10 October 2006 - Iraq Special Weapons News |
Operations
Deployments
US Policy
United Nations
Reconstruction Issues
Foreign Reactions
News Reports
Current Operations
- OIF/OEF Casualty Update 10 Oct 2006 [PDF]
- Task Force Lightning Soldier dies
- DoD Identifies Army Casualties
- DoD Identifies Army Casualty
- DoD Identifies Army Casualty
- DoD Identifies Army Casualty
- CENTAF releases airpower summary for Oct. 10 AFPN 10 Oct 2006 -- U.S. Central Command Air Forces officials have released the airpower summary for Oct. 10.
- Iraqi Soldiers Capture Terrorists in Two Baghdad Operations AFPS 10 Oct 2006 -- Iraqi soldiers, with coalition assistance, captured suspected terrorists in two separate operations near Baghdad yesterday.
- US Military: Fire at Ammunition Depot Causes Explosions in Baghdad VOA 10 Oct 2006 -- The U.S. military says a fire at an ammunition depot has set off a series of explosions in southern Baghdad, but there are no immediate reports of casualties.
- Car Bomb Blast in Baghdad Kills 10 VOA 10 Oct 2006 -- Iraqi officials say a car bomb explosion in Baghdad has killed at least 10 people and wounded several others.
Deployments
US Policy
- Reconciliation Progressing in Iraq, Coalition Officials Say Washington File 10 Oct 2006 -- Despite ongoing violence in Iraq, the country's new government continues to make progress toward national reconciliation and building the democratic institutions essential to long-term success, coalition officials say.
- Violence, Progress Coexist in Iraq, Casey Says AFPS 10 Oct 2006 -- Violence and progress co-exist in Iraq, and those who focus exclusively on the violence miss the larger picture, the coalition commander in Iraq said in an interview today.
United Nations
Reconstruction Issues
- Saddam Thrown Out of Court Again VOA 10 Oct 2006 -- Saddam Hussein's trial on genocide charges continued in Baghdad, with the former Iraqi leader again getting ejected from the court
- IRAQ: Judicial system far from independent IRIN 10 Oct 2006 -- Like other public sectors in Iraq, the judicial system decayed during the three and a half decades of former President Saddam Hussein's 24-year rule, in which his government controlled it and directed judges to serve its interests.

