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Evil Angel
06-08-2006, 02:59 PM
U.S. airstrike kills al-Zarqawi
BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- Al Qaeda in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the coalition's most wanted man in Iraq, was killed in an airstrike near Baquba, jubilant U.S. and Iraqi authorities announced Thursday.

Al-Zarqawi's death gives Iraq a chance to "turn the tide" in the fight against the nation's insurgency, President Bush said at the White House.

"The ideology of terror has lost one of its most visible and aggressive leaders," Bush said. "Zarqawi's death is a severe blow to al Qaeda."

"Special Operations forces, acting on tips and intelligence from Iraqis, confirmed Zarqawi's location and delivered justice to the most wanted terrorist in Iraq," Bush said.
"Zarqawi personally beheaded American hostages and other civilians in Iraq," Bush said. "Now Zarqawi has met his end and this violent man will never murder again."

In one of the most notorious killings ascribed to him and posted on the Web, Zarquawi is believed to have beheaded American businessman Nicholas Berg.

Later, at a briefing for reporters, U.S. military officials displayed a picture of al-Zarqawi taken after the attack and showed aircraft video of the strike.

U.S. Army Maj. Gen. Bill Caldwell said two Air Force F-16s dropped two bombs on a safe house near Baquba on Wednesday night.

Six people including al-Zarqawi and a key lieutenant, spiritual adviser Sheik Abd-al-Rahman, were killed in the strike, the military said. Iraqi forces were the first to arrive at the scene, Caldwell said.

"Zarqawi's body was then removed, brought back to a secure location," Caldwell said. "By visual identification it was established that that probably was him.

"But they ... did further examination of his body, found more scars and tattoos consistent with what had been reported and what we knew about him. They then did a fingerprint identification, and that came back ... this morning as positively identified as Zarqawi having been killed."

"We have absolutely no doubt whatsoever that Zarqawi was in the house," Caldwell said. "It was 100 percent identification." Even so, DNA testing will be conducted, he said.

U.S. and Iraqi officials first announced the news at a briefing in Iraq.

The 3-year-old insurgency has "lost its leader," said U.S. Gen. George Casey, the highest-ranking U.S. commander in Iraq. Casey was joined during the announcement by U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad and Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.

A Web site used by Al Qaeda in Iraq confirmed al-Zarqawi's death and urged its followers to continue the insurgent fight.

Another Web site used by the group issued a statement: "People of Islam, God will not let our enemies celebrate and spread corruption in the ground. Expect the right that was stolen to come back to us and destroy the Crusaders" -- an apparent reference to U.S. troops in Iraq.

CNN could not verify the authenticity of the Web messages.

Al-Zarqawi was the self-proclaimed leader of one of the nation's many insurgent factions -- al Qaeda in Iraq --who pledged allegiance to Osama bin Laden.

He had a $25 million bounty on his head, led foreign and Iraqi fighters in a series of dramatic and high-profile attacks against U.S. and Western targets and was seen as leader of one of the factions in Iraq that fomented sectarian strife between the Sunni and Shiite communities.

His killing is a major coup for the embattled coalition forces.

"Today is a good day," U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Khalilzad said at the news conference. "Zarqawi has been killed."

Khalilzad called al-Zarqawi "the godfather of sectarian killing and terror in Iraq" -- and said the death "marks a great success for Iraq and the global war on terror." (Watch how al-Zarqawi's body was identified -- 2:28)

"His organization has been responsible for the deaths of thousands of civilians in Iraq and abroad."

The 39-year-old Jordanian-born al-Zarqawi was accused of terrorist links before the Iraq war and soon led the insurgency after the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime. (Watch how al-Zarqawi murdered his way to the most-wanted list -- 2:50)

Multiple attempts have been made to capture or kill him and he was held briefly by Iraqi security forces in 2004 but was released because no one knew who he was.

In London, British Prime Minister Tony Blair called al-Zarqawi's death "a very important moment in Iraq. A blow for al Qaeda in Iraq is a blow for al Qaeda everywhere."

Casey wouldn't provide many details about the action but said that "all of these operations are the result of a long, painstaking process where tips and intelligence are received, processed and checked out."

"Tips and intelligence from Iraqi senior leaders from his network led forces to al-Zarqawi and some of his associates who were conducting a meeting approximately eight kilometers north of Baquba when the airstrike was launched," Casey said.

Baquba is a volatile area northeast of Baghdad in Diyala province, a mixed Shiite-Sunni jurisdiction. There have been many roadside bombings and shootings throughout the province and within the week, severed heads were found in fruit boxes there.

"Iraqi police were first on the scene after the airstrike, and elements of Multi-National Division North, arrived shortly thereafter," Casey said. "We have been able to identify al-Zarqawi by fingerprint verification, facial recognition and known scars."

This particular operation had been in the works for a couple of weeks, leading to the location of the house in a wooded area and the meeting, he said.

