Wednesday, 11 June 2014

Iraq's troubles brewing for years





  • Militants have taken over vast swaths on Iraq, putting troops on the defensive

  • While such movement has been fast, it's not totally surprising given Iraq's history

  • Some warned the U.S. military's withdrawal could open the way for violence

  • Syria's civil war bolstered ISIS, which is appealing to disenfranchised Sunnis in Iraq




(CNN) -- What's happening now in Iraq is dramatic, significant, quite possibly historic. But, to some, it is not surprising.


Militants believed to be from the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, also known as ISIS, overmatched government forces and now control a vast swath of its territory. Hundreds of thousands have fled, becoming refugees overnight. Sectarian violence plagues some areas not under ISIS control.


And amid all this, some believe the Baghdad-based central government won't be able to do much about it.


Some of these developments, like the fall of Mosul, have been swift and sudden. Others, such as the tensions between Shiite and Sunni Muslims, date back for decades, if not centuries.


But all this trouble didn't come out of nowhere. For years, experts have predicted that various factors -- some rooted in history, some of them related to recent big decisions, some functions of what's happening in the region -- could foster instability and violence in Iraq.





What's next for Iraq?




Cities under siege in Iraq








Families gather at a checkpoint in Iraq's Kurdish region on Wednesday, June 11, after they fled their homes in the country's Nineveh province. More than 500,000 people fled in fear after extremist militants overran Mosul, Iraq's second-largest city, the International Organization for Migration said.Families gather at a checkpoint in Iraq's Kurdish region on Wednesday, June 11, after they fled their homes in the country's Nineveh province. More than 500,000 people fled in fear after extremist militants overran Mosul, Iraq's second-largest city, the International Organization for Migration said.



A man in a wheelchair is among those fleeing the violence on June 11.A man in a wheelchair is among those fleeing the violence on June 11.



A security guard is seen at a Kurdish checkpoint on June 11.A security guard is seen at a Kurdish checkpoint on June 11.



Construction begins on refugee camps in Erbil, Iraq, on June 11.Construction begins on refugee camps in Erbil, Iraq, on June 11.



Automobiles clog a highway as refugees flee Mosul on Tuesday, June 10. Automobiles clog a highway as refugees flee Mosul on Tuesday, June 10.



Refugees are seen in Erbil on June 10.Refugees are seen in Erbil on June 10.



People believed to be refugees flee Mosul on June 10.People believed to be refugees flee Mosul on June 10.



Iraqi families are given water as they gather at a Kurdish checkpoint on June 10.Iraqi families are given water as they gather at a Kurdish checkpoint on June 10.



The rush from Mosul led to bottlenecks at checkpoints as people tried to reach safety in Erbil, about 90 kilometers (56 miles) to the east.The rush from Mosul led to bottlenecks at checkpoints as people tried to reach safety in Erbil, about 90 kilometers (56 miles) to the east.



Many people are fleeing on foot. Mosul's four main hospitals are inaccessible because of fighting, and some mosques have been converted to act as clinics, the International Organization for Migration said.Many people are fleeing on foot. Mosul's four main hospitals are inaccessible because of fighting, and some mosques have been converted to act as clinics, the International Organization for Migration said.



Iraqi police stand guard at a checkpoint in Baghdad. Iraqi police stand guard at a checkpoint in Baghdad.




Iraqi civilians flee Mosul

Iraqi civilians flee Mosul

Iraqi civilians flee Mosul

Iraqi civilians flee Mosul

Iraqi civilians flee Mosul

Iraqi civilians flee Mosul

Iraqi civilians flee Mosul

Iraqi civilians flee Mosul

Iraqi civilians flee Mosul

Iraqi civilians flee Mosul

Iraqi civilians flee Mosul



Photos: Iraqi civilians flee MosulPhotos: Iraqi civilians flee Mosul



PREDICTION: Breaking up the army after Saddam Hussein's fall could haunt Iraq


While not as big as what it had been prior to the 1991 Gulf War, Iraq's military under Saddam Hussein boasted an estimated 430,000 soldiers and another 400,000 personnel in paramilitary units and security services when U.S.-led troops invaded in spring 2003.


Still, the Iraqis proved no match for coalition forces.


After the military was overrun, it was dissolved -- along with Iraq's defense and information ministries -- by Paul Bremer, the top U.S. civilian administrator in Iraq.


