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http://www.WagKingdom.com/wag/deMello_assasination_ww3.htm
ASSASINATION OF
TOP UN REP
MAY PRESSAGE MID-EAST WW3
Some elements in the Iraq conflict may
have determined to give those opposed
to the invasion a signal taste of the same medicine they have been
dishing out.
Discussion Tuesday night on Mysteries
of the Mind (Archive soon)
By Fintan
Dunne, 19 Aug 03 21:44GMT
Editor, WagKingdom.com
Interests
outside Iraq may underlie the assasination of one of the most experienced
and top ranking UN officials in the world in a bomb blast at the
UN headquarters in Baghdad. At least 20 are dead and scores wounded
in the massive blast which severly damaged the Canal Hotel UN building.
The bomb destroyed the office of the UN's special representative
to Iraq, Sergio Vieira de Mello, who used
his mobile phone to summon help while still trapped in the rubble.
But rescuers, who had to remove rubble by hand, were unable to reach
him before he died of his injuries.
Before losing contact, Vieira de Mello, told rescuers an iron bar
had fallen on his legs and he could not move.
A UN official at
the scene, Salim Lone said Viera de Mello's office, was close
to the main explosion. "All this happened right below [his office]
window. I guess it was targeted for that," Mr Lone said.
Particularly relevant may be comments during a news
conference, August 19, 2003 in Manama, Bahrain. A member of
the US/UK-backed Interim Governing Council of Iraq, Adnan Pacachi,
was reported
saying that the bombing was a message to the United Nations
and other countries to change their views towards sending troops
to Iraq to maintain security. [REUTERS/Hamad I Mohammed]
The explosion follows days after another truck bomb blew up outside
the Jordanian embassy in Baghdad, killing 19 people. At the time,
in his capacity as UN Special Representative in Iraq, Vieira de
Mello strongly
condemned the attack. An August 10th, 2003 editorial in the
Jordan Times speculated the bombing was linked to an ongoing anti-Jordan
campaign orchestrated
by Ahmed Chalabi through newspapers over which he has influence.
The editorial recounted some eyewitness
reports at the Jordanian embassy bombing said the truck did not
explode because it contained a bomb, but because it was actually
hit by a missile, claimed to have been fired by a U.S. helicoptor
seen hovering two minutes earlier above the embassy.
An audio report today by a Global
Radio News correspondent in Iraq, said an unconfirmed eyewitness
account described a missile striking the UN Headquarters.
The assasination of Viera de Mello
comes as both the USA and Russia are engaging in large scale military
exercises.
TOP UN TROUBLESHOOTER
Sergio Vieira de Mello, 55, was the UN's top
troubleshooter for hotspots around the world. He was appointed
the U.N. special representative to Iraq in late May in what was
to be a four-month assignment.
In the 1970's Vieira de Mello served the UN in Bangladesh, Cyprus
and Mozambique. In the early 1980's, he was senior political adviser
to the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon. In the early 1990s, he was
in Cambodia, then in Yugoslavia and later became a special U.N.
envoy in Kosovo. Recently, he oversaw East Timor's transition to
independence. In September 2002, he was appointed U.N. High Commissioner
for Human Rights. He was often described as a possible future U.N.
secretary-general.
Vieira de Mello had said the top of
his agenda was to consult Iraqi leaders and opinion makers "to
make sure that the interests of the Iraqi people come first"
in rebuilding their country.
The U.N. role in postwar Iraq was
a major issue during the intense Security Council negotiations on
a resolution lifting sanctions and authorizing the United States
and Britain to administer the country until a democratic government
is established. Under pressure from France, Russia and Germany,
the secretary-general's special representative was given "independent
responsibilities" besides working with Britian and the US to
rebuild Iraq.
Fayssal Mekdad, who represents Syria on the UN Security Council
said
in a statement: that such terrorist incidents "aimed at
undermining the vital role of the United Nations in Iraq" cannot
break the will of the international community to further intensify
its efforts to help the people of Iraq." U.N. Secretary General
Kofi Annan will cut short a vacation and return to U.N. headquarters
in New York on Wednesday.
In Cairo, the Arab League strongly
condemned the attack and urged Iraqi political forces to help
prevent such acts from recurring again. "This is a serious, criminal
terror act aimed against UN presence in Iraq," the pan-Arab organisation
said in a statement.
UNPRECEDENTED MILITARY
EXERCISE
Yesterday, Russia
began large-scale
exercises of Russia's Pacific Navy in the Far East. Over 68
ships and boats, 42 auxiliary vessels, 50 planes and helicopters,
up to 30,000 servicemen and civil specialists are engaged. It will
be the largest exercise of it's kind in the region for over 20 years.
" This exercise is unprecedented
in the history of the Russian Navy in terms of scale, range
of participants, and area," Adm. Viktor Kravchenko, chief of
Russia's Naval Main Staff, was quoted by Itar-Tass.
Meanwhile, 'U.S. Northern Command,
which is responsible for military operations inside the United States,
also yesterday
began an exercise to test its ability to respond to multiple
domestic emergencies simultaneously. Twenty-eight active-duty military
units are involved, including the headquarters of Atlantic Fleet
in Norfolk, Va., and Air Combat Command in Langley, Va.