Al-Maliki indicated that the strike on al-Zarqawi was the "result of cooperation" with ordinary Iraqis, saying that authorities many times have asked the citizenry to provide information.

"This is a message to all those who take violence as a path."

Khalilzad said the demise of al-Zarqawi won't end the violence in Iraq, but it is "an important step in the right direction."

finally.

Anthony.
06-08-2006, 04:32 PM
*In a Middle Eastern style, shoots AK-47 into the air*

Well, that was a nice catch... erm kill. Only one of the many they need to catch, but at least there's some progress.

lpboarder
06-08-2006, 07:21 PM
1 BIG fish down....

Todd
06-08-2006, 11:39 PM
It's nice that he's dead and all, but it won't change anything. It won't hurt Al Quaeda. Someone even crazier will take his place. It's not like it takes a genius to run a terrorist organization...."OK, you put on this bomb, you walk over to that crowd of people, and you blow yourself up!" In the long run this will only hurt us, because now they're even more pissed off at us and will be even more determined to attack us.

Janie Jones
06-08-2006, 11:46 PM
It's nice he's no longer there to cause problems and it's good he got punished because we really don't need people like this, but I'm with Todd on this one. In a few weeks, perhaps, they'll bounce right bak with, "Al Quaeda zindabad!" or whatever and plan another massive attack in vengance. I know it's a lot to be imposed on the governemnt and the war against terrorism, but the thing has to be stopped from the roots. Lies must be removed- I saw this one thing on discovery about suicide bombers- it's damn well easy to talk them into it, this caught bomber said that he had been allured into it because they promised him pure paradise after his death, just have a bit of imagination and a bit of confidence and you can lure the masses into anything, when they are already so terribly fired up.

But, back on topic, good riddance to bad rubbish. They should keep this up, nonetheless.

Will
06-09-2006, 12:32 AM
It's nice that he's dead and all, but it won't change anything. It won't hurt Al Quaeda. Someone even crazier will take his place. It's not like it takes a genius to run a terrorist organization...."OK, you put on this bomb, you walk over to that crowd of people, and you blow yourself up!" In the long run this will only hurt us, because now they're even more pissed off at us and will be even more determined to attack us.
I have to admit, though, that being an instructor would be hard.

"Now, pay attention, class: I can only do this once." :lol:

I agree with what you said, though, that nothing's going to change. Bush is going to use this as propaganda, but I think the majority of people (except Republicans) know that Zarqawi's death isn't going to change anything.

Janie Jones
06-09-2006, 12:41 AM
By DEXTER FILKINS
Published: June 8, 2006

BAGHDAD, Iraq, June 7 — By finally eliminating Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the American military and its Iraqi allies have killed the man who put a face on the Iraqi insurgency.
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The Reach of War
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The question now looming over Mr. Zarqawi's death is how large a blow it deals to the guerrilla movement he helped drive to such bloody limits.

The most likely answer, according to American and Iraqi officials and experts who have been following Mr. Zarqawi, is this: While his death could degrade the ability of his group, Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, to mount bloody suicide and car bomb attacks, and it may set off a bloody succession struggle, the insurgency and sectarian war that he helped ignite will carry on without him.

It was Mr. Zarqawi, in letter obtained by American forces in 2004, who first called on that Sunni insurgents to turn their sights on Shiites. A "sectarian war," Mr. Zarqawi wrote, was the only way Sunni insurgents could win in Iraq, by provoking a Shiite backlash and rallying millions of Sunnis outside the country..

Much of what Mr. Zarqawi wished has come true. The bloodlettting in Iraq's mixed Sunni-Shiite cities, like Baghdad, is now unfolding so quickly that it appears to have a life of its own, with hundreds of burned and bullet-riddled bodies turning up each week at city morgues. And the Sunni-led insurgency is so diffuse and so broadly based that it seems unlikely to be stopped by one death, even that of its most visible leader.

"Zarqawi may be gone, but the conflagration that he set alight continues to burn," said Bruce Hoffman, a terrorist expert at the Rand Corporation in Washington. "That is the reality. He has already set in motion powerful forces that won't necessarily stop just because he is dead."

Unlike some terrorist leaders — like the man he claimed to follow, Osama bin Laden — Mr. Zarqawi went beyond providing just inspiration and public relations for his movement. He fought on the front lines with his men.

Indeed, American and Iraqi officials believe that Mr. Zarqawi probably played a central role in planning some of the bloodiest and most spectacular attacks that his group carried out here: the suicide bombing of the United Nations headquarters in October 2003; the bombings on the Ashoura holiday in March 2004, which killed more than 140 Shiite pilgrims; and the destruction of the Al Askari shrine in February, which set off a wave of sectarian killings that has not yet abated.

