Chief
Justice John G. Roberts, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, Justice Ruth Bader
Ginsburg. : Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Justice Stephen G. Breyer, Justice Samuel
A. Alito, Jr., Justice Elena Kagan. Justice Clarence Thomas,
Before
the Honorable Court Justice of The Hague, The International Community and
Before The United States District Court for the District of Texas As the story
goes furtherance’s ......
Cmdr.
Bluefin United States Navy (Secret Service) present 2016 “The Trojan Horse” as the story go’s
A
long time ago, there was an ancient city-state on the coast of Turkey, across
the sea from Sparta. This city-state was named Troy. At one time, Troy and the
other Greek city-states were pretty good friends.
But times had changed the Knights of The Klu
Klux Klansmen Own United States of America on the grisly hostile coup corrupted
very day 1865 –
The 1993 World Trade Center bombing was
the first terrorist attack on the World Trade Center, carried out on February
26, 1993, when a truck bomb was detonated below the North Tower of the World
Trade Center in New York City
“As
the story go’s A long time ago– January 4 2009 there was an ancient city Baghdad,
Iraq. A suicide bomb blast at a Shiite religious shrine in Baghdad killed at
least 35 people and injured 79,
2009 :Date :Dead :Injury
January 21 4 10 Iraq Baghdad, Iraq.
Ziyad al-Ain, a dean of Baghdad's Islamic University and the Iraqi
Under-secretary for the Education Ministry, Ammar Aziz Mohammed Ali, survived a
car bomb but four others including a woman and a child were killed and ten
others injured
February 28 4 6 Iraq Baghdad, Iraq. A
bomb in Sunni western Baghdad left four people including a police officer dead
and another six wounded.
March 3 1 9 Iraq Diyala Province, Iraq.
Two bombs exploded in Diyala province targeting police patrols. One police
officer was killed in the first explosion and his partner was wounded and a
second blast injured four more police officers and four civilians
March 4 4 22 Iraq Baghdad, Iraq. A blast
at a restaurant killed four people and injured at least 22 others in Baghdad
March 5 12 56 Iraq Hilla, Iraq. In a
crowded cattle market sixty miles south of Baghdad in the town of Hilla a
massive explosive detonated killing 12 people and injuring 56 others. All dead
and injured are reported to be civilians
March 5 2 7 Iraq Mosul, Iraq. A suicide
car bomber detonated his explosives in northern Mosul killing one Iraqi soldier
and injuring seven other people
Iraq Saadiyah, Iraq. Police conducting a
raid in Saadiyah were the target of a booby-trap bomb as a massive explosion
rocked the city when one of the houses they entered exploded. Two Iraqi police
officers were killed and 8 others wounded
March 23 25 45 Iraq Jalawla, 25
civilians are killed after a suicide bomber detonated at a Kurdish funeral.
"Dozens" are reported to have been wounded.
March 23 9 22 Iraq Abu Gharib, Iraq.
Nine people were killed and at least another 22 were injured after a roadside
bomb planted by a garage where vehicles were getting repaired exploded. The
explosion occurred in the early afternoon at peak business for the garage
March 25 4 7 Iraq Mosul, Iraq. A bomb
exploded in a group of female school girls in the ethnically charged city of
Mosul killing for female students and injuring another seven children
March 26 16 40 Iraq Baghdad, Iraq. At a
shopping mall in northern Baghdad a car bomb exploded killing sixteen people
and injuring at least forty others. The attack in a mostly Shite area was
possibly an attempt to reignite tensions between the Shite majority and Sunni
minority
March 31 8 21 Iraq Mosul, Iraq. A
suicide bomber detonated explosives at a police station in the ethnically
volatile city of Mosul where Al Qaeda strikes regularly, and tensions are
simmering between Arab and Kurdish factions. In the blast eight people were
killed, including the bomber and four police officers and seventeen others were
wounded
April 6 36 110 Iraq Baghdad 6 bomb
attacks kill 36 people and injure 110 in Shiite neighborhoods. US forces
believe Al Qaeda was responsible, stating "the nature of the targets was
consistent with past attacks."
April 7 8 14 Iraq Baghdad A car bomb
detonated in Baghdad near a Shite religious shrine killing eight people and
injuring at least fourteen people. This attacks comes one day after six car
bombs in Baghdad that attempted to reignite Shite-Sunni communal tensions.