International opponents of the US/UK invasion of Iraq have been
content to let the invaders dangle on the end of a guerilla noose
of their own making. Their reluctance to contribute to an international
peacekeeping force, combined with infrastructure attacks and US
casualties meant that in the long term the US mission had already
de facto become impossible.
The Jordanian embassy blast and today's UN HQ attack have been characterized
as "soft" targets. But they are, of course, also non-US
targets.
Some elements involved in the Iraq conflict may have determined
to up the ante and give those opposed of the invasion a signal taste
of the same medicine they have been dishing out.
But, Mr. Vieira de Mello was not just well connected, he was a pivotal
player in the United Nations and the geopolitical elite. His death
could lead to an unstoppable cascade of events, or may even directly
trigger a scale and scope of retaliation which could plunge the
Middle East and the world into a global conflict.
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WEDNESDAY
20th
WE WARNED US OF BLAST SAYS CHALABI
"During
a meeting on the 14th (of August), we received information that
a large-scale terror attack would take place in Baghdad. The information
said that the attack would be aimed at a soft-target,
not the American military or forces. The information said the attack
would use a truck and would be carried
out by using a suicide mechanism or by remote control. We shared
this information with the Americans," Chalabi told reporters.
Ten days ago, just after the bombing
of the Jordanian Embassy in Baghdad, Walter Slocombe, the senior
coalition advisor to the Iraqi Defense Ministry, said
in an interview with The Los Angeles Times that "we
have to be prepared for a spectacular attack."
U.N. officials tell
NewsMax that de Mello's office on the second floor, in an area
of the building overlooking a public road, was one of the "softest"
sections of the compound. "It is one of the areas which had the
least security," confided one U.N. official. Why the U.N.'s security
department allowed its most senior official in Iraq to occupy such
an exposed office is a question many at the world body's New York
City headquarters are now asking.
The road in question was occupied several weeks ago by Coalition
troops, which had since re-deployed to other
areas around Iraq.
The positioning of the bomb near the
envoy's office suggested he was the target of the attack, L. Paul
Bremer, the top U.S. civilian administrator in Iraq, told
CNN.
China's President Hu Jintao urged
the United Nations to continue its mission..., and Germany's
Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder blamed the attack on ``forces that
do not want the rebuilding of Iraq to take place in peace and freedom.''
TUESDAY
19th
Baghdad's Canal hotel, which
had housed the headquarters of the United Nations in Iraq for more
than a decade, was a scene of devastation and confusion on Tuesday
following a huge explosion that tore apart the building. Local
residents said the hotel complex was also used by American troops.
Some eyewitnesses claimed
a rocket had been fired from the north-east.
The Arab television station Al-Jazeera reported that
an anti-U.S. group in Iraq, the Iraqi Islamic National Resistance
Movement, released
a statement condemning the attack and saying no Iraqis would
have attacked the United Nations.
A congressional delegation touring
Baghdad today had
been scheduled to speak with UN officials. Sen. Maria Cantwell,
D-Wash had
set up a meeting with Sergio Vieira de Mello. Mechanical problems
with the delegation's C-130 plane out of Jordan delayed the 1:30
p.m. meeting at coalition headquarters, Cantwell said, so she tentatively
set up a telephone call with Vieira de Mello for later. The bomb
went off at 4:30 p.m.
After the explosion, the delegation attended a scheduled reception
with several members of the Iraqi governing council, said Sen. John
Sununu, R-N.H. The group includes Senator John McCain and Congressman
Jim Kolbe. Senator McCain called for more U.S. troops in the country.
"I believe we may need more people and we may need different types
of people," he said.
"The second effective use of a car
bomb in less than two weeks suggests at least some
foreign involvement," said political risk analyst Jon Alterman,
Middle East director of the Washington-based CSIS.
Fearing deadly car bomb attacks, U.S.
forces in Iraq just weeks ago began
erecting more barriers around potentially "softer" nonmilitary
targets. But United Nations officials in Iraq decided on a lower
level of security to provide a more welcoming image to Iraqis, American
military officials said. A cement truck filled with about 500 pounds
of C4 military explosives detonated just outside a newly built,
12-foot-high security wall around the U.N. compound. The wall was
about 50 feet away from the U.N. building at the site of the blast.
In a statement, the U.N. Staff Council's
security
committee called on Secretary-General Kofi Annan "to suspend
all operations in Iraq and withdraw its staff until such time as
measures can be taken to improve security." Both the Security Council
and Annan said in statements that the United Nations would be undeterred
by the violence. A U.N. spokesman Fred Eckhard emphasized that U.N.
security was the responsibility of the United States, noting "we
are entirely in their hands." U.N. staff demanded an investigation
into "why adequate security was not in place to prevent such a horrifying
attack."
The deadly bombing in Iraq will only
strengthen
the United States' commitment to the long and difficult task
of bringing peace and democracy to that country, Rep. Jim Gibbons
said Tuesday. Gibbons said the attack will cause U.S. officials
to re-examine whether existing military resources in Iraq "are adequate
to do the job.
Iraq's 25-member interim Governing
Council blamed
the bombing of the UN headquarters in Baghdad on either toppled
dictator Saddam Husseins followers or foreign terrorists. "The Iraqi
people .....calls on its brother countries and friends at the UN
to play a positive role in the efforts to bring stability and security...."
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