Thursday, February 11, 2010

Car bomb hits police patrol in Baghdad, 5 wounded

A car bomb went off near a police patrol in western Baghdad on Wednesday and wounded five people, an Interior Ministry source said.

The attack took place shortly before sunset when a booby- trapped car parked near the intersection of Adel neighborhood exploded, the source told Xinhua on condition of anonymity.

The blast damaged one of the patrol's police vehicles, wounding two policemen aboard, along with several nearby civilian cars, the source said, adding that three civilians were also wounded by the blast.

Sporadic attacks are still common in Iraq as part of recent deterioration in security which shaped a setback to the efforts of the Iraqi government to restore normalcy in the country just a few weeks before the March general elections.

Thousands of Secret Documents Are 'Core' of U.K. Iraq Inquiry

Tens of thousands of secret documents form the core of the ongoing inquiry into the Iraq war, its chairman revealed on Monday—far more than previously thought.
The inquiry also hinted that such documents showed British officials knew George Bush intended to invade Iraq even if they complied with the U.N. weapons inspections.

In a statement marking the end of a month of public testimonies by senior decision-makers broadcast live on the Web, inquiry chairman Sir John Chilcott said that secret documents allowed the panel to see what really went on.

“They allow us to shine a bright light into seldom-seen corners of the government machine, revealing what really went on behind the scenes, before, during, and after the Iraq conflict,” said Sir John.

The inquiry team will examine the documents over the next few months said Sir John, allowing the panel “to see where the evidence joins together and where there are gaps.”

After the examination of the documents, more of which he emphasized were still being received every week, the inquiry team would be in a position to decide who else to interview.

“We have no reason to believe that any material is being deliberately withheld,” said Sir John, emphasizing that access to documents is unrestricted.

The statement by Sir John followed the second quizzing of the foreign secretary at the time of the Iraq invasion, Jack Straw.
One exchange hinted that the panel had access to secret documents revealing that George Bush planned to attack Iraq even if Iraq complied with inspectors and was in compliance with crucial U.N. resolution 1441.

Sir Lawrence Freedman had asked Mr. Straw, “Was there any point where [Colin] Powell said to you that, even if Iraq complied, President Bush had already made a decision that he intended to go to war?”

When Mr. Straw said this was not the case, “to the best of my recollection,” and talked more broadly around the question, Sir Lawrence pressed him a few times on the issue.

Sir Lawrence Freedman said, "I was going to suggest you might want to look through your conversations and check."

“I will go through the records, because I think you are trying to tell me something,” said Mr. Straw.

Mr. Straw also said he had no recollection of Claire Short’s accusation that she had been “jeered at” by members of the Cabinet when she challenged the legality of the invasion. “This was a very serious Cabinet meeting. People weren't, as I recall, anyway, going off with that kind of behavior. We all understood the gravity of the decision,” she said. Short resigned as International Development secretary two months after the invasion of Iraq, and has been an outspoken critic of Mr. Blair and the Iraq war.

Mr. Straw had denied that the Cabinet discussion on the attorney general's advice on the legality of invasion had been blocked, and said that there was no way the members of Cabinet could be unaware of the finely balanced nature of the legal argument, given its wide attention in the media.

He said that Cabinet comprised strong-minded people.

"None of them were wilting violets; their judgment was that it was not necessary to go into the process by which Peter Goldsmith came to his view. I don't recall Cabinet as a whole receiving legal advice on the matter," said Mr Straw. "All [the Cabinet] wanted to know was: is it lawful or is it not lawful?" What was required in the end was "essentially a yes or no decision" from the attorney general, he added.

Mr. Straw stoutly defended his decision not to act on the advice of the Foreign Office legal adviser, Sir Michael Wood. “The legal advice he offered, frankly, was contradictory and I think I was entitled to raise that,” he said.

Sir John said that the inquiry hoped to meet with veterans from the Iraq war later this year, as well as with more top officials from the Bush administration.

Former U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair told Fox news on Monday that the succession of probes into the invasion reflected our human inability to agree or disagree.

"There's always got to be a scandal as to why you hold your view. There's got to be some conspiracy behind it, some great deceit that's gone on, and people just find it hard to understand that it's possible for people to have different points of view and hold them … for genuine reasons. There's a continual desire to sort of uncover some great conspiracy, when actually there's a decision at the heart of it."

US frees Iraqi photographer held for 17 months

Ibrahim Jassam Mohammed, who worked for Reuters, was arrested in September 2008 in a dawn raid on his home.
The US said the photographer was a "security threat", but all evidence against him was classified secret.
An Iraqi court had ruled in December 2008 that there was no case against him and that he must be released, but the US military refused.
"How can I describe my feelings? This is like being born again." Mr Jassam told Reuters.
According to Reuters, the US accusations were based on his "activities with insurgents".
"The term 'insurgents' in Iraq generally refers to Sunni Islamist groups, like al-Qaeda. Jassam is a Shia Muslim," the news agency said.
The US military has detained a number of Iraqi journalists working for international news organisations, but none have been convicted.
It has been criticised by press freedom organisations such as Reporters Without Borders.

Iraq and Afghanistan wearing down the military, MPs warn

Conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan are leaving the armed forces ill equipped to undertake any new operations, MPs have warned.

Britain's forces need a period of "effective recuperation" after operating at a rate well above official planning assumptions, a report by the Commons defence committee says today. "The MoD was unable to tell us how long it would take before the armed forces return to satisfactory levels of readiness", it says.

It describes how RAF pilots are unable to train because aircraft are tied up on operations, the navy has too many commitments and major exercises are having to be cancelled.

The report quotes Lieutenant General Sir Graeme Lamb, a senior commander, as saying that his fellow senior officers believed the army needed to expand from about 102,000 troops to 112,000 to meet demand.

The MPs say current defence planning assumptions – that the forces are supposed to be resourced to maintain one enduring medium-scale operation and one small-scale operation – are "out of step with what is happening in reality". The army has suffered particularly, working at "full stretch" with training exercises cancelled and the time between tours of duty cut. "Given the high tempo of operations over the last eight years it is not surprising that some senior army officers think there needs to be a bigger army."

The MPs point out that the other armed services are also affected. The navy has seen essential equipment – such as the replacement for the Type 23 frigate – delayed and the report questions whether it can continue with its commitments around the world. The RAF has a shortage of aircraft for routine training because of the number of its fighter jets and helicopters committed on operations overseas.

The report warns that any cuts in an emergency "stringency budget" after the next election could make the strategic defence review (SDR), promised by all the main parties, undeliverable.

