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Day By Day With VOA
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Bush: Coalition Forces Must Remain in Iraq to Fight 'Enemies of Freedom'
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Americas - USA - Washington -
@White House - Re: Military Volunteers & Iraq

President Bush says American forces are still needed in Iraq to fight off threats to freedom. Mr. Bush spoke at a ceremony at the White House honoring Americans who volunteer for military service. He sought to reassure the nation at a time when American and British casualties in Iraq are mounting. Mr. Bush stressed that coalition troops must remain to fight "enemies of freedom." "Having liberated Iraq as promised, we will help that country to found a just and representative government, as promised," he emphasized.

VOA -- 01 Jul 2003, 21:06 UTC
Paula Wolfson
White House

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President Bush says American forces are still needed in Iraq to fight off threats to freedom. Mr. Bush spoke at a ceremony at the White House honoring Americans who volunteer for military service. 

The room was filled with military personnel. But the president's message was for the American public at large. 

He sought to reassure the nation at a time when American and British casualties in Iraq are mounting. Mr. Bush stressed that coalition troops must remain to fight "enemies of freedom." 

"The looting and random violence that began in the immediate aftermath of war remains a challenge in some areas," he said. "A greater challenge comes from former Baath Party and security officials who will stop at nothing to regain their power and their privilege." 

The president vowed there will be no return to tyranny in Iraq. He said those who threaten order and stability in that country will face ruin just as surely as the regime they once served. 

"Those who try to undermine the reconstruction of Iraq are not only attacking our coalition, they are attacking the Iraqi people," he said. "And we will stand with the Iraqi people, strongly, as they build a hopeful future." 

Mr. Bush said all attacks on American troops in Iraq will be met with decisive force, and he pledged U.S. forces will remain until freedom is firmly established. 

"Having liberated Iraq as promised, we will help that country to found a just and representative government, as promised," he emphasized. 

The remarks came in a ceremony marking the thirtieth anniversary of the all-volunteer military in the United States. Military conscription ended in America on July 1, 1973. Standing behind the president during the ceremony were 30 men and women who took the oath of re-enlistment during the White House event. The oath was administered by General Richard Myers, the nation's highest military officer.
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US Administrator in Iraq: Violence is Last Gasp From Saddam Loyalists
Explosion at Fallujah Mosque Raises Tensions Between Iraqis and American Troops
5 Dead in Iraq Mosque Explosion
Massive Coalition Raids in Iraq Continue, say US Officials


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Contents of VOA Page
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VOA -- Logged on Tuesday, 01-Jul-2003
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Contents of Defend America Page
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DoD -- Logged on Tuesday, 01-Jun-2003
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REENLISTMENT CEREMONY Marking the 30th anniversary of the All-Volunteer Force that constitutes America's military, President George W. Bush speaks at a White House reenlistment ceremony for servicemembers. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Richard Myers (second from left) reenlisted the 30 military personnel in the East Room Tuesday, July 1, 2003. Defense Dept. photo by Sgt. 1st Class Doug Sample
Ceremony Marks 30 Years of All-Volunteer Force
By Sgt. 1st Class Doug Sample/ American Forces Press Service 
     WASHINGTON, July 1, 2003 With right hands and voices raised, 30 military personnel from each branch of the armed forces repeated the oath of re-enlistment in the White House East Room today. 
     This re-enlistment ceremony marked the 30th anniversary of the all-volunteer force. Presiding over the event was Commander in Chief George W. Bush. Air Force Gen. Richard B. Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, read the oath. 
     The White House ceremony was one of many held throughout the Defense Department on this special day. Enlistment ceremonies were also held at 65 Military Entrance Processing Stations throughout the United States. More
Transcript of the President's Remarks
A Proclamation
All-Volunteer Force Has 'Come of Age,' Chu Says
Amb. Bremer Says More Iraqis Cooperating With Coalition
By Jim Garamone / American Forces Press Service
U.S. Army Lt. Col. William Bishop (right), commander of the 431st Civil Affairs Battalion, escorts Ambassador Paul Bremer and U.S. Army Maj. Gen. David H. Petraeus, commander of the101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), to the Civil Military Operations Center located in Mosul, Iraq, June 29, 2003. Bremer toured the center and answered questions by the media. U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Kevin J. Wastler     WASHINGTON, July 1, 2003 The remnants of Saddam Hussein's regime are not only attacking coalition forces, but also the infrastructure all Iraqis rely on, said the presidential envoy to Iraq today.
     The death squad leftovers and unreconstructed members of the Iraqi Republican Guard and Baath Party loyalists "are increasingly alienating the rest of the population, which is beginning to enjoy their new-found freedoms," Paul Bremer said in a Baghdad news conference.
     He noted that more and more Iraqis are coming forward to help the coalition forces and the reconstituted Iraqi police with information on who is behind these attacks. More

