RT News

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Washington's Black Democracy of Blast Walls , is it Wall of Hatred or Wall to keep Iraqis imprisoned?






East Germany/West Germany are divided by the walls of hatred. Bait Al Muqqadas is being bifurcated by these war walls which has divided religions and nations.

The only wall Babylon GODs see on the planet from moon is China wall , not Washington's DoD funded walls erected to prolong US invasions and their client regimes of Kabol, Baghdad, Islamabad.

As long as US Continue extending their so-called get them all invasions, they are limiting the life of Americans to live inside green zone safe heavens, forts following pre-history killer kings/emperors like Hallaku , Chengez Khan.


If we love each other, then we don't need any wall of hatred to provide us peace, security at the cost of hatred and protecting US agenda of prolonging/continued occupation.


These walls remind you that your enemy is your neighbor , not the one who came for your help across 7 seas, 15,000 K.M away from your door steps. Trust a nation who is beyond seas but don't trust your immediate neighbors. Painting these walls will never bring peace, protection, prosperity. We need rulers who can rule over hearts and only mutual respect, understanding, equality in respect of human rights can bring nations together.

Despite world's best super power full of modern technological and lethal war equipments , 3rd generation war vessels, missiles, fighter jets Washington failed to rule over Veitnam, Afghans, Somalis, Palestinians, Iraqis and Pakistanis.


Americas still need another generation to produce rulers who can rule over hearts and minds.

Iraq suspends decision to pull down blast walls


25 Aug 2009 10:52:35 GMT
Source: Reuters
* Local military commanders to decide on blast walls

* Bombings dealt political blow to PM Maliki on security

By Aseel Kami

BAGHDAD, Aug 25 (Reuters) - After bomb attacks killed almost 100 people last week in Baghdad, officials have suspended a decision to remove many of the towering blast walls girding the Iraqi capital, a security official said on Tuesday.

Tahseen al-Sheikhli, a civilian spokesman for security operations in Baghdad, said a plan to remove all the concrete walls across Baghdad by the end of 2009, or even earlier, would no longer be implemented as planned.

Officials had early this month said most of the capital's blast walls would come down within 40 days.

Sheikhli said it would now be up to local military commanders whether to dismantle the walls, which have divided neighbourhoods, encircled government buildings, and cut off roadways since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003.

The reversal comes less than a week after coordinated attacks in Baghdad, including truck bombs near two ministries, killed 95 people and wounded more than 1,000 others, shaking the confidence of many Iraqis who have tentatively begun to accept the worst of the bloodshed of the last six years may be over.

The blasts also dealt a blow to Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, seeking to portray himself as responsible for improving security ahead of a general election early next year.

Maliki said the attacks were a response to the announcement to bring down most of Baghdad's blast walls by mid-September.

"After Wednesday's events, the battle took a different direction. A review has been made of removing walls in many areas ... Leaders in the field will decide," Sheikhli said.

He said the walls will be lifted from some streets, left as is or expanded in other areas.

The removal of the walls, a symbol of the chaos and destruction that have claimed the lives of tens of thousands of Iraqis since 2003, would be a welcome step in returning Iraq to normality as U.S. troops prepare to halt combat operations next year and withdraw entirely by the end of 2011.

It also figures in Maliki's plans to capitalise on security gains as he seeks a second term as prime minister.

But last week's explosions brought outrage from Iraqis who blamed local soldiers and police for failing to stop bombers at checkpoints and even prompted some senior officials to point a finger at security forces for possible involvement.

Foreign Minister Hoshiyar Zebari, a member of Iraq's Kurdish minority, said the attacks were partly due to a false sense of security that led to removal of blast walls and checkpoints. (Editing by Missy Ryan and Charles Dick)

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