"The thinking of easier times – when public spending on health, education and social security was increased by much more than that on defence – must not be allowed to continue into these troubled times," the report says.

Meanwhile the defence secretary, Bob Ainsworth, has told the committee that the plan to renew the Trident nuclear missile project will be excluded from the SDR due to be set up after the general election.

The shadow defence secretary, Liam Fox, said the report "exposes the damage that has been done across the armed forces by Labour's refusal to hold a proper review for over a decade".

"It is clear that radical reform is needed to ensure that our armed forces are best configured to defend British interests and that our procurement programme gets our troops what they need, when they need it," he said.

General Sir Richard Dannatt, the former head of the army, said war in Iraq and Afghanistan had taken its toll on troops and echoed Lamb's call for a boost to land forces.

"There is quite a strong argument to say that our land forces are not large enough, particularly units that may have done two or three tours in Iraq and are now on a second or third tour in Afghanistan," he told GMTV. "Inevitably and sadly we have taken a number of casualties and people are tired. So those units need to be stronger. If they were 10% or 15% stronger they would be more resilient to casualties and if people become ill or injured."

Iraq oil pipeline sabotaged

A pipeline carrying crude oil to a refinery in Baghdad has been sabotaged only days after going back online following years of being the target of attack, the oil minister said on Wednesday.
"Yesterday (Tuesday) evening, criminals sabotaged the pipeline with a bomb at Rashidiya, north of the capital," Hussein al-Shahristani said.
The attack "interrupted transport, causing a reduction in refining at the Dora station from 100,000 barrels a day to 70,000 barrels," he added.
"Ministry teams are working to repair it, and we hope it will be able to function again in a few days."

Iraq expels 250 former Blackwater guards

The Iraqi interior minister said on Thursday he had expelled 250 ex-employees of the American security firm Blackwater, whose guards were charged with killing unarmed civilians in Baghdad.
"We have sent an order to 250 former Blackwater employees, who today are working with other security companies in Iraq, to leave the country in seven days and we have confiscated their residence permits," said Jawad Bolani.
"All of those concerned were notified four days ago and so they have three days to leave. This decision was made in connection with the crime that took place at Nisur Square."
Bolani was referring to an incident at the busy Baghdad square in September 2007, when five guards employed by Blackwater were accused of killing 14 unarmed Iraqis in a gun and grenade attack, and wounding 18 others.
The case has become a running sore among the Iraqi population and uproar was sparked last year when a US judge dismissed charges against the guards, ruling that US prosecutors violated their rights by using incriminating statements they had made under immunity during a State Department probe.
US Vice President Joe Biden, during a trip to Baghdad last month, expressed his "personal regret" at the incident and said the American government would appeal the case.
The Baghdad government maintains that 17 people were killed by the guards, who were part of a convoy of armoured vehicles.
Blackwater Worldwide changed its name to Xe Services in February 2009, following what the company said was a switch of business focus.
However, critics suggested that the rebranding was an effort to polish an image tarnished by an alleged culture of lawlessness and lack of accountability among Blackwater staff.
In December, the New York Times reported that Blackwater took part in Central Intelligence Agency "snatch and grab" missions to capture or kill insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The North Carolina-based firm lost its contract to provide security for US embassy diplomats in Baghdad in May 2009 after Iraqis and critics repeatedly accused it of adopting a cowboy mentality to duties in the country.
Only days earlier the Iraqi government said it was considering lodging its own complaint against Blackwater to seek compensation for the families of the victims.
The admissibility of such a case, however, was doubted because all of the families except one had previously agreed damages from Xe, according to a lawyer injured in the incident.
The lawyer, Hassan Jabbar Salman, said the families of those killed were offered 100,000 dollars (73,000 euros) and those wounded received between 20,000 and 50,000 dollars from the US security firm.

American soldier dies in Iraq

The U.S. military says an American soldier has died in Iraq of injuries unrelated to combat.

A military statement says the soldier from United States Forces-Iraq died on Wednesday. The name of the soldier is being withheld pending notification of next of kin.

Thursday's statement also says the incident is under investigation. It provided no further details.

The death raises to at least 4,376 the number of U.S. military personnel who have died in Iraq since the war began in March 2003. That's according to an Associated Press count.

Iraqi Who Worked for Reuters Is Freed by U.S.

An Iraqi freelance photographer who worked for Reuters has been released by the United States military after 17 months in detention in Iraq, the news agency reported Wednesday. The Iraqi, Ibrahim Jassam, was reunited with his family after his release.

“How can I describe my feelings?” Mr. Jassam told Reuters by telephone. “This is like being born again.”

Mr. Jassam was detained in September 2008 during a raid by Iraqi and United States forces on his home in the town of Mahmudiya, about 20 miles south of Baghdad, Reuters reported. The Iraqi Central Criminal Court ruled in December 2008 that there was insufficient evidence to hold him. But the United States military refused to release him, saying it was not bound by the ruling because intelligence reports indicated that he was a security threat.

Reuters has said it asked about the evidence against Mr. Jassam but was told it was classified. “I am very pleased his long incarceration without charge is finally over,” David Schlesinger, the editor in chief of Reuters, said in a statement. “I wish the process to release a man who had no specific accusations against him had been swifter.” The United States military confirmed Mr. Jassam’s release but refused to provide any information about his case.

“The intelligence evidence that we have on him remains classified,” said Lt. Col. Patricia Johnson, spokeswoman for United States military detainee operations in Iraq.

Under a United States-Iraq security pact, the American military is required to hand over thousands of detainees to Iraq. About 6,000 detainees in United States custody are still waiting to be turned over to the Iraqi authorities. Since the United States-led invasion of 2003, the military has detained a number of Iraqi journalists working for international news organizations. None has been convicted in an Iraqi court.

In April 2008, the military freed Bilal Hussein, an Associated Press photographer who was part of a team that received a 2005 Pulitzer Prize for spot news photography from Iraq. He was freed after a little more than two years in detention.

Iraq seeks return of $900 mln paid for French jets

Iraq is seeking the return of 651 million euros ($898 million) paid by Saddam Hussein's government for French Mirage fighters that were never delivered because of sanctions, a government spokesman said on Thursday.

Ali al-Dabbagh said talks with France's Dassault Aviation (AVMD.PA) and the French defence ministry for the return of the funds were positive, and Iraq was separately eyeing a possible purchase of an unspecified number of Mirage jets from Dassault.

"We want these funds returned. Simultaneously, we are in negotiations with the French for (the purchase of) Mirage F1s," Dabbagh said, adding that Iraq had not yet decided whether to buy jets from France or the United States.