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Go to Operation Tribute to Freedom
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JOIN THE TEAM
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"As we move toward the 4th of July 
holiday, I would like to acknowledge the many communities around the country that are participating and hosting Tribute to Freedom events. These events symbolize the unification of our communities and our military and serve to recognize our uniformed men and women who have served and continue to serve in Iraq, in Afghanistan, and around the world. And they do that so we may enjoy the freedom of our independence. It's also an opportunity to thank all Americans for their unwavering support of our troops." 

 
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff 
Gen. Richard B. Myers, USAF, June 30, 2003
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July 4th Events to 
Highlight Support for Troops
     WASHINGTON, June 30, 2003 More than 4,000 military troops and Defense Department civilians will take part in Independence Day events across the United States as part of Operation Tribute to Freedom, the DoD initiative encouraging Americans to thank and support U.S. troops. 
      These service members and civilians will be supporting more than 2,000 parades, military bands, color guards, speeches and military aircraft flyovers as the nation pauses to celebrate its independence and extend its thanks to troops serving worldwide in the war on terrorism. More
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Welcome Home & Thank You
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starAMERICA'S BEST WISHES
"How does a civilian even begin to thank you?? Words just do not do justice at this time. You have put YOUR life at risk for OUR freedom and there is not a thank you in the world good enough for you all. You are truly HERO'S and beyond. We are honored and proud of EACH and every one of you. May God bless you ALL."
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Saddam's Iraq: Reign of Terror

