Discourse and Intercourse [entries|friends|calendar]
Spring Dew

[ website | http://springdew.com ]
[ userinfo | livejournal userinfo ]
[ calendar | livejournal calendar ]

Cover Makeovers: Loretta Chase [22 May 2008|07:04pm]
smartbitches

I haven’t done a Cover Makeover in a good long time, and I figured you guys are long past due for another eye-searing collection of past and present cover hilarity. This current set’s victims are the novels of Loretta Chase. In case you didn’t know already, I love Loretta Chase novels like whoa and like burning. She writes intelligent, elegantly-constructed stories that tweak romance novel conventions in exactly the right ways, all narrated in a delightfully wry voice.

You wouldn’t know it looking at the covers. You look at the covers, and you can hear the soft porn sax begin to flow, and girls with names like Tami or Koral exclaiming their pleasure in breathy voices even as they attempt to writhe around the bed in a way that won’t rub the fake tanner off on the sheets.

So given that these books are actually GOOD, when Berkley re-released her two earliest Avon historicals, I was all YES! AWESOME! Finally, she can get the covers she deserves!

Nope. No such luck. I don’t know how or why Chase has pissed off the God of Good covers so severely, but almost every cover she’s had has been beaten severely with the ugly stick before being run over--twice--by the ugly truck.

link

post comment

Ma'am, fixing this stereo's gonna cost ya [22 May 2008|07:37am]
cuteoverload

I won't lie. I've been in this business 23 years.

It's gonna be pricey.

Lkr32

Sender-Inner Jonathan R. found this little Dude on DubKorps Forums.

link

5 comments|post comment

The Smart Bitch Silver Anus Purple Prose Contest: The Entries! [22 May 2008|01:25pm]
smartbitches

Are you craving chocolate? No? How about over the top purple prose anal sex? You want summa that?

We here at Smart Bitch Headquarters are here for you. Granted, our abs are 12% more in shape now that we’ve read through the entries, but we’re here. Giggling. And snorting. So put down the coffee, make sure no one is reading over your shoulder, and enjoy, because This. Is. Annnnnnnnnnal Sex Idol. Only without the idol. Voting is in the poll within this entry, and the entry will disappear in 24 hours. Once your vote is in (ha!) you won’t see the totals; the entry will just reload without the poll, so you can enjoy the what-what action again and again. Winners announced tomorrow.

So ready, set, and poke your favorite.

link

post comment

Narcoleptic Noodles [22 May 2008|05:23am]
cuteoverload

...sounds like a really great Asian dish.

[Picks up kitteh with chopsticks, shoves into mouf]

Img_2109

Delectabuhl, Deanna C.!

link

2 comments|post comment

HaBO: It’s not a book. It’s gift wrap. [22 May 2008|11:30am]
smartbitches

Bitchery reader Marie asks for a book that she didn’t read more than a few pages of, because it wasn’t a book. It was gift wrap of the subterfuge variety:

When I was a kid, we got my mother one of those “motherhood rings,” with birthstones from every member of our family.  But since we have a long-standing tradition of wrapping presents in a fashion that makes them utterly unidentifiable (t-shirt in a light bulb box, necklace in a rolled-up sheed of newspaper, etc), we decided to get the trashiest romance novel we could find and cut a hole in the middle of it to hide the ring in.  (My mother: not a romance reader.)

Of course, being twelve or whatever I was, the romance novel got me curious.  So I read some, maybe all of it—minus the hole in the middle of some of the pages, of course—and that’s where this request comes from. 

You see, from what little I remember, the scenario involved a white woman among Native Americans.  It also had the most horribly cliched clinch cover we could get our hands on.  And though I have utterly forgotten the plot, I do recall some woman in the tribe pointing out to the heroine at one point that she “used no bloody rushes” lately, i.e. hadn’t had her period, i.e. was pregnant.  The phrase “bloody rushes” is all that stuck in my mind.

So on the basis of an extremely common scenario, an utterly forgettable cover (I seem to remember the dominant color being blue, but I could be wrong), and a two-word phrase—can anybody identify this?  It would have been published no later than the early ‘90s.... I figure the odds of anybody knowing which book it is drop from “unlikely” to “I have a better chance of being struck by lightning while holding a winning lottery ticket.”