An Iraqi committee was formed two months ago to negotiate the return of the deposit for jets ordered under Saddam, and Iraq expects the issue to be resolved this year, Dabbagh said.

Sanctions imposed on Iraq shortly after its invasion of Kuwait in 1990 prohibited arms sales to Baghdad, forcing the abandonment of its deal with Dassault for the fighter jets.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

In Northern Iraq, a Vote Seems Likely to Split

There was a hope, not long ago, that democracy would mean peace and stability for Nineveh, a place where cultures and armies have clashed since biblical times. Instead, democracy is hardening divisions — of people, of resources, of land — in ways that threaten the future of Iraq itself.

Last year’s election of a new provincial governor and council spawned political deadlock, inflamed by ethnic tensions. A boycott by a third of the council’s new members since last summer has crippled the government’s work at a time when Iraqis were promised that the elections would improve it.

Basic services remain meager, the economy feeble. The violence, though diminishing, is relentless, ravaging a crossroads of peoples and faiths in the plains where Arab Iraq meets the Kurdish mountains.

“This is the democracy the Americans brought,” said Hussein Mahmoud Ahmed, a Shabak, a member of a small minority group that occupies the plains.

It is a sentiment increasingly heard across Iraq as the country prepares to elect a new Parliament on March 7. The vote — only the country’s third since the American invasion in 2003 — is considered crucial to forging a unified, functioning democratic state. Here in Nineveh Province, though, as elsewhere, it is highlighting Iraq’s alarming fragmentation.

Lebanon is a model Iraqis often cite, a democracy that produces gridlock among ethnic and sectarian parties as divided before elections as after them, resulting in an ever tense political paralysis. Bosnia is another. When it comes to land and borders, disputed between the Arabs and the Kurdish regional government, the divisions are as intractable as those of Israelis and Palestinians.

When the federal government started to build a textile factory in Mr. Ahmed’s village, Bartallah, in a part of Nineveh controlled by the Kurds, the Kurdish regional government halted the project lest it create jobs for workers loyal to Mosul, the largely Arab provincial capital.

In Qaraqosh, the ownership of land is so fraught politically that the community council created a “black book” to register the name of any Christian who sold property to “an outsider.”

“We are living as doves among wolves,” said Staifo Jamil, a leader of a community council that represents Qaraqosh, a Christian town that lives in such fear that it mustered its own irregular militia to stand watch.

Iraq’s democracy is still young, and compared with those of other countries in the region, it remains the most competitive, if not exactly robust. Voter apathy and disillusionment, however, are already taking root. The election, delayed for months by bickering in Baghdad, has become a contest not of ideas as much as for advantage in the way the vote itself will be conducted and the parliamentary seats distributed.

The murky process to disqualify candidates with ties to Saddam Hussein’s Baath Party knocked out at least 10 candidates allied with the governor, Atheel al-Nujaifi, a Sunni who sought to restore Arab dominance in a still divided province. Among them was the mayor of Mosul, Zuhar al-Araji, who once worked closely with the American military.

Nineveh remains split, as it has since 2003, between Arab- and Kurdish-controlled regions. The tensions are so high that the American military this month joined troops from both sides to police the line of control along a series of new checkpoints.

Politicians on both sides on the line complain of restrictions when they campaign on the opposite side: harassment of candidates, pressure on parties, violence. When Mr. Nujaifi recently crossed the unofficial boundary on his way to Tall Kayf, his convoy was pelted with stones and tomatoes and briefly held up by Kurdish troops, the pesh merga. On Sunday evening a woman running with a secular coalition that includes Mr. Nujaifi and a former prime minister, Ayad al-Allawi, was shot to death outside her home in Mosul.

Mr. Nujaifi’s election last year raised hopes that the post-2003 disenfranchisement of Sunnis in Nineveh, which once fueled the insurgency, was coming to an end, and some measure of reconciliation would result.

That it has not is one reason that few interviewed here expressed hope that the coming election would result in anything better.

“Nothing is going to happen,” said Saleh Hassan Ali al-Jubouri, the mayor of Ash Shura, a town on the Arab side of the Tigris River not far from the ancient ruins of Kalhu, or Nimrud.

“We know which part belongs to the Kurds and which part to Nineveh,” he said, when asked how the results in March might affect the territorial dispute that has cleaved the province. He repeated, with evident disdain, “Nothing is going to happen.”

What is striking is how faithfully Iraqis expect to vote by identity, despite campaign appeals to national unity.

Issues — basic services, economic development, security — all seem to stem from identity as much as politics. “First ethnicity, second political party,” was how the leading Kurdish official here, Khasro Goran, put it.

The new Parliament will include 31 members from Nineveh, and Mr. Goran expects the main national Kurdish coalition to win 10 seats — based not on polls, but on the estimated percentage of Kurds in the province. Nineveh’s small minority communities — Yazidis, Shabaks and Christians — have dedicated parliamentary seats reserved for their representatives.

Mr. Goran, who has led the boycott of the provincial council, blames the governor and his party for the increasing bitterness, saying stability in Nineveh will come only with respect for minority parties, like his.

He also acknowledged that Nineveh’s border with the three officially recognized Kurdish provinces to the north is enmeshed in the impasse between the government of Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki and that of the Kurdish regional president, Massoud Barzani, over the extent of Iraq’s federalism. That, as much as the local disputes, has perpetuated Mr. Goran’s boycott. Becoming the loyal opposition in Nineveh might imply recognition of Mosul’s political authority over the whole region.

“Some of the problems are local, but others are Iraqi,” Mr. Goran said in the Kurdish regional capital, Erbil, referring to the disputes that plague Nineveh. “And we have to pay the price.”

Khalis Isho, a candidate from Qaraqosh vying to win one of the Christian seats in Parliament, said that the country’s political leaders had failed — failed to embrace democratic values of rights and representative government, failed to learn that elections are only one part of democracy.

“I don’t believe we will reduce the activities of the terrorists until the thinking in Iraq generally and in Mosul in particular improves,” he said, “until they understand that peace in Mosul means peaceful coexistence.”

Remote Iraq post outfitted with golf clubs

The soldiers serving at Joint Security Station Aqur Quf had a problem: They had a hitting mat and tens of thousands of golf balls, but only two clubs.
Thanks to the kindness of News Tribune readers, that’s not a problem anymore.

The donors are people such as Zoeanne Hondle of Tacoma, who sent numerous clubs and a hard-top bag. Vic Peterson of Tacoma shipped clubs including a Callaway Big Bertha, plus a note saying his distance record with the driver was 325 yards.

