Friday, December 19, 2003
By MICHAEL WARE / BAGHDAD
The insurgents are currently in a process of
consolidation, reconstituting themselves into tighter
and more committed cells, cleaving away the hangers-on
and the remotely suspect. Although Saddam's arrest has
hardly persuaded them to put down their weapons, some
are feeling more cornered than before, others angrier
and even more willing to wreak havoc. That may mean
they're a little more dangerous, now, their antennae
more acutely tuned to pick up signs of trouble, making
them more careful to avoid unnecessary risk and more
vigilant in their activities.
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Monday, December 15, 2003
By BRIAN BENNETT; MICHAEL WARE / BAGHDAD
For Abu Ali, lethal rocket strikes against the U.S.
occupation army are part of the regular routine. At the
modest farmhouse of a fellow member of his network of
insurgents one recent evening, Abu Ali--the nom de
guerre he has chosen--welcomes seven fighters into a
room lined with worn sofas. Despite the steady
whoomp-whoomp of circling U.S. helicopters, the
insurgents sit back, chain-smoking and chatting about
weapons, tactics, the long lines to get gasoline, whose
children are starting to crawl. A young man spreads a
plastic sheet on the floor and lays out plates of
roasted chicken, rice, bean soup and boiled vegetables.
As the men eat, the talk is jovial, full of laughter
and noisy boasting. The presence of a reporter for a
U.S. magazine does not seem to faze them. "American
soldier very afraid," roars Abu Ali. "We are not." A
grinning fighter brags about what would have happened
if he had known President George W. Bush would be in
the Baghdad airport complex on Thanksgiving Day. "We
would have ... whoosh!" he says, motioning as if firing
a shoulder-launched missile.
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Sunday, December 07, 2003
Recent articles
by U.S. journalists portray the workings of guerrilla
groups trying to force the U.S.-led occupying force out
of Iraq. Experts say that insurgent attacks in Iraq are
becoming increasingly sophisticated and violent. NPR's
Robert Siegel talks with Time
magazine's
Michael Ware.
NPR: 4:32
Wednesday, November 19, 2003
Winning the
War
Who’s really winning the
war in Iraq? We’ll cut away the posturing for a tough
analysis.
Guests:
Michael Ware, correspondent, TIME Magazine
OnPoint: 7:11
Thursday, September 18, 2003
By MICHAEL WARE
TIME has received a 27-minute-long video from anti-U.S.
resistance fighters, documenting an attack on a U.S.
position at an old Iraqi ammunition facility. The tape
was allegedly produced by Mohammed's Second Army, one
of the three groups who claimed credit for the U.N.
bombing. This particular cell, the Anbar Branch, did
not pull off that bombing, but they claim to have some
knowledge of that attack. The video taped aired on ABC
News on Wednesday night and can be viewed at
abcnews.com.
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Saturday, August 30, 2003
Former Courier-Mail reporter Michael Ware, now Time
magazine's Baghdad bureau chief, finds the Iraqi
capital has everything and nothing in common with
Brisbane
Read More...
Saturday, August 16, 2003
By MICHAEL WARE / BAGHDAD
When U.S. special forces led an assault in March on a
compound in northern Iraq belonging to the militant
group Ansar al-Islam, U.S. officials said they had
taken out a significant terrorist threat. Before the
war, Bush Administration officials identified Ansar,
some of whose members are believed to have trained in
al-Qaeda camps, as a link between Saddam Hussein and
Osama bin Laden, a claim based on reports that Saddam
had dispatched an agent to northern Iraq to establish
ties with Ansar. On March 26, after the strike on the
compound, Bush said the U.S. had "destroyed the base of
a terrorist group in northern Iraq that sought to
attack America and Europe with deadly poisons."
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Friday, August 08, 2003
NPR's Alex
Chadwick talks to Time
magazine
correspondent Michael Ware, who describes the scene at
the recent bombing of the Jordanian embassy in downtown
Baghdad.
NPR: 3:16
(Michael's Time magazine
article, mentioned in the report, is
here.)
Thursday, August 07, 2003
By MICHAEL WARE
With a roar and a rolling shockwave that shattered
windows and trembled rooftops across northern Baghdad
this morning the grinding guerrilla war entered a new
and more lethal phase. Shortly before 11 am local time
a bomb in a Coaster minivan outside the Jordanian
embassy detonated with horrific force, unleashing a
fireball that incinerated a car full of people passing
by. Those in front of the building were killed
instantly, the clothes wrenched from their bodies and
flung in tufts like singed confetti, their flesh
torched. More than 50 others inside the compound or in
the family homes nearby were wounded.
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Wednesday, March 05, 2003
By MICHAEL WARE / HALABJA
The Kurdish region in northern Iraq, a pivotal staging
point for any U.S. invasion, is an unsettling place at
the best of times. Five bodies left sprawled on the
road by a checkpoint on March 4 has made it even more
so. Among the dead was Abullah Qasre, a leading figure
in a local militant Islamic group known as Komal, one
of the plethora of sectarian factions that riddle
Kurdish politics. Komal, however, has come to be
particularly important in recent months in light of the
bloody war raging between ruling parties of Iraqi
Kurdistan and Islamist groups linked with al-Qaeda,
such as Ansar al-Islam. The local government had
entered into a covert dialogue with Komal, hoping to
draw it out of the Islamist nexus. The bloody
checkpoint scene, captured by a Time photographer who
arrived during the gun battle, has now thrown that
dialogue into disarray. Komal supporters immediately
blamed local government forces for the ambush.
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Wednesday, February 26, 2003
By MICHAEL WARE / HALABJA
An unsuspecting taxi driver was both the vehicle and a
victim of a suicide bombing in Northern Iraq, today —
an attack that served as a reminder that there are no
rules in the campaign by the Qaeda-linked Ansar
al-Islam against the local Kurdish authorities. The
fight for control of a tiny sliver of northern Iraq
pitches fighters loyal to the Patriotic Union of
Kurdistan, which rules the eastern part of the
territory liberated from Saddam Hussein in 1991,
against Ansar, a small cadre of homegrown Islamic
militants supported, trained and reinforced by Osama
bin Laden's organization. And today, as a Bush
administration envoy met Iraqi opposition leaders at
Erbil, some 150 miles north of Halabja, Ansar played
rough.
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