So many clinch covers to choose from, so little time. Anyone remember “bloody rushes” or something similar? This is a longshot so if anyone guesses this, I’ll be so impressed. 

link

post comment

Ehhhn!!! [21 May 2008|10:41pm]
cuteoverload

Bottled meelks! I MUST HAVE EET!

I don't even want to know HOW this happened, Sarah H...

link

4 comments|post comment

Pakistani government inks peace deal with Swat Taliban [21 May 2008|06:05pm]
longwar_rss
Taliban-Leadership-Image.jpg

Mullah Fazlullah. Click image to view the slideshow of the Taliban Leadership in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The Pakistani government has signed another peace agreement with the Taliban in the Northwest Frontier province. After striking a deal with a banned radical Taliban outfit in the Bajaur region, a peace agreement has been signed with Mullah Fazlullah's Taliban faction in the settled districts of Swat and Malakand.

The peace deal in Swat and Malakand comes after several rounds of negotiations. A fifteen-point agreement was signed with representatives of the Northwest Frontier Province and representatives of Fazlullah’s Taliban. The major points of the agreement are as follows:

• Sharia law would be imposed in the Swat and Malakand districts.
• The Pakistani Army will gradually withdraw security forces from the region.
• The government and the Taliban would exchange prisoners.
• The Taliban would recognize the writ of the government and cooperate with security forces.
• The Taliban would halt attacks on barber and music shops.
• The Taliban cannot display weapons in public.
• The Taliban would turn in heavy weapons (rockets, mortars).
• The Taliban cannot operate training camps.
• The Taliban would denounce suicide attacks.
• A ban would be placed on raising private militias.
• The Taliban will cooperate with the government to vaccinate children against diseases like polio.
• Fazlullah's madrassa, the Imam Dherai, would be turned into an Islamic university.
• Only licensed FM radio stations would be allowed to operate in the region.
• The Taliban would allow women to "perform their duties at the work place without any fear."

Just yesterday, the government denied that security forces would be withdrawn from Swat and other Taliban hotspots such as South Waziristan.

Red agencies/ districts controlled by the Taliban; purple is de facto control; yellow is under threat.

The Pakistani government signed a peace agreement with Fazlullah in May 2007 with similar terms. The terms of the nine-point peace deal signed in 2007 required Fazlullah to support the polio vaccination campaign and education for girls, as well as government efforts to establish law and order. He also agreed to shut down training facilities for terrorists, stop manufacturing weapons, and support the district administration in any operation against anti-state elements. Fazlullah's followers were also to stop carrying weapons in the open. In return, Fazlullah was permitted to continue broadcasting his illegal FM radio programs and the government dropped criminal cases lodged against him.

The Taliban promptly disobeyed the terms of the deal, and began to overrun police stations and enforce sharia law in the district. The Taliban used the government's siege and assault on the Lal Masjid, or Red Mosque, as their reason to violate the peace agreement. But Fazlullah and his fighters began violating the agreement long before the Red Mosque incident.

Fazlullah's forces overran much of Swat, and neighboring Shangla as well. The government launched an operation to dislodge the Taliban from Swat in November and vowed to oust them by December. But the military has fought a grinding campaign that has failed to defeat the Taliban. The Pakistani security forces operating in the small district lost 195 soldiers, policemen, and Frontier Constabulary paramilitaries during a year of fighting.

Fazlullah is the son-in-law of Maulana Sufi Muhammad, the leader of the outlawed Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammadi (TNSM - the Movement for the Implementation of Mohammad's Sharia Law). He had close links with the administration of the Lal Masjid. Fazlullah has successfully organized anti-polio and anti-girls schools campaigns throughout the region. The Swat region has been a safe haven and training ground for the Pakistani Taliban.

The TNSM is known as the "Pakistani Taliban" and is the group behind the ideological inspiration for the Afghan Taliban. The TNSM sent over 10,000 fighters into Afghanistan to fight U.S. forces during Operation Enduring Freedom in October 2001. Faqir Mohammed, a senior leader of the TNSM in neighboring Bajaur agency who is wanted by the Pakistani government, kicked off a suicide campaign after the air strike on the Chingai madrassa in October 2006.

The Pakistani government signed a peace agreement with the TNSM on April 21. The government freed Sufi Mohammed. The government is also close to signing a peace deal with Baitullah Mehsud, the leader of the Pakistani Taliban behind a brutal suicide and conventional military campaign in the tribal areas and in greater Pakistan.

