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Sunday, January 21, 2007

Deadliest Day in Iraq in 2 Years

And this is at current troop levels.

Associated Press:

At least 20 service members were killed in military operations in Iraq on Saturday in the deadliest day for U.S. forces in two years, including 13 who died in a helicopter crash and five slain in an attack by militia fighters in the holy city Karbala, military officials said.

Saturday's toll was the third-highest of any single day since the war began in March 2003, eclipsed only by 37 U.S. deaths Jan. 26, 2005 and 28 on the third day of the U.S. invasion. U.S. authorities also announced two U.S. combat deaths from Friday.

The heavy toll comes at a critical time of rising congressional opposition to President George W. Bush's decision to dispatch 21,500 additional soldiers to the conflict to try and curb sectarian slaughter. The first reinforcements are already arriving in Baghdad and the surrounding areas.


Meanwhile, 10,000 troops advocate for withdrawal, not escalation.

United Press International:

Some 50 active-duty officers and other troops, including veterans of the current Iraq war, announced Tuesday that they would hand-deliver their petition, entitled an "Appeal for Redress," to Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, and other members of Congress, AppealforRedress.org said in a statement Tuesday.

"Rather than escalating troop levels, the appeal calls on Congress to put an end to the war and bring the troops home," the statement said.

"With the recent call for an escalation of troops in Iraq, Congress should listen to those of us who have been there and who will be directly affected by this policy change," said Seaman Jonathan Hutto, co-founder of the Appeal for Redress group.

"Any troop increase over here will just produce more sitting ducks, more targets," said Sgt. Ronn Cantu who is on active service in Iraq and was quoted in the group's statement.


Clearly, escalation will just mean more bad days. Any actual progress will be unlikely. As we build up, so does the insurgency -- all we're doing is extending the conflict.

Which, of course, is the entire purpose of escalation. There's a reason why people are calling it Operation Run Out the Clock -- Bush is hoping the war ends after he leaves office. He's more concerned with his own place in history than he is with the lives of american soldiers and iraqis.

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