hasan
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ok, thread came late ..
The attack on the city started about .. 3 days ago (well since longer, in reality, preparations and daily bombings has been going on for weeks)
for those who don't know anything, or have huge misonceptions (i.e. if you watch .. Fox .. all the time?) should read this:
http://www.islamonline.net/english/In_Depth/Iraq_Aftermath/2004/11/article_04.shtml
This is the second attempt to enter the city, the first one was last April, which ended by a defeat for the Amerians.
This is their coming back .. the second attempt.
Rage is now all over the place for Muslims .. and these are special religous nights for Muslims, I pray for Fallujah and the Mujahideen every night, and so do millions.
if you just know how I feel .. because I can't describe it. I had the same feelings during the beginning of the war in 2003.
I feel anger, sadness, rage, fury, but I also feel a confidence in victory. And I feel my faith growing stornger .. I also feel enthusiasm for Jihad.
anywayz, Americans are claiming they are gonna win in 2 days they already claim they have over %70 (or was it %75?) of the city.
Ofcourse with no press there -except the one embedded with the occupation forces- the americans can lie freely. especially with no Al Jazeera in the city; Al Jazeera has been banned since 3 monthes. I also expect the Americans threatened Al Jazeera to target thier crew if they go to Fallujah or something. Because last time, part of the cease fire agreement was that Al Jazeera correspondent leaves the city.
Among their claims, which are pretty much all lies, are: finding a slaughterhouse (rofl), Zarqawi fled the city (yeah, because he doesn't even exist), most of the mujahideen are tryng to negotiate surrender. etc.
ofcourse, in this time, %90 of the pupolation already fled the city by the time the attack started. there are probably still about 40,000 people there however. (if they didn't leave yet)
oh and btw, if you haven't done so yet, what are you waiting for?
READ THE ARTICLE!!!!!
go ahead and flame
edit: bolded some stuff in the article
The attack on the city started about .. 3 days ago (well since longer, in reality, preparations and daily bombings has been going on for weeks)
for those who don't know anything, or have huge misonceptions (i.e. if you watch .. Fox .. all the time?) should read this:
http://www.islamonline.net/english/In_Depth/Iraq_Aftermath/2004/11/article_04.shtml
This is the second attempt to enter the city, the first one was last April, which ended by a defeat for the Amerians.
This is their coming back .. the second attempt.
Rage is now all over the place for Muslims .. and these are special religous nights for Muslims, I pray for Fallujah and the Mujahideen every night, and so do millions.
if you just know how I feel .. because I can't describe it. I had the same feelings during the beginning of the war in 2003.
I feel anger, sadness, rage, fury, but I also feel a confidence in victory. And I feel my faith growing stornger .. I also feel enthusiasm for Jihad.
"And when the believers saw the allies, they said: This is what Allah and His Apostle promised us, and Allah and His Apostle spoke the truth; and it only increased them in faith and submission.
Among the believers are men who are true to the covenant which they made with Allah: so of them is he who accomplished his vow, and of them is he who yet waits, and they have not changed in the least"
anywayz, Americans are claiming they are gonna win in 2 days they already claim they have over %70 (or was it %75?) of the city.
Ofcourse with no press there -except the one embedded with the occupation forces- the americans can lie freely. especially with no Al Jazeera in the city; Al Jazeera has been banned since 3 monthes. I also expect the Americans threatened Al Jazeera to target thier crew if they go to Fallujah or something. Because last time, part of the cease fire agreement was that Al Jazeera correspondent leaves the city.
Among their claims, which are pretty much all lies, are: finding a slaughterhouse (rofl), Zarqawi fled the city (yeah, because he doesn't even exist), most of the mujahideen are tryng to negotiate surrender. etc.
ofcourse, in this time, %90 of the pupolation already fled the city by the time the attack started. there are probably still about 40,000 people there however. (if they didn't leave yet)
oh and btw, if you haven't done so yet, what are you waiting for?
READ THE ARTICLE!!!!!
By Firas Al-Atraqchi
Freelance Columnist
11/11/2004
As citizens of Fallujah start to bury their dead in makeshift burial grounds freshly dug in the outskirts of the city, it may be little comfort for them to know that the name of their city will go down in history.
Stalingrad and Warsaw during World War II, the Alamo in 1836, the Massada in 70 CE and Leipzig during the Thirty Years War are just some of the cities that have been besieged, starved or bombarded throughout history. All played key roles in the development of their respective countries’ histories and all are the basis of folk stories—and in some cases, Hollywood lore.
Fallujah is the latest addition.
Since April 2003, when US forces declared victory in invading and occupying Iraq and unseating its government, Fallujah has borne witness to a number of attacks which have killed hundreds of civilians, including women and children.
When one reviews the chronology of events concerning Fallujah in the North American press, one finds that the starting point of so-called “trouble” is usually March 2004, when four heavily-armed private defense contractors were killed and then publicly displayed in the streets of the city.
However, this is a gross misrepresentation of the events that shaped the city into the stronghold of resistance against a foreign occupation and does not delve into the reasons why such hatred and inhumanity was put on display in the case of the contractors.
The name of Fallujah, in reality, became a newspaper item on April 29, 2003 when dozens of Iraqi demonstrators were massacred by US troops. World press reports put the number of Iraqi dead at 20, with some 75 more wounded. At the time, US troops prevented medical assistance from reaching the wounded and claimed the demonstrators were armed and fired at US troops.