That left hundreds of thousands of troops suddenly out of work. Those with ranks of colonel and above -- who knew the most about strategy, tactics and more -- were hit even harder, as they weren't entitled to severance packages and couldn't work for the new Iraqi government.


Then they had to go somewhere.


According to Fawaz Gerges, a professor at the London School of Economics and Political Science, "hundreds, if not thousands, of skilled officers of Saddam Hussein's ... joined ISIS."


That means this militant force -- even as it is supplemented by foreign fighters -- is trained and knows Iraq well. And its leaders may be more organized, strategically savvy and adept at fighting than some in Iraq's current military.


"(This) has allowed ISIS to basically have skills, to have motivation, to have command and control," Gerges told CNN. "It's a mini-army fighting both in Iraq and Syria."


PREDICTION: Syria's civil war will destabilize the region


ISIS is not just fighting, it's winning.


As of Wednesday, the militant group had taken over not just Iraq's second-largest city in Mosul but also Tikrit (which is Saddam's hometown). It has a major presence in northeastern Syria.


That latter fact speaks to how ISIS -- after the group it emerged from, al Qaeda in Iraq, suffered heavy losses in the 2000s -- was able to emerge as a significant, and stronger, fighting force.


This growth is thanks, in large part, to the success that ISIS has had in Syria since 2011, when that country's civil war began.


In that time, the militant group gained experience, recruits and resources as it gobbled up territory -- and, with it, millions of dollars and military firepower that has helped it to flourish.


"And they have an agenda," adds CNN's Nic Robertson, referring to ISIS's goal to create a caliphate -- or an Islamic state -- across a vast area that includes Syria and Iraq. "We're now seeing ... that agenda (in action). We're seeing the destabilizing influence that the war in Syria has had in the region."


British Foreign Secretary William Hague agrees that the Syrian conflict has negatively affected other countries, such as Iraq. That is one major reason why, he says, some accord needs to be reached in Syria -- though that won't solve everything.


"(The regional unrest) underlines the importance of renewed efforts over the coming months to bring about a political solution in Syria," Hague told CNN's Christiane Amanpour. "But in Iraq ... it is also vital that there is some political progress that helps the Iraqi government respond effectively to this."


PREDICTION: Divisions between Shiite, Sunni Muslims cannot be overcome


By "political progress," Hague was likely referring to the sectarian divide that defines Iraqi politics and government. The latter is led by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, a Shiite Muslim. Sunni Muslims -- the minority in Iraq -- often find themselves left out.


James Jeffrey, U.S. ambassador to Iraq from 2010 to 2012, doesn't think that it was inevitable Shiite and Sunnis in Iraq would be at loggerheads, as they are now.


The veteran diplomat, now a fellow at The Washington Institute for Near East Policy think tank, says that "Sunnis by and large had bought into the new Iraq." They served in the Iraqi military, some of them as generals.


But in the last few years, relations have gone downhill. Jeffrey points to what's happened in Syria, issues with Iraq's military and the fact that both the military and the government are increasingly divided along sectarian lines.


"There was the atrocious political campaign against Sunnis ... and simply a lack of effort to bring Sunnis into the government," said the former ambassador.


Well before the recent events in Mosul, this sectarian strife has manifest itself in violence. About 8,000 civilians were killed in 2013, in what the United Nations says was the deadliest year for civilians since 2008.


Outright violence isn't the only problem. It's also a matter of trust. To that end, it's hard to state how much animosity some Sunnis have for al-Maliki and his government. And ISIS has tried to take advantage, Gerges explained.


"The rift has allowed ISIS to basically position itself as the spearhead of the Sunni community," Gerges said. "It has found a ... refuge and a social base. That particular social base among the Sunni community has allowed ISIS to gain momentum and recruits."


Granted, this momentum could be stopped.


Gerges said doing so will require convincing the vast majority of Sunnis that they are better off with a Baghdad-based government -- maybe one that's more of a unity government, with more Sunni inclusion -- than living under radical Islamist militants.


But picking which is the lesser of two evils for Sunnis may not be simple.


"The Sunni population does not want to be dominated by (ISIS); they went through that in 2004," said Jeffrey, the former American ambassador. "But by the same token, they are disillusioned with the Iraqi government in Baghdad."


PREDICTION: The United States will regret pulling out of Iraq


So what can be done to stop militants from a group that even al Qaeda has disowned, for its excessive and abusive actions in Syria, from taking over Iraq?


Jeffrey doesn't think offering amnesty to some Sunni fighters or forming a unity government will do much to seriously "change the dynamic" overall.