Six U.S. Soldiers Wounded in 2 Attacks in, Around Baghdad
By Jim Garamone / American Forces Press Service
     WASHINGTON, July 1, 2003 Six U.S. soldiers were wounded in two separate attacks in Iraq today, said Combined Joint Task Force 7 officials.
      Three soldiers of the 1st Armored Division were wounded when an improvised explosive device struck their vehicle. They were part of a convoy traveling on Highway 8 six kilometers north of al Muddiyah a northern suburb of Baghdad. Two soldiers went for treatment to the 28th Combat Support Hospital and one returned to duty.
      The second incident happened in Baghdad. Three Americans were wounded and an Iraqi interpreter is missing. The Americans were evacuated to the 28th Combat Support Hospital. There was no information on their conditions available.
      Just after midnight July 1, a building next to a mosque in the former regime stronghold of Fallujah exploded, said Army Spc. Nicole Thompson, a task force spokeswoman. More
Third International Division Could be Needed in Iraq
By Jim Garamone / American Forces Press Service
     WASHINGTON, June 30, 2003 A third international division-sized unit could possibly be stood up in Iraq in the future, U.S. defense officials said during a press conference June 30. 
      There are just under 150,000 American troops in Iraq with just over 12,000 coalition forces today, Joint Chiefs chairman Air Force Gen. Richard B. Myers said.
      Two divisions, led by Britain and Poland, are already scheduled to start moving into Iraq in July and August. Myers said these 20,000 international troops will take up duties in the country in September. 
      Joint Staff officials said the United States is negotiating with many other nations for the third division-sized unit. U.S. leaders have been in discussions with more than 20 nations. 
More  News Briefing Transcript
Photo Essay - banner image
Children of Iraq (More Photo Essays)
Photo, caption below
U.S. Marine Corps Maj. Paul Kanopka visits an orphanage in Al Hillah, Iraq, to present a fridge, computer and TV as gifts from the United States, and to speak to the kids about the coalition's goal for Iraq, June 11, 2003. Marines and sailors of 1st Battalion, 4th Marines, are currently supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom, the multinational coalition effort to liberate the Iraqi people, eliminate Iraq's weapons of mass destruction, and end the regime of Saddam Hussein. U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Christopher Graham 6 More Photos
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Sec. Rumsfeld Says Transition
To Democracy is 'Never Easy'
By Jim Garamone / American Forces Press Service
     WASHINGTON, June 30, 2003 As Independence Day approaches, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld compared what the United States went through after the American Revolution to the situation in Iraq and Afghanistan. 
     That both countries are going through turmoil should be expected, the secretary said. "The transition to democracy is never easy," he said during a Pentagon press briefing today.
      Following the American Revolution, the United States was not really united. The Colonies went through an economic depression, Rumsfeld noted, with rampant inflation and no stable currency.
     "Discontent led to uprisings, with mobs attacking courthouses and government buildings," Rumsfeld continued.
More   News Briefing Transcript
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Infantry Patrols Baghdad Streets
By U.S. Army Spc. Chad D. Wilkerson / 372nd Mobile Public Affairs Det.
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     BAGHDAD, Iraq Well catch somebody here, every time, said Staff Sgt. Raymond Dolbow, B section leader of A Company, 2nd Battalion, 6th Infantry Regiment, out of Baumholder, Germany, during a patrol in Baghdad, June 24.
     Alpha 2/6 Infantry, as the soldiers call their company, is attached to 1st Battalion, 35th Armor Brigade, 1st Armored Division. The company has spent the past few weeks making a concerted effort at reducing the amount looting and theft happening in their sector. 
      On a daily basis, the infantry soldiers walk through these streets in Baghdad to apprehend looters, weapon carriers and curfew violators to maintain order in the neighborhoods. More
Armored Cavalry, Airborne Infantry Lock Down Baghdad Search Area 
     BAGHDAD, Iraq The M2 Bradley fighting vehicles and M1 Abrams tanks rumbled ferociously down the highway as the Kiowa Warrior helicopters appeared, seemingly out of thin air, and zipped across the Baghdad rooftops. Within seconds the vehicles had set up their positions at every entrance and exit, concertino wire was in place, and an entire area of Baghdad was locked down. 
     The number of illegal weapons and explosive devices in Baghdad has been a threat to U.S. Army soldiers since their arrival there, but the cavalry has arrived. Operation Scorpion Sting focused on the disarming individuals who are attacking U.S. forces as well as the shutting down of Baghdads underground arms markets. More
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82nd Airborne Finds Weapons Cache 
U.S. soldiers of Company B, 1st Battalion. 325th Infantry Regiment, found five mortar tubes, 50 81mm mortars with fuses, 16 to 20 RPG [rocket- propelled grenade] launchers and 30 to 40 RPG rounds. Some of the RPG rounds were still in their original packaging in Baghdad, Iraqi, during Operation Desert Scorpion Sting. photo by Spc. Anthony Reinoso, 372nd MPAD   BAGHDAD, Iraq U.S. Army soldiers of the 82nd Airborne Division, out of Fort Bragg, N.C., acting on information from an Iraqi, raided a Baath Party building here June 18, and discovered a sizeable weapons cache. 
The soldiers of Company B, 1st Battalion, 325th Infantry Regiment, currently attached to 113th Armor, blockaded a perimeter in preparation for the raid in Baghdad, a city of five million people.
     According to Staff Sgt. Jay Hong, 315th Signal Operations Company, an Iraqi man reported that a weapons cache was buried in front of a fence of an old Baath Party building. Most of the information that is gathered in cases like this derives from the local Iraqi people. 
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On the FrontLines - banner image
Fallujah Police Dept. Gets New Look 
     FALLUJAH, Iraq, June 30, 2003 In a continuing effort to rid Fallujahs streets of crime and abolish the remnants of the Baath Partys rule in Iraq, the U.S. Army's 3rd Military Police Company gave Fallujahs law enforcers a much-needed facelift by issuing new uniforms and pistols to officers at the main precinct.
     With these gestures, we hope to forge a relationship between the U.S. and Iraq that will last for years to come, said Company Commander Cpt. Joseph Hissim during his remarks at the presentation ceremony.
      The ceremony, attended by Col. Joseph DiSalvo, 2nd Brigade Combat Team commander, and Taha Bedani Alwan, mayor of Fallujah, was the culmination of weeks of planning between the brigade combat team and the city to take the steps necessary to ensure the citys safety. More
More Operation Iraqi Freedom Stories
Army   Navy   Air Force   Marines   Coast Guard
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On Iraq
Former Iraqi Regime Supporters, Criminals Behind Recent Attacks
Missing Soldiers' Remains Recovered
On Terrorism
President Lauds Pakistan for Catching Over 500 Terrorists
Military News
CJCS Says Volunteer Military Going Strong After 30 Years
National Guard, Reserve Update
Iraq Update Afghanistan Update
Iraq Update Afghanistan Update
Pentagon Officials 
Identify Army Casualties
     WASHINGTON Defense Department officials announced June 30 the identities of three Army casualities.
     Cpl. Tomas Sotelo Jr., 20, of Houston, Texas, was killed on June 27 in Baghdad, Iraq. Sotelo was traveling in a convoy when a rocket propelled grenade struck his vehicle. Sotelo was assigned to Headquarters Troop, 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment, Fort Polk, La.
     Sgt. Timothy M. Conneway, 22, of Enterprise, Ala., was injured on June 26 in Baghdad, Iraq and he later died of wounds on June 28. Conneway was traveling in a government vehicle when an explosive device detonated and struck the vehicle. Conneway was assigned to the 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment, Fort Benning, Ga. 
     Spc. Kelvin E. Feliciano Gutierrez, 21, of Anasco, Puerto Rico, was killed on June 28 in Orgun-E, Afghanistan. Gutierrez was a .50 caliber gunner on a vehicle that was returning from patrol when it veered off the road and turned over. Gutierrez suffered fatal injuries while trapped under the vehicle. Gutierrez was assigned to Headquarters Company, 3rd Battalion, 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment, Fort Bragg, N.C.
Predator Team Prowls Iraq
Airmen from the 64th Expeditionary Reconnaissance Squadron position a Predator unmanned aerial vehicle.
     TALLIL AIR BASE, Iraq (AFPN) It hunts alone, flying quietly for more than 20 hours at a time, carefully scouring the Earth for the most minute evidence of ground activity and discretely relaying intelligence information to analysts half a world away.
     But on a moment's notice, the Predator unmanned aerial vehicle can transform itself from a forward aerial-observer to an opportunist attack-craft capable of delivering an armor-busting missile with pin-point accuracy. More
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Iraqi Freedom
bullet U.S. Views Quotes by President Bush & other U.S. leaders
bullet Defense Views Quotes by U.S. defense leaders
bullet Maps of Iraq Maps of the nation of Iraq and the region

