Calling al-Zaidi a Baathist is a particularly pathetic way to put one’s head in the sand instead of confronting this simple reality. From Wordnik.com. [Mobb Deep | ATTACKERMAN] Reference
He's been called a "Baathist" for making the visit. From Wordnik.com. [The Belly Of The Beast] Reference
Iraq moves to blacklist 'Baathist' election candidates. From Wordnik.com. [WN.com - Photown News] Reference
Iraqi Shiites protest 'Baathist' election candidates - Summary. From Wordnik.com. [The Earth Times Online Newspaper] Reference
EXTRA: Row over 'Baathist' candidate ban delays Iraq campaigning. From Wordnik.com. [The Earth Times Online Newspaper] Reference
The Baathist philosophy, Wolf, was inspired by Nazism. From Wordnik.com. [CNN Transcript Mar 23, 2006] Reference
And again, that Baathist philosophy was directly inspired. From Wordnik.com. [CNN Transcript Mar 23, 2006] Reference
The Baathist loyalists went on the U.S. government payroll. From Wordnik.com. [CNN Transcript Aug 19, 2009] Reference
We believe a lot of Iraqi Baathist money has come into Syria. From Wordnik.com. ['Mafia State'] Reference
Iraq, and former Baathist leaders find a safe haven within Syria. From Wordnik.com. [The Iraq Study Group Report] Reference
And then someone hotwires a car to ambush a secret Baathist meeting. From Wordnik.com. [Big Picture] Reference
In Fallujah, the Army has agreed that an ex-Baathist group will run the city. From Wordnik.com. [No Security, No Democracy] Reference
We also met businesspeople, academics, bankers, and leaders of the Baathist party. From Wordnik.com. [The Next Hot Market] Reference
Having broken the Baathist regime, we face a remnant of violent Saddam supporters. From Wordnik.com. [State of the Union Address (1790-2001)] Reference
And they're a volatile combination of Al Qaeda In Iraq and former Baathist elements. From Wordnik.com. [CNN Transcript Jan 13, 2007] Reference
Instead, a growing parade of Baathist officials took to the airwaves to rally the troops. From Wordnik.com. [A Plan Under Attack] Reference
For one thing, much more Baathist infrastructure remained in place than was first realized. From Wordnik.com. [Unmasking the Insurgents] Reference
For months now there have been signs that the Baathist insurgency wants to end its uprising. From Wordnik.com. [Exploit Rifts in The Insurgency] Reference
So what we're looking at right here is a Baathist insurgency that didn't start with al Qaeda. From Wordnik.com. [CNN Transcript Jun 15, 2006] Reference
But "I have a fan club of ex-Baathist senior military leadership that think we're the solution.". From Wordnik.com. [The Making of a Dissident] Reference
And the shadowy insurgency seems to be centered on this Baathist stronghold 40 miles west of Baghdad. From Wordnik.com. ['Lord... Just Help Us Kill 'Em'] Reference
Roughly 6,000 Jews remained, fairly safely, until the late 1960s, when Saddam's Baathist party took over. From Wordnik.com. ['It Is Now or Never'] Reference
That's a strongly Baathist tribe, whose leader, Sadeq al Sadouni, was the top Baathist official in Basra. From Wordnik.com. [Basra Melee] Reference
Zarqawi gained recruits, and made common cause with Saddam's Baathist followers, whom he had long bitterly denounced. From Wordnik.com. [Terror For Export] Reference
A prominent Baathist had been using his sisters to glean information from the women and children in the neighborhood. From Wordnik.com. [Saddam's Spy Files: Key To Healing Or More Hurting?] Reference
Now that the Baathist infrastructure has been destroyed, power has been flowing back to tribal rulers such as al-Issa. From Wordnik.com. [Coming Out Of The Shadows] Reference
The jihadis have nothing but contempt for Iraq's Shiite majority, and their newfound Baathist friends share that attitude. From Wordnik.com. [RULES OF ENGAGEMENT] Reference
A few Iraqis exiled after 1968, when the Baathist party came to power, already have temporary ID cards allowing them entry. From Wordnik.com. ['It Is Now or Never'] Reference
When the League of Iraqi Writers started in exile in Beirut after the late-'70s Baathist purges, it had 500 founding members. From Wordnik.com. [Longing To Return] Reference
There's the Baathist and Fedayeen Saddam, which are the assassins, the trained killers for Saddam, and there's many of those. From Wordnik.com. [CNN Transcript Sep 22, 2003] Reference
And, for example, it's ludicrous to hear the prime minister of Iraq blame these bombings on Saddam loyalists or -- or Baathist loyalists. From Wordnik.com. [CNN Transcript Aug 19, 2009] Reference
A terrified aide to the former president stood for hours in front of the Baathist delegates recounting details of his own supposed crimes. From Wordnik.com. [Terror vs. Justice] Reference
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