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dadachango69
20th August 2004, 12:34
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Iraqi soccer players angered by Bush campaign ads

http://i.a.cnn.net/si/2004/olympics/2004/writers/08/19/iraq/p1_sadir.costa_getty.jpg

Salih Sadir, left, has celebrated two goals for the surprising Iraqis in Greece, but will find his return home quite sobering.
Nick Laham/Getty Images


PATRAS, Greece -- Iraqi midfielder Salih Sadir scored a goal here on Wednesday night, setting off a rousing celebration among the 1,500 Iraqi soccer supporters at Pampeloponnisiako Stadium. Though Iraq -- the surprise team of the Olympics -- would lose to Morocco 2-1, it hardly mattered as the Iraqis won Group D with a 2-1 record and now face Australia in the quarterfinals on Sunday.

Afterward, Sadir had a message for U.S. president George W. Bush, who is using the Iraqi Olympic team in his latest re-election campaign advertisements.

In those spots, the flags of Iraq and Afghanistan appear as a narrator says, "At this Olympics there will be two more free nations -- and two fewer terrorist regimes."

"Iraq as a team does not want Mr. Bush to use us for the presidential campaign," Sadir told SI.com through a translator, speaking calmly and directly. "He can find another way to advertise himself."

Ahmed Manajid, who played as a midfielder on Wednesday, had an even stronger response when asked about Bush's TV advertisement. "How will he meet his god having slaughtered so many men and women?" Manajid told me. "He has committed so many crimes."

"The ad simply talks about President Bush's optimism and how democracy has triumphed over terror," said Scott Stanzel, a spokesperson for Bush's campaign. "Twenty-five million people in Iraq are free as a result of the actions of the coalition."

To a man, members of the Iraqi Olympic delegation say they are glad that former Olympic committee head Uday Hussein, who was responsible for the serial torture of Iraqi athletes and was killed four months after the U.S.-led coalition invaded Iraq in March 2003, is no longer in power.

But they also find it offensive that Bush is using Iraq for his own gain when they do not support his administration's actions. "My problems are not with the American people," says Iraqi soccer coach Adnan Hamad. "They are with what America has done in Iraq: destroy everything. The American army has killed so many people in Iraq. What is freedom when I go to the [national] stadium and there are shootings on the road?"

At a speech in Beaverton, Ore., last Friday, Bush attached himself to the Iraqi soccer team after its opening-game upset of Portugal. "The image of the Iraqi soccer team playing in this Olympics, it's fantastic, isn't it?" Bush said. "It wouldn't have been free if the United States had not acted."

Sadir, Wednesday's goal-scorer, used to be the star player for the professional soccer team in Najaf. In the city in which 20,000 fans used to fill the stadium and chant Sadir's name, U.S. and Iraqi forces have battled loyalists to rebel cleric Moktada al-Sadr for the past two weeks. Najaf lies in ruins.

"I want the violence and the war to go away from the city," says Sadir, 21. "We don't wish for the presence of Americans in our country. We want them to go away."

Manajid, 22, who nearly scored his own goal with a driven header on Wednesday, hails from the city of Fallujah. He says coalition forces killed Manajid's cousin, Omar Jabbar al-Aziz, who was fighting as an insurgent, and several of his friends. In fact, Manajid says, if he were not playing soccer he would "for sure" be fighting as part of the resistance.

"I want to defend my home. If a stranger invades America and the people resist, does that mean they are terrorists?" Manajid says. "Everyone [in Fallujah] has been labeled a terrorist. These are all lies. Fallujah people are some of the best people in Iraq."

Everyone agrees that Iraq's soccer team is one of the Olympics' most remarkable stories. If the Iraqis beat Australia on Saturday -- which is entirely possible, given their performance so far -- they would reach the semifinals. Three of the four semifinalists will earn medals, a prospect that seemed unthinkable for Iraq before this tournament.

When the Games are over, though, Coach Hamad says, they will have to return home to a place where they fear walking the streets. "The war is not secure," says Hamad, 43. "Many people hate America now. The Americans have lost many people around the world--and that is what is happening in America also."

h&s
20th August 2004, 13:51
Iraqi soccer players angered by Bush campaign ads
The game's called FOOTBALL, not soccer.
http://i.a.cnn.net/si/2004/olympics/2004/writers/08/19/iraq/p1_sadir.costa_getty.jpg
See, they're using their feet to kick the ball.

Aside from that, yes the Bush campaign is just so wrong. Perhaps the oppositon should mock it by showing the Afghan and Iraq flags and say the same sort of thing, but then show the American flag and say, "still one more terrorist regime to go!"

fernando
20th August 2004, 14:19
Originally posted by hammer&[email protected] 20 2004, 01:51 PM
The game's called FOOTBALL, not soccer.
http://i.a.cnn.net/si/2004/olympics/2004/writers/08/19/iraq/p1_sadir.costa_getty.jpg
See, they're using their feet to kick the ball.

Aside from that, yes the Bush campaign is just so wrong. Perhaps the oppositon should mock it by showing the Afghan and Iraq flags and say the same sort of thing, but then show the American flag and say, "still one more terrorist regime to go!"
Everywhere except the US (or some otehr countries) do they call it football, however, the US already has their versionof football (American Football) so to prevnt confusion they prolly called it soccer

h&s
20th August 2004, 14:29
American 'football' is called football for quite a comlex reason. Untill 1850 the only football was 'soccer,' untill some posh idiots at Rugby school decided football would be better if they were allowed to hold the ball and kick it over the goal (probably because they were so shit they could never score). This is called Rugby football, and when it went over to America they changed it into American 'football.' (actually thats not complex at all)
Sorry about that, but this football-soccer thing really gets my goat.
Lets get back to the topic now....

Funky Monk
20th August 2004, 15:08
Actually mate, it is called Soccer in Britain.

I dont want to go into detail but it stems from the distinction between professional and amateur games and the offshoots from the original game.

Rugby's full title is Rugby Football and the modern game is known as aSOCCiation football which wsa shortened to Soccer.

PRC-UTE
21st August 2004, 00:24
In Ireland, Australia, the USA and Canada it's soccer. To me, I hear Football and think Gaelic Football.


the modern game is known as aSOCCiation football which wsa shortened to Soccer.

I've heard that story, too.