The newspaper ran a story Dec. 23 about the small outpost in western Baghdad province where soldiers from Joint Base Lewis-McChord take a break from the grind of their yearlong deployment by teeing off from the roof of the motor pool building.

But these Stryker soldiers from the 4th Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division had only two clubs, and both were woefully short.

Dozens of readers responded and shipped sets of clubs – old ones, new ones, cheap ones and expensive ones. They did it at their own expense so the soldiers could take golf swings in style.

“They’re great,” said Sgt. Christopher Bergevine, who works in the motor pool at Aqur Quf and is one of the outpost’s regular duffers.

The gifts also have become a tool of international relations. When the first batch of clubs arrived in early January, two Iraqi army officers appeared and received a crash course from their Lewis-McChord counterparts.

It all started shortly after the soldiers came to Aqur Quf in September. They discovered a shipping container with 50,000 golf balls and two clubs – the latter of which appear designed for shorter people. But they set up the driving mat and sent balls over the wire as a stress reliever.

“Sometimes the guys in the guard tower will radio the (tactical operations center),” Spc. Clois Seely told The News Tribune in December. “They’ll tell them, ‘The mechanics are throwing things at us again.’”

New shipments of clubs first arrived last month at the 4th Brigade public affairs office, a cozy room made even cozier by boxes of golf gear. Four full sets have already been sent to the soldiers at Aqur Quf, with additional sets distributed to the brigade’s other battalions across Baghdad province.

Boxes arrive almost daily. Brigade commander Col. John Norris plans to send thank-you notes and a certificate of appreciation to those who donated.

Thirteen boxes sat in the corner of the public affairs office Jan. 18, when Capt. Chris Ophardt and Spc. Luisito Brooks ripped into the packages to see what had arrived.

The first three boxes were from Zoeanne Hondle of Tacoma, who sent irons, woods, drivers and that hard-top bag. Vic Peterson mailed woods and irons, in addition to that long-yardage Big Bertha driver.

William Barton of Tacoma mailed a box of drivers. Gail Deason of Lakewood mailed irons and wooden drivers, including the not-often-seen 21/2- and 41/2-wood clubs.

Other boxes – donations from concerned readers in Tacoma, Lakewood, Bonney Lake, Steilacoom, Fox Island and elsewhere – still awaited opening.

Monday, February 8, 2010

South London groups slam Iraq inquiry

THE Iraq War inquiry is “powerless and pointless”, according to South London campaign groups.
Anti-war protesters have hit out at the Chilcot Enquiry because it doesn’t have the power to charge former Prime Minister Tony Blair as a war criminal.
Colin Wilson, of Stop the War Lambeth, said: “This inquiry is completely pointless.
"It has absolutely no power to challenge Blair on the terms in which he should be tried.
“Tony Blair should face legal proceeding at the International Court in The Hague.
"He has broken international law and therefore should be tried as a war criminal.”
The Chilcott Inquiry was launched last July 30 to identify lessons that can be learned from the Iraq conflict.
A report of the findings will be published this summer and its content debated in Parliament.
Campaigners also disputed Blair’s claim that the world was safer without Saddam Hussein.
Wandsworth Stop The War chairman John Clossick, who heckled Blair as he left the inquiry held at the QEII Conference Centre in London last Friday, said: “Blair said that if we had not removed Saddam in 2003 the world would be much more dangerous.
“But the Iraq War has turned virtually every country in the Middle East into a hot bed of terrorist activity.
“It has made it easy for militant groups to recruit young Muslims.
“Blair and Bush have increased the threat of global terrorism.”
But Mr Blair was unrepentant after being summoned last week, telling the inquiry panel he was right to go to war.
He said: “I have not a regret for removing Saddam Hussein. I think he was a monster.
"I think he threatened not just a region but the world.”
Prime Minster Gordon Brown is due to give evidence at the inquiry next month.

A Well-Written War, Told in the First Person

Brian Turner was focused on staying alive, not poetry, when he served as an infantry team leader in Iraq. But he quickly saw that his experience — “a year of complete boredom punctuated by these very intense moments” — lent itself to the tautness of verse.

The result was a collection called “Here, Bullet,” with a title poem inspired by Mr. Turner’s realization during combat patrols that he was bait to lure the enemy.

If a body is what you want,

then here is bone and gristle and flesh,

... because here, Bullet,

here is where the world ends, every time.

“Poetry was the perfect vehicle,” said Mr. Turner, who had a master’s in fine arts from the University of Oregon before joining the Army. “The page was the place where I could think about what had happened.”

Mr. Turner is a literal foot soldier in what might be called the well-written war: a recent outpouring of memoirs, fiction, poetry, blogs and even some readable military reports by combatants in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Soldier-writers have long produced American literature, from Ulysses S. Grant’s memoirs about the Civil War to Norman Mailer’s World War II novel, “The Naked and the Dead,” to Tim O’Brien’s “The Things They Carried,” about Vietnam.

The current group is different. As part of a modern all-volunteer force, they explore the timeless theme of the futility of war — but wars that they for the most part support. The books, many written as rites of passage by members of a highly educated young officer corps, are filled with gore, inept commanders and anguish over men lost in combat, but not questions about the conflicts themselves. “They look at war as an aspect of glory, of finding honor,” said Mr. O’Brien, who was drafted for Vietnam in 1968 out of Macalester College in St. Paul. “It’s almost an old-fashioned, Victorian way of looking at war.”

The writers say one goal is to explain the complexities of the wars — Afghan and Iraqi politics, technology, the counterinsurgency doctrine of protecting local populations rather than just killing bad guys — to a wider audience. Their efforts, embraced by top commanders, have even bled into military reports that stand out for their accessible prose.

“The importance of good official writing is so critical in reaching a broader audience to get people to understand what we’re trying to do,” said Capt. Matt Pottinger, a Marine and former reporter for The Wall Street Journal who is a co-author of the report “Fixing Intel,” an indictment of American intelligence-gathering efforts in Afghanistan released last month. “Even formal military doctrine is well served by a colloquial style of writing.”

The report, overseen by the top military intelligence officer in Afghanistan, Maj. Gen. Michael T. Flynn, is an anecdote-rich argument against intelligence officers who pursue secrets about insurgents but ignore data for winning the war right in front of them — local economics, village politics and tribal power brokers. The report compares the American war in Afghanistan to a political campaign, “albeit a violent one,” and observes, “To paraphrase former Speaker of the House Thomas P. ‘Tip’ O’Neill’s famous quote, ‘all counterinsurgency is local.’ ”

Another report, an unreleased Army history about the battle of Wanat in July 2008 — the “Black Hawk Down” of Afghanistan — unfolds in stiffer prose but builds a strong narrative. Written by Douglas R. Cubbison, a military historian at the Army’s Combat Studies Institute at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., the draft report lays bare the failures of an American unit to engage the local population in a village in eastern Afghanistan — “these people, they disgust me,” one soldier is quoted as saying — and graphically tells the story of the firefight that killed nine Americans.

