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Free Great Video Clips to download

American infantry and snipers from the U.S. Army's 3rd Stryker Brigade team up with Iraqi soldiers from the 6th Iraqi Army Division during a firefight on Baghdad's notorious Haifa Street, January 2007.

Get some Bush Shoe gear: http://tinyurl.com/bushshoeincident An Iraqi journalist threw 2 shoes at President George Bush

An Iraqi journalist has thrown his shoes at George Bush, the US president, in his last visit to Baghdad, shouting: "This is a goodbye kiss from the Iraqi people, dog." One of the shoes narrowly missed the president's head and slammed into the wall behind him. Nuri al-Maliki, the Iraqi prime minister, tried to block the second with his arm. Throwing shoes at somebody is a supreme insult in the Middle East.
Jan
7

On the night of January 2nd 2008 a group of Marines on patrol in Iraq have a close encounter of the first kind with...?

This is another in a series I am releasing as tributes to the US Marines in Iraq. This is as real as the real gets. Never again likely will you ever get to see uncensored footage from the front lines. May God watch over all fighting for their countries.

http://iraqforsale.org/ On May 10th, 2007, this video was banned in Congress Robert Greenwald, the director of IRAQ FOR SALE, was invited to testify before Congress by Rep. Jim Moran. He prepared four minutes from the documentary to show. Republicans insisted this not be shown.

CNN's Take on Bush Shoe Incident, with additional video of Bush talking about it. An Iraqi journalist threw two shoes at President George W. Bush at a News Conference during his surprise visit to Iraq today. The president ducked and the size 10's missed. Among Muslims, throwing shoes at someone, or sitting so that the bottom of a shoe faces another person, is considered an insult.

An Iraqi journalist threw two shoes at President George W. Bush at a News Conference during his surprise visit to Iraq today. The president ducked and the size 10's missed. Among Muslims, throwing shoes at someone, or sitting so that the bottom of a shoe faces another person, is considered an insult.

During debate on the binding Iraq-withdrawal bill that would require George W. Bush to withdraw all U.S. troops from Iraq within one year, Joe Biden rips Republicans for standing by Bush's horrible course.

In this interview from April 15th, 1994 Dick Cheney reveals the reasons why invading Baghdad and toppling Saddam Hussein's regime wouldn't be a great idea. He also stipulates that "not very many" American soldiers' lives were worth losing to take out Saddam during the Gulf War. ======================================== SOURCE: This clip was originally aired on C-SPAN3 [History] on the evening of Thursday, August 9th. http://c-span.org

An interview with 'George Parr' (a fictional character stating real facts). Shown in 2007 during Bremner, Bird, and Fortune the interview features Iraq and it's oil. Taken from the new series of BBF currently on Channel 4 (captured via Channel 4 +1).
Jan
7

Prof. Emanuel Pastreich of George Washington University offers his insights on war profiteering, the military-industrial complex, and the Iraq War-- in particular its parallels, not to Vietnam, but Imperial Japan's occupation of Manchuria during the 1930's. LINKS: Lockheed Stock and Two Smoking Barrels by Richard Cummings http://www.playboy.com/magazine/features/lockheed/index.html Book Review: James Carroll's "House of War" http://dialoginternational.typepad.com/dialog_international/2006/10/book_review_jam.html Iraq For Sale: The War Profiteers A film by Robert Greenwald http://iraqforsale.org/ The New Imperialism and the Post-Colonial Developmental State: Manchukuo in comparative perspective By Prasenjit Duara http://www.japanfocus.org/products/details/1715 Our Mercenaries in Iraq: Blackwater Inc and Bush's Undeclared Surge http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=07/01/26/1559232 Is Energo-fascism in Your Future? The Global Energy Race and Its Consequences (Part 1) By Michael T. Klare http://www.tomdispatch.com/index.mhtml?pid=157241 Petro-Power and the Nuclear Renaissance Two Faces of an Emerging Energo-fascism (Part 2) By Michael T. Klare http://www.tomdispatch.com/index.mhtml?pid=157744 Soldiers of Good Fortune http://www.motherjones.com/news/feature/2003/05/ma_365_01.html http://www.motherjones.com/news/feature/2003/05/ma_365_01.html THE Pentagon's Private Corps http://www.motherjones.com/news/update/2003/10/we_597_01.html

These are the things we do when we're bored waiting on our Team Leader to come out from meetings with our Iraqi counterparts. We did all this without any of them realizing it.

Iraq has taken control of security in Baghdad's fortified Green Zone after a UN mandate for troops expired.
Jan
7

This is what is really going on in Iraq. I don't know these guys, I just found the vid somewhere in the internet. Songs: First one is something from "Celine Dion" DJ Bobo - What a feeling Eddy Grant - Electric Avenue

President Bush gets a shoe tossed at him. Not once, but two times. This is awesome and that is all that needs to be said about this. A little sound remix at the end...

Shoes thrown at Bush in Iraq 14.12.08 An Iraqi reporter threw shoes at President Bush President Bush Attacked By Shoes GEORGE BUSH

A female suicide bomber blew herself up on Sunday among a crowd at a revered Shiite shrine in northern Baghdad, killing at least 35 people and wounding at least 65. (Jan. 4th)

Since the end of the Cold War a decade ago, the U.S. has gone to war in Iraq, Somalia, Yugoslavia, and Afghanistan. Supporters say the interventions are humanitarian deployments to stop aggression, to topple dictatorships, or to halt what they describe as terrorism. Critics argue that with the US possessing unprecedented economic and military strength, American leaders have openly embraced the idea of imposing its ambitions on to the world. However, after each U.S. intervention, the attention of supporters and critics alike has turneSince the end of the Cold War a decade ago, the U.S. has gone to war in Iraq, Somalia, Yugoslavia, and Afghanistan. Supporters say the interventions are humanitarian deployments to stop aggression, to topple dictatorships, or to halt what they describe as terrorism. Critics argue that with the US possessing unprecedented economic and military strength, American leaders have openly embraced the idea of imposing its ambitions on to the world. However, after each U.S. intervention, the attention of supporters and critics alike has turned to speculate on which countries would be next.

Witness presenter Rageh Omaar returned to Iraq five years after reporting on the US-led invasion. He found much had changed and, as ordinary Iraqis told him, rarely for the better.



