The terms of Swat and TNSM peace deals and the proposed South Waziristan agreement are similar. None of the agreements calls for the Taliban to halt cross border attacks inside Afghanistan.

link

post comment

US military killed Mahdi Army commander Arkan Hasnawi in May 3 strike [21 May 2008|03:13pm]
longwar_rss
Hasnawi.jpg

Arkan Hasnawi. Click the image to view wanted the Mahdi Army leaders in Baghdad.

The US military killed a senior member of the Mahdi Army, according US and Mahdi Army sources. Arkan Hasnawi, a senior lieutenant of the Mahdi Army commander in Sadr City, was killed in a guided rocket strike in Sadr City on May 3. The news of Hasnawi's death comes as details emerge on the senior leadership of the Mahdi Army in Baghdad and the blurring of the lines between Sadr's militia and the Special Groups.

Hasnawi was among several senior Mahdi Army leaders killed or wounded in the GLMRS strike on a Mahdi Army command and control center that was placed next to the Sadr Hospital inside Sadr City, according to a report in The Washington Post. The command and control center, called "Tahseen's trailer" by US troops after Tahseen al Freiji, the senior Mahdi Army commander in Sadr City, was used to direct Mahdi Army operations during the fighting from late March to mid May.

Arkan Hasnawi was a brigade commander in Sadr's Mahdi Army. He fought against US and Iraqi forces in Najaf in 2003 and 2004 and has been linked to multiple attacks on US and Iraq security forces in Baghdad. He runs a network of Mahdi Army fighters in the Sha'ab neighborhood, just east of Sadr City. The US military and Iraqi security forces fought pitched battles against the Hasnawi network in February, and killed a senior lieutenant of Hasnawi and scores of fighters in the organization.

Hasnawi was behind the kidnapping of Shia and Sunni tribal leaders in Diyala province in October 2007. His network was also behind the kidnapping of six Sons of Iraq from a checkpoint in Baghdad’s Ur neighborhood on Feb. 7.

The Mahdi Army took significant casualties during the six weeks of fighting

Hasnawi was one of hundreds of Mahdi Army operatives killed in the fighting inside Sadr City from March 25 until the cease-fire with the Mahdi Army took place on May 10.

The US military estimates more than 700 Mahdi Army fighters were killed. "It is pretty safe to say that we have killed the equivalent of a U.S. battalion," Colonel John Hort, the commander of the 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division told The New York Times.

A Mahdi Army commander put the number closer to 1,000 killed over the past six weeks. "A thousand martyrs, what did they die for?" the commander said.

Number compiled by The Long War Journal showed 600 Mahdi Army fighters were killed in an around Sadr City since the fighting broke out on March 25.

Mahdi Army and Special Groups distinctions are essentially meaningless

The US military has long made distinctions between the Mahdi Army and what it calls Iranian-backed Special Groups. The Long War Journal has long maintained the military made these distinctions to divide the Mahdi Army and provide the non-extremist elements a way to end the violence. The Special Groups are essentially a subset oof the Mahdi Army.

The "rogue element" and "Special Groups" narrative has provided Mahdi Army fighters and commanders a path to lay down their arms and join the political process. Multinational Forces Iraq has refused to categorize the entire Mahdi Army as "irreconcilable elements" to give Mahdi Army fighters this out.

Today's Washington Post shows the distinctions being made by Multinational Forces Iraq are meaningless. US commanders fighting in and around Sadr City are well aware that mainstream Mahdi Army fighters, who take orders directly from Sadr and the Sadrist movement leadership in Najaf.

The US military knows that Freiji commands anywhere from 6,000 to 8,000 Mahdi Army fighters inside Baghdad, and takes orders directly from the Sadrist movement in Najaf.

A Mahdi Army commander named Mahdi Khaddam Alawi al Zirjawi is the perfect example of someone who Multinational Forces Iraq would describe as a Special Groups leader. He has received training from Iran's Qods Force and Lebanese Hezbollah. Yet Zirjawi is considered a mainstream Mahdi Army commander. "Sadr has not repudiated him. Haji Mahdi fits in the organization," a US Army intelligence officer told The Washington Post. "I think [Sadrist] leaders are comfortable with him."

Another Mahdi Army commander named Baqir al Saidi also fits the profile of a Special Groups commander. Saidi is thought to be behind the kidnapping of five British contractors from the Finance Ministry in Baghdad in May 2007. The kidnapping is long been thought to have been an Iranian-sponsored operation. Saidi has direct links to Iran and is thought to have fled there to avoid capture. The kidnappers of the British contractors have asked for the release of Qais Qazali, the leader of the Iranian-backed Qazali Network.

