"The raid was the latest assertion of total military independence by Iraqi forces from US control. Video of the event, with Iraqi soldiers delivering severe beatings to unarmed residents, adds evidence of brutal tactics within the new Iraqi Army,"
giggles Dan Murphy at the Christian Science Monitor disgracing himself in the process as well as the memory of Mary Baker Eddy. What a proud moment for the paper that . . . no longer is a paper.
E . . . entertaining elephants . . . F. . . forever fooling . . . G . . . getting gigles . . . H . . . having headaches . . .-- "Alligators All Around," lyrics by Maurice Sendak and music by
Carole King,
Really Rosie.
And when Dan Murphy's out of short pants (and pull ups), we'll work on the next series of letters. Grasp for a moment that Iran's
Tehran Times opens with, "On Tuesday, Iraqi soldiers and riot police stormed Camp Ashraf, where Mojahedin Khalq Organization members had been based, triggering violent clashes that left at least 260 people injured." It's all too much for Murphy.
Grasp that
AFP reports that while Iraq says everything is under 'control' and a police station is set up, Iraq's refusing to allow reporters to enter the camp. Not noted in the report, they're also rebuffing requests from human rights organizations and charities. Grasp that Iraq's
Alsumaria treats the issue with more balance and more seriousness than the
Christian Science Monitor. "Assertion of total military independence"? No, Nouri did at Camp Ashraf what he did throughout Baghdad to ethnically cleanse neighborhoods.
The
National Council of Resistance of Iran released the following statement today:
NCRI - The Iranian Resistance’s Leader, Mr. Massoud Rajavi, released a statement broadcast yesterday by the Simaye Azadi (Iran National Television), with regards to the brutal assault of Iraqi forces against Camp Ashraf residents in Iraq. Mr. Rajavi said:Through his agents in Iraq, the regime’s Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, took revenge for the Iranian people’s uprising from Ashraf, which is the strategic nucleus of the struggle for freedom. He wishfully thinks that by targeting Ashraf the uprising would cease; But, the water that has already gone over the dam can't be forced back into the regime's channel and save the disintegrating religious regime.Mr. Rajavi urged all Iranians across the world to rush to support the hunger strike and demands of Ashraf residents, which are:1. The leaving of Iraqi forces from Ashraf;2. Protection of Ashraf to be assumed by US forces, who have disarmed and signed agreements with every single one of Ashraf residents about protecting them until the determination of their final status;3. Presence of lawyers and international human rights organizations in Ashraf, which has been banned for the past 7 months;4. Presence of a representative of the UN Security Council or Secretary General in Ashraf for talks about the determination of the final status of Ashraf residents;5. Compliance of the Iraqi government with the April 24, 2009 resolution of the European Parliament on the humanitarian situation of Ashraf residents;6. Prosecution and punishment of parties who ordered or perpetrated the brutal attacks and massacre in Camp Ashraf by an international tribunal for crimes against humanity.They also note that sit-ins took place yesterday "in the cities of Washington (US), Berlin (Germany), London (Britain), Dublin (Ireland), Brussels (Belgium), Copenhagen and Aarhus (Denmark), Stockholm, Gothenburg, and Malmo (Sweden), Geneva (Switzerland), Paris (France), Helsinki (Finland), Ottawa and Vancouver (Canada), Oslo (Norway), Amsterdam and The Hague (The Netherlands), and Sydney (Australia)" to protest the assault on Camp Ashraf.
"What happens when the US abandons some good friends?" asked anchor Katie Couric at the top of yesterday's evening news where
Lara Logan reported on the assault last night on the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric (link has text and video).