Author Topic: al-Qaida Chief Appointed Minister of War  (Read 819 times)

ieffinhatecardio

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al-Qaida Chief Appointed Minister of War
« on: April 19, 2007, 01:33:57 PM »
Just one of many interesing quotes from the article, "The announcement unveiling an "Islamic Cabinet" for Iraq appeared to have multiple aims. One was to present the Islamic State of Iraq coalition as a "legitimate" alternative to the U.S.-backed, Shiite-led administration of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki - and to demonstrate that it was growing in power despite the U.S. military push against insurgents."


http://apnews1.iwon.com//article/20070419/D8OJSE400.html


By MAAMOUN YOUSSEF

CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - A Sunni insurgent coalition posted Web videos on Thursday naming the head of al-Qaida in Iraq as "minister of war" and showing the execution of 20 men it said were members of the Iraqi military and security forces.

The announcement unveiling an "Islamic Cabinet" for Iraq appeared to have multiple aims. One was to present the Islamic State of Iraq coalition as a "legitimate" alternative to the U.S.-backed, Shiite-led administration of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki - and to demonstrate that it was growing in power despite the U.S. military push against insurgents.

It also likely sought to establish the coalition's dominance among insurgents after an embarrassing public dispute with other Iraqi Sunni militants.

The Islamic State of Iraq is a coalition of eight insurgent groups, the most powerful of them al-Qaida in Iraq. It was first announced in October, claiming to hold territory in the Sunni-dominated areas of western and central Iraq.

In the Cabinet announcement video, a man identified as a spokesman for the group appeared, with his face obscured, speaking from behind a desk with a flat-screen computer.

"It is the duty at our present stage to form this Cabinet, the first Islamic Cabinet, which has faith in God," said the spokesman, wearing robes and a red headdress.

He denounced Iraq's rulers for the past decades - including Saddam Hussein's Baath Party and the present government - saying they "spread corruption and ruined the country and its people, until God helped the mujahideen (holy warriors) bring torture upon them."

"Now the Islamic State emerges as a state for Islam and the mujahideen," he said.

He then listed a 10-member "Cabinet," including Abu Hamza al-Muhajer as "war minister." Al-Muhajer is the name announced as the successor of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the leader of al-Qaida in Iraq who was killed in the summer of 2006. The U.S. military and Iraqi government have identified him by another pseudonym, Abu Ayyub al-Masri.

The names listed by the spokesman were all pseudonyms and their real names were not known - though the pseudonyms included the names of some major Sunni Arab tribes.

The Islamic state is led by Abu Omar al-Baghdadi, who holds the title of "emir (prince) of the faithful."

Sheik Abu Abdul-Rahman al-Falahi was named as the emir's "first minister," the spokesman said. Other positions included ministers of information, "prisoners and martyrs," agriculture and health.

The video came on the heels of a rare public dispute between the coalition and other insurgent groups.

In past week, another Sunni insurgent group, the Islamic Army in Iraq, has issued statements accusing al-Qaida of killing its members and trying to force others to join its ranks. Al-Baghdadi tried to patch up the dispute by issuing a Web audiotape this week calling for unity and promising to punish any of his group's members who kill other insurgents.

Al-Qaida in Iraq is blamed for some of the deadliest suicide bombings against Shiite civilians, as well as numerous attacks on U.S. troops and Iraqi soldiers and police. The U.S. military has blamed it for a devastating bombing Wednesday in Baghdad's Sadriyah market.

The message came after hours after another video from the group showing a masked gunmen walking down a row of men, blindfolded and bound, shooting each in the back of the head.

The video purported to show 20 Iraqi police and soldiers that the Islamic State in Iraq claimed six days earlier to have kidnapped northwest of Baghdad. It had threatened to kill them after 48 hours unless the government freed female prisoners and handed over police accused of rapes in the northern town of Tal Afar.

The Iraqi government has denied that 20 police and soldiers were kidnapped. Interior Ministry spokesman Brig. Gen. Abdul-Karim Khalaf said Thursday that the men in the video could not be identified and said the insurgents may have dressed up civilians to kill them.

"We checked with our commands then and all the troops were accounted for," Khalaf told The Associated Press. "They are immoral criminals. They have used all criminal methods and we don't rule out that they executed civilians who they dressed in military uniforms."

