U.S. keeps heat up as al-Qaida in Iraq issues urgent appeals
BAGHDAD, Iraq — The U.S. military pressed its offensive against al-Qaida in Iraq on Friday, staging an additional 39 raids based mostly on information uncovered during the hunt that led to the death of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in a U.S. airstrike.
The raids came as al-Qaida issued urgent appeals for money and volunteers to fight U.S. forces, a day after the news of al-Zarqawi's death left the organization without a clearly identifiable leader.
The U.S. military also gave more details of the Wednesday evening airstrike that killed the al-Qaida in Iraq leader, saying al-Zarqawi apparently didn't die until after U.S. forces arrived. By that point, two 500-pound bombs had been dropped on his hide-out in the small village of Hibhib, just outside Baqouba and about 60 miles north of Baghdad.
The al-Qaida appeals suggested al-Zarqawi's network may be feeling heat from the U.S. raids, which have extended beyond Hibhib to include locations in and around Baghdad.
In a video news conference relayed from Baghdad to the Pentagon, spokesman Maj. Gen William Caldwell displayed a suicide belt, explosives and Iraqi army uniforms uncovered in 17 raids conducted in the immediate aftermath of al-Zarqawi's death. The raids targeted people the U.S. had been monitoring in the buildup to the strike, which was delayed until al-Zarqawi had been pinpointed because they were giving "indicators at different points in time as to where Zarqawi might be," he said.
An additional 39 raids were conducted Friday, some of them directly related to information obtained in the earlier raids, Caldwell said.
Caldwell said one targeted individual, whom he did not identify, was killed in the latest raids and at least 25 were captured.
Two official statements posted on the Web site used by al-Qaida in Iraq urged Muslims to volunteer to fight in Iraq, saying al-Zarqawi's death should remind them of their "duty" to fight infidels.
"Iraq is the front line of defense for Islam and Muslims. So, don't miss this opportunity to join the Mujahedeen and the martyrs," said one signed by Abdullah Rasheed al-Baghdadi, who succeeded al-Zarqawi this year as head of the Mujahedeen Shura Council, the umbrella group that includes al-Qaida in Iraq.
"This is a compulsory duty for all Muslims in these days," it said.
The Seattle Times
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The raids came as al-Qaida issued urgent appeals for money and volunteers to fight U.S. forces, a day after the news of al-Zarqawi's death left the organization without a clearly identifiable leader.
The U.S. military also gave more details of the Wednesday evening airstrike that killed the al-Qaida in Iraq leader, saying al-Zarqawi apparently didn't die until after U.S. forces arrived. By that point, two 500-pound bombs had been dropped on his hide-out in the small village of Hibhib, just outside Baqouba and about 60 miles north of Baghdad.
The al-Qaida appeals suggested al-Zarqawi's network may be feeling heat from the U.S. raids, which have extended beyond Hibhib to include locations in and around Baghdad.
In a video news conference relayed from Baghdad to the Pentagon, spokesman Maj. Gen William Caldwell displayed a suicide belt, explosives and Iraqi army uniforms uncovered in 17 raids conducted in the immediate aftermath of al-Zarqawi's death. The raids targeted people the U.S. had been monitoring in the buildup to the strike, which was delayed until al-Zarqawi had been pinpointed because they were giving "indicators at different points in time as to where Zarqawi might be," he said.
An additional 39 raids were conducted Friday, some of them directly related to information obtained in the earlier raids, Caldwell said.
Caldwell said one targeted individual, whom he did not identify, was killed in the latest raids and at least 25 were captured.
Two official statements posted on the Web site used by al-Qaida in Iraq urged Muslims to volunteer to fight in Iraq, saying al-Zarqawi's death should remind them of their "duty" to fight infidels.
"Iraq is the front line of defense for Islam and Muslims. So, don't miss this opportunity to join the Mujahedeen and the martyrs," said one signed by Abdullah Rasheed al-Baghdadi, who succeeded al-Zarqawi this year as head of the Mujahedeen Shura Council, the umbrella group that includes al-Qaida in Iraq.
"This is a compulsory duty for all Muslims in these days," it said.
The Seattle Times
Hey guys now is your big chance to achieve greatness and martyrdom. Signup now, get your ticket to paradise.
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