April 11 12 32 Iraq Baghdad A suicide
bomber exploded after getting into the middle of a crowd of Sunni militamen
allied with the U.S military in Iraq. Nine people were killed and another
thirty-one were injured in the explosion
April 15 11 23 Iraq Kirkuk A suicide car
bomber detonated his explosives near an Iraqi police unit that had been
assigned to protect an oil installation. Eleven people were killed in the
explosion and twenty-three others wounded.
April 16 16 50 Iraq Baghdad A suicide
bomber in an army uniform detonated his explosives in the middle of a military
parade in Anbar province killing sixteen soldiers and injuring at least fifty
people
April 20 4 20 Iraq Baquba A suicide
bomber detonated his explosives at a joint U.S-Iraqi meeting in Baquba
resulting in four Iraqis being killed, two police officers, and twenty people
being wounded in the attack including eight U.S soldiers.
April 23 48 68 Iraq Muqdadiya A suicide
bomber targeted Shite pilgrims from Iran killing forty people, all but two
Iranian, and injuring at least sixty-eight people. Al Qaeda in Iraq is being
blamed for this blast and the blast in Central Baghdad.
April 23 28 57 Iraq Baghdad A suicide
bomber exploded in a Shiite area of Baghdad where Iraqi government officials
were handing out relief supplies to refugees who had left their neighborhoods
after the fall of Saddam Hussein because of sectarian violence. Twenty-two
people were killed and another thirty-five injured
April 24 60 125 Iraq Baghdad Two suicide
bombers blew themselves up at the entrance to the Moussa al-Kadhim shrine in
the Kadhimiya neighborhood. Many of the casualties were Iranian pilgrims
May 6 10 30 Iraq Baghdad At a vegetable
market in southern Baghdad a bomb exploded killing ten civilians and wounding
at least thirty people
May 10 0 1 Iraq Baghdad General Jaafar
Taama al-Khafaji an Interior Ministry official was wounded when a car bomb
exploded near his passing military convoy
May 12 5 10 Iraq Kirkuk A suicide car
bomber detonated his bomb when an Iraqi police patrol passed by his vehicle.
The bomber and five Iraqi police officers were killed and ten police officers
were wounded in the attack
May 12 0 6 Iraq Khanaqin District Six
Iraqi soldiers on a foot patrol were injured in an roadside bomb explosion in
northern Iraq.
May 20 34 70 Iraq Baghdad A massive car
bombing in northern Baghdad by several restaurants killed thirty-four people
and injured seventy.[159]
May 21 12 25 Iraq Baghdad A suicide
bomber detonated his explosives at a market in southern Baghdad killing twelve
and injuring twenty-five.[160]
May 21 8 7 Iraq Kirkuk Anti-Al Qaeda
forces were targeted by a suicide bomber dressed in an Iraqi army uniform at a
Kirkuk military base. Eight Anti-Al Qaeda militia were killed and seven were
wounded in the bombing
*May
25 0 0 United States New York City A small explosive device exploded out front
of a Starbucks in New York City destroying a bench it had been placed on. No
injuries or deaths were reported in the blast
June 24 72 100+ Iraq Baghdad A bomb
exploding at a market in Sadr City leaves 72 people dead and more than 100
injured
July 9 33 70+ Iraq Tal Afar, Iraq. 33
people are killed and more than 70 injured in a double suicide bombing.
July 11 4 38 Iraq Mosul 4 people are
killed following a car bomb that also left 38 civilians wounded
August 10 46 100+ Iraq Iraq Two truck
bombs detonated in the Shia village of Khaznah near Mosul, killing at least 28,
wounding at least 100 and destroying 30 homes. Two car bombs detonated near
construction sites in Baghdad killing 18 and wounding many more. Forty killed
in attacks on Shias on August 7
September 17 3 3 Iraq Tal Afar, Iraq
Three civilians are killed and three police officers are wounded when a suicide
truck bomber attacks a police checkpoint.
October 11 14 50 Iraq Anbar, Iraq Two
car bombs detonate at a hospital in Iraq's western Anbar province
October 25 155 520+ Iraq Baghdad, Iraq
Two vehicles detonate in the Green Zone, killing at least 155 and injuring 520.