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Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld
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"This year in Iraq, Americans saw our forces in action, but it important to remember that Operation Iraqi Freedom was just one battle in a difficult and dangerous war that is still going on: the global war on terror. Today and every day, brave men and women are fighting that war, risking their lives to defend our people from terrorism."
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Remarks at a DoD news briefing, June 30, 2003
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Iraq's 55 Most Wanted
Status of Iraq's 55 Most Wanted
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Iraq Update / Afghanistan Update Iraq Update Afghanistan Update
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Profile
U.S. Army 
Capt. Avrohom Horovitz 
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As the sun sets on the western bank of the Euphrates River, Army Capt. Avrohom Horovitz, a Jewish chaplain with the 3rd Battalion, 27 Artillery Regiment prepares for a Shabbat service for Marines and soldiers stationed at Camp Babylon, Iraq. Horovitz is one of only three military rabbis in theater supporting the troops in Operation Iraqi Freedom.
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     CAMP BABYLON, Iraq On the banks of the Euphrates River, a region that was once the center of Jewish culture and study, Jewish Marines and soldiers got a rare chance to celebrate the Sabbath with one of only three military rabbis' in theater.
     Army Capt. Avrohom Horovitz, a chaplain with 3rd Battalion, 27th Artillery Regiment of Ft. Bragg, N.C., was invited travel to Camp Babylon in Al Hillah from Camp Commando in Kuwait during the last week of June to minister to the Marines. More
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More Profiles
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On the Ground
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In Djibouti
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Engineers' Expertise 
Benefits Region 
Port officials prepare to move one of the 463rd Engineer detachment's five-ton trucks upon it's arrival at the port of Djibouti. This equipment will be used to construct buildings in the local community, making a positive difference for the people in the region. DoD photo by Sgt. Matthew B. Roberson, U.S. Army
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     CAMP LEMONIER, Djibouti -- U.S. Army Engineers from West Virginia recently arrived here, bringing an entirely new capability to Combined Joint Task Force - Horn of Africa's mission of detecting, disrupting and defeating terrorism and denying the reemergence of transnational terrorism in the East African Region. 
     A key element in the counter-terrorism mission of CJTF-HOA is making a positive difference in the lives of people in the region and their environment. This element is where the fifty-man detachment from the 463rd Engineer Battalion will make its mark.
     "One of the biggest ways we're going to help with counter-terrorism is working in the community and showing the local people that we are here to help," said Capt. Shawn P. McNabb, 463rd detachment commander. More
In Afghanistan
Unexploded Ordnance
Prompt Mine Awareness
     BAGRAM, Afghanistan As renovations continue to improve the quality of life for troops on Bagram, the reconstruction process has been digging up more than just rocks and rubble.
     An unexploded ordnance was found outside of the Base Operations building June 29, making it the second one to be discovered in the past week. More
War Fighters Give a Helping Hand
Afghan Airline Reopens Kabul Route 
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In Iraq
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‘Soldiers and Iraqi Teams Take to the Court
‘Red Horse’ Rides in to Tallil
Ordnance Experts Keep Assessors Safe
Iraqis, Marines Live Side-By-Side As Neighbors 
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In Uzbekistan
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U.S., Uzbeks Find Ties In Soccer 
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'On The Ground' Archive
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Explosion at Fallujah Mosque Raises Tensions Between Iraqis and American Troops
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Middle East - Iraq - Fallujah - Re: Explosion at Mosque

