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Sweejak wrote:Actually I'd be ok with a do over if I were so presumptuous to intrude into their affairs, but then wouldn't the 'reformers' run the risk of being defeated and forever tagged as being the 'Gucci Revolutionaries'?
"Creative destruction is our middle name"-- Ledeen. And doesn't Mousavi have some relationship with Ledeen. Pretty tenuous but it's there.
I don't think they care right now, they just want to upset the game board. I think the US interest is about surrounding Russia, controlling oil and the regular imperial concerns. Oh, and then there is Israel and their wishes, which are quite clear.
Iraq insurgents kill nine police
Insurgents have shot dead nine police in Iraq's two most populous cities of Baghdad and Mosul, police and government officials said on Sunday.
Four policemen were shot dead by gunmen while on patrol on Saturday in separate incidents in the predominantly Sunni Arab Baghdad district of Jamiya on Saturday, while another two were killed in clashes between insurgents and security forces on Sunday in the same neighbourhood.
"All (four) were killed by insurgents carrying pistols with silencers who passed nearby, opened fire, and fled immediately," a police official told AFP of Saturday's incidents.
Also in Baghdad on Sunday, two policemen on patrol were killed and one other wounded by gunmen in Ghazaliyah, another Sunni neighbourhood in west Baghdad, an official said.
In the main northern city of Mosul, meanwhile, insurgents using pistols with silencers killed another policeman on Sunday, a local police official said.
A roadside bomb targeting police in the city also killed a civilian and wounded three people, one of them a policeman, the official added.
Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has warned that insurgent groups and militias could exploit the planned withdrawal of US forces from built-up areas by the end of the month to step up attacks in a bid to undermine confidence in Iraqi security forces.
During 2006 and 2007, when sectarian violence blighted much of Iraq, police officers commonly wore masks while on duty because they feared for their safety.
Violence has dropped markedly in recent months, with the lowest Iraqi death toll since the 2003 invasion reported in May. But attacks remain common, particularly in Baghdad and Mosul.
... because the nation ruled by the unworthy rulers still must be defended from its many enemies.
sunny wrote:Once again, I feel like a Kremlinologist, trying to decipher the US's true strategy/desires here. I can't figure out if they actually want Mousavi installed so the economy will be 'liberalized' to let Western corporations come in and rape resources in peace, or if they want Ahmadinejad to remain so that not only can he continue being "Hitler", but the crisis and turmoil has the potential to spiral out of control to the point US/Israel intervention is called for. Maybe it's something in between, something I can't even imagine.
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