December 8 127 448 Iraq Baghdad, Iraq A
series of bombings killed at least 127 people and injured 448 others, making it
the deadliest attack in Iraq since the October 25, 2009 Baghdad bombings
December 11 6 20 Iraq Baghdad, Iraq Two
bombs went off in a two-pronged bomb attack which seemed to be designed to
ambush bystanders. The first bomb caused no casualties but attracted a crowd of
onlookers who were then attacked by the second bomb, which killed at least six
and wounded twenty
Florida on Nov. 4, 2012
United State of America “President
Barack Obama” sent a message to Congress yesterday giving notice that he was
extending the "national emergency" the United States has experienced
as a result of the problems in Iraq since 2003, when the U.S. first invaded
that country and removed the regime of Saddam Hussein.
President Obama pulled the last U.S.
troops out of Iraq at the end of 2011. Then--while running for reelection in
2012--he repeatedly stated at campaign rallies that he had "ended"
the war in Iraq.
"We've ended the war in Iraq,"
Obama said at a June 25, 2012, rally in New Hampshire for example.
"I've kept the commitments that
I've made," he said in Iowa on Oct. 24, 2012. "I told you we'd end
the war in Iraq. We did."
"You know I say what I mean and I
mean what I say," Obama said at a rally in Florida on Nov. 4, 2012.
"I said I would end the war in Iraq. I ended it."
The message he sent to Congress on
Tuesday said that he was extending a "national emergency" because the
situation in Iraq continues "to pose an unusual and extraordinary threat
to the national security and foreign policy of the United States."
“Section 202(d) of the National
Emergencies Act (50 U.S.C. 1622(d)) provides for the automatic termination of a
national emergency unless, within 90 days prior to the anniversary date of its
declaration,
the President publishes in the Federal
Register and transmits to the Congress a notice stating that the emergency is
to continue in effect beyond the anniversary date,” said Obama.
“In accordance with this provision, I
have sent to the Federal Register for publication the enclosed notice stating
that the national emergency with respect to the stabilization of Iraq that was
declared in Executive Order 13303 of May 22, 2003, is to continue in effect
beyond May 22, 2015.
“Obstacles to the orderly reconstruction
of Iraq, the restoration and maintenance of peace and security in the country,
and the development of political, administrative, and economic institutions in
Iraq continue to pose an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national
security and foreign policy of the United States,” Obama said.
“Accordingly, I have determined that it is
necessary to continue the national emergency with respect to the stabilization
of Iraq.”
A Congressional Research Service report
published in 2014 explained that when the president declares a national
emergency it triggers provisions in “numerous statutes which confer standby
authority on the president.”
“Article I, Section 8, of the
Constitution vests in Congress the power ‘to declare War.’ Pursuant to that
power, Congress has enacted 11 declarations of war during the course of
American history relating to five different wars, the most recent being those
that were adopted during World War II,” said the CRS report.
“In addition, Congress has adopted a
number of authorizations for the use of military force, the most recent being
the joint resolution enacted on October 16, 2002, authorizing the use of
military force against Iraq,”
Said the CRS report. “To buttress the
nation’s ability to prosecute a war or armed conflict, Congress has also
enacted numerous statutes which confer standby authority on the President or
the executive branch and are activated by the enactment of a declaration of
war, the existence of a state of war, or the promulgation of a declaration of
national emergency.”
The CRS report includes a list of the
statutory provisions triggered during a “national emergency.” The report--with
its list--is available by clicking here.
President Obama visited Fort Bragg in
North Carolina in December 2011 to announce the final withdrawal of U.S. forces
from Iraq. At that time, the president said he was “ending a war” and “leaving
behind a sovereign, stable and self-reliant Iraq.”
“It’s harder to end a war than begin
one,” Obama said then. “Indeed, everything that American troops have done in
Iraq--all the fighting and all the dying, the bleeding and the building, and
the training and the partnering--all of it has led to this moment of success.
Now, Iraq is not a perfect place. It has many
challenges ahead. But we’re leaving behind a sovereign, stable and self-reliant
Iraq, with a representative government that was elected by its people.
We’re building a new partnership between our
nations. And we are ending a war not with a final battle, but with a final
march toward home. This is an extraordinary achievement, nearly nine years in
the making.”
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