US and Iraqi troops may be targeting senior Mahdi leaders

Part of the agreement between the Iraqi government and the Sadrist movement is that Mahdi Army members could not be targeted unless a warrant is issued for their arrest. It is unclear if the Iraqi government has listed Freiji, Zirjawi, and the others as wanted men.

But the US and Iraqi military may be targeting them none the less. On May 19, the Gulf News reported British and US Special Operations Forces are accompanying the Iraqi Army into Sadr City to hunt for the five British hostages captured by Saidi. "Special personnel trained to free the hostages will accompany the Iraqi forces that are allowed to enter the Sadr City according to the agreement to look for and release the five British hostages," the Gulf News reported.

The entry of Iraqi troops into Sadr City has been peaceful thus far, but the hunt for senior Mahdi Army and Special Groups leaders may rekindle the violence that led to the decimation of the Mahdi Army during the past six weeks.

Operations against the Mahdi Army outside Sadr City have not abated, either. Today, US forces killed 11 Mahdi Army fighters during a series of engagements in New Baghdad, which borders Sadr City to the east. The Mahdi Army fighters were killed as part of "an ongoing operation," Multinational Forces Iraq reported. US forces also captured a Special Groups commander in the Rashid district in Baghdad.


A list of the Mahdi Army / Special Groups commanders in Sadr City (see slideshow for images)

Tahseen al Freiji: The senior Mahdi Army commander in Sadr City. Freiji was behind much of the 2006 and 2007 sectarian violence in Baghdad. Freiji commands a full brigade in Sadr City, equaling about 6,000 to 8,000 men, according to the US military. He directs mortar and rocket attacks, small arms attacks, and IED and explosively formed penetrator attacks. He receives his orders from the Sadrist leadership in Najaf. He operated command centers next to hospitals in Sadr City.

Arkan Muhammad Ali al Hasnawi: Arkan Hasnawi was a brigade commander in Sadr's Mahdi Army. He fought against US and Iraqi security forces in Najaf in 2003 and 2004. Hasnawi has been linked to multiple attacks on US and Iraq security forces and was behind the kidnapping of Shia and Sunni tribal leaders in Diyala province in October 2007. His network was also behind the kidnapping of six Sons of Iraq from a checkpoint in Baghdad’s Ur neighborhood on Feb. 7. Hasnawi was killed in a US GMLRS strike on one of Freiji's command centers next to a hospital in Sadr City on May 3.

Mahdi Khaddam Alawi al Zirjawi: Also known as Abu Ahmad and Abu Rayna, he is considered the top Iranian-linked Mahdi Army leader in Sadr City. Zirjawi has traveled to Iran to receive training from Iran's Qods Force and Lebanese Hezbollah. He is considered "public enemy number one in Sadr City" and still reports to Sadr.

Baqir al Saidi: The Mahdi Army commander thought to be behind the kidnapping of five British contractors from the Finance Ministry in Baghdad in may 2007. Saidi is believed to have been in Iran in February and is thought to be considering going back to avoid the dragnet in Sadr City.

Jawad Kazim al Tulaybani: A rocket and mortar specialist behind an April attack on a US combat outpost in Baghdad that wounded 15 US soldiers.

Ismail Hafiz al Atawi: Also known as Abu Dure, Atawi has been behind the sectarian death squads that killed thousands of Sunnis in Baghdad. He has conducted kidnappings, murders, conducted EFP And IED attacks against US and Iraqi troops. He is also a weapons smuggler.

Muhammad Jassim al Daraji: Also known as Muhammed Cobra, Dajaji is behind EFP attacks and smuggling, IED attacks, kidnappings and murders. He is also a Special Groups financier.

link

post comment

Everyone knows that baby red pandas are mythical [21 May 2008|11:33am]
cuteoverload

K Mythical creatures! They do not exist! IMPOSSIBUHLS!

Hey Amanda W., ruhmember this guy (from Teh Archives)

[Teeter teeter] COMING TO GET YOOOOOOOUUUU

Rpctgy

link

8 comments|post comment

Baroosday Embroidereh [21 May 2008|10:22am]
cuteoverload

Now that you have your SUITE of Caturday pillows and Caturday underwear all stitched up, the next logical step is: Baroosday!

