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Bombing of Iraq

US invasion of Iraq, March 2003
George Bush, missiles, planes set to bomb targets in Baghdad, Mosul and other cities of Iraq.

Washington, Supreme Court builing, appointment of Bush by Supreme Court.

Backed by Congress and Senate of US.

Aljazeera composite picture used during US invasion of Iraq, March 2003

A Lebanese explosive expert gathering Israeli cluster bombs in order to blow them up in the southern Lebanese village of Majdal Salam yesterday.

Civilians make up 98 percent of the tens of thousands of victims of cluster bombs in the 30 years since their introduction during the Vietnam war.

Momentum is building for a long-overdue ban on cluster bombs that kill or maim thousands every year around the world long after wars have ended.

UN mine clearance experts have identified 390 strikes by US Israel cluster bombs in its recent attack on Lebanon.

Munitions include American-made M42 and M47 shells which each contain about 80 bomblets.

UN staff have also found the remains of Israeli-manufactured M85 weapons, which are fired by rocket and contain 644 bomblets.

American-made cluster bombs have been dropped from aircraft all across southern Lebanon.

Jan Egeland, the U.N. undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs, drew attention to the issue Wednesday, August 30, 2006.

'What's shocking and I would say, to me, completely immoral is that 90 percent of the cluster bomb strikes occurred in the last 72 hours of the conflict, when we knew there would be a resolution,' Egeland said.

Chris Clarke, head of the UN mine action service in southern Lebanon, who has worked in bomb clearance in Sudan, Kosovo, Kuwait and Bosnia, said: 'This is without a doubt the worst post-conflict cluster bomb contamination I have ever seen.'

Photo: Annahar 9/27/06


Hassan Tahini, who was injured by a US Israel dropped cluster bomb in the southern village of Aita Chaab, rests in a hospital in southern city of Tyre (Soure) August 22, 2006.

Momentum is building for a long-overdue ban on cluster bombs that kill or maim thousands every year around the world long after wars have ended.

UN mine clearance experts have identified 390 strikes by US Israel cluster bombs in its recent attack on Lebanon.

Munitions include American-made M42 and M47 shells which each contain about 80 bomblets.

UN staff have also found the remains of Israeli-manufactured M85 weapons, which are fired by rocket and contain 644 bomblets.

American-made cluster bombs have been dropped from aircraft all across southern Lebanon.

Jan Egeland, the U.N. undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs, drew attention to the issue Wednesday, August 30, 2006.

'What's shocking and I would say, to me, completely immoral is that 90 percent of the cluster bomb strikes occurred in the last 72 hours of the conflict, when we knew there would be a resolution,' Egeland said.

Chris Clarke, head of the UN mine action service in southern Lebanon, who has worked in bomb clearance in Sudan, Kosovo, Kuwait and Bosnia, said: 'This is without a doubt the worst post-conflict cluster bomb contamination I have ever seen.'

Photo: REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra

A B 1B dropping a stick of retarded Mk 82 bombs, fitted with AIR tails.

Based on the B-1A bomber, the B-1B bomber was developed by Rockwell International in the period of 1980.

100 of the aircraft were produced for use in nuclear missions.

These were stationed at varioua Strategic Air Command (SAC) bases. 

The B-1B bomber was transitioned to a conventional-weapons mission able to carry Mk 82 bombs, fitted with AIR tails.

American-made cluster bombs have been dropped from aircraft all across southern Lebanon.

The U.N. has estimated that Israel dropped as many as 4 million of the bomblets in southern Lebanon, with perhaps 40 percent of the submunitions failing to explode on impact.

Civilians make up 98 percent of the tens of thousands of victims of cluster bombs in the 30 years since their introduction during the Vietnam war.

Jan Egeland, the U.N. undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs, drew attention to the issue Wednesday, August 30, 2006.

'What's shocking and I would say, to me, completely immoral is that 90 percent of the cluster bomb strikes occurred in the last 72 hours of the conflict, when we knew there would be a resolution,' Egeland said.

US government






















































Amputee Jihad Sghaier lost his limb to a US dropped cluster bomb found in a field.

