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Zarqawi Confirmed Dead
http://forums.clankiller.com/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=1866
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Author:  derf [ Thu Jun 08, 2006 3:34 am ]
Post subject:  Zarqawi Confirmed Dead

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle ... 058304.stm

Yay!!!

Author:  Rinox [ Thu Jun 08, 2006 6:00 am ]
Post subject: 

Why yay? It's not like it's going to change anything. :P

In a month's time we'll see a new d00d pop up with a similar name. Oh, and meanwhile Zarqawi is a martyr. W00t. :/

Author:  ElevenBravo [ Thu Jun 08, 2006 7:10 am ]
Post subject: 

Rinox wrote:
Why yay? It's not like it's going to change anything. :P

In a month's time we'll see a new d00d pop up with a similar name. Oh, and meanwhile Zarqawi is a martyr. W00t. :/


exactly.

You would think this might be a signal for a pull out of somekind for troops in Iraq but you watch, your going to hear something like

"Today we are one step closer to winning the war on terror but its important to remind people there are still terrorist out there want to change your way of lives and so the war on terror must continue and we should put more money/troops/resource into this war as its clear its effective"

War on terror = war on drugs. It will never end.

Author:  Satis [ Thu Jun 08, 2006 8:51 am ]
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yea, at the rate we're killing them, it doesn't mean much.

However...if one came up and was put down within a few months, it would have meaning. It takes awhile for a commander to get good at what they're doing...if we keep killing them off rapidly, we kill off their leadership and their experience. As we keep capping them, their experience pool will shrink and they'll start making more mistakes...which would lead to more deaths, which would further deplete their experience pool, etc etc.

But, at the current rate, it means NADA.

Author:  pevil [ Thu Jun 08, 2006 12:04 pm ]
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well i have no clue who he was, but from comments i guess he was your 'evil dictator' type that we seem to view everyone as ;) hehe. like you guys say, its neverending. For every terrorist we jail/kill, 3 more pop up in anger at the jailing/killing.

Author:  Arathorn [ Thu Jun 08, 2006 12:11 pm ]
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The Israelis's are quite good at killing terrorist leaders at a high rate. Maybe the US can hire some of those guys.

Author:  Satis [ Thu Jun 08, 2006 2:42 pm ]
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yea, Mossad is nothing to sneeze at. Too bad they're not taking out terrorists we don't like as zealously as they were nazis.

Author:  derf [ Thu Jun 08, 2006 4:55 pm ]
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Bah. Its still a positive thing anyway.

Author:  Rinox [ Fri Jun 09, 2006 4:21 am ]
Post subject: 

I encourage everyone to read this short interview with the father of a dude that was beheaded by Al Arqawi and his homeboys.

http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/meast/06/ ... index.html




Quote:
Beheaded man's father: Revenge breeds revenge
Michael Berg talks about the death of his son and al-Zarqawi

Thursday, June 8, 2006; Posted: 11:19 p.m. EDT (03:19 GMT)

A terror-linked Web site showed Nicholas Berg being beheaded, likely by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.

Father of Iraq victim finds no solace (1:44)

-- The U.S.-led coalition's No. 1 wanted man in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi -- who conducted a campaign of insurgency bombings, beheadings and killings of Americans and Iraqi civilians -- was killed in a U.S. airstrike.

A gruesome video was posted on Islamic Web sites in May, 2004, depicting a man believed to be al-Zarqawi beheading Nicholas Berg, an American businessman who was working in Iraq.

CNN anchor Soledad O'Brien talks to Nicholas Berg's father, Michael Berg, by phone from Wilmington, Delaware, for his reaction to the news.

O'BRIEN: Mr. Berg, thank you for talking with us again. It's nice to have an opportunity to talk to you. Of course, I'm curious to know your reaction, as it is now confirmed that Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the man who is widely credited and blamed for killing your son, Nicholas, is dead.

MICHAEL BERG: Well, my reaction is I'm sorry whenever any human being dies. Zarqawi is a human being. He has a family who are reacting just as my family reacted when Nick was killed, and I feel bad for that. (Watch Berg compare Zarqawi to President Bush -- 1:44)

I feel doubly bad, though, because Zarqawi is also a political figure, and his death will re-ignite yet another wave of revenge, and revenge is something that I do not follow, that I do want ask for, that I do not wish for against anybody. And it can't end the cycle. As long as people use violence to combat violence, we will always have violence.

O'BRIEN: I have to say, sir, I'm surprised. I know how devastated you and your family were, frankly, when Nick was killed in such a horrible, and brutal and public way.

BERG: Well, you shouldn't be surprised, because I have never indicated anything but forgiveness and peace in any interview on the air.

O'BRIEN: No, no. And we have spoken before, and I'm well aware of that. But at some point, one would think, is there a moment when you say, 'I'm glad he's dead, the man who killed my son'?

BERG: No. How can a human being be glad that another human being is dead?