Most of the writing by combatants has been memoirs that bear witness to battles of their own. Craig M. Mullaney, a former Ranger and Army captain, writes in “The Unforgiving Minute” of a 2003 ambush on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border that killed one of his men, Pfc. Evan W. O’Neill.

“Small-caliber rounds dented the Humvees around me, but it was strangely silent, as if someone had pressed the mute button. ... All I could remember were those eyes, glacial-blue, like my brother’s. There’s no way O’Neill’s dead. This wasn’t a game or an exercise or a movie; these were real soldiers with real blood and real families waiting back home. What had I done wrong?”

Mr. Mullaney, who has left the Army and is now a Pentagon official handling policy for Central Asia, said he wrote his book in part as catharsis, and as a way of telling Private O’Neill’s parents what had happened to their son. “I had a lot of ghosts I was still wrestling with,” he said. “I thought by writing I could make some sense of this jumble of experiences and memories and doubts and fears.”

Nathaniel C. Fick, a former Marine officer who wrote of taking heavy fire during the 2003 invasion of Iraq in “One Bullet Away,” had his own troubles coming home. Mr. Fick, now the chief executive of the Center for a New American Security, a military research group in Washington, also appears in Evan Wright‘s book (and the HBO miniseries) “Generation Kill,” based on Mr. Wright’s experience as a Rolling Stone reporter embedded with Mr. Fick’s platoon.

Mr. Fick, a Dartmouth graduate who applied to graduate school after leaving the Marines, describes getting a call from an admissions officer.

“ ‘Mr. Fick, we read your application and liked it very much. But a member of our committee read Evan Wright’s story about your platoon in Rolling Stone. You’re quoted as saying, “The bad news is, we won’t get much sleep tonight; the good news is, we get to kill people.” ’ She paused, as if waiting for me to disavow the quote. I was silent, and she went on .... ‘Could you please explain your quote for me?’ ...

“ ‘You mean, will I climb your clock tower and pick people off with a hunting rifle?’

“It was her turn to be silent.

“ ‘No, I will not. Do I feel compelled to explain myself to you? I don’t.’ ”

Other books started as soldier blogs, at least before commanders shut them, among them “My War” by Colby Buzzell, a former machine gunner in Iraq. Another soldier’s blog, shut by the Army in 2008 but to be published as a book in April, is “Kaboom: Embracing the Suck in a Savage Little War,” by Matt Gallagher, a former Army officer in Iraq.

There are far fewer books by women, but one of them, “Love My Rifle More than You” by Kayla Williams, an Arabic-speaking former sergeant in a military intelligence company, is particularly critical of the military. (Ms. Williams writes of how she was instructed to verbally humiliate a naked Iraqi prisoner in Mosul.)

So far there are relatively few novels, although “The Mullah’s Storm” by Tom Young, a flight engineer in the Air National Guard, is to be published in the fall. The story is about a soldier shot down in Afghanistan.

Mr. O’Brien, whose own memoir, “If I Die in a Combat Zone, Box Me Up and Ship Me Home,” was published in 1973, said that the dearth of novels did not surprise him. His first war novel, “Going After Cacciato,” was not published until 1978. “The Things They Carried” was published in 1990. Soldiers need more time to explore “what happened inside,” Mr. O’Brien said — suggesting that the flow of their war books will not stop anytime soon.

Iraqi PM: Appeals panel can review election law

BAGHDAD -- Iraq's prime minister says he accepts an appeals panel's jurisdiction over a ban on candidates from March 7 parliamentary elections for their suspected ties to Saddam Hussein's regime.

The seven-member panel is combing through a list of candidates barred from the election.

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki had pushed for the ban, and his decision Monday to leave the candidates' appeals in the court rather than let parliament rule on the issue in an emergency session is seen as a concession.

The issue has threatened to hurt the credibility of a vote officials hope could be a milestone in the country's democratic evolution.

The ban initially affected about 450 candidates, but most were replaced by their parties or dropped out.

Iraq - Foreign Minister Receives Ambassador of the Czech Republic in Baghdad

His Excellency Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari received in his office this afternoon 7th .Feb.2010 Ambassador of the Czech Republic in Baghdad Ms. Bronislava Tomasova , and conveyed the appreciation of Czech Deputy Prime Minister – Foreign Minister Jan Kohout for the hospitality by the Iraqi Government during his last visit to Baghdad in October and the results of this visit .

Minister Zebari pointed to the importance of developing bilateral relations between the two countries, stressing on the importance of participation of the Observers in the elections which will be held in Iraq, the Ambassador expressed her country’s intention to send Observers in the European Mission to supervise the elections in several Iraqi Cities. Also sent a formal invitation from Czech Foreign Minister to his Excellency to visit Czech Republic at a date to be agreed later and also expressed the readiness of the Czech Foreign Ministry to hold a course to develop Diplomatic expertise for the Ministry’s Staff.

Marines quietly wrap up ops in Iraq

By mid-February, Marines will be out of Iraq.

After almost seven years of bloodshed, 850 Marines killed in action and a pedigree of hard-won victories that toppled Saddam Hussein’s regime, propped up a new government and quelled a tenacious insurgency, Col. Scott Aiken’s boots will be among the very last in the sand.

But before he can step on a flight home, Aiken must lead Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force – Responsible Drawdown and coordinate shipment of thousands of pieces of remaining equipment and Marines out of Iraq.

In late January, Maj. Gen. Richard Tryon, the Marine commander in Iraq, transferred authority over Anbar province to the Army’s 1st Armored Division, which also oversees Baghdad. The ceremony in Ramadi leaves the Corps without an area of operations in Iraq and marks an official end to the Corps’ large-scale commitment in the country.

All remaining U.S. combat troops are slated to withdraw from Iraq by August, President Obama said during his State of the Union address Jan. 27. The only Marines who will continue to operate there include a handful of embedded trainers, the Marine Security Guard detachment at the U.S. embassy and limited administrative staff in Baghdad.

With combat operations in Iraq over for the Corps, the mission is now a logistical one. As of Feb. 3, about 900 Marines and just a few thousand pieces of equipment remained, and those numbers continue to plummet daily.

“Getting people to go home is the easy part,” Aiken said. “But getting them to go home correctly takes a little more finessing. You only have one time to do it right.”