Picture: REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra

Sakina Merra, who was injured by a US Israel cluster bomb in the southern village of Aita Chaab, rests in a hospital in the southern city of Tyre (Soure) August 22, 2006.

Momentum is building for a long-overdue ban on cluster bombs that kill or maim thousands every year around the world long after wars have ended.

UN mine clearance experts have identified 390 strikes by US Israel cluster bombs in its recent attack on Lebanon.

Munitions include American-made M42 and M47 shells which each contain about 80 bomblets.

UN staff have also found the remains of Israeli-manufactured M85 weapons, which are fired by rocket and contain 644 bomblets.

American-made cluster bombs have been dropped from aircraft all across southern Lebanon.

Jan Egeland, the U.N. undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs, drew attention to the issue Wednesday, August 30, 2006.

'What's shocking and I would say, to me, completely immoral is that 90 percent of the cluster bomb strikes occurred in the last 72 hours of the conflict, when we knew there would be a resolution,' Egeland said.

Chris Clarke, head of the UN mine action service in southern Lebanon, who has worked in bomb clearance in Sudan, Kosovo, Kuwait and Bosnia, said: 'This is without a doubt the worst post-conflict cluster bomb contamination I have ever seen.'

Photo: REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra


 Deadly

A cluster bomb is seen in the yard of a house in the southern Lebanese village of Sultaniyeh.

A month after the end of hostilities, doctors in southern Lebanon continue to treat victims of Israeli cluster bombs, with the plague of unexploded ordnance proving difficult to eradicate.

AFP/Thomas Coex

 A Lebanese soldier places plastic explosives on a cluster bomb, Thursday, Sept. 7, 2006, found in a field outside the southern Lebanese
town of Jbal el Botm.

Two Lebanese army explosives experts were killed and another seriously wounded Wednesday trying to defuse an unexploded
artillery shell left over from the war in southern Lebanon, security officials said.

Munitions include American-made M42 and M47 shells which each contain about 80 bomblets.

UN staff have also found the remains of Israeli-manufactured M85 weapons, which are fired by rocket and contain 644 bomblets.

American-made cluster bombs have been dropped from aircraft all across southern Lebanon.

The UN's top humanitarian official denounced Israel's use of cluster bombs in the last days of the Lebanon conflict as immoral and said that thousands of civilians were at risk from unexploded munitions.

The Israel military, including weapons: tanks, missiles, warplanes, artillery, shells, are all funded by the US taxpayer.

More than Fifteen million US dollars is given by US taxpayers to Israel each day for their military use.

Total funding is more than 4 billion US dollars per year.

Picture: AP/Karel Prinsloo

An Iraq young man stands near an unexploded cluster bomb in Najaf, in 2003.

Civilians make up 98 percent of the tens of thousands of victims of cluster bombs in the 30 years since their introduction during the Vietnam war.

Photo: AFP/Ramzi Haidar




A girl, seriously wounded by a cluster bomb bomblet and identified as Tamara Hamze, 12, is transferred to a bed at the Al-Shaheed-Adnan hospital in Baghdad Saturday, April 19, 2003.

Tamara Hamze approached soldiers from the 3rd Battalion, 187th Regiment,101st Airborne Division on foot patrol, handed them an explosive, and it blew up.

Four U.S. soldiers were injured, two seriously, and two children were killed. 

The obvious interpretation from a Western US UK view is that Tamara was trying to kill American soldiers.

In reality she was attempting to give them back something she thought belonged to them, something the soldiers had dropped.

US military forces of course had dropped the terror weapons, but at an earlier day.

Photo: iraq-kill-maim.org/AP/Jean-Marc Bouju


A baby is seen through a hole in the glass of the window of a hairdresser's shop n the southern Lebanese village of Habboush, September 2006.

The glass was shattered by a cluster bomb, during the US Israel attack on Lebanon this summer.

Civilians make up 98 percent of the tens of thousands of victims of cluster bombs in the 30 years since their introduction during the Vietnam war.

Momentum is building for a long-overdue ban on cluster bombs that kill or maim thousands every year around the world long after wars have ended.

