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Iraq |
U.S. and Iraqi troops storm Baghdad neighborhood again |
2007-01-25 |
![]() However, the use of Apache helicopters and mortars so soon after a similar assault on the same neighborhood Jan. 9 suggested that uprooting armed groups in Baghdad won't be easy, even with the additional 17,500 U.S. troops President Bush is sending to the Iraqi capital. It also underscored how hard it is for American troops to restore order without getting embroiled in Iraq's sectarian civil war. A Sunni organization called the Haifa Street operation "genocide", and Sunni residents of the neighborhood said the attack capped a terrifying two-week siege by mostly Shiite Iraqi government forces that stayed behind when American troops withdrew after the first offensive. A man who gave his name as Omar Abu Khatab, a 24-year-old day laborer, pleaded for help when a reporter reached him by phone. "We have many people wounded and badly injured and we have also people killed. We want someone to help us bury them, but we cannot get any help," he said. "We don't have any food or water. Until now, 16 days under this curfew and we cannot go out." |
Posted by:Fred |
#4 Uproot= D-9 ops. more. faster. please. |
Posted by: USN, Ret. 2007-01-25 14:12 |
#3 Afew deaths on one street in one city is genocide? It's a good thing these people aren't Jewish or Gypsy -- they'd have gone mad long since. |
Posted by: trailing wife 2007-01-25 12:49 |
#2 Change the ROEs did they? |
Posted by: tu3031 2007-01-25 10:49 |
#1 If they're calling it genocide, it must be working. "We have many people wounded and badly injured and we have also people killed." That's Arabic for a good start. Al |
Posted by: Frozen Al 2007-01-25 10:38 |