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Iraq to fund Sahwa forces in fighting al-Qaeda

Dear Mr. Wannabe Canadian,

LoLz, you mad bro? :lol: Iraq = 0 to " Saudia " :lol:

Do you even know the history and recent history / power status of Iraq before Saddam came ? Quit degrading Iraq or we start the same about Saudi Arabia, keep it clean.
 
Dear Mr. Wannabe Canadian,

LoLz, you mad bro? Iraq = 0 to " Saudia "

You Jahil did you read post in context where did VS come from.

What is wannabe Canadian did you not know Canadian population is not indigenous except for aboriginals/red indians rest have migrated since 1600's it is a multicultural society and a clustered Nation with different Nationalities unlike the inferiority and superiority complex saudis like yourself. Horribly you have absolutely no knowledge of North America both US/Canda have indigenous aboriginal's as the first people rest are all migrants. By the logic saudis have major population that before the creation of s. arabia came from yemen, syria, egypt and even iraq. Ridiculous Jahil people.

Do you even know the history and recent history / power status of Iraq before Saddam came ? Quit degrading Iraq or we start the same about Saudi Arabia, keep it clean.

That is the problem that jahil doesn't even know the local and surrounding arabian history, pointless to argue or even initiate argument with him or he will drag you to moronic level.
 
I don't want to start another childish hate round, quit degrading countries to avoid it.
 
Do you even know the history and recent history / power status of Iraq before Saddam came ? Quit degrading Iraq or we start the same about Saudi Arabia, keep it clean.
Bro,

Nothing against Iraq or its people by large, I'm just refuting such claim as " leave them alone "
 
Yes other entities should leave Iraqi Government and its people alone let them decide and sort out no one else should have a say if the decision would bear any fruit or end in disaster worry about yourselves.
 
BAGHDAD — Iraq has submitted a shopping list of U.S. military
equipment that included its first unmanned aerial vehicles.
Officials said Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki has relayed a
request for advanced UAVs from the United States. The officials said the unspecified
UAVs were meant for long-range reconnaissance missions in an effort to
improve border and internal security.

“This will be deployed in military bases in Iraq and help us face the threats to this country,” Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari said.
Zebari did not identify the UAV sought from Washington. But the foreign minister described it as a pilotless combat aircraft, which could mean an
attack UAV such as the U.S.-origin Predator B.
The Iraqi shopping list marked the latest by a Middle East country for U.S. unmanned aerial platforms. In 2013, similar requests were reported by Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia and Turkey.
In a statement on Aug. 18, Zebari acknowledged continued Iraqi
dependence on U.S. military aid. He said the assistance included that of
intelligence analysis and could host a small U.S. military presence.
“This would suggest the possibility of hosting American experts and
consultants in the war against terrorism to help the army deter the recent
escalation,” Zebari said.
On Aug. 17, Iraq’s leading port at Umm Qasr was bombed in what prompted
a shutdown of the oil export facility. Officials said Al Qaida was believed
responsible for the truck bombing, the first such attack since 2003.
“There is a weakness in the security plan for the protection of vital
installations in Basra, especially since intelligence was given to the
security forces days before warning that the Umm Qasr port was a target, as
were a number of other border points,” Iraqi parliamentarian Suzanne Al
Saad, a member of the Energy and Oil Committee, said. “But the warning was
not taken seriously.”
Officials said the administration of President Barack Obama has eased
restrictions on American military exports to Iraq. They pointed to
Washington’s decision to sell Baghdad at least 36 F-16 Block 52 multi-role
fighters, a more modern variant than that exported to Egypt.
“Today, we find that the United States wants to support Iraq with
military equipment not granted in the past,” Hamid Mutlaq, a member of
the Iraqi parliament’s Security and Defense Committee, said.
 
Let's see if the US is going to sell it to Iraq :pop:
BAGHDAD — Iraq has submitted a shopping list of U.S. military
equipment that included its first unmanned aerial vehicles.
Officials said Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Al Maliki has relayed a
request for advanced UAVs from the United States. The officials said the unspecified
UAVs were meant for long-range reconnaissance missions in an effort to
improve border and internal security.

“This will be deployed in military bases in Iraq and help us face the threats to this country,” Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari said.
Zebari did not identify the UAV sought from Washington. But the foreign minister described it as a pilotless combat aircraft, which could mean an
attack UAV such as the U.S.-origin Predator B.
The Iraqi shopping list marked the latest by a Middle East country for U.S. unmanned aerial platforms. In 2013, similar requests were reported by Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia and Turkey.
In a statement on Aug. 18, Zebari acknowledged continued Iraqi
dependence on U.S. military aid. He said the assistance included that of
intelligence analysis and could host a small U.S. military presence.
“This would suggest the possibility of hosting American experts and
consultants in the war against terrorism to help the army deter the recent
escalation,” Zebari said.
On Aug. 17, Iraq’s leading port at Umm Qasr was bombed in what prompted
a shutdown of the oil export facility. Officials said Al Qaida was believed
responsible for the truck bombing, the first such attack since 2003.
“There is a weakness in the security plan for the protection of vital
installations in Basra, especially since intelligence was given to the
security forces days before warning that the Umm Qasr port was a target, as
were a number of other border points,” Iraqi parliamentarian Suzanne Al
Saad, a member of the Energy and Oil Committee, said. “But the warning was
not taken seriously.”
Officials said the administration of President Barack Obama has eased
restrictions on American military exports to Iraq. They pointed to
Washington’s decision to sell Baghdad at least 36 F-16 Block 52 multi-role
fighters, a more modern variant than that exported to Egypt.
“Today, we find that the United States wants to support Iraq with
military equipment not granted in the past,” Hamid Mutlaq, a member of
the Iraqi parliament’s Security and Defense Committee, said.
 
Its probably requesting US operated drones, articles are always full of errors.
 
[Bregs];4737000 said:
US main aim is to sell its weapons that's why it attacked Iraq in 1st place, looting with both ends in war too and now too

No financial profit was made for the US as the war costs exceed arms trade with Iraq by far despite the 10s billion dollars deal coming in the future.
 
No financial profit was made for the US as the war costs exceed arms trade with Iraq by far despite the 10s billion dollars deal coming in the future.

what about US Companies role in re construction going on, oil wells and now selling weapons to you. are they not earning dollars now ?
 
[Bregs];4737014 said:
what about US Companies role in re construction going on, oil wells and now selling weapons to you. are they not earning dollars now ?

Nowhere near the money spent on the war/wars in Iraq, so no financial profit but other profits maybe.
 
[Bregs];4737000 said:
US main aim is to sell its weapons that's why it attacked Iraq in 1st place, looting with both ends in war too and now too

Let's see if they will sell these to Iraq.

What benefit will the US make from selling drone while they can make 30ish times more by selling them F-16s? :lol:
 

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