Ardolino back from Iraq as Mosul operation moves forward
posted at 9:00 am on May 15, 2008 by Ed Morrissey
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Bill Ardolino has returned from Iraq, covering the events in Sadr City for the Long War Journal. Today he gives us an interesting slide show of operations in Sadr City. While that operation continues, the Maliki government stepped off its anticipated assault on al-Qaeda in Iraq in Mosul today, beginning house-to-house operations to clear the city of foreign terrorists. AQI got one last attack on a funeral before the Iraqi Army began its operation, killing 22 people:
In an attack that bore the group’s hallmarks, a suicide bomber Wednesday blew himself up in a funeral tent in a village west of Baghdad, killing 22 people and wounding 40, according to police Col. Faisal al-Zubaie.
The funeral for Taha Obaid, a primary school principal killed the previous day by gunmen, was attended by local U.S.-backed Sunni tribesmen fighting al-Qaida militants. It was not known how many of them were among the killed and wounded.
Obaid’s 3-year-old son was among those killed, said al-Zubaie.
Ardolino’s dispatches provide readers a close-up, first-hand account of the efforts in Sadr City and elsewhere in Iraq, similar to the work Bill Roggio has done for LWJ and Michael Yon does for his own site. All of these independent journalists rely on reader contributions, so be sure to donate through their tip jars as generously as possible. It takes thousands of dollars just to prepare for an embed mission, and the value of their reporting far exceeds the costs.
For instance, the AP report on the Mosul operation includes this nugget of Basra Narrative:
Al-Maliki’s trip to Mosul, 225 miles northwest of Baghdad, is a repeat of a trip he made in late March to the southern city of Basra, where government troops fought radical Shiite militias to a standstill. That fighting later spread to Sadr City.
Sure, it was a standstill, if you consider Iraqi Army units securing and liberating the city a standstill. The Mahdis surrendered Basra and the entire south. The fighting “spread” to Sadr City because Nouri al-Maliki wants to rid the country of militias and enforce Iraqi authority throughout the nation. After years of attempting to get Moqtada al-Sadr to disband his militias and stop setting up his own Iranian-backed state within Iraq, the IA has finally gained enough strength to disarm Sadr.
Update: My apologies; I misunderstood Bill’s e-mail. He has returned from Iraq, and he kindly e-mailed me to clarify. He recommends this post, and remarks that the mainstream media has missed the extent to which the Mahdis have lost support over the last few years. In Baghdad, Bill couldn’t find anyone who supported Sadr.
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Did Bill Ardolino said also that we’re leaving Iraq in 2013?
Indy Conservative on May 15, 2008 at 9:04 AM
Go Cav!
Limerick on May 15, 2008 at 9:08 AM
Ardolino and Yon
“the value of their reporting far exceeds the costs”
They are the heros of journalism, doing it right for the correct reasons! God protect these men to whom we donate.
maverick muse on May 15, 2008 at 9:12 AM
I wonder if they’ll be around in 2013.
Indy Conservative on May 15, 2008 at 9:15 AM
Wrong Morrissey, who should stick to singing about his Girlfriend in a Coma. We don’t need independent embeds, but independent unembedded reporters. The ones that bring us the views of the Iraqi people in an objective as possible fashion, such as the late Steven Vincent.
Mister Ghost on May 15, 2008 at 9:18 AM
The Sadr city op is still on going and the JAM is finished. Every time a few of them decide to take a potshot, they get some hellfires.
Mosul will go the same way.
dogsoldier on May 15, 2008 at 9:24 AM
Obviously it is a quagmire that we can never win.
/sarcasm.
rbj on May 15, 2008 at 9:52 AM
Mister Ghost, leave your tactless charm out of this. More information is always what is needed, especially where reporting is deficient, and nowhere is it more deficient than in the area of embedding.
Dusty on May 15, 2008 at 10:05 AM
Yeah, just like I have missed not listening to their despicable lies.
drunyan8315 on May 15, 2008 at 10:11 AM
I wonder if Yon, Roggio and Ardilino were ever offered opportunites with the AP or other outlets. In my opinion it would be pretty shameful of those outlets if they DIDN’T offer these men positions.
ikez78 on May 15, 2008 at 11:32 AM
Yon offered a story and his photos, from Diyala for free to any media outlet. I’m not sure any took him up on it. He was the only guy on scene for any extended period of time. There was one NYT correspondent who went further north of where Yon was for a couple of days – nobody else…
major john on May 15, 2008 at 1:22 PM
ikez, they probably did and were turned down. I hope these great journalists never to get tied to any news organization in anything but a personal services contract that spells out their independence. The quality of their work would be far less if tied to the MSM editors and agendas.
BTW; I cannot say this strongly enough: BUY YON’S BOOK! Mopefully, the other two Wise Men are also working one books, so I can buy them as well.
michaelo on May 15, 2008 at 2:26 PM
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