Aiken, an infantry officer who has commanded the II Marine Expeditionary Force Forward Headquarters Group in Iraq for almost a year, describes the process as something more complicated than bubble wrap, boxes and moving trucks. In a three-pronged approach, equipment must be accounted for and shipped to various locations. Personnel must be logged, scheduled for flights and tracked as they ship out. And facilities at Al Asad Air Base must be cleaned and prepped for the airmen and soldiers who will take over.

Adding to the job’s complexity, equipment ranging from behemoth trucks to minuscule radio components must be rated as “in need of repair” or “suitable for use” and directed to the U.S. or Afghanistan. So far, almost 16 million pounds of gear have been flown to Afghanistan. About 25 percent of what still remains may also be flown there as Marines intensify their fight against the Taliban.

Still, Aiken said he is confident he will meet his February deadline.

The number of personnel will drop off by the hundreds “as flights come and go,” he said by phone from Al Asad Air Base on Jan. 22. “It has been surprisingly smooth so far, and we’ve been hitting the deadlines right on.”

In fact, the number of Marines left in Iraq could drop to just 600 by early February, he predicted.

That’s a drop in the bucket compared to the more than 20,000 Marines who operated in Anbar province during that war’s most violent years. Mayhem reigned there from 2004 to 2007 when Marines clashed with insurgents regularly, highlighted by epic battles in Fallujah and Ramadi.

Now, just one infantry unit remains. Third Battalion, 24th Marines, a Reserve battalion based in St. Louis, Mo., arrived in September primarily to conduct convoy security, guard border crossings and train Iraqi troops. They have not fired a shot in anger since arriving and have been hit by only one improvised explosive device, which caused no injuries.

When the last piece of gear has been packed and properly labeled, Aiken’s unit will be the last to leave the country, something he called a privilege.

“For me, I would say that it is definitely an honor to be among the last few out. I’m proud of our efforts since we’ve been in Iraq,” he said, citing security improvements since his first deployment to the country in 2005 as commander of 2nd Battalion, 6th Marines.

“We have lost fine Marines and sailors out here, but given the people of western Iraq a fine chance to carry on here.”

Friday, February 5, 2010

Blast Strikes Shiite Pilgrims in Iraq

At least two explosions tore through crowds marching to the burial place of Shiite Islam’s most revered martyr Friday in the culmination of ritual mourning that has drawn millions to the holy city of Karbala in one of the world’s largest pilgrimages. At least 27 people were killed and dozens more were wounded.

There was a sense of fatalism to the attacks, one of dozens this week on pilgrims that the Shiite-led government grimly predicted but was powerless to stop. The killings have underlined the meaning of the pilgrimage: a religious ceremony to commemorate Imam Hussein, the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad whose death in the battlefield in Karbala in 680 gave Shiite Muslims an ethos of suffering, martyrdom and resistance.

“They think these explosions can stop us from marching,” said Muhaned Shaker, a 27-year-old pilgrim, “but if I die today in an explosion that will be a gift from God.”

Interior Ministry officials said a suicide car bomb had detonated at the Peace Bridge a few miles east of the city, tearing through a crowd so tight that people were standing shoulder to shoulder. Moments later, a mortar shell exploded nearby, killing and wounding more pilgrims as they frantically fled the scene. In the chaotic aftermath, officials said the crowds rendered rescuers almost helpless to treat the wounded.

The attacks came amid a stubborn crisis over the disqualifications of hundreds of candidates from Iraq’s parliamentary elections in March for ties to the Baath Party of former President Saddam Hussein.

An appeals court decided Wednesday to delay their appeals until after the vote, effectively restoring their candidacies. But since then, Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki and other Shiite leaders have called the court’s decision illegal and insisted that the disqualifications go forward, casting politics into more tumult.

The dispute has taken a personal turn, with Mr. Maliki complaining in a statement late Thursday of intervention in the crisis by the United States ambassador, Christopher R. Hill. He said his government would not allow Mr. Hill “to exceed his diplomatic duties.”

Philip Frayne, an American Embassy spokesman, defended Mr. Hill’s role as appropriate. “Ambassador Hill has been doing what any diplomat normally does, offering his government’s views on issues that could affect American interests,” Mr. Frayne said. “That is not going beyond the bounds of acceptable diplomacy.”

American officials and the United Nations have played a crucial role in trying to solve the complicated dispute over the candidacies.

The issue of Baathists has become incendiary in the campaign for the March 7 vote, with religious Shiite candidates competing with one another in proving their anti-Baathist credentials to a constituency that suffered dearly under Mr. Hussein’s rule. Iraqi law has also proved unhelpful in ending the dispute, as there is no precedence for resolving who has the final say on candidate disqualifications.

In the attacks near Karbala, the Interior Ministry said 27 people were killed and 75 wounded. Officials in Karbala put the toll at 40 killed and more than 150 wounded, although they acknowledged the difficulty in determining precise numbers amid the chaos.

Friday was the observance of Arbaeen, the 40th day after Imam Hussein’s death. Banned under Mr. Hussein’s government, the pilgrimage has flourished in the years since the American-led invasion in 2003. This year, city officials estimated that 10 million people journeyed to the gold-domed shrine in Karbala. Security officials put the number higher, at 11 million, and clerics insisted it was even more.

By custom, pilgrims walk to the shrine, carrying green, red and black flags and sometimes traveling hundreds of miles over days. Occasionally, pilgrims choose to walk barefoot. The sheer numbers have given the region around Karbala a cinematic quality, as people clamber through date groves and surge through the streets in one of the world’s largest voluntary movements of people.

Along the way, volunteers have set up tents for the weary, offering a dish known as hareesa, a stew of lamb and beans, bananas, oranges, cakes, cookies, tea, juice and soda. According to tradition, residents open their houses to travelers to rest and sleep.

Security officials have banned most vehicles from the city, and witnesses reported that crowds were lined up for miles beyond Karbala’s three entrances.

United States military officials said as of Thursday, insurgents had carried out 35 attacks against pilgrims, fewer than the 54 last year and far below the more than 180 in 2007. But as in past bombings, survivors directed their anger at the police and soldiers for failing to stop the attacks and blamed the election crisis for diverting politicians’ attention.

“The explosions are just for the elections so they can say that this party or that party failed to protect the people,” said one pilgrim, Abbas Nasser. “We know the game.”

About 30,000 troops and police officers have been deployed to protect the pilgrims, who in past years have been the object of attacks by insurgents bent on sowing sectarian strife. On Monday, a female suicide bomber with explosives hidden under her garment killed at least 38 people on the outskirts of Baghdad, many of them marching to Karbala. Another bombing Wednesday, just miles from the shrine, killed at least 20 people.