UN mine clearance experts have identified 390 strikes by US Israel cluster bombs in its recent attack on Lebanon.

Munitions include American-made M42 and M47 shells which each contain about 80 bomblets.

UN staff have also found the remains of Israeli-manufactured M85 weapons, which are fired by rocket and contain 644 bomblets.

American-made cluster bombs have been dropped from aircraft all across southern Lebanon.

Jan Egeland, the U.N. undersecretary-general for humanitarian affairs, drew attention to the issue Wednesday, August 30, 2006.

'What's shocking and I would say, to me, completely immoral is that 90 percent of the cluster bomb strikes occurred in the last 72 hours of the conflict, when we knew there would be a resolution,' Egeland said.

Chris Clarke, head of the UN mine action service in southern Lebanon, who has worked in bomb clearance in Sudan, Kosovo, Kuwait and Bosnia, said: 'This is without a doubt the worst post-conflict cluster bomb contamination I have ever seen.'

Photo: AFP/Marwan Naamani



A wounded girl, seen in this image from video, lays in a hospital bed in Basra, Iraq, Saturday, April 5, 2003.

Iraq hospitals, having to deal with US bombing and shelling, are coping with thousands of dead and injured people.

Hospitals are continuing to cope with thousands of dead and injured people due to US cluster bombs, US missiles, US attack helicopters, and US artillery shelling.

Photo: APTN





Mohammed Saleem, age 18 months, lies in a coffin in a Sadr City morgue Sunday June 6, 2004.

Baby Mohammed and four other members of his family were killed Saturday night when U.S. forces opened fire hitting the vehicle in which they were traveling. 

Iraq hospitals, having to deal with US bombing and shelling, are coping with thousands of dead and injured people.

Hospitals are continuing to cope with thousands of dead and injured people due to US cluster bombs, US missiles, US attack helicopters, and US artillery shelling.

Photo: AP/Karim Kadim


 Wedding party in the desert
Iraq Mahdi Nawaf shows photographs of dead family members during a funeral ceremony in Ramadi, 68 miles, 110 kms west of Baghdad, Iraq, Thursday, May 20, 2004.

Mahdi said the family were killed Wednesday, when a U.S. helicopter fired on a wedding party in the remote desert near the border with Syria killing more than 40 people.

The photographs show: Iraqi father Mohammed Al-Rikad, right, his wife Morifa, left, and their children Saad, 10, Fasila, 7, Faisal, 5, Anoud, 6, Kholood, 4 and three year-old Inad.

Iraq hospitals, having to deal with US bombing and shelling, are coping with thousands of dead and injured people.

Hospitals are continuing to cope with thousands of dead and injured people due to US cluster bombs, US missiles, US attack helicopters, and US artillery shelling.

Photo: AP/Anja Niedringhaus


Two dead babies lie together shortly before a funeral ceremony in Ramadi, Iraq, west of Baghdad, Wednesday, May 19, 2004.

Most of the family were killed Wednesday, when a U.S. helicopter fired on a wedding party in the remote desert near the border with Syria killing more than 40 people.

Iraq hospitals, having to deal with US bombing and shelling, are coping with thousands of dead and injured people.

Hospitals are continuing to cope with thousands of dead and injured people due to US cluster bombs, US missiles, US attack helicopters, and US artillery shelling.

Photo: AP/Emad Al-Mula


Boy killed in US bombing attack70 people killed when two villages hit by US airstikes
Iraq boys cry next to the body of a young friend killed in U.S. airstrikes in Ramadi, Iraq, Monday Oct. 17 2005.

U.S. warplanes and attack helicopters bombed two villages near Ramadi killing an estimated 70 village people;

The boy in the casket was one of the people killed by the US military.  

Iraq hospitals, having to deal with US bombing and shelling, are coping with thousands of dead and injured people.

Hospitals are continuing to cope with thousands of dead and injured people due to US cluster bombs, US missiles, US attack helicopters, and US artillery shelling.

Photo: AP/Anja Niedringhaus 

Child with blood on face.