The landscape could be altered, he says, by military intervention by Turkey (which might have special motivation given the conflict's tight proximity to its border and the fact militants seized dozens at its consulate in Mosul) or by Iran (which is a Shiite state, and thus has a natural alliance with al-Maliki).


Then, of course, the U.S. military could act.


It's done so before, sending tens of thousands of troops into the Middle Eastern nation during the 2003 invasion. While units rolled in and out, the military stayed there for years -- peaking at 166,300 troops in October 2007, according to the Defense Department.


Chart: U.S. troop levels in Iraq


But they were all gone by the start of 2012, fulfilling a vow made by President Barack Obama.


That move drew sharp criticism in some circles. Michael Hayden, the National Security Agency director from 1999 to 2005 who led the CIA in President George W. Bush's last 2½ years in office, characterized the withdrawal as a mistake that may undermine the country and the region.


"Whatever the withdrawal means in purely physical terms in Iraq," Hayden wrote in a CNN.com op-ed, "the psychic impact there and in the region is that America is less interested. In Iraq that means that each of the factions are going to their sectarian corners and are preparing to come out fighting."


It's not like the United States cut ties with Iraq entirely or that it's backing away more now.


A Defense Department official says about $15 billion in equipment, training and other services, and firepower including helicopter-fired rockets, machine guns, grenades and rifles have gone to Iraq. Another $1 billion in arms and goods, including up to 200 Humvees, are in the works.


"We are committed to ensuring that ammunition and equipment Iraq needs in its current fight are delivered as quickly as possible," the official said.


A U.S. official said the Iraqi government has indicated a willingness for the United States to conduct airstrikes to help repel insurgents.


But there has been no indication that American troops will be back to fighting on the ground in Iraq anytime soon.


PREDICTION: Iraq won't stay together, over the long term


Without combat intervention from another country, saving Iraq -- as it's currently constituted -- is up to its military and government.


Will they be up to the task?


Recent developments aren't particularly encouraging. Witnesses reported Iraqi security forces abandoned their posts in droves in Mosul, some of them dropping their weapon, taking off their uniforms and running.


And, of course, militants have had success in many other parts of the country, with government fighters sometimes offering sparse resistance.


Jeffrey said better training of Iraq's military, more effective air power and better counterterrorism capabilities may have stopped, or at least slowed, the ISIS onslaught. But now, the longtime diplomat said, Iraq's military is "ill-trained, badly led and not particularly competent."


"They clearly cannot fire and maneuver," said Jeffrey, a U.S. Army veteran.


The Baghdad-based government to which these troops report doesn't inspire confidence in some circles, either.


As CNN's Robertson notes, it's challenged enough "putting out ... fires all over the country, never mind rallying troops to Mosul."


Plus, the government's frayed relations with anyone who is not Shiite -- be they Sunnis or Kurds, in the semiautonomous region in Iraq's northeast -- make creating a united front difficult.


Part of the challenge is that many Iraqi feel more loyalty to their groups -- be they Shiite, Sunni or Kurd -- than to Iraq as a whole. No other than U.S. Vice President Joe Biden proposed, in a 2006 joint New York Times editorial, that one way to keep Iraq united is by "giving each ethno-religious group ... room to run its own affairs."


For all the doubts, Iraq's government believes that the country can remain as one. And the military, it says, will be a big reason why.


"This is not the end," the Defense Ministry vowed in a statement. "We are very confident that we will be able to correct the path and to overcome mistakes."



Halle Berry ordered to pay child support






Things have gotten tense between Halle Berry and her daughter's father, model Gabriel Aubry. The <a href='http://ift.tt/1kjCkgR' target='_blank'>pair are back in court </a>following a fight between Berry's fiance, Olivier Martinez, and Aubry. But Hollywood has a history of contentious custody disputes including ...Things have gotten tense between Halle Berry and her daughter's father, model Gabriel Aubry. The pair are back in court following a fight between Berry's fiance, Olivier Martinez, and Aubry. But Hollywood has a history of contentious custody disputes including ...

In a custody battle that has gone international, Kelly Rutherford's case may seem like a storyline on her show "Gossip Girl." But the drama has been very real, and in August 2012 <a href=' http://ift.tt/1phm87u' target='_blank'>she was ordered to share custody</a> of her two children with Giersch in Monaco, where he currently lives. She has vowed to have the children returned to the U.S.In a custody battle that has gone international, Kelly Rutherford's case may seem like a storyline on her show "Gossip Girl." But the drama has been very real, and in August 2012 she was ordered to share custody of her two children with Giersch in Monaco, where he currently lives. She has vowed to have the children returned to the U.S.

