Abu Musab al-Zarqawi is shown wearing American tennis shoes and unable to 
operate his automatic rifle in video released Thursday by the U.S. military as 
part of a propaganda war aimed at undercutting the image of the terror leader. 
 
 
 |  The undated video 
 image released by the The U.S. military command Thursday, May 4, 2006, 
 shows a previously unseen images of a video purportedly posted by al-Qaida 
 in Iraq's leader Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi . [AP]
 | 
The U.S. command showed the footage to reporters at a time when it is 
stepping up operations against al-Qaida in 
Iraq and making overtures to 
other Sunni groups. The Americans hope to isolate religious extremists from 
insurgents they believe are more likely to cut a deal to end the war. 
The clips were part of a longer video that U.S. troops seized in a raid last 
month. Al-Qaida in Iraq militants posted an edited version of the same video on 
the Internet April 25 ? but without the embarrassing segments. 
Maj. Gen. Rick Lynch, spokesman for the U.S. command, mocked al-Zarqawi as 
the previously unseen footage showed a smiling al-Qaida leader first firing 
single shots from a U.S.-made M-249 light machine gun. A frown creeps across 
al-Zarqawi's face as the weapon jams. He looks at it, confused, then summons 
another fighter. 
"It's supposed to be automatic fire. He's shooting single shots," Lynch said. 
"Something is wrong with his machine gun. He looks down, can't figure out, calls 
his friend to come unblock the stoppage and get the weapon firing again." 
By contrast, the edited version which the militants posted on the Web showed 
what happened only after the fighter fixed the weapon ? a fierce-looking 
al-Zarqawi confidently blasting away with bursts of automatic gunfire. 
His fellow fighters and associates appear similarly inept in the newly 
released footage. One reaches out to grab a just-fired weapon by the barrel, 
apparently unaware that it would burn his hand. The camera quickly pans to the 
ground and then away. 
"His close associates around him ... do things like grab the hot barrel of 
the machine gun and burn themselves," Lynch said. "Makes you wonder" about their 
military skills. 
Another clip showed the Jordanian-born al-Zarqawi ? who has derided 
everything Western ? dressed in a black uniform but wearing New Balance tennis 
shoes as he walked to a white pickup. 
Lynch said the full video was discovered during one of several raids against 
al-Qaida in Iraq safe houses in the Baghdad area starting with an operation last 
month near Youssifiyah, 12 miles southwest of the capital. U.S. forces have 
killed 31 "foreign fighters" since April and have captured 161 al-Qaida in Iraq 
officials since the beginning of the year, Lynch said. 
He said al-Zarqawi was focusing operations on the Baghdad area, a religiously 
mixed city where more than 20 percent of Iraq's 27 million people live. Planning 
documents also seized in the Youssifiyah raids spelled out this strategy, which 
also involves fewer attacks in Sunni areas. 
"Zarqawi is zooming in on Baghdad, and we are zooming in on Zarqawi," Lynch 
said. 
At least 20 people were killed across the country Thursday, including two 
American soldiers who died in a roadside bombing in Baghdad. Ten people were 
killed in a suicide attack at a court building in eastern Baghdad, police said, 
and the military said U.S. troops killed eight insurgents in a gunfight in 
Ramadi. 
It was unclear whether the newly released outtakes would reach a broad Arab 
audience. Iraqi state television aired some of the newly released portions but 
not until at 1 a.m. Friday. 
The previously posted al-Qaida footage, in which al-Zarqawi pledged his 
allegiance to 
Osama bin Laden and mocked the U.S., was widely 
transmitted by Arab satellite stations. 
American military officials said the new clips were released to Arab media 
but too late for many evening newscasts. By late Thursday evening, the stations 
had yet to air the material. 
U.S. authorities have used selective leaks in the past to discredit 
al-Zarqawi but with uncertain success. The 
Pentagon was embarrassed in 
December when reports surfaced that it had paid Iraqi newspapers to publish 
propaganda stories. 
In October, the U.S. released a letter purportedly from bin Laden's deputy, 
Ayman al-Zawahri, urging al-Zarqawi to expand his operations into neighboring 
Muslim countries. Al-Qaida claimed the letter was fake. 
The Army Times newspaper reported this week that American special operations 
troops "came within a couple of city blocks" of capturing al-Zarqawi in a raid 
in Youssifiyah in mid-April. 
The raid was carried out by the secret Task Force 145, made up of Army Delta 
Force, Rangers, Navy SEALs and British Special Air Service paratroopers, the 
newspaper said. 
While the military steps up its hunt for al-Zarqawi, U.S. diplomats are 
making overtures to other Sunni insurgent groups. They hope to persuade those 
groups to lay down their arms and support the new national unity government, 
which Washington believes has the best chance of calming sectarian tensions, 
weakening the insurgency and allowing U.S. and other international troops to 
leave. 
The Americans have made no overtures to Islamic extremists such as al-Qaida 
in Iraq and 
Saddam Hussein loyalists, U.S. diplomats have said. 
In a bid to counter the U.S. efforts, Sunni militants have targeted Sunnis 
who cooperate with the government, including Iraqi army and police. A suicide 
bomber killed two policemen and 13 police recruits Wednesday in the Sunni city 
of Fallujah. 
The day before, 10 people died when a suicide driver detonated his vehicle 
alongside the convoy of the Sunni governor of Anbar province, although the 
official escaped serious injury. 
On Thursday, 10 people were killed and 52 injured in the suicide bombing at a 
court in a mixed Shiite-Sunni area of eastern Baghdad, police said. 
Lynch cited such attacks as part of al-Zarqawi's campaign of triggering 
full-scale civil war between Shiites and Sunnis: "He's been told by his 
leadership that democracy equals failure for Zarqawi in Iraq."