Election Panel Puts Off Start of Iraq Parliament Races

Iraq’s independent elections commission announced Thursday that the parliamentary elections campaign, scheduled to start Sunday, would be postponed for five days, as confusion reigned over an appeals court decision that overturned a ban on hundreds of candidates.

The campaign for the March 7 elections will now begin Feb. 12, said Qassim al-Obudi, a spokesman for the elections commission, to give officials time to try to determine which candidates are eligible to be on the ballots.

The decision appeared to deepen Iraq’s political crisis, as the speaker of Parliament called an emergency session to debate the court ruling and election officials appealed to Iraq’s Supreme Court for guidance.

Iraqi officials said some lawmakers had even begun discussing the possibility of postponing the elections until the candidates’ eligibility was resolved. That may prove problematic; the election has long been viewed as a milestone in the United States’ plans to withdraw combat troops from Iraq by the end of August.

The tumult followed the appeals court decision on Wednesday, which effectively allowed more than 500 candidates who were disqualified last month by a government commission to take part in the election. They had been accused of promoting the Baath Party of former President Saddam Hussein.

Technically, the court decided that the candidates’ status should be determined after the election, in what could be the makings of another crisis. “This doesn’t solve the crisis; it postpones it indefinitely,” said Hadi al-Ameri, a leading Shiite lawmaker who has tried to help mediate the dispute.

Many Iraqi politicians, along with foreign diplomats, have been pushing for a resolution to the dispute, saying the elections could lack credibility if hundreds of candidates were excluded.

Confusion over the appeals court’s decision led Faraj al-Haidari, the head of the Independent High Electoral Commission, to question whether it was binding.

“We sent the Supreme Court an urgent letter asking if we have to adhere to the appeals court decision,” Mr. Haidari said in an interview. “The appeals court neither found them guilty nor declared them innocent, which puts it in contradiction with the electoral law.”

Ali al-Dabbagh, a spokesman for the government of Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, declared the ruling “illegal and unconstitutional.”

The latest escalation in the dispute over who is permitted to run in the elections has unsettled the political landscape. Iraqi law remains untested and perhaps bereft of mechanisms to reach a solution just a month before the vote.

“I know what is happening today, but no one knows what’s going to happen tomorrow,” said Omar al-Mashhadani, a spokesman for Parliament’s speaker, Ayad al-Samarrai.

Mr. Maliki has requested an emergency session of Parliament on Sunday, Iraqi state television reported. Mr. Samarrai agreed to call the session, and in turn asked for an emergency meeting of Iraq’s leadership on Friday or Saturday.

Reactions to the court’s decision to overturn the ban on candidates predictably broke along political and sectarian lines on Thursday.

Former Prime Minister Ayad Allawi, whose main ally, Saleh al-Mutlaq, a Sunni leader, was among those barred, warned about the possibility that some candidates might still be disqualified. “The country will go into severe turmoil, I’m sure. It will cause a backlash,” he said in an interview.

Many critics of the ban viewed it as an attempt to marginalize secular and Sunni opponents of Iraq’s religious Shiite parties, including Mr. Maliki’s. Some leaders and voters had threatened to boycott the elections if officials went ahead with the ban, recalling the election in 2005, when many Sunnis refused to vote.

Religious Shiite leaders accused the appeals court of buckling to what they described as outside pressure, in particular from the United States.

Allowing the candidates to run in the elections “is a badge of shame on the forehead of the government,” Moktada al-Sadr, a radical Shiite cleric, said in a statement. “I am hopeful that the Iraqi people will not allow their return and their participation in a political process thought to be democratic.”

Iraqi legal experts defended the court’s decision to postpone the determinations of the candidates’ eligibility, calling it constitutional, and said election officials should respect the ruling. “The appeals court didn’t find the candidates who were included in the procedures innocent yet,” said Tariq Harb, a prominent lawyer. “It just delayed its decision.”

But Mr. Ameri, the Shiite lawmaker, said the ruling, by postponing decisions on eligibility until after the elections, could deepen the political crisis. Like others, he wondered whether lawmakers could actually be unseated after they had won elections, and, if so, what branch of the government would unseat them.

Iraq war means a new batallion of lost souls bunkered down in suburban homes

ANGUS Sim draws deep breaths. He warns, as he tells his story, that he is becoming worked up.

He looks like most modern young warriors, built strongly and emblazoned with heavy ink. He shifts between tears and rage.

For Sim, the quiet streets of Sunbury, in Melbourne's northern outskirts, may as well be filled with hidden home-made bombs, snipers and trucks being prepared for suicide bomb missions.

Sim, 24, returned from Iraq in June 2005 after serving with the Brisbane-based infantry battalion, 6RAR.

He was involved in four incidents that would separately, and cumulatively, damage him profoundly.

His energy has nowhere to evaporate. Time bomb or loose cannon, take your pick.

Sim doesn't like people much. "I got back to Sunbury after Iraq," he said. "I had a girlfriend and I broke up with her. It turned nasty. I got called a 'psycho from Iraq' and this sort of stuff. People don't understand. But the Australian people need to understand."

Sim likes his memories even less. The need for hyper-vigilance after being assigned to the security detachment, or SecDet, guarding Australian embassy staff within Baghdad's red zone - the uncontrolled, dangerous part of that city - stays with him.

Sim has post-traumatic stress disorder, a condition the military once regarded with scepticism.

PTSD sufferers were seen as bludgers looking for compo.

The military now accepts the reality of PTSD.

But who could blame the public for not understanding Sim's pain? This Government, like the previous one, has kept a tight leash on all information from Iraq and Afghanistan.

Defence drip-feeds abbreviated information about Australians wounded or killed in conflict, and has even less to say on the mentally damaged.

Just like Vietnam, a new battalion of lost souls is bunkered down in suburban homes, haunted by intrusive images of carnage.

The Federal Government claims it is trying harder with mental health issues and has promised $83 million over the next four years to implement the recommendations of Prof David Dunt, who last year produced two Australian Defence Force reports on improving mental health.

BUT they have done nothing to help the Australian public cushion the landing for returning soldiers.

Public knowledge of Iraq and Afghanistan has been mostly limited to wives and babies kissing camouflaged homecoming soldiers.

Sim doesn't like it. Most soldiers don't.

They feel their service is undervalued.

Sim has an inbuilt bull detection meter. It's set to maximum. "I'm safe, but I got a short fuse and a bad temper," he said. "People just annoy me. On Anzac Day a few years ago, there was this guy at the pub telling me he was SAS. I questioned him and his story didn't add up.