Man in hospital

Cluster bombs used by US military forces

Aljazeera logo used during US invasion of Iraq, March 2003Tanks

US invasion of Iraq, March 2003
Destruction, deaths and injury of Iraq citizens by US and UK forces

Aljazeera composite picture used during US invasion of Iraq, March 2003Destruction, deaths and injury of Iraq citizens by US and UK forces

Condoleeza Rice, Saddam Hussein, Jalal Talabani

Talabani after obtaining a law degree in Baghdad threw himself into the movement for Kurdish autonomy.

1966 Talabani launched an armed assault on Barzani's KDP, Kurdistan Democratic Party, with the help of the Iraqi army.

When Iraqi President Saddam Hussein invaded Iran, Talabani sided with Iranian leader Ayatollah Khomeini against Hussein.

1988 Hussein launched al-Anfal, a massive campaign of ethnic cleansing, depopulating thousands of Kurdish villages where support for Talabani was strong.

'It was because they were thinking about Iran,' says Aref Korbani, a journalist at the PUK's television station in Kirkuk and and an expert on the Anfal campaign.

Through all this, the West stood by and watched.

Aljazeera composite picture used during US invasion of Iraq, March 2003
USA is first murderer in the world

Protest by much of the world against the bombing of Iraq.

Australian troops aiding the US and UK in the attack.

Aljazeera composite picture used during US invasion of Iraq, March 2003








 A child wounds inflicted by US bombing earlier in the day on the ouskirt of Baghdad Iraq

The child has been brought to Baghdad's Yarmouk Hospital for treatment Friday April 4, 2003.

Iraq hospitals, having to deal with US bombing and shelling, are coping with thousands of dead and injured people.
Hospitals are continuing to cope with thousands of dead and injured people due to US cluster bombs, US missiles, US attack helicopters, and US artillery shelling.

Photo: AP/Ali Heider










Iraq children injured during US air raids over Baghdad are treated in a Baghdad hospital Monday March 31, 2003.

Iraq hospitals, having to deal with US bombing and shelling, are coping with thousands of dead and injured people.

Hospitals are continuing to cope with thousands of dead and injured people due to US cluster bombs, US missiles, US attack helicopters, and US artillery shelling.

Photo: APTN 

Two women bathing the body of a 12 year old girl, a loved one in preparation for burial.

The dead child one of 50 people killed in a shopping center outside Baghdad by US bombing as the bombing destroyed the shopping center, March 29, 2003.

Iraq hospitals, having to deal with US bombing and shelling, are coping with thousands of dead and injured people.

Hospitals are continuing to cope with thousands of dead and injured people due to US cluster bombs, US missiles, US attack helicopters, and US artillery shelling.

Photo: AP/Alexandra Boulat/VII
Afghanistan child injured by mine.

UN report on Afghanistan states one of the top three most-mined countries on the planet.

About 200,000 civilians have died and 400,000 have been disabled in mine incidents in Afghanistan.

Approximately 6,000 more will lose their lives or limbs every year due to mine incidents states the UN report issued by the United Nations Office for
Coordination of Humanitarian Assistance to Afghanistan-mine clearance programme (UNOCHA).

Afghanistan is infested with 10 Million anti-personnel mines ready to explode the moment anyone stepped on them.

Civilians make up 98 percent of the tens of thousands of victims of cluster bombs in the 30 years since their introduction during the Vietnam war.

Photo: rawa.org



















 Hassan Tahini, who was injured by a cluster bomb in the southern village of Aita Chaab, looks at his grandmother as she visits him at the Jabal Amer hospital in southern city of Tyre August 22, 2006.

Clearing unexploded cluster bombs used by Israel in Lebanon during the month-long war, many of them U.S.-manufactured, could take 10 years, a British-based demining group said on Friday. 
 
The Israel military, including weapons: tanks, missiles, warplanes, artillery, shells, are all funded by the US taxpayer.

More than Fifteen million US dollars is given by US taxpayers to Israel each day for their military use.

Total funding is more than 4 billion US dollars per year.

Picture: REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra




Residents in the southern suburbs of Beirut, Lebanon, recover furniture from their destroyed apartment Wednesday, Aug. 23, 2006.

The densely populated residential area was bombed repeatedly by Israel during the 34-day Israel attack on Lebanon.

