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At least 27 killed as Iraqi forces raid Sunni protest camp

Who brought America to Iraq? GCC...
and you seem that you forgot Bahrain and East Saudi "Arabia"... the most sectarian governments are know to be the GCC..
and don't forget that GCC are allies with Americans and the west... so what the heck are you talking about?

Enough said..

Saudi Arabia strongly opposed the US invasion of Iraq and kicked the US base out of the country. Our stance was clear from the beginning unlike you traitors have been stabbing arab throughout history

Iran gave out Iraq to the US after Afghanistan, officially stated. NFO

@Syrian Lion you know I don't take you seriously in this forum so please dont Q my post.
 
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Saudi Arabia strongly opposed the US invasion of Iraq and kicked the US base out of the country. Our stance was clear from the beginning unlike you traitors have been stabbing arab throughout history

Iran gave out Iraq to the US after Afghanistan, officially stated. NFO

@Syrian Lion you know I don't take you seriously in this forum so please dont Q my post.

Smart one.. Iran is not in GCC... I was talking about GCC and how they opened their lands for Iraq invasion... Did Iran open its land for the west??

and if you don't take me seriously, is because you have no facts to counter-argue :azn: and I can quote anyone in this forum.. you have problem? go cry to the administration
 
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The fact that when we handed Gaza over, we got more rockets than ever.

When we handed Southern Lebanon over, we got rockets and a cross-border raid which ended up in war.

We gave the Sinai over, got a cold peace and now face more terrorism from the Sinai than ever.



So in answer to your question - "what stops us"

It's past experience with giving land and getting terrorism in return.

You name them places as they were yours to keep at the first place. You didnt give away anything, you were forced to leave them as they were occupied by your armies. Someone else s land someone else s country, and yet you hold land illegally.
 
Smart one.. Iran is not in GCC... I was talking about GCC and how they opened their lands for Iraq invasion... Did Iran open its land for the west??

and if you don't take me seriously, is because you have no facts to counter-argue :azn: and I can quote anyone in this forum.. you have problem? go cry to the administration
]Are you taking this thing seriously is he even worth I look @ his comment please ignore these worthless things.
 
You name them places as they were yours to keep at the first place. You didnt give away anything, you were forced to leave them as they were occupied by your armies. Someone else s land someone else s country, and yet you hold land illegally.

Makes no difference.

The fact is that these lands have been returned and terrorism was the response.


Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.

-Albert Einstein

Enough with emboldening our enemies. The only language they understand is force.

After the withdrawal from Lebanon in 2000, we got 6 years of rockets, shooting attacks and then a cross-border raid from Lebanon.

So withdrawing didn't work.

What did work was destroying half of Southern Beirut in 2006.

Not a single Hezz rocket since then.


Force is the only language they understand.
 
BEIRUT — Security forces for the Shiite-led Iraqi government raided a Sunni protest camp in northern Iraq on Tuesday, igniting violence around the country that left at least 36 people dead.

The unrest led two Sunni officials to resign from the government and risked pushing the country's Sunni provinces into an open revolt against Prime Minister Nouri Maliki, a Shiite. The situation looked to be the gravest moment for Iraq since the last U.S. combat troops left in December 2011.

The violence Tuesday started in the Sunni town of Hawija, where shooting erupted during the raid. Security forces had demanded that protesters hand over demonstrators suspected of shooting and killing an Iraqi soldier Friday. The security forces stormed the camp after protesters failed to deliver anyone.

Both sides blamed the other for the ensuing bloodshed. Government figures close to Maliki faulted militants among the protesters for opening fire when the Iraqi forces entered the protest camp, while Sunni politicians said government forces shot at demonstrators without being provoked.

Word of the unrest spread and ignited confrontations in three towns near Hawija, leaving 26 people dead and 80 wounded, according to security sources. In Ramadi in the western province of Anbar, an army jeep was torched and three soldiers were killed; in Suleiman Beg in Salahuddin province in the north, seven police were killed and 11 wounded when a mob surrounded a police station; and in Mosul, a mob also stormed a police office, according to security sources.

Members of different political factions agreed that if the government couldn't quickly bring calm, a Sunni uprising could sweep through the center and north of the country and could merge Iraq's conflict with the war across the border in Syria. The Syrian civil war has pitted Sunni fighters against President Bashar Assad's government forces and stoked sectarian tensions across the region.