Old_Rooster

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Re: al-Qaida Chief Appointed Minister of War
« Reply #1 on: April 19, 2007, 01:35:31 PM »
they need a cruise missile at their first cabinet meeting!
Benjamin Pearson-Pedo

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Re: al-Qaida Chief Appointed Minister of War
« Reply #2 on: April 19, 2007, 01:40:43 PM »
LOL. I thought this quote was interesting as well, "In past week, another Sunni insurgent group, the Islamic Army in Iraq, has issued statements accusing al-Qaida of killing its members and trying to force others to join its ranks. Al-Baghdadi tried to patch up the dispute by issuing a Web audiotape this week calling for unity and promising to punish any of his group's members who kill other insurgents."

Too many insurgent groups, too much chaos. I'll never understand all the politics going on within Iraq. Why the hell do the Sunni's need different insurgent groups? And you'd think they'd be clever enough to realize that separating into different groups weakens each group.

24KT

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Re: al-Qaida Chief Appointed Minister of War
« Reply #3 on: April 19, 2007, 01:50:49 PM »
LOL. I thought this quote was interesting as well, "In past week, another Sunni insurgent group, the Islamic Army in Iraq, has issued statements accusing al-Qaida of killing its members and trying to force others to join its ranks. Al-Baghdadi tried to patch up the dispute by issuing a Web audiotape this week calling for unity and promising to punish any of his group's members who kill other insurgents."

Too many insurgent groups, too much chaos. I'll never understand all the politics going on within Iraq. Why the hell do the Sunni's need different insurgent groups? And you'd think they'd be clever enough to realize that separating into different groups weakens each group.

Sooner or later the insurgents are going to figure that out, and form a united front.
Personally, I'd rather see all coalition forces out of there before that happens.
w

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Re: al-Qaida Chief Appointed Minister of War
« Reply #4 on: April 19, 2007, 01:58:38 PM »
LOL. I thought this quote was interesting as well, "In past week, another Sunni insurgent group, the Islamic Army in Iraq, has issued statements accusing al-Qaida of killing its members and trying to force others to join its ranks. Al-Baghdadi tried to patch up the dispute by issuing a Web audiotape this week calling for unity and promising to punish any of his group's members who kill other insurgents."

Too many insurgent groups, too much chaos. I'll never understand all the politics going on within Iraq. Why the hell do the Sunni's need different insurgent groups? And you'd think they'd be clever enough to realize that separating into different groups weakens each group.

Yes, but remember when Osama branched off and started his own insurgent camps? He was criticized and told that he would weaken the movement, when it actually helped recruiting. Kinda like the gangs of New York, diffrent divisions but they clump up and work for the same cause eventually.

240 is Back

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Re: al-Qaida Chief Appointed Minister of War
« Reply #5 on: April 19, 2007, 02:10:34 PM »
I will personally waterboard any american who support putting a POS al quida member into power over there.

And i just know that some dumb shit blind Bush supporters will support it here.

yes, the same people that say "let's nuke 1 billion people" will support "let's put al quida into power".

God the neotaints disgust me.

Old_Rooster

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Re: al-Qaida Chief Appointed Minister of War
« Reply #6 on: April 19, 2007, 02:16:03 PM »
I will personally waterboard any american who support putting a POS al quida member into power over there.

And i just know that some dumb shit blind Bush supporters will support it here.

yes, the same people that say "let's nuke 1 billion people" will support "let's put al quida into power".

God the neotaints disgust me.

I wanna run things over there.
2 rules, no more cars-they shall use horses
no black robes, they will wear bathing suits-no more suicide bombers.
Benjamin Pearson-Pedo

youandme

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Re: al-Qaida Chief Appointed Minister of War
« Reply #7 on: April 19, 2007, 02:27:47 PM »
I wanna run things over there.
2 rules, no more cars-they shall use horses
no black robes, they will wear bathing suits-no more suicide bombers.
I was gonna say mopeds but whatever

24KT

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Re: al-Qaida Chief Appointed Minister of War
« Reply #8 on: April 19, 2007, 02:33:56 PM »
I will personally waterboard any american who support putting a POS al quida member into power over there.

And i just know that some dumb shit blind Bush supporters will support it here.

yes, the same people that say "let's nuke 1 billion people" will support "let's put al quida into power".

God the neotaints disgust me.

240, they are a Sunni insurgent coalition... the side Saudi Arabia has vowed to aggressively back.

Yet again we see Saudi & US interests conflict with each other.
w