U.S.-Allied Sheik's Followers Vow Revenge
Funeral For Slain Sunni Leader Draws 1,500 Mourners; Elsewhere, 4 U.S. Troops Killed
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President Bush met with Sheik Abdul-Sattar Abu Risha in Anbar province on Sept. 3, 2007. (CBS)
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Sunni Sheik Abdul-Sattar Abu Risha, slain in an apparent bombing Sept. 13, 2007, is seen in this January 2007 file photo. Abu Risha was the top Sunni cleric working with U.S. forces to fight against al Qaeda in Iraq. (CBS/Cami McCormick)
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Mourners accompany the coffin of Sheik Abdul Sattar Abu Risha, founder of Anbar Awakening, in Iraq's Anbar province in the provincial capital of Ramadi, 70 miles west of Baghdad on Friday, Sept. 14, 2007. (AP Photo)
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President Bush shakes hands with Abdul-Sattar Abu Risha, leader of the Anbar Salvation Council, also known as the Anbar Awakening, during a meeting in Anbar province, Iraq, in this Sept. 3, 2007 file photo. Abu Risha was killed in a bomb attack Sept. 13, 2007. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)
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Play CBS Video Video Bush, Sheik Risha Meet
President Bush met with U.S. ally Sheikh Risha for what would be the last time on Sept. 3 in Anbar province. The Sunni leader was killed by a roadside bomb near his home in Ramadi.
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Al Qaeda’s front in Iraq claimed responsibility for the attack in a Web statement.
In eastern Diyala provice, meanwhile, a bomb exploded near a U.S. military vehicle on Friday, killing four American soldiers in, the U.S. command said. They were the first American deaths reported in Iraq since Monday.
More than 1,500 mourners marched along the highway near the home of Abdul-Sattar Abu Risha, who was killed along with two bodyguards and a driver Thursday by a bomb hidden near his house, just west of Ramadi.
Scores of Iraqi police and U.S. military vehicles lined the route to protect the procession as it followed the black SUV carrying the sheik's Iraqi-flag draped coffin.
"We will take our revenge," the mourners chanted along the six-mile route to Risha's family cemetery, many of them crying. "We will continue the march of Abu Risha."
Abu Risha was buried one year after the goateed, charismatic, chain-smoking young sheik organized 25 Sunni Arab clans under the umbrella of the Anbar Awakening Council, an alliance against al Qaeda in Iraq, to drive terrorists from sanctuaries where they had flourished after the U.S.-led invasion in 2003.
No group claimed responsibility for the assassination, but it was widely assumed to have been carried out by al Qaeda, which already had killed four of Abu Risha's brothers and six other relatives for working with the U.S. military.
U.S. officials credit Abu Risha and allied sheiks with a dramatic improvement in security in such Anbar flashpoints as Fallujah and Ramadi after years of American failure to subdue the extremists. U.S. officials now talk of using the Anbar model to organize tribal fighters elsewhere in Iraq.
Mr. Bush hailed Abu Risha's courage during his short Sept. 3 visit to al-Asad Air Base, and vowed in his nationally televised address Thursday night to help others carry on his work.
"Earlier today, one of the brave tribal sheiks who helped lead the revolt against al Qaeda was murdered," Mr. Bush said. "In response, a fellow Sunni leader declared: 'We are determined to strike back and continue our work.' And as they do, they can count on the continued support of the United States."
Many high-ranking officials were on hand for the funeral, including Iraq's interior and defense ministers and National Security Adviser Mouwaffak al-Rubaie.
"We condemn the killing of Abu Risha, but this will not deter us from helping the people of Anbar - we will support them more than before," al-Rubaie declared. "It is a national disaster and a great loss for the Iraqi people - Abu Risha was the only person to confront al Qaeda in Anbar."
In other developments:
Meanwhile, Iran's supreme leader said Friday that President Bush will one day be tried in court just like deposed Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein for his involvement in the Iraq tragedy.
Speaking to thousands of worshippers during the first Friday prayer of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said that Mr. Bush will be called to account for the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.

Khamenei's caustic remarks were the latest in a war of words between Tehran and Washington, on the heels of Mr. Bush's Thursday night speech in which he repeatedly referred to the Islamic Republic as a "disruptive" force in need of countering and containment.
"Americans will have to answer for why they don't end occupation of Iraq and why waves of terrorism and insurgency have overwhelmed the country," Khamenei said during his address. "It will not be like this forever and some day they will be stopped as happened to Hitler, Saddam and certain other European leaders."
Khamenei mocked the U.S., describing the recent congressional testimony of the top U.S. officials in Iraq as a sign of weakness and the failure of American policy in the war torn country.
"More than four years have past since the occupation of Iraq and today everyone knows that American has failed and is frantically looking for a way out," he said.
In their testimony Gen. David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker raised allegations of Iranian meddling in Iraq by financial and military supporting militias and insurgent groups, warning that the U.S. was already embroiled in a proxy war with the Islamic republic.
Despite U.N. sanctions and efforts to isolate Iran internationally, the country is flourishing, maintained Khamenei.
"Today we are in a better political position compared to four to five years ago," he said. "We have moved forward economically and the spiritual preparedness and happiness of our nation has improved."
"A nation like ours, without an atomic bomb and not as wealthy as these other powerful governments, has foiled a whole series of their conspiracies and forced them to give up and withdraw," he added.
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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- I fought in the Hungarian uprising. I lost a hand, and part of my jaw, as a spray of bullets went through my hands, holding a handgranade which I thew with my other hand, before my capture. I was tortured for three years, by the Russians, before my release. I believe that gives me some credentials to speak.
- Reply to this comment
- We support Shia AND Sunni radicals all through the mideast. Our occupation produced the climate where a murdering nutty fringe group like al Qaeda could secure a foothold. We paid 50,000,000 American taxpayer dollars to the Anbar Awakening Council for pacification. 190,000 military small arms are missing under Petreus'' watch. We provided the matches for this fire and continue to throw gasoline on it. We can come home when it''s extinguished? Totally illogical.
- Reply to this comment
- With the death of this young man, the "peace" of Andar Province also dies. His followers intend to secure an eye for an eye and thus the cycle begins again.
- Reply to this comment
- You know it is only in the last six months or so that Republican propaganda has been busy branding insurgents in Iraq as whozewhatses.
They regular insurgents far outnumber the whozewhatses. That is well established. So they don''t need to "rebel".
Ah. The words of propaganda.
Old BS labels are replaced with new BS labels.
But the propaganda methods of those who wish to rule by force and intimidation (terror) stay the same. - Reply to this comment
j-whitman,
Re: "Wouldn''t be funny if they all bought thier own tickets & left ???"
Not only funny, but also a great idea.- Reply to this comment
- Then we have Bush who says the troops can start coming home ---- Wouldn''t be funny if they all bought thier own tickets & left ???
- Reply to this comment
"shrinkingprick" must have seen the "Male Enhancement: Is It Worth A Try?" article, an decided that this might be a good way to please his Master, Beezelbub.- Reply to this comment
- Mother Theresa earned the right to be conflicted.
- Reply to this comment
- Even Mother Teresa was conflicted.... But she didn''t cut & run like singindick did when posed with questions she didn''t like, or was afraid to face.
- Reply to this comment
"Sir, my concern is not whether God is on our side; my greatest concern is to be on God''s side..."- Abraham Lincoln- Reply to this comment
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