You can whine and complain [Barooooooo!] to a Baroosday pillow all day long. OR, you can cock your head to one side and say "Baroo?" Your choice.

Download Baroosday 2 sided transfer design here!

Baroosday_flipped

Hey Maria Ruth, please talk to Walmart about taking these worldwide. KThnx.

link

1 comment|post comment

The Chocolate Balloon Knot: A Smart Bitch Contest! [21 May 2008|03:14pm]
smartbitches

It’s been awhile since we’ve had a contest, don’t you think? I mean, we’ve named sex toys, written LOL Romance queries, crafted LOLHOffs, and written cover copy based on nonsense spam words from Sarah’s inbox. But you know, there’s one place we haven’t been yet, one path we haven’t taken, one deep, dark secret ecstacy we haven’t yet explored.

You guessed it: anal!

Thanks to Kate from Ramblings on Romance, my eyeballs were forever assaulted by the first and absolutely real chocolate starfish. That’s right: an edible anus. (Can you imagine that “edibleanus.com” wasn’t already taken by some enterprising cyber squatter, emphasis on “squat?") While the shop is closed right now and you can’t procure a chocolate representation of the Hershey highway for your very own until Memorial Day (and what a day to remember THAT will be), we here at Bitchery headquarters never want to skip an opportunity to exercise our abs with the romance and the absurd.

link

post comment

Excellent use of exclamation marks [21 May 2008|07:38am]
cuteoverload

Who made this movie and from WHOM are they requesting a Sugar Glider?

As usual, the music put me over the edge with this sweet lil' movie. And, YES, I'll pay for the cage and food, Apple Squeakie and Kim I.

link

3 comments|post comment

A very special donk [21 May 2008|05:33am]
cuteoverload

Doesn't it totally sound like the post of this is; "This week, on a very special Blossom episode..."

But seriously folks, Check out this knobbular donk.

Fantasyandhermiracletwins

Apparently, donkeh twins are very rare, and since it was a tight fit in the womb, one donk got knocked (but very cute!) knees. Read more here!

Littleloneganslegs

Ehn! Go little donkeh go! (You too, Emily S.)

link

3 comments|post comment

Nuts Are Good! Success Story [21 May 2008|03:00am]
uncommonbiz
Link of the day - Free $50 Kmart card.

http://www.nutsaregood.com/

Jon and Dan Levy are definitely not nuts. Sure, they're passionate about nuts, but these no-nonsense guys don't let passion blind them from making good financial decisions. Dan, the founder of Nuts Are Good!, and his brother, Jon, who joined the company soon after it launched, started selling fresh-roasted cinnamon-flavored almonds from a mall kiosk in 1988. Business boomed, and that early success catapulted the company into volume distribution.

Roasting almonds was Jon and Dan's life--until the price of raw almonds more than doubled. "Prices started climbing in 2005 and they didn't stop until almost 2007," says Dan. "It looked like our sales volume was going to come to a screeching halt." As prices rose, Jon, 41, and Dan, 43, decided to explore more price-competitive snack items, like flavored peanuts and granola. "Granola--even with organic oats--is a lot cheaper than nuts," says Dan. "And with snack mixes, even if one ingredient goes up [in price], it doesn't shatter your profit margin."

Their new product line has reignited their passion for roasted snack products, and it fired up more than $3 million in sales of spicy buffalo peanuts, salty tamari cashews and crunchy organic granolas last year. "Almonds were always the biggest," says Jon. "But you start spinning off and seeing where the avenues to sell all these other products are."

Making Money With Credit Card Art

Spanx.Com Success Story

What Presidential Candidates Don't talk About

An E-Commerce Empire, From Porn to Puppies

link

post comment

Oh, just turn the knife would ya [21 May 2008|12:02am]
cuteoverload

More proof positive today that the Japanese continue to kick our tiny American asses in the Cuteness depahtment. Hello Kitty is now an official Tourism Ambassador of Japan.

Look at this guy in the middle. Victory is HIS, clearly.

Arthellokittyap

Thanks a LOT CNN. And Sender-Inner Kimberly S. Thanks.

link

3 comments|post comment

Tabbular! [20 May 2008|11:41pm]
cuteoverload

If you look deepleh into this kitteh's eyes, you can see the ENTIRE C.O. AUDIENCE OMG


handfull, originally uploaded by jekrub.

Followed by: JAZZ HANDS!