The killing and wounding of nearly 100 Iraqi civilians was cited as self-defense.
A day later, three more Iraqi civilians were killed and 16 wounded.
Human Rights Watch investigated the two incidents:
Significantly, Human Rights Watch did not find conclusive evidence of bullet damage on the school where U.S. soldiers were based during the first incident, placing into serious question the assertion that they had come under fire from individuals in the crowd. In contrast, the buildings across the street facing the school had extensive evidence of multi-caliber bullet impacts that were wider and more sustained than would have been caused by the “precision fire” with which the soldiers maintain they responded, leading to the civilian casualties that day. Witness testimony and ballistics evidence suggest that U.S. troops responded with excessive force to a perceived threat.
In the second incident on April 30, protesters admitted throwing rocks, and one broke the window of a U.S. military vehicle, injuring a soldier. But there was no clear evidence of shooting from the crowd, again suggesting that U.S. forces responded with disproportionate force.
Those incidents convinced Iraqis that all the talk of liberation and democracy was little more than a smokescreen for occupation and wholesale depletion of Iraq’s resources and manpower.
Last April, when US troops attempted to take the city, some 800 people were killed and more than 2000 wounded. Iraqi sources said that hundreds of civilians were killed in that assault—which ended when US forces were forced to retreat due to stiff resistance and an international outcry.
But US military sources scoffed at the reports of civilians dead. Liars, they called the people of Fallujah.
In late October, however, an independent website that routinely reports the civilian and military body counts in Iraq said the US siege of Fallujah last April caused the deaths of 600 civilians, including 300 children.
Press spokesman of Iraq Body Count (IBC) John Sloboda said data recently released to the public by the Iraqi Health Ministry had allowed IBC to resolve a problem they have been struggling with for months: “How to reconcile casualty figures reported by local doctors of 800 total dead with a much lower estimate, [280 dead] produced in short order by the Iraqi Health Ministry (IHM).”
More civilian deaths, more denials by the US military, and more wilful distortion of the facts on the ground by US media. An exercise in searching for a meagre mention of the IBC report in North American media would prove fruitless and frustrating.
In the period following the US military retreat from Fallujah, the city came under a near-nightly barrage of artillery and aerial assaults. Dozens of civilians were killed and maimed, but US media continued to ignore the carnage inflicted on the civilian population of the city.
While Arab television stations from Mauritania to Oman showed—once again—near-nightly video of children being pulled from under the rubble of destroyed buildings, blood-stained hospitals filled with the miniature carcasses of eight- and nine-year-old children and their mothers, and the desperate wails of parents forced to bury their young, US media continued to use the catchphrases “US forced target insurgents in Fallujah” or “Terrorist safe houses have been destroyed by US warplanes.”
In the latest attack on Fallujah, in which US infantry supported by air power and several tank and armored brigades have taken nearly 70 percent of the city, there have been reports of massive civilian casualties. On November 8, the International Committee for the Red Cross (ICRC) expressed dismay that doctors and support medical staff had been targeted, that food and medical provisions were running low in the city, that US forces disallowed doctors from reaching the wounded, that the last remaining ambulance was blown up by US forces, and that refugees from the city had no access to medical supplies.
Nevertheless, US media continues its selective reporting methods and ignores the plight of Fallujah’s civilians.
On November 10, the Iraqi Red Crescent Society (the equivalent of the Red Cross) reported that a humanitarian crisis was brewing in Fallujah.
According to the Society, a pregnant woman and her child died in a refugee camp outside Fallujah after the mother unexpectedly aborted and no doctors were available to treat her.
Firdaws al-Obeidi, an official from the Society, told Reuters, “From a humanitarian point of view it’s a disaster, there’s no other way to describe it. And if we don’t do something about it soon, it’s going to spread to other cities,” she said.
The Iraqi Red Crescent Society just reported that a woman and her three daughters were trying to escape the carnage in Fallujah, but their home was hit by US bombardment earlier this week and all died.
Still, US media ignores.
So, it isn’t surprising when my inbox is inundated with emails from well-wishing Americans who spare no words to exclaim their joy that Fallujah is finally being destroyed. Civilian casualties? No problem; it’s their fault, say these emailers. It is the fault of the Iraqi civilians that they stayed in their homes—where they have been for generations—and did not leave when they were told of the impending invasion. Never mind this is their country.
When these columns reveal the killing of civilians, this writer is called a liar, an Islamo-fascist, unobjective, on and on. “Why don’t you print the facts,” one angered emailer wrote, citing the statements of the US military in Fallujah as the prime example of what he believes fact-telling to be.
In all fairness, however, there are some emails which decry the US military action and the deaths of civilians caught with nowhere to go. But these are a minority. My job is done when these become the majority.
Until then, the name of Fallujah will resonate in Iraqi history. Already, we have seen the rise of a new resistance group in Iraq called the Mujahideen of Fallujah. The US military actions in Fallujah are refueling an anti-occupation movement in Iraq that will soon transform from the passive to the aggressive.
Expect more groups to pledge revenge for Fallujah, more kidnappings, more attacks, more violence.
go ahead and flame
edit: bolded some stuff in the article