The courts awarded custody to Federline in 2007, and at one point Spears <a href='http://ift.tt/1kjCip4' target='_blank'>actually lost the right</a> to visit their sons. Spears and Federline are said to be on better terms these days, and she is often photographed with their boys.The courts awarded custody to Federline in 2007, and at one point Spears actually lost the right to visit their sons. Spears and Federline are said to be on better terms these days, and she is often photographed with their boys.

The world learned probably more than it wanted to know about Mel Gibson after audio leaked that was said to be of <a href='http://ift.tt/1kjCipa' target='_blank'>him ranting</a> to ex-girlfriend Oksana Grigorieva. The former lovers settled on a deal in 2011 that <a href=' http://ift.tt/1phmaMz' target='_blank'>reportedly granted</a> her $750,000 and visitation with their young daughter.The world learned probably more than it wanted to know about Mel Gibson after audio leaked that was said to be of him ranting to ex-girlfriend Oksana Grigorieva. The former lovers settled on a deal in 2011 that reportedly granted her $750,000 and visitation with their young daughter.

The singer ultimately won custody of his two young sons with his ex-wife, but not without some drama in the courtroom that included <a href='http://ift.tt/1kjCkxl'>Usher breaking down in tears</a> on the stand at one point during testimony.The singer ultimately won custody of his two young sons with his ex-wife, but not without some drama in the courtroom that included Usher breaking down in tears on the stand at one point during testimony.

Their divorce in 1998 was messy and the custody battle over their two sons was even more so. At one point during the custody trial, Anderson said she had <a href='http://ift.tt/1phm8nX' target='_blank'>contracted hepatitis C</a> from sharing an infected tattoo needle with Lee. In 2002 they decided to share custody.Their divorce in 1998 was messy and the custody battle over their two sons was even more so. At one point during the custody trial, Anderson said she had contracted hepatitis C from sharing an infected tattoo needle with Lee. In 2002 they decided to share custody.

Etheridge and her former spouse reached an <a href='http://ift.tt/1phm8o4' target='_blank'>agreement in 2012 to share custody </a>of their 5-year-old twins, but not before plenty of accusations were tossed back and forth. <a href='http://ift.tt/InprRg' target='_blank'>TMZ reported</a> that Etheridge claimed Michaels had accidently burned one of the children with a cigarette.Etheridge and her former spouse reached an agreement in 2012 to share custody of their 5-year-old twins, but not before plenty of accusations were tossed back and forth. TMZ reported that Etheridge claimed Michaels had accidently burned one of the children with a cigarette.

The basketball player <a href=' http://ift.tt/1phmb3f' target='_blank'>spent years in the courts</a> with his ex-wife before winning custody of his two sons in 2011. The experience so impacted his life that in 2012 he released a book titled "A Father First: How My Life Became Bigger Than Basketball."<br/><br/>The basketball player spent years in the courts with his ex-wife before winning custody of his two sons in 2011. The experience so impacted his life that in 2012 he released a book titled "A Father First: How My Life Became Bigger Than Basketball."

The "30 Rock" star and his ex-wife fought over the <a href=' http://ift.tt/1kjCkNR' target='_blank'>custody of their daughter for seven years</a>. The battle peaked in 2007 after he left a voicemail for their child calling her a "rude, thoughtless little pig." Baldwin wrote about it in his book, "A Promise to Ourselves: A Journey Through Fatherhood and Divorce."The "30 Rock" star and his ex-wife fought over the custody of their daughter for seven years. The battle peaked in 2007 after he left a voicemail for their child calling her a "rude, thoughtless little pig." Baldwin wrote about it in his book, "A Promise to Ourselves: A Journey Through Fatherhood and Divorce."

Allen's romantic relationship with Farrow's adopted daughter, Soon-Yi Farrow Previn, did not help their custody battle over their three kids go smoothly. In awarding Farrow custody in 1993, <a href='http://ift.tt/K0II23' target='_blank'>the judge characterized Allen as a "self-absorbed, untrustworthy and insensitive" dad.</a> Allen later married Previn and the couple adopted two children.Allen's romantic relationship with Farrow's adopted daughter, Soon-Yi Farrow Previn, did not help their custody battle over their three kids go smoothly. In awarding Farrow custody in 1993, the judge characterized Allen as a "self-absorbed, untrustworthy and insensitive" dad. Allen later married Previn and the couple adopted two children.









