Cleita
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Sat Nov-06-04 05:40 PM
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Watching CNN International it was just said that one of the Iraqi commanders who had been given a complete briefing on the plan of attack in Fallujah is missing. It's feared he may be telling the Fallujans the war plan.
Sorry no link to post yet.
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TwilightZone
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Sat Nov-06-04 05:41 PM
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1. Earlier, it was reported that he deserted. |
Obviousman
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Sat Nov-06-04 05:41 PM
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then this thing is falling apart at the seems
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cheezus
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Sat Nov-06-04 05:41 PM
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3. Wow. Thank GOD we re-elected Bush |
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otherwise we might have been able to do this right... and we can't have that: we need to stay the course!
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movonne
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Sat Nov-06-04 05:58 PM
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8. I am glad we are not doing this right ... I can't stand that we are |
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on the verge of killing 1000's more Iraq's and 100's more our soldiers..
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Hubert Flottz
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Sat Nov-06-04 05:42 PM
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4. Can you say Clusterflop? |
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Probably in Iran reporting in!
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LMG
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Sat Nov-06-04 05:47 PM
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This is hard work getting this right bet he worked on saturday you know its hard work when the Iraq general left he must have taken the carry out menu
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elehhhhna
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Sat Nov-06-04 05:50 PM
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6. Iraqi officer deserts with Fallujah battle plans (Reuters) |
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Iraqi officer deserts with Fallujah battle plans An Iraqi military commander has deserted US forces hours after he received a full briefing on US military plans to storm the rebel-held city of Fallujah, CNN has reported.
The pool report sent to Reuters and other media from a US marine unit quoted US officers as saying the desertion of the unidentified captain, a Kurdish company commander, would not change plans to retake the city before elections scheduled for January 27.
They said they believe the officer, who commanded 160 Iraqi soldiers training with US marines at a base on the outskirts of Fallujah, was not likely to hand over battle plans to rebels in the Sunni Muslim city.
The officer disappeared on Friday morning, one day after US marine officers gave him a full briefing on the battle plans. US officers found his uniform and automatic rifles on his bed.
"This man has no known ties with Fallujah and they (the US military) don't believe in the first instance that he is headed for Fallujah. They believe that since the captain is a Kurd, he is more likely headed up north and going home," the report said.
"It is significant that he disappeared the morning after he had a full and detailed brief on the full battle plan for the assault on Fallujah," it added.
US officers said Iraqi forces, who include former Kurdish Peshmerga fighters and former members of Saddam's Iraqi army, were among Iraqi troops training with US Marines preparing to storm Fallujah.
Kurds were allies of the United States in last year's war that ousted Saddam Hussein.
US forces say they are awaiting a signal from Iraq's interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi and US President George W Bush to attack the city, where an estimated 1,000 to 6,000 Saddam loyalists and Arab supporters of Zarqawi are dug in.
Fallujah had a population of 300,000 before the US-led invasion of Iraq and an unknown number remain in the city.
US forces expect the Fallujah battle to be the toughest that US Marines face since the Vietnam war.
Analysts expect capturing the city will involve street fighting which can extract a high death toll from non-combatants.
-Reuters __________________
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Flammable Materials
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Sat Nov-06-04 07:01 PM
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Fatima
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Sat Nov-06-04 05:51 PM
Response to Original message |
7. Fear not, they will figure out a way to kill more of us "filthy ragheads" |
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George never fails and sadly, the Democratic so-called outrage failed to stop him.
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snippy
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Sat Nov-06-04 06:02 PM
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9. Interesting that it was a Kurdish officer. |
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Are the Kurds now supporting the insurgency?
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Bok_Tukalo
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Sat Nov-06-04 06:08 PM
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10. It is possible (because I am not completely cynical) |
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that he found the plan to be morally repugnant.
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snippy
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Sat Nov-06-04 06:24 PM
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11. I had not thought of that possibility, but it would not surprise me. n/t |
incapsulated
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Sat Nov-06-04 06:34 PM
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12. That explanation makes no sense whatsoever |
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Why tip off the Americans by deserting? Then they would know he was a mole and change the battle plans. It's stupid and doesn't make any sense. He would stay undercover and deliver the plans without raising any suspicion if that was his motive.
My guess is:
1)He's been kidnapped or killed
2)He's being blackmailed or one of his family has been kidnapped, which happens to ordinary Iraqis all the time, and this particular Iraqi is on a hit list, no? Perfect way for the insurgents to take him out of the picture.
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Cleita
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Sat Nov-06-04 06:37 PM
Response to Reply #12 |
13. Well, this is what they said, then they clarified that he |
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was a Kurd. News never gets breaking news right the first time around.
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incapsulated
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Sat Nov-06-04 06:40 PM
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14. I'm not doubting what they said |
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I just don't think it makes any sense, heh.
Not that anything over there does.
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amandabeech
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Sat Nov-06-04 06:54 PM
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15. Perhaps he's concerned about problems in the Kurdish area. |
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I believe that it was reported last week that the Turks threatened to move into Iraqi Kurdistan if the Kurds took Kirkuk. There was no statement from the U.S. warning the Turks to stay home, which was undoubtedly a disappointment to the Kurds.
In additional Kurd news, there are reports of Kurdish insurgents active inside Turkey once again. I would expect that Kurdish affairs are more important than Iraqi affairs to a Kurd.
Either that, or the Kurds are aligning with the Sunni Arabs (I believe that the Kurds are Sunni) against the Shia. Perhaps the Sunnis promised the Kurds autonomy in a confederation composed of Sunni Arab and Kurd, so long as the Kurds shared a little oil $ with the Sunnis.
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DrWeird
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Sat Nov-06-04 07:03 PM
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17. I doubt they'd postpone it. |
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They've spent weeks getting ready, no sense postponing Bush's victory party just because a bunch of extra US troops are going to get killed.
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Thu Apr 25th 2024, 02:42 AM
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