But the Al Qaeda organization that Mr. Zarqawi leaves behind in Iraq is a far-flung and decentralized collection of semi-autonomous terrorist groups, each operating more or less independently. To date, at least 60 different groups have carried out attacks against Iraqi and American targets under Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia's name. Experts say these groups can probably continue to carry out attacks, if perhaps not with the same audacity as Mr. Zarqawi.

Dozens of other insurgent groups in Iraq have little or no relationship to Al Qaeda, including some of the largest, like Ansar Al-Sunnah and the Islamic Army of Iraq. Indeed, some of them are Al Qaeda'a deadly rivals. They, too, will probably carry on.

What is more, Mr. Zarqawi, a Jordanian, had apparently begun to hand over the leadership of his organization to Iraqis, possibly in anticipation of his own death.

He had also begun to set up what his comrades described as a framework for a future Islamic government in Iraq: In January, Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia announced that it had joined the Council of Holy Warriors, a collection of seven insurgent groups headed by an Iraqi, Abdullah Al-Baghdadi.

Most of the senior leaders around Mr. Zarqawi are now believed to be Iraqi; American officers said recently they had killed 161 members of the organization, many of them foreigners.

Some experts doubted whether Mr. Baghdadi really exists, and whether Mr. Zarqawi had ever relinquished day-to-day control of his organization.

"Zarqawi was under pressure to hand over power to Iraqis, and like most Arab leaders under pressure to democratize, he created a false parliament," said a senior Iraqi intelligence official, speaking of the Council of Holy Warriors. "He was still in command."

Some Iraqi officials said they expect a bloody struggle for control of Al Qaeda now that Mr. Zarqawi is dead.

"There is no immediate alterative to Zarqawi," the senior Iraqi intelligence official said. "There will be a vacuum of leadership. His close circle — his organization — will not agree on one of them to succeed him. There is the prospect for division in this group."

A similar thing happened among the senior leaders of the terrorist group clustered around Abu Nidal in the 1980's, when assassinations of senior members ignited a bloody struggle in the ranks, Mr. Hoffman said.


Source (http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/08/world/middleeast/08cnd-assess.html?hp&ex=1149825600&en=a0ab2f5a8156d92d&ei=5094&partner=homepage)

Justin
06-09-2006, 01:46 AM
It's nice that he's dead and all, but it won't change anything. It won't hurt Al Quaeda. Someone even crazier will take his place. It's not like it takes a genius to run a terrorist organization...."OK, you put on this bomb, you walk over to that crowd of people, and you blow yourself up!" In the long run this will only hurt us, because now they're even more pissed off at us and will be even more determined to attack us.

I think that it's a hell of a lot harder to run a terrorist organization. Imagine how hard it would be to evade capture. I hope Al Qaeda has been dealt a severe blow, and that the death of Zarqawi will send a warning to potential recruits. Nearly all of the people that lived near Al-Zarqawi's headquarters hated and feared him.

User Name
06-11-2006, 04:36 PM
It's nice that he's dead and all, but it won't change anything. It won't hurt Al Quaeda. Someone even crazier will take his place. It's not like it takes a genius to run a terrorist organization...."OK, you put on this bomb, you walk over to that crowd of people, and you blow yourself up!" In the long run this will only hurt us, because now they're even more pissed off at us and will be even more determined to attack us.

That was exactly what I was thinking when I heard the news of his death. I have doubt that it probably hurt the morale a bit, I think his death pissed off the insurgents more than anything.

lpboarder
06-12-2006, 05:26 AM
(random terrorist): I was pissed at USA before, but now I'm really pissed!

(his buddy): how will you avenge our idiot leader's death?

(random terrorist): hm....dont know, but can't you tell I'm really pissed!?


I really dont believe you can upset the insurgents any more than they already have been since our troops have been in Iraq. All these "leaders" really do is incite anti-US cheers and go hide somewhere. They arent very brave and if you kill enough cheerleaders eventually the message will be gotten.

Christopher
06-12-2006, 11:34 AM
I think it's a good thing he's death but to say that makes me feel weird.

He was a terrible man but they should've captured him, than they could force Al Qeada to give information or something.

Janie Jones
06-12-2006, 04:04 PM
The father of a Taliban victim has pubiclically rebuked the murder of Zarqawi. His words were something along non violence and not sinking to the taliban level because no one desereves that and stuff. I quite disagree. What would you suggest then? Teddy bears, chicken soup and anger management classes? I'm sorry, but that's no solution. They don't understand what they're doing. They see it in a different way. It's almost an uncurable mental disease...and no amout of The monk who sold his ferrari can help people outta that.

Todd
06-12-2006, 11:41 PM
Well, it seems Bush got what he wanted: http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/06/12/iraq.poll/index.html

Janie Jones
06-13-2006, 07:35 AM
Well, it seems Bush got what he wanted: http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/06/12/iraq.poll/index.html


Sick.