O'BRIEN: There have been family members who have weighed in, victims, who've said that they don't think he's a martyr in heaven, that they think, frankly, he went straight to hell ...

You know, you talked about the fact that he's become a political figure. Are you concerned that he becomes a martyr and a hero and, in fact, invigorates the insurgency in Iraq?

BERG: Of course. When Nick was killed, I felt that I had nothing left to lose. I'm a pacifist, so I wasn't going out murdering people. But I am -- was not a risk-taking person, and yet now I've done things that have endangered me tremendously.

I've been shot at. I've been showed horrible pictures. I've been called all kinds of names and threatened by all kinds of people, and yet I feel that I have nothing left to lose, so I do those things.

Now, take someone who in 1991, who maybe had their family killed by an American bomb, their support system whisked away from them, someone who, instead of being 59, as I was when Nick died, was 5-years-old or 10-years-old. And then if I were that person, might I not learn how to fly a plane into a building or strap a bag of bombs to my back?

That's what is happening every time we kill an Iraqi, every time we kill anyone, we are creating a large number of people who are going to want vengeance. And, you know, when are we ever going to learn that that doesn't work?

O'BRIEN: There's an alternate reading, which would say at some point, Iraqis will say the insurgency is not OK -- that they'll be inspired by the death of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in the sense of he was turned in, for example, we believe by his own No. 2, No. 3 leadership in his ranks.

And, that's actually them saying we do not want this kind of violence in our country. Experts whom we've spoken to this morning have said this is a critical moment where Iraqis need to figure out which direction the country is going to go. That would be an alternate reading to the scenario you're pointing to.

BERG: Yes, well, I don't believe that scenario, because every time news of new atrocities committed by Americans in Iraq becomes public, more and more of the everyday Iraqi people who tried to hold out, who tried to be peaceful people lose it and join -- what we call the insurgency, and what I call the resistance, against the occupation of one sovereign nation.

O'BRIEN: There's a theory that a struggle for democracy, you know...

BERG: Democracy? Come on, you can't really believe that that's a democracy there when the people who are running the elections are holding guns. That's not democracy.

O'BRIEN: There's a theory that as they try to form some kind of government, that it's going to be brutal, it's going to be bloody, there's going to be loss, and that's the history of many countries -- and that's just what a lot of people pay for what they believe will be better than what they had under Saddam Hussein.

BERG: Well, you know, I'm not saying Saddam Hussein was a good man, but he's no worse than George Bush. Saddam Hussein didn't pull the trigger, didn't commit the rapes. Neither did George Bush. But both men are responsible for them under their reigns of terror. (Watch

I don't buy that. Iraq did not have al Qaeda in it. Al Qaeda supposedly killed my son.

Under Saddam Hussein, no al Qaeda. Under George Bush, al Qaeda.

Under Saddam Hussein, relative stability. Under George Bush, instability.

Under Saddam Hussein, about 30,000 deaths a year. Under George Bush, about 60,000 deaths a year. I don't get it. Why is it better to have George Bush the king of Iraq rather than Saddam Hussein?

O'BRIEN: Michael Berg is the father of Nicholas Berg, the young man, the young businessman who was beheaded so brutally in Iraq back in May of 2004.















He pwnz the entire war, pointing out the futility of it all.

Author:  pevil [ Fri Jun 09, 2006 7:52 am ]
Post subject: 

A guy after my own heart. Shame people like him never have the desire to get to power. And even if he did, the others would all overthrow him somehow. *sigh* human nature...

Author:  Myrddin L'argenton [ Wed Jun 14, 2006 4:25 am ]
Post subject: 

yeah we are too predictable. Can the muslim extremists try and kill Bush. Come on make my day, I'll even supply the equipment :rifle:

Author:  ElevenBravo [ Wed Jun 14, 2006 5:28 am ]
Post subject: 

Already got a new Zarqawi


http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ ... ry/Comment

Quote:
Al-Zarqawi successor vows to punish Sunnis

Paris -- The newly appointed successor to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the slain leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq, vowed yesterday in his first Internet statement to punish Sunnis who have embraced the Iraqi political process.

Abu Hamza al-Muhajer also warned the United States not to be too happy about Mr. al-Zarqawi's death. "Do not be overtaken with the ecstasy of having killed our Sheik. He has left behind lions that have been trained in his den," he said. AFP

Author:  Satis [ Wed Jun 14, 2006 6:10 am ]
Post subject: 

hmmm...I wonder if he trains alot of lions in his den. wtf kind of idiot statement is that?

Anyway, one can only hope for swift deaths for the idiots.

Author:  derf [ Wed Jun 14, 2006 8:06 am ]
Post subject: 

Another guy to have a pop at.

Author:  Myrddin L'argenton [ Sat Jun 17, 2006 11:04 am ]
Post subject: 

Anyone heard of the arrests made due to the documents found at the hideout? And the plans being made to lead the US into war with iran?

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