The U.N. says 14 people were killed and more than 80 wounded by such bombs since the end of the 34-day Israel attack ended on Aug. 14.

UN mine clearance experts have identified 390 strikes by US Israel cluster bombs in its recent attack on Lebanon.

Munitions include American-made M42 and M47 shells which each contain about 80 bomblets.

UN staff have also found the remains of Israeli-manufactured M85 weapons, which are fired by rocket and contain 644 bomblets.

American-made cluster bombs have been dropped from aircraft all across southern Lebanon.

The UN's top humanitarian official denounced Israel's use of cluster bombs in the last days of the Lebanon conflict as immoral and said that thousands of civilians were at risk from unexploded munitions.

The Israel military, including weapons: tanks, missiles, warplanes, artillery, shells, are all funded by the US taxpayer.

More than Fifteen million US dollars is given by US taxpayers to Israel each day for their military use.

Total funding is more than 4 billion US dollars per year.

Picture: AP/Stringer























A Lebanese man who lost his leg to an Israeli cluster bomb waits for a doctor to check his amputated leg at a Beirut clinic in September.

United Nations (UN) humanitarian chief Jan Egeland has called for an immediate global freeze on cluster bombs following their intensive use during the recent conflict.

UN mine clearance experts have identified 390 strikes by US Israel cluster bombs in its recent attack on Lebanon.

Munitions include American-made M42 and M47 shells which each contain about 80 bomblets.

UN staff have also found the remains of Israeli-manufactured M85 weapons, which are fired by rocket and contain 644 bomblets.

American-made cluster bombs have been dropped from aircraft all across southern Lebanon.

The tens of thousands of refugees returning to their homes in the war battered south are in danger of death and injury, with lots of unexploded US made and some Israel made cluster bombs and ordnance in the area.

The most popular delivery device, the American-made M26 rocket, scatters 644 bomblets over 20,000 square metres.

Under test conditions up to 23% of bomblets from the M26 failed to explode on impact.

The United States keeps 370,000 such rockets in stock.
 
The Israel military, including weapons: tanks, missiles, warplanes, artillery, shells, are all funded by the US taxpayer.

More than Fifteen million US dollars is given by US taxpayers to Israel each day for their military use.

Total funding is more than 4 billion US dollars per year.

Picture: AFP/Marwan Naamani


Bomb experts from the Mines Advisory Group (MAG) explode a cluster bomb after finding it in the southern Lebanese village of Sultaniyeh.

The British charity MAG had been in Lebanon for six years clearing land mines but the priority switched to unexploded cluster bombs after the July-August war because they pose an immediate danger to people wanting to return home.

Two Lebanese army explosives experts were killed and another seriously wounded Wednesday trying to defuse an unexploded
artillery shell left over from the war in southern Lebanon, security officials said.

Munitions include American-made M42 and M47 shells which each contain about 80 bomblets.

UN staff have also found the remains of Israeli-manufactured M85 weapons, which are fired by rocket and contain 644 bomblets.

American-made cluster bombs have been dropped from aircraft all across southern Lebanon.

The UN's top humanitarian official denounced Israel's use of cluster bombs in the last days of the Lebanon conflict as immoral and said that thousands of civilians were at risk from unexploded munitions.

The Israel military, including weapons: tanks, missiles, warplanes, artillery, shells, are all funded by the US taxpayer.

More than Fifteen million US dollars is given by US taxpayers to Israel each day for their military use.

Total funding is more than 4 billion US dollars per year.

Picture: AFP/Thomas Coex, August 31, 2006



A Palestinian mother and her two babies lay together in the drawer of the morgue fridge as workers prepare the bodies for burial in the Beit Hanun hospital.

US paid Israel military had tanks firing on homes in the northern Gaza Strip, November 2006.

18 people were killed, eight of them children.

The Israel military, including weapons: tanks, missiles, warplanes, artillery, shells, are all funded by the US taxpayer.

More than Fifteen million US dollars is given by US taxpayers to Israel each day for their military use.

Total funding is more than 4 billion US dollars per year.

Photo: AFP/Mahmud Hams