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Iraq-Jordan
Zarqawi Vows to Assassinate Iraqi Leader
2004-06-23
Like this is news.
An audio recording purportedly made by the militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and found online Wednesday threatened to assassinate Iraq's interim prime minister. "As for you (Iyad) Allawi ... you didn't know that you have survived already traps we made for you, but we promise you that we will continue the game until the end," the online recording said. "You are the symbol of evil and the infidel nation; you are the source of all traitors."
"Rabid, scared, high-pitched, like a flouncey little girl, yep, that's him, Boss!"
The Jordanian terror suspect is believed to have ties to al-Qaida, and groups associated with him have claimed responsibility for a number of bombings and attacks in Iraq, most recently Tuesday's beheading of South Korean hostage Kim Sun-il.
Posted by:Steve White

#11  remote man

Yes I suppose its possible. However Fallujah has, what I call, a high jihadist ratio (you might call it a high asswipe ratio). That is, the hard core anti Iraq govt. anti American anti kfr population is at least 5% of the total population. The jihadist sympathizer population probably is another 15% at least.

In Najaf and Karbala, this ratio was way down, probably below 0.5% and the asswipers weren't homeboys either.
Posted by: mhw   2004-06-23 4:27:34 PM  

#10  It is possible that what occurred in Najaf and Karbala with Al Sadr's boys will also occur in Fallujah. Namely, as mhw points out, the locals will get sick of Zarqawi and his team of asswipes and eventually rat on them. Despite Fallujah being a Sadaam hotbed, it is possible that the regular folks there had a taste of freedom before the uprising in April. I'll bet some of them liked it...a lot. And I'll bet that they hate being bullied by Syrians, Algerians, Chechens and Saudis who act as if they own the place. Yeah, that kind of situation could produce an ever-growing stream of actionable inteligence.
Posted by: remote man   2004-06-23 1:38:40 PM  

#9  Of course this is one reason why the intel is better with locals getting grudges against the insurgents

good point
Posted by: Liberalhawk   2004-06-23 1:11:43 PM  

#8  Old Boy(tm) will be SOOO surrounded by Blackwater and I.S.A.T. gunners, anyone trying to off him will have a helluva time putting him on ice. I've done a lot of training with I.S.A.T. in Germany, and they produce some top-notch bodyguards. Zarqawi would be a fool to try anything, because the best Hired Guns, tribal intel, technology, and purchased loyalties will be on Allawi's side.
Posted by: Bodyguard   2004-06-23 12:53:42 PM  

#7  mhw, As far as the Fallujah locals go, I don't have much sympathy. You reap what you sow...

I'm for building a fully armed and manned wall around the entire city (None in or out withing a full search and vetting) and letting them have exactly what they want.
Posted by: CrazyFool   2004-06-23 12:17:17 PM  

#6  On the subject of multidimensional logic, I partly concur with LH that we are getting a lot of intel from the locals in Fallujah. However, the 'problems and frustrations' were definately not a cover; they are real. The non violent, just trying to get by segment of the Fallujah population is getting bullied, extorted, etc. by the insurgency. Of course this is one reason why the intel is better with locals getting grudges against the insurgents, but its too bad it comes this way.
Posted by: mhw   2004-06-23 12:12:13 PM  

#5  ok, so we've hit two safe houses in Fallujah in the last 5 days, all preceded by what Kimmet calls "actionable intelligence"

This is with USMC withdrawn from Fallujah. So who is providing the intell, who is gathering it etc?

Is it possible that all the problems and frustrations with the Fallujah Protective Service are simpley cover for what is actually an effective means of getting info from the nest of foreign fighters in central Fallujah? (baruch hashem)
Posted by: Liberalhawk   2004-06-23 12:02:20 PM  

#4  Killing them in the present always worked for us.
Posted by: Aaron   2004-06-23 11:37:56 AM  

#3  Have we got time travel yet? I heard about the Philadelphia experiment in WW2. It could be useful if we have.
Posted by: Howard UK   2004-06-23 5:00:29 AM  

#2  For those of you who understand three dimensional thought (logic), the key to neutralizing Zarqawi, is to kill him in the past or the future, not in the present. We'll miss him every time!
Posted by: smn   2004-06-23 2:22:18 AM  

#1  So the race is on, who kills who first. Odds?
Posted by: Lucky   2004-06-23 1:58:22 AM  

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