An explosion at a mosque in the Iraqi city of Fallujah has increased tensions between residents of the city and American forces. Many residents believe the blast was caused by a U.S. airstrike, and the American military is trying to convince them that is not true. "We are focusing on informing them of what the real facts are," said Colonel Joseph DiSalvo, commander of the Army forces in the area. He also said, "A majority of the people know it was an explosion and not an American attack, which again was a false rumor", and "It simply was an explosion from a building inside the mosque compound, adjacent to the mosque. And we will just work on informing the people with the right information."

Comment (HFY): Maybe I am dense, but according to the following article an "explosion ... destroyed a small building in the Al-Hassan mosque compound, and damaged the mosque". What may I ask are such horrendous amounts of explosives doing in a mosque compound - a holy place - a place of worship? My guess is as follows. The Moslem clerics (of that Mosque) are up to their old tricks again inflaming hate towards the "occupiers" because the clerics want to create civil disobedience and want to take over once they have chased away the "occupiers", the Americans. My guess goes further. These clerics are busy dispatching some of the "faithful" asking them to take life threatening chances by using those explosives against the "occupiers". They may also be in temporary league with members of the hated Baask party currently taking all the heat and blame for these attacks. My guess goes even further. Because the explosion has exposed these clerics and in order for these clerics to cover up their actions they have inflamed more of the "faithful" to protest against the Americans and accuse the Americans of this explosion. Remember, from a Muslim standpoint these clerics are the mouthpiece of God and their morality does not seem to prohibit them from lies and false accusations. How can the "mouthpiece of God" lie? Now, I don't know what this looks like to you, but to me it looks like these particular clerics are willing to do almost anything to gain power. What the Americans military should be doing in the face of this suspicious explosion is establishing a force of Muslim police specially trained and given the label - the Mosque Police Detachment - with complete rights to unannounced, check out these mosques and clerics to ensure they are abiding by the laws and expectations required for a peaceful social structure. Failure to do so is giving these "holy terrorists" a blank cheque to kill Americans there to protect them. Now I am not saying my suspicions are correct, only that you be the judge as I believe the American military when they say they did or did not do something. And you explain to me and others what these explosives were doing in a Mosque and why was it necessary to cover up what was happening in that compound and why did not these clerics try to put a stop to the protests and accusations against the Americans?