"I finished my beer and slammed the glass into his face. He was lying. He was showing no respect. And I'd do it again."

These days, Sim has almost totally withdrawn.

He feels safer indoors and knows he is less of a threat to others there. "I don't really go out much any more," he said.

"I stay around here. I might as well be in jail. I avoid situations, I suppose."

It's hard to believe these are the comments of a man who, at 24, should be just starting out on his working life. He feels Australia did the right thing in going to Iraq, but says his country used him, then threw him out without preparing him for normal life.

"My debrief from Iraq was with one psychiatrist, for half an hour, in Iraq," he said. "I had some real dramas. I hit the drugs pretty hard. I'd never touched them in my life. I was 19. The last year I was in the army I was doing drugs every weekend. You name it - speed, ice, ecstasy, acid.

"I went off the rails. It just took me away from everything. It was just a way of dealing with it. Not the right way, I know. And I was drinking a fair bit, too.

"It's just disappointing. I hate this country now. Well, I don't hate it, but f------ hell, we're soldiers going over to do a bit of good for the world. We didn't just look for terrorists. We were trying to bring some peace to Iraq.

"And I think we achieved that. We helped them get their first election up."

Sim is discharged, classified TPI - totally and permanently incapacitated.

He likes cooking for his fiancee, Jess, and he likes his widescreen TV.

NOT much else. "I'm always on guard, high strung and on edge. If I'm in bed and Jess comes home, I'll wake up ready to kill her," he said.

"We hooked up a year ago. We fight - had a doozy the other night. But she's good, she's caring. She understands, as much as she can."

The sense around Australia's veteran community is that PTSD numbers from Iraq and Afghanistan are creeping above 10 per cent, though delayed onset means that number will only grow.

We know now why those who served in World Wars I and II rarely talked about their wars. They couldn't talk about them. Many were undiagnosed PTSD sufferers.

On January 19, 2005, a truck laden with explosives attempted to ram the Australian embassy compound. Sim was blown out of his bed, but, like the other Australian soldiers guarding the vicinity, he was unhurt.

Several Iraqi civilians were killed. The bomb was followed by a secondary device and sniper fire.

"That woke us up and told us we were in Baghdad," said Sim. His detachment became renowned for the number of events it faced in the first half of 2005.

A WEEK after the embassy attack, Sim and others stopped a vehicle. "This bloke, a civilian, was pissed and staggering around," he said. "We looked in his van and he had drums in the back. We didn't take any risks, we shot him.

"One of my mates did, shot him four times.

"Turned out it was only some barrels of petrol, no detonators. It was silly of him the way he was acting. His missus was all upset."

Now it's Sim, recounting this story, who's upset.

The next day, Australia Day, an Australian light-armoured vehicle was hit by a suicide car bomber on the road to the airport.

Sim's detachment arrived at the scene minutes later.

"I don't now how no one died. One guy had serious facial wounds, he lost his nose. We skull-dragged the vehicles back to the nearest base, which was American, and I had to clean the vehicles of (the suicide bomber's) body pieces.

"There was skin all over our vehicles. I found a bit of his spine and had to pull his foot out of the exhaust system. I got all the flesh, put it in the bin. A few of our boys were sent to (hospital in) Germany."

By then, everyone in SecDet was on edge. The next incident affected Sim more than the others.

"These civilians were driving up the road," he said. "We had night-vision goggles. They didn't stop. One of the boys opened fire with a burst of machinegun. One bullet hit a female passenger in the head. She was sitting in the front seat.

"A little kid in the back got hit with glass in his eye, lost his eye. It was just a family. That just plays on me. It wasn't me who shot him. We donated a heap of money to try and fix his eyesight, but he ended up losing his eye. The mum didn't die. I think she had brain damage. We went to hospital to see them, tried to do the right thing."

SIM'S mental health care on return was two weeks' stress leave.

"The help was crap," he says. "I just said to myself, 'I'll deal with this.' I dealt with it until I couldn't deal with it any more. I have bad days, bad months, still.

"It's not as bad as when I tried to keep it all in. I thought I was going crazy. And in a way I was.



"The biggest kick in the a--- was when we got back, the way we were handled.

"We should have gone straight into a debriefing program. If you want help, you should be able to get it."

The Department of Veterans' Affairs pays for Sim's medication and psychiatric help, but only after he was admitted to hospital for suicide attempts.

He wants it known he is only speaking out so other soldiers might benefit.

An estimated 36,000 Australians have served in Iraq and Afghanistan.

John Vincent, of the Totally and Permanently Incapacitated Veterans Association says 30 per cent of those who serve in conflicts will develop some form of PTSD.

Clinton 'heartened' by Iraq move to reinstate candidates

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Friday she is "heartened" by an Iraqi decision to reinstate Sunni candidates and urged all parties to do nothing to undermine the legitimacy of elections.
"We were heartened by the decision earlier this week to reverse the deletion of the 500 names from the list for the upcoming election," Clinton told reporters.
An appeals panel ruled Wednesday in Baghdad that more than 500 candidates barred from Iraq's March 7 general election could stand after all. They were allegedly linked to former dictator Saddam Hussein.
But Iraq's premier Nuri al-Maliki convened parliament for Sunday to debate what his government branded an "illegal" decision to reinstate candidates with alleged links to ousted dictator Saddam Hussein.
The chief US diplomat said she wanted to make sure the election is free and fair.
"We do very much encourage all the parties ...in Iraq to ensure that nothing is done that undermines the legitimacy of this election," Clinton said.
Clinton's spokesman Philip Crowley on Thursday gave a similar reaction to the latest developments in Baghdad.

At last! Have they finally found a 'weapon of mass destruction' in Iraq?

They have been searching in Iraq for the past nine years, 10 months and 15 days.

Today, the hard work finally paid off as soldiers found one of those elusive ‘weapons of mass destruction’ that Saddam Hussein was supposed to have been hiding.

So is it all round to Tony Blair's house for celebratory drinks?

Unfortunately the discovery came just a few days late for the former prime minister, who could have used the extraordinary find as proof he was right about Iraq all along during the Chilcot Inquiry.

But from the looks of the rocket, it would appear unlikely it could be deployed anywhere in 45 minutes, let alone be fired at the UK, as a certain dossier led us to believe.

The bomb is thought to have been buried by Saddam Hussein's regime before the UK and U.S. invasion of Iraq started in 2003.

Iraqi guards were as surprised as the rest of us to discover the 'missile' during an operation in Baghdad's Abu Ghraib suburb.

It is not yet known whether the seven-metre rocket is armed with a warhead.