to minimize its role in Tal Afar in favor of a high profile for the increasingly muscular Iraq military.

Interior Minister Bayan Jabr said the insurgents were turning to Internet threats because the Tal Afar offensive had badly shaken the militants.

"It was a great shock to al-Qaida. They were thrown off balance and issued this threat," he said at a news conference.

The insurgents' threat to use chemical weapons was not being taken lightly. Last month, U.S. troops raided an insurgent hideout in the north that the U.S. military said may have produced chemicals for use against coalition forces. About 1,500 gallons of various chemicals were found in the hideout in Mosul, which is 35 miles east of Tal Afar.

"There were 11 precursor chemicals, which are dangerous by themselves, and mixed together they would become even more dangerous," Lt. Col. Steve Boylan, a military spokesman, said at the time.

Defense Minister Sadoun al-Dulaimi kept up his recent verbal assaults on Syria, whose eastern border is about 50 miles from Tal Afar. "Syria is not only the loophole, but it is the evil's gateway on this country," he said.

U.S. and Iraqi officials complain Syria has failed to stop the influx of foreign fighters through its territory into Iraq, and al-Jaafari ordered the border crossing with Syria nearest to Tal Afar closed Saturday night.

"It looks like Syria has assumed the historic role of creating chaos in Iraq," al-Dulaimi said, claiming the Syrian government opposed the regime of Saddam Hussein and now seeks to undermine Iraq's U.S.-backed successor government.

Syria rejected the scolding, with a Foreign Ministry official calling the charges "absolutely untrue."

"Iraqi officials are fully aware that Syria is exerting all-out efforts to control the borders," Syria's official news agency quoted the unidentified official as saying.

In other developments Monday:

_A car bomb exploded outside a restaurant in Baghdad, killing at least two people and wounding 17.

_Police in the capital reported finding the bodies of 10 unidentified men who had been tied and shot to death.

_Two Kurdish security guards died and three were wounded when gunmen shot up their vehicle in Mosul. On the city's outskirts, police found two burned bodies.

_In the northern city of Kirkuk, gunmen killed two police officers.

___

Associated Press reporters Jacob Silberberg and Sinbad Ahmed near Tal Afar contributed to this story.



"no American soldiers were hurt.", what a great line, it's been awhile since I've read that and it feels great, hope its in many more articles to come.

The jihadist knuckleheads are getting more and more desparate. I say let the Iraqi Army go after them all. Their hands aren't tied behind their backs the way US troops' are.
 
I dunno if anyone has answered this before or what not but why didn't we just try and assassinate Hussein? I know we could have, it woulda been pretty cool too. I'm just saying, sending our entire army in there full force is kind of obvious, no wonder Osama is still on the run, he saw us coming from across the Atlantic! :splat:
 
USMCDevilDog said:
I dunno if anyone has answered this before or what not but why didn't we just try and assassinate Hussein? I know we could have, it woulda been pretty cool too. I'm just saying, sending our entire army in there full force is kind of obvious, no wonder Osama is still on the run, he saw us coming from across the Atlantic! :splat:

Killing the leader of an established regime may cause some sensationalism, but in effect does very little. Someone else would just take his place.
 

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