2506239011_011456e0bd_b

kitten, originally uploaded by jekrub.

Exsquizzle find, Lori W.

link

8 comments|post comment

Afghanistan: Graphing the violence - week 20 [20 May 2008|08:49pm]
longwar_rss
afgh-week20.jpg

Click the image to view the charts on the attacks in Afghanistan.

NATO and Afghan forces have stepped up offensive operations in the southern provinces of Kandahar, Helmand, and Uruzgan as the US Marines have provided additional manpower to target Taliban strongholds. Coalition forces hope to blunt the yearly "Taliban offensive."

Data provided to The Long War Journal by Vigilant Strategic Services Afghanistan (VSSA) shows that the attacks by the Taliban and “Anti-Government Elements” such as Gulbaddin Hekmatyer’s Hizb-I Islami Gulbuddin and other allied groups have increased over the past several weeks as the poppy harvest season has ended. The Taliban now has a pool of unemployed harvesters to serve as recruits.

Attacks in the southern region have more than tripled over the past four weeks, while attacks in the western region have doubled. The eastern, southeastern, and southern provinces bordering Pakistan still remain the most violent areas in Afghanistan. These regions collectively account for 77 percent of the violence in Afghanistan. NATO expects the attacks to increase as the Pakistani government sues for peace with the Taliban in the tribal areas and the Northwest Frontier Province.

link

post comment

Iraqi Army presses into Sadr City [20 May 2008|11:50am]
longwar_rss
IA-Sadr-City-05202008.jpg

Iraqi soldiers man a checkpoint in Sadr City. Photo by Reuters.

The Iraqi security forces have entered the northern regions of Sadr City on Tuesday. Dubbed Operation Salam, or Peace, thousands of Iraqi troops moved into the Mahdi Army stronghold just before dawn and took up positions at strategic points throughout Sadr City.

"Operation Salam is going in accordance with well-planned and organized steps," Major General Qassem Atta told Voices of Iraq. Iraqi troops are tasked with securing the neighborhoods, arresting wanted individuals, and searching and seizing unlicensed weapons.

"The forces aim at maintaining security and stability to implement the remaining three stages of the ceasefire agreement with the Sadrist movement," Atta said. The agreement states there will be no use of "illegal weapons," the Iraqi Army would dismantle roadside bombs set up by the Mahdi Army, and security forces can arrest wanted individuals if a warrant has been issued. Security forces may also target anyone attacking them. The Iraqi Army has found and destroyed more than 100 roadside bombs since the operation began.

The Iraqi Army said three of its brigades were involved in the operation, and moved into Sadr City in seven convoys. Six of the nine available battalions from the three brigades were pushed into Sadr City. Between 4,000 and 5,000 Iraqi troops are now operating inside Sadr City.

The US military, including the advisory teams, has not entered the northern areas of Sadr City. "No U.S. troops have gone beyond Quds Street," said Lieutenant Colonel Steven Stover, the chief Public Affairs Officer for Multinational Division Baghdad, in an e-mail to The Long War Journal. "This is an Iraqi planned, led, and executed operation. US soldiers are providing advice, intelligence and enabling support."

The Iraqi soldiers massed behind the walled segment of southern Sadr City, where US and Iraqi troops established a security zone. US engineers opened sections of the concrete barrier late at night, and Iraqi troops poured through the openings at 5 AM local time, The New York Times reported.

The Army met little resistance in moving through Sadr City. "By midday in Baghdad, Iraqi forces had driven to a key thoroughfare that bisects Sadr City and taken up positions near hospitals, police stations and the political headquarters" of the Sadrist movement, The New York Times reported.

Raids against the Mahdi Army continue outside Sadr City

As Sadr City remains relatively quiet, Iraqi and Coalition forces continue to target Mahdi Army forces outside the eastern district and in the South.

On May 17, US soldiers killed a Mahdi Army fighter as he prepared to attack in New Baghdad. On Monday, Iraqi troops raided a mosque in the Sha'ab neighborhood in northern Baghdad. Iraqi troops arrested five Mahdi Army fighters and seized a large weapons cache, which included "Twenty-four explosive devices, six RPG-7 launchers, 20 missiles, 50 hand grenades and 5,000 BKC machine-guns were seized." Eight of the Iranian-manufactured explosively formed penetrators, or EFPs, were found among the roadside bombs.