VOA -- 01 Jul 2003, 17:42 UTC
Challiss McDonough
Baghdad

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An explosion at a mosque in the Iraqi city of Fallujah has increased tensions between residents of the city and American forces. Many residents believe the blast was caused by a U.S. airstrike, and the American military is trying to convince them that is not true. 

AP Photo
AP
Iman stands amid rubble of Al-Hassan Mosque 
Monday, the people of the al-Askari neighborhood were burying five of the people who died in the mosque blast. Chanted refrains of "There is no God but God" give way to the rattle of gunfire as many men in the crowd began firing AK-47s into the air.

 The people are angry, angry at the American soldiers they hold responsible for the explosion that destroyed a small building in the Al-Hassan mosque compound, and damaged the mosque.

 The Americans have denied having anything to do with the blast, but the people at the funeral either have not heard those denials or just do not believe them.

 Hundreds of people escorted the five coffins to the cemetery more than a kilometer away. The prayers for the dead have turned into rage against the Americans, and they vow to kill every American soldier they see. 

"Now the war begins between the people of Iraq in Fallujah and the soldiers of America," said one man. "Now the war begins. You understand?"

 The people at the funeral believe an American F-16 warplane struck the mosque complex with a missile. 

Colonel Joseph DiSalvo, commander of the Army forces in the area, denied any U.S. involvement in the explosion. 

"I can assure you there were no U.S. warplanes involved," said Colonel DiSalvo. "There was no American attack on this mosque. There was no artillery fire. It simply was an explosion from a building inside the mosque compound, adjacent to the mosque."

 Colonel DiSalvo said an examination of the blast site shows there is no impact crater, which would have been left behind by a missile or artillery. 

The colonel refused to speculate on what might have caused the explosion. He said local Iraqi police will conduct a full investigation into the incident and should have a report within a few days.

 The colonel downplayed the significance of the rage on the streets. He said U.S. troops are taking their normal security precautions in the area, which even before the blast was considered a hotspot for resistance attacks against American forces.

 Fallujah residents are predominantly Sunni Muslim, the religious group closely associated with the regime of Saddam Hussein. 

Colonel DiSalvo said he is working with the mayor of Fallujah and local religious leaders to try to calm the population down. 

"We are focusing on informing them of what the real facts are," said the American officer. "A majority of the people know it was an explosion and not an American attack, which again was a false rumor. And we will just work on informing the people with the right information."

 In the meantime, the mood in Fallujah is even more tense than normal, and some residents are predicting an upsurge in anti-American attacks in the city.
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5 Dead in Iraq Mosque Explosion
US Launchs Major Operation Against Saddam Supporters
Iraqi Civilian Killed in Attack on US Military Convoy


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Pro-China Party Leader Urges Government to Rethink Controversial Anti-Sedition Laws
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Asia Pacific - China - Hong Kong -
Re: Beijing Anti-Sedition Laws for Hong Kong

The head of Hong Kong's largest pro-China party Tsang Yok Sing heads the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong and has urged the government to rethink controversial anti-sedition laws being introduced at the behest of Beijing. The legislation has drawn wide protest over fears it could erode rights and freedoms. A top pro-China lawmaker in Hong Kong suggested the government revise proposed anti-subversion laws, which critics fear could curtail civil liberties. The planned laws have drawn sharp criticism from the United States and Britain, which fear they could negate Hong Kong's freedoms. On Thursday, the Australian and New Zealand governments also urged Hong Kong officials to reconsider the legislation. Hong Kong returned to Chinese sovereignty in 1997 after more than century of British rule. Under the terms of the handover, Hong Kong has retained its capitalist economy, British-style judiciary and freedom of expression and religion. Although the focus of Tuesday's march was the anti-subve