"When things reach the point of fighting, with victims and the interference of the army in solving our internal conflicts, this opens the door to all [kinds of] possibilities," said Kurdish lawmaker Mahmoud Othman. "The borders with Syria will be opened and people will come and go. Iran will interfere and so will Turkey."

The violence was a culmination of the ill will that has colored Iraq's political process since the finish of the nation's violent Sunni-Shiite conflict from 2005 to 2008. Despite an end to the open warfare between a Shiite-dominated government and Sunni armed groups in the years since, Iraq's ruling Shiite Islamists have failed to share power equitably with Iraq's Sunni minority, who enjoyed privilege under the late dictator Saddam Hussein's Baath Party.

Frustration at their second-class status along with the arrest of ordinary Sunnis and prominent political figures set off Sunni demonstrations in Iraq at the end of December. Though there were halting efforts at reform by Maliki, and the wooing of a partner in his Sunni Deputy Prime Minister Saleh Mutlaq, initiatives aimed at meeting Sunni demands for freeing thousands of detainees and ending discrimination against former Baath Party members had yet to be implemented.

In a February interview with The Times, Mutlaq worried that the government would not move fast enough to avert a confrontation between Iraq's alienated Sunni population and its deeply suspicious Shiite Islamist political class.

The glacial pace of reforms created an opening for Sunni hard-liners emboldened by the uprising in Syria who hope to carve out their own Sunni state or independent region in Iraq. One former Sunni insurgent said in late February that the goal of Islamists was to spark violent confrontation with the government and create their own self-ruled territory even if a few thousand people died, because that was better than living under the yoke of an oppressive Shiite government in Baghdad that would arrest and humiliate them.

As violence erupted Tuesday, some lawmakers vowed to keep Iraq from falling back into chaos.

"A minority of hard-liners are using these protesters as human shields and have infiltrated these demonstrations. They want to drag the country into a civil war between the Sunni and Shiites," said lawmaker Sami Askari, who is close to Maliki. "The majority [of Iraqis] reject this."

But even as Askari and others vowed to stave off disaster, the government appeared hobbled by mistrust. Kurds have boycotted the Cabinet along with most Sunnis. The Sunni education minister, Mohammed Tamim, resigned Tuesday after trying to broker a peaceful resolution between the protesters and security forces in the hours before the early-morning raid. The minister of technology, Abdul Kareem Samarrai, also resigned.

Mutlaq was named Tuesday to head the investigation into the shootings, and one of his senior aides, Dr. Mohanned Husam Aldin, said they believed an officer should be prosecuted for giving the order to open fire on demonstrators. If an officer was not charged, Mutlaq might resign, and with him the last of the Sunnis would exit the government.

The possibility of a Sunni revolt, similar to Syria's and perhaps involving fighters from next door, was raised by politicians and analysts.

"It could be like the Syria scenario," Aldin warned. "We will be facing random armed groups trying to attack everything."

Former Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Barham Saleh, a Kurd, broached similar concerns in a message on Twitter.

"Iraq, Syria dynamics could merge into one with dire consequences. Iraq's political leaders must act decisively and now to spare country from abyss," he wrote.

Emma Sky, the former political advisor in Iraq to U.S. Army Gen. Ray Odierno, warned that a full-on Sunni revolt could spell the end of the modern boundaries between Iraq and Syria as fighters make common cause across borders against both Maliki and Assad.

"The killings in Hawija increase concerns that the Syrian conflict is spilling over into Iraq," Sky said.

Some tribal leaders called for vengeance against Maliki even as some warned that their areas risked being swamped by extremist groups.

In Anbar province, where the protest movement began in December, sheiks threatened violence.

"The tribes are ready to fight back and move toward Baghdad, and the war will be open to reach whoever is involved," said Sheik Ali Hatem Suleiman, the crown prince of the Dulaim confederation, the largest tribe in the desert region adjacent to rebel-controlled territories in Syria. "The war will start but will not stop till the end of Maliki and his government."

In Kirkuk province, Sheik Anwar Obeidi, the leader of the largest tribe in the oil-rich region, urged the government to move to appease them, or risk the reality of Sunnis being whipped up in a frenzy by the hard-line militants among them.

