BAGHDAD, Iraq - Iraq's constitution was adopted by a majority in a fair vote during the Oct. 15 referendum, as Sunni Arab opponents failed to muster enough support to defeat it, election officials said Tuesday. A prominent Sunni politician called the balloting "a farce." The U.S. military announced the deaths of two Marines in fighting with insurgents last week in Baghdad, bringing to 1,999 the number of American service members killed since the war started in 2003, according to an Associated Press count. ** Guess shit happened to this guy. In federal court Monday, a judge officially sentenced Ahmed Hassan Al-Uqaily to nearly five years in prison, after he pleaded guilty to weapon charges. Last year, Al-Uqaily was arrested after paying for two machine guns, four hand grenades, and ammunition. Authorities say he also asked about buying missiles. He was arrested in October of 2004 in the parking lot of the Krispy Kreme on Thompson Lane in south Nashville. An undercover informant says Al-Uqaily told him he was buying weapons so he could attack two Jewish facilities in Nashville. ... As part of his sentence Al-Uqaily will be sent back to Iraq after serving his time.
** So we have hit 2000 US dead, big deal these are the figures the media should be reporting..
U.S. and Iraqi forces have killed or arrested more than 50,000 Iraqi insurgents in the past seven months, a former top general who has headed repeated Pentagon assessment missions to Iraq said yesterday.
Gen. Jack Keane, a former deputy chief of staff for the Army, also said the United States has a good picture of the leadership of the vicious insurgency but less of an idea about its mid- and lower-level ranks.
"We know who they are," he told a lunch gathering sponsored by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. He said the eight to 10 leaders "occasionally meet -- we've recorded that -- not just in Iraq, but in Jordan and Syria."
Gen. Keane's remarks provided a rare insight into the extent of U.S.-led operations against an insurgency that has been responsible for hundreds of deaths in the past few weeks alone.
Pentagon officials previously had been quoted as saying 15,000 to 16,000 Iraqis were in custody in Iraq, but spokesman Lawrence DiRita was unable to comment last night on the 50,000 figure offered by the general.
"I would highly doubt that anyone has a good handle on the numbers," he said. "I'm not aware of what General Keane has been told, but I know of no number that has been provided to the secretary, briefed by the commanders, or is being tracked by anyone."
Gen. Keane, noting that the numbers probably were higher now, said, "In the past six to seven months, we have killed or captured 50,000 insurgents."
The retired general has traveled to Iraq twice in uniform and twice as a civilian to assess progress there for the U.S. military. He did not explain how the number had been obtained.
A Defense Department consultant, retired Army Col. Robert Killebrew, said Gen. Keane's figure likely includes some Iraqis who were swept up in military operations and subsequently released.
"Does that mean all of them are terrorists or still being held? Probably not. It means we are making inroads, but not that we captured 50,000 terrorists," he said.
Many Iraqis feel that a number of innocent people have been caught up in military raids. A slow-moving judicial system and constant intimidation of judges means that a majority of those behind bars have not been tried, Gen. Keane said.
"There are thousands of people in jail who have a body of evidence against them -- some should be receiving death sentences, some should be in jail for life sentences," Gen. Keane said.Grim Countdown
** And this is why the troops from the strong nations are in Iraq.
Ahmed Hassan Al-Uqaily was upset about the way things were going in Iraq, so he purchased two machine guns, four hand grenades and ammunition and threatened to attack.
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Wednesday, 26 October 2005
SOME REAL CASUALTY FIGURES
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