The Sha'ab neighborhood hosts a dangerous Mahdi Army group led by Arkan Hasnawi. A brigade commander in the Mahdi Army, Hasnawi has been linked to multiple attacks on US and Iraq security forces. He was behind the kidnapping of Shia and Sunni tribal leaders in Diyala province in October 2007. His network was also behind the kidnapping of six Sons of Iraq from a checkpoint in Baghdad’s Ur neighborhood on Feb. 7. US and Iraqi forces fought multiple battles with the Hasnawi network in February and captured a key lieutenant during a raid.

Further south of Baghdad, Iraqi troops continue to round up Mahdi Army suspects. An "armed cell" leader and three cell members were arrested in Karbala on May 19. Iraqi security forces arrested 50 "wanted persons" in Maysan province, a Sadrist stronghold in the South. In Basrah, the Iraqi Army arrested 22 "wanted men" during raids in the Madina and Ali districts.

Background on the recent fighting in with the Mahdi Army

Mahdi Army forces openly took up arms against the government after the Iraqi government started the assault on Basrah on March 25 to clear the city of the Mahdi Army and other Iranian-backed Shia militias. Sadr called for his forces to leave the streets on March 30 just as Iraqi Army and police reinforcements began to arrive in Basrah. Sadr later admitted he ordered his followers within the Army and police to abandon their posts and join the fighting against the government.

In Baghdad alone, US and Iraqi forces killed 173 Mahdi Army fighters during the six days of fighting from March 25 up until Sadr declared a cease-fire. The fighting has not abated in Sadr City and other Mahdi Army-dominated neighborhoods in northern and eastern Baghdad. A total of 520 Mahdi Army fighters have been confirmed killed in and around Sadr City since March 25.

Sadr and his political movement have become increasingly isolated since the fighting began in Basrah, Baghdad, and the South. The Iraqi government, with the support of the political parties, said the Sadrist political movement would not be able to participate in upcoming provincial elections if it failed to disband the Mahdi Army. On April 13, the cabinet approved legislation that prevents political parties with militias from contesting provincial elections this year. The bill is now in parliament for approval. Grand Ayatollah Ali al Sistani, the top Shiite cleric in Iraq, said the Mahdi Army was not above the law and should be disarmed. Sadr has refused to disband the Mahdi Army.

On April 20, Sadr threatened to conduct a third uprising, but later backed down from his threat, claiming it was directed only at US forces. The Maliki government has stood firm and said operations would continue until the Mahdi Army and other militias disarm and disband. On May 1, the Iraqi government sent a delegation to confront Iran on its involvement with the insurgency, but Sadr, who is currently in Iran, refused to meet with the Iraqi government representatives. On May 10, the Sadrist movement signed an agreement with the Iraqi government that would allow the Army and police to move into Sadr City unopposed.

link

post comment

Links of Fun, Sad, and Awesome [20 May 2008|05:08pm]
smartbitches

Did you know there are really about fourteen other pages on the internet? Really, it’s a trick done with mirrors. I’m not sure how. I’m not sure if we even exist. I need to go lie down now.

From Jenyfer Matthews, a silly link courtesy of KY Massage oil: Are you British In Bed? Discover your sexual nationality. I, apparently, am 79% Taiwanese, which is hugely amusing considering that I’m the non-Asian half of the Bitching Duo. I now wonder if I am more Asian than Candy. Probably not.

From Barb Ferrer, a link to her part of the Chica-Lit Blog tour, which contains an excerpt from a previously written piece, and a challenge for commenting. For ever comment she receives to the entry, she’ll be donating an additional $5 on top of her initial $150 donation to a charity which assisted her friends before and after the tragic death of their daughter.

And from Ernmeister, the Icelandic Phallological Museum. Is there a better way to honor the wildlife of your country than to amass “a collection of over one hundred penises and penile parts belonging to almost all the land and sea mammals that can be found in Iceland”? The curator, one Sigurdur Hjartarson, is photographed there next to one prize specimen. Boy howdy, indeed.

link

post comment

Guess who just filled out their absentee statewide primary balllllot! [20 May 2008|07:45am]
cuteoverload

This lil' stoat! He's votin' 'n' stoatin'!

[OK, technically, it's a Marten, but Martens only vote for Nader and I didn't want to encourage that]


Curious Marten, originally uploaded by Adam Lyon.

link

8 comments|post comment

navigation
[ viewing | most recent entries ]
[ go | earlier ]