Saturday, March 29, 2008

YAHOO: DEATH TOLL RISES IN BAGHDAD FIGHTING

While FOX NEWS, CNN and MSNBC saturate the airwaves with endless reports about Hillary, Obama and McCain, the situation in Iraq is going from bad to worse and the so-called cable news organizations don't give a damn.

How in the world can FOX NEWS, CNN and MSNBC call themselves "news organizations" when all they do is rehash endlessly the same crap about Hillary, Obama and McCain while ignoring the war in Iraq where 160,000 young AMERICANS are now being drawn into the sectarian violence that has erupted all across Iraq?

FOX NEWS, CNN and MSNBC are nothing more than propaganda outlets for the DNC and RNC and not worthy of the title of being "news organizations."

Sadly, the American public are being given the shaft by FOX NEWS, CNN and MSNBC because all three news organizations are run by corporations that have divisions that are in the defense industry and are making a ton of money off the war in Iraq and they don't want it to end, nor do they even want to report on events in IRAQ.

Editorial comment by BILL CORCORAN, editor of CORKSPHERE, the blog that is not in the hands of corporations making money off the IRAQ war and we can tell the TRUTH about what is happening in IRAQ and not be muzzled by CEOs making a pile of money off the war.


The death toll rose above 130 after days of fighting in Baghdad where U.S. forces have been drawn deeper into an Iraqi government crackdown on militants loyal to Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.

By Peter Graff 56 minutes ago

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/iraq_dc;_ylt=Ao9pwRmdqcQLPhTkhyEIlnVX6GMA

U.S. forces said they had killed 48 militants in air strikes and gun battles across the capital on Friday.

A top Sadr aide said Sadr's representatives had met Iraq's highest Shi'ite religious authority, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, in an effort to end the violence. The Sadr aide, Salah al-Ubaidi, said Sistani called for a peaceful solution.

At least 133 bodies and 647 wounded have been brought to five hospitals in the eastern half of Baghdad over the past five days of clashes, the head of the health directorate for eastern Baghdad, Ali Bustan, said on Saturday.

Health workers say hospitals are overflowing and understaffed in the Sadr City slum, a vast stronghold of Sadr's followers, and a ring of Iraqi and U.S. forces around the area makes it impossible to evacuate the wounded.

More than 300 people have been reported killed and many hundreds wounded in the five days of fighting across southern Iraq and Baghdad since Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki launched a crackdown on Sadr's followers in the southern city of Basra.

In Basra, Mehdi Army fighters controlled the streets, manning checkpoints and openly brandishing rifles, machine guns and rocket launchers.

Maliki has announced he will fight the militants in Basra "until the end." He issued orders to his commanders in Baghdad to pursue militants in the capital with "no mercy."

Washington says the crackdown is a sign the Iraqi government is serious about imposing its will and capable of acting on its own. But government forces have failed to drive Sadr's fighters from the streets.

U.S. forces described a number of gun battles in Baghdad including one in which they said they killed 10 gunmen who attacked a joint U.S.-Iraqi security station. The Americans have used helicopter gunships and artillery.

Mortar bombs and rockets have caused havoc in the capital all week. Strikes on the fortified Green Zone government and diplomatic compound forced the U.S. embassy to order staff to wear helmets and body armor.

A curfew is in place in Baghdad, closing shops, businesses and schools. Residents are confined to their homes in areas where there has been fighting.

RIFT
The conflict exposes a deep rift within Iraq's majority Shi'ite community, between the political parties in Maliki's government who control the security forces and Sadr's followers who in many areas rule the streets.


Sistani almost never intervenes in politics. His views, if made public, would carry authority among Shi'ites in Sadr's movement and in the political parties that support Maliki.

A spokesman for Sistani in Beirut declined to say whether Sistani was involved in any initiative to stop the fighting.

At one house in Basra, walls were shattered and blood poured into a sewer. Grieving relatives said seven people had been killed in what they believed was an air strike that morning.

A spokesman for British forces said there were no air strikes on Saturday but there had been earlier this week.
The air strikes require U.S. or British teams on the ground to direct them, indications that Western involvement has been growing in what so far has been an Iraqi-led operation.


A main British force of 4,100 troops, which pulled out of Basra in December, has remained on a base outside it and British officials have said they have no plans to retake the city.

Iraqi commanders say they have killed 120 fighters in Basra.

Maliki, who had initially given them 72 hours to surrender, extended the deadline until April 8 for the fighters to turn over weapons in return for cash. They remained defiant.

"We will fight on and never give up our weapons," Mehdi Army deputy military commander in Basra Abu Hassan al-Daraji told Reuters by telephone. "We will not turn over a single bullet."
Fighting has spread to other towns across the south.


Clashes were under way on the western outskirts of Kerbala, one of Shi'ite Islam's holiest cities.

The Iraqi commander in the province, Major-General Raad Jawdat, said his forces had killed 21 "outlaws" and arrested 50 others.

(Additional reporting by Wathiq Ibrahim and Waleed Ibrahim in Baghdad, Aref Mohammed in Basra and Khaled Farhan in Najaf; Editing by Robert Woodward)

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