Submit your comments on this article |
Iraq |
Secret US plot to |
2007-05-21 |
![]() The revelation of this extraordinary plot, which would probably have provoked an uprising by outraged Shia if it had succeeded, has left a legacy of bitter distrust in the mind of Mr Sadr for which the US and its allies in Iraq may still be paying. "I believe that particular incident made Muqtada lose any confidence or trust in the [US-led] coalition and made him really wild," the Iraqi National Security Adviser Dr Mowaffaq Rubai'e told The Independent in an interview. It is not known who gave the orders for the attempt on Mr Sadr but it is one of a series of ill-considered and politically explosive US actions in Iraq since the invasion. In January this year a US helicopter assault team tried to kidnap two senior Iranian security officials on an official visit to the Iraqi President. Earlier examples of highly provocative actions carried out by the US with little thought for the consequences include the dissolution of the Iraqi army and the Baath party. |
Posted by:GolfBravoUSMC |
#3 left a legacy of bitter distrust in the mind of Mr Sadr Screw any "bitter distrust in the mind", we should have left a slug. |
Posted by: Zenster 2007-05-21 23:20 |
#2 al-Sadr reminds me of the old joke about a man who escaped from a runaway zoo lion chasing him. "I was runnin' down the street with that ol' lion slidin' after me. Then I ran around the corner, an' that old lion just slid on by." "Was you scared?", asked his friend. "What do you think that ol' lion was slidin' on?", he replied. |
Posted by: Anonymoose 2007-05-21 23:15 |
#1 Maybe it happened; maybe not. I recall seeing Cockburn interviewed on TV. He is very leftish. |
Posted by: JohnQC 2007-05-21 22:48 |