"The tribes who lost their sons are ready to fight back the Iraqi forces if Maliki will not apologize to the people and tribes and prosecute whoever was involved in the killings," Obeidi said. "The street is boiling and no one knows what will happen."

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/middleeast/la-fg-iraq-protests-20130424,0,3072167.story
 
The Safavids must be dealt with. The Sunni Arabs are from our Arab tribes. Full political, diplomatic, military and financial support must be given. If they want autonomy we should support them 100 percent as well. We can all see where this moving towards. Killing 36 innocent protestors while thousands of former/current Shia militia fanatics are roaming around freely.

Death to fanatical Safavids.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xNbl3vjw4_4

Why is the Safavi government of failed Iraq not doing anything against persons like this? They want to play with fire we will give them that.
 
We are Achaemenids not Safavids, Safavid was too small we Persians need to conquer the whole world !
AchaemenidMapBehistunInscription.png
 
Saudi Arabia strongly opposed the US invasion of Iraq and kicked the US base out of the country. Our stance was clear from the beginning unlike you traitors have been stabbing arab throughout history

Iran gave out Iraq to the US after Afghanistan, officially stated. NFO

@Syrian Lion you know I don't take you seriously in this forum so please dont Q my post.

Thank you for the video, they don't believe me when I tell them they are just a dagger in our side. They don't believe me when I tell them their enmity to Israel and USA is nothing but a sham of their real enmity to Arabs and Muslims. Despicable tactics..
 
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The Safavids must be dealt with. The Sunni Arabs are from our Arab tribes. Full political, diplomatic, military and financial support must be given. If they want autonomy we should support them 100 percent as well. We can all see where this moving towards. Killing 36 innocent protestors while thousands of former/current Shia militia fanatics are roaming around freely.

Death to fanatical Safavids.

‫

Why is the Safavi government of failed Iraq not doing anything against persons like this? They want to play with fire we will give them that.


Now why did you not bother to open that link, speaking about innocent
600


Innocent is not putting a military truck on fire.
 
Thank you for the video, they don't believe me when I tell them they are just a dagger in our side. They don't believe me when I tell them their enmity to Israel and USA is nothing but a sham of their real enmity to Arabs and Muslims. Despicable tactics..

Because hypocricy is high in these people, he wants us to turn a blind eye to the help of GCC in Iraq’s invasion 2 times and blame it all on Iran cause they benefited in the proces.
 
The Safavids must be dealt with. The Sunni Arabs are from our Arab tribes. Full political, diplomatic, military and financial support must be given. If they want autonomy we should support them 100 percent as well. We can all see where this moving towards. Killing 36 innocent protestors while thousands of former/current Shia militia fanatics are roaming around freely.

Death to fanatical Safavids.

‫

Why is the Safavi government of failed Iraq not doing anything against persons like this? They want to play with fire we will give them that.

Listen to this.

 
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You know very well where all this is moving ahead and who is behind. Your Maliki puppet is an Iranian agent educated in Iran and he escaped from his fatherland like the coward he was in the time where he was most needed in the Shia community. He even fought with the Kurds against Iraq. What is the excuse for this massacre from the government? Show me even the KSA government killing Shia protestors like this. They have been protesting for 2 straight years in the Eastern Province.

It's basically a declaration of war and we Sunni Arabs will not tolerate this happening to fellow Sunni Arabs nor do we want Safavi agents near our borders.

‫

Why is the Safavi government of failed Iraq not doing anything against persons like this? They want to play with fire we will give them that.

The attack was retalition for killing 36 innocent protestors. Don't tell to me that this is not understandable. We are talking about the Middle East.

Why are hundred of thousand Sunni Arabs protesting in Iraq for 4 straight months? Are they also all terrorists or sponsored by the evil Sunni Arabs?:omghaha:

Let's see how many Sunni Arabs in Iraq (not in Europe) will vote for Al-Maliki in the elections. I predict less than 5 percent. Indeed there is great harmony between the Sunnis and Shias as seen by the actions.

Iraq has always been problematic and the most sectarian country in the MIddle East throughout all its history. Long standing history of Shia vs Sunni, Arab vs Kurd and other fractions.

Get your act straight and don't destabilize the whole region.
 
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