[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Sign-in] [Mail] [Setup] [Help]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
World News See other World News Articles Title: Two top Sadrist commanders killed in 24 hours in Iraq This reminds me of the biblical warning, "Careful what ye shall sow."
from PressTV, Tehran [ Editors Note: These attacks on commanders can spin out of control quickly. Whacking people going to work, or coming home, or in the grocery store parking lot is fairly easy. Its the escape that is the tricky part, but Intel and military factions can do that. This reminds me of the biblical warning, Careful what ye shall sow. Iraqi authorities are certainly aware that their country is under full spectrum attack. The US has taken the position that it will make the decision on whether it will remove its military presence, a stance that has triggered virtually no public interest among the US public. And neither has there been any outrage on the the US Bozo the Clown act of assassinating Iranians with diplomatic credentials in Iraq who were in negotiations with Saudi Arabia on decreasing tensions. But the ultimate sin was launching the Soleimani attack from a US airbase in Iraq that had no air defenses. All we saw from the Vet orgs was concern over the headache comment Trump made, a sign that they still prefer to only take on the easiest tasks. VT has been one of the few platforms to openly discuss the slipping of our military into the General Smedley Butler position when it admitted that he had been a gangster for Wall Street. Among veterans, only what is left of the Vietnam ones are the only bastion of even having concern over the dilemma. It is hard to take one entrenched bad guys when your own people are asleep at the wheel. That situation is made worse when our free press has been gutted, so that once valuable platform which had the power to shame those in power is almost gone. Even someone like Democracy Now, the liberal bastion, stays far away from the sensitive Israeli issues, like the massive espionage and election interference, when because of its government funding is supposed to be free to touch red lines
Jim W. Dean ] Jim's Editors Notes are solely crowdfunded via PayPal Jim's work includes research, field trips, Heritage TV Legacy archiving & more. Thanks for helping. Click to donate >> First published
February 08, 2020 Two commanders of Iraqi cleric Muqtada al-Sadrs movement have been killed in separate attacks in the span of 24 hours in what appears to be a plot to create division among Iraqi groups. One of them was Hazim al-Hilfi, a commander of the Saraya al-Salam militant group, who was killed on Thursday when the vehicle carrying him was targeted by unidentified gunmen on the Muhammad al-Qasim road, west of Basra province. He suffered fatal injuries and died on the spot, local security sources said. They quoted a Sadr movements media official in Basra, Saad al-Maliki, as saying that Halfi was one of the leaders of the Peace Corps. His assassination came less than 24 hours after Abu-Muqada al-Azirjawi, another top commander of the Saraya group, was seriously wounded on Tuesday night after unknown assailants riding motorcycles opened fire on him near his house in Abou Roummaneh district of Maysan governorate. He later died of his injuries in hospital, Iraqi media reported. There are speculations that the assassinations are carried out by foreign intelligence services with the aim of pinning the blame on rival Iraqi groups, and reignite a civil war in the volatile country. Last October, Maysan Governorate witnessed the killing of Wissam al-Alyawi, a prominent leader in the Asaib Ahl al-Haq group, following an armed attack on its headquarters. US plotting to pit Sadr Movement against Asaib Ahl al-Haq Asaib leader Qais Khazali has said the US had plotted to assassinate Muqtada al-Sadr and pin the blame on Asaib Ahl al-Haq group in a bid to provoke a civil war in Iraq. The first American-Israeli project in Iraq, which they wanted to implement, was to assassinate Muqtada al-Sadr and then accuse Asaib of killing him, causing a nationwide slaughter in the country, Khazali said in an interview with al-Ahad. Sadr and Iran received the intelligence, and the issue was sorted out. Thank God the plot was failed, he noted, saying the source of the intelligence was top Iranian general Qassem Soleimani, who was assassinated in a US drone attack last month. Khazali also pointed to the issue of unknown snipers who targeted Iraqi protesters at the beginning of the protests in October, and said launching an investigation into the issue and identifying the perpetrators is among the most important demands of Iraqi people. If this case is opened, Asaib Ahl al-Haq has sufficient evidence and documents about those behind this issue, he added. Since early October, Iraq has been roiled by mass protests over poor living conditions and corruption, which forced ex-premier Adel Abdul-Mahdi to resign. The demonstrations have often turned violent and over 600 people, including police forces, have been killed and 17,000 injured, according to an Iraqi human rights group. Iraqs President Barham Salih last week tasked Mohammed Allawi with forming a government within a month, a decision rejected by some protesters. The appointment of Allawi as prime minister-designate was expected to end the protest rallies, but the demonstrations have continued across Iraq against the new premier. The holy city of Najaf, in particular, has in recent days been a scene of violent clashes, which some Iraqi politicians blame on the US and Saudi Arabia. Fatah Alliance lawmaker Abdul Amir Taiban says the Najaf violence is an American-Saudi plot to distract the Iraqi peoples attention from the expulsion of US troops from the Arab country, which has been demanded by the Iraqi Parliament. Foreign parties are directing the events in central and southern Iraqi provinces behind the scenes, he added. By torching, burning, spreading riot and chaos, the US is trying to distract the Iraqi nation and deflect their attention from the issue of expelling alien forces from their country, he told Al-Maalomah. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Ada (#0)
The whole idea from the start has been to keep Iraqi oil in the hands of Iraqis so the U.S. can benefit from its sale on the open markets under the U.S. claim of Dollar Supremacy. Remember that Saddam was selling oil for Euros since as he said he "did not want to trade in the currency of the enemy". This of course lead to the invasion of Iraq in 2003 under George W. Bush and the eventual hanging of Saddam Hussein. ;) "When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one." Edmund Burke
It's debatable whether it keeps Iraqi oil in the hands of Iraqi's given that money from all oil sales is kept in Iraq's "account" held by the US, maybe it's the federal reserve bank. From this account, Iraq receives a certain allowance each month to fund their operations. This account would potentially be seized or frozen by the US if Iraq dared to expel US forces from their country. It could certainly be argued that this arrangement is prudent due to the potential for corruption within the Iraq government, but it nonetheless denotes Iraq as a colony of the USA.
it nonetheless denotes Iraq as a colony of the "When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one." Edmund Burke
|
||
[Home]
[Headlines]
[Latest Articles]
[Latest Comments]
[Post]
[Sign-in]
[Mail]
[Setup]
[Help]
|