  • Halle Berry must pay Gabriel Aubry $16,000 a month in child support, a court rules

  • Berry and Aubry have a 6-year-old daughter, Nahla

  • The settlement comes after a lengthy legal battle




(CNN) -- Halle Berry has a hefty new expense.


The Oscar-winning actress has to pay over $16,000 in child support each month to her ex, Gabriel Aubry, to provide for their 6-year-old daughter Nahla, the Los Angeles Superior Court ordered.


Berry's monthly bill will remain in effect until Nahla turns 19 or graduates high school, whichever occurs first, according to court documents obtained by CNN. The settlement came on May 30, at the end of lengthy child support legal battle.


The court also ordered Berry to pay $115,000 retroactively in child support, as well as to cover her ex-boyfriend's legal fees, which amount to $300,000. The "X-Men: Days of Future Past" star is fully responsible for Nahla's tuition, while both parents will divide health care costs.


Berry and the Canadian model met in 2005 and split in spring 2010 and have since been entangled in bitter custody and child support litigation. Tensions erupted in a physical altercation between Aubry and Berry's husband, Olivier Martinez, on Thanksgiving Day 2012, when Aubry came to Berry's home to drop off then 4-year-old Nahla.


Berry and Aubry's legal battles also include Berry seeking to relocate their daughter to France, and Nahla's nanny filing a restraining order against Aubry. Since their custody dispute came to an end in spring 2011, both parents have shared equal custody of Nahla.


Nahla is Aubry's only child. Berry is a mother of two. She gave birth to a son with Martinez in October of last year.



No link found between gunman and victim





  • The shooter had an AR-15 type rifle, a handgun, loaded magazines, and a large knife

  • Authorities have found no motive and no link between the gunman and his victim

  • They identify the shooter as 15-year-old Jared Padgett

  • "The country has to do some soul-searching," Obama says




(CNN) -- The scenes are depressingly familiar.


A gunman opens fire on an American campus. Students, teachers and administrators duck for cover. Parents anxiously wait for their kids to check in, praying for the phone to ring.


It played out again Tuesday at Reynolds High School in Troutdale, Oregon, a city of 16,400 people 12 miles east of Portland.









Friends, family and others hold candles for the victim of a school shooting at a vigil Tuesday, June 10 in Troutdale, Oregon, near Portland. A student shot and killed another student at Reynolds High School before apparently taking his own life, law enforcement sources said.Friends, family and others hold candles for the victim of a school shooting at a vigil Tuesday, June 10 in Troutdale, Oregon, near Portland. A student shot and killed another student at Reynolds High School before apparently taking his own life, law enforcement sources said.



Troutdale Mayor Doug Daoust addresses reporters at a June 10 press conference in a Safeway parking lot near the school.Troutdale Mayor Doug Daoust addresses reporters at a June 10 press conference in a Safeway parking lot near the school.



Students look for family members after arriving at a shopping center parking lot June 10 in Wood Village, Oregon, after the shooting in nearby Troutdale.Students look for family members after arriving at a shopping center parking lot June 10 in Wood Village, Oregon, after the shooting in nearby Troutdale.



Parents anxiously wait for their children at the shopping center parking lot in Wood Village on June 10.Parents anxiously wait for their children at the shopping center parking lot in Wood Village on June 10.



Buses arrive at a grocery store parking lot in Wood Village on June 10 to reunite students with their parents after the shooting.Buses arrive at a grocery store parking lot in Wood Village on June 10 to reunite students with their parents after the shooting.



A distraught woman waits for news after the school shooting June 10.A distraught woman waits for news after the school shooting June 10.



The shooting happened at about 8 a.m., said Sue Strickland of the Troutdale Police Department. A semiautomatic weapon was involved in the shooting, she said.The shooting happened at about 8 a.m., said Sue Strickland of the Troutdale Police Department. A semiautomatic weapon was involved in the shooting, she said.



Family and friends of Reynolds High School students waited outside for word of students' safety. Details about what led to the shooting weren't immediately available.Family and friends of Reynolds High School students waited outside for word of students' safety. Details about what led to the shooting weren't immediately available.



About an hour after the shooting, Oregon State Police said the area was secure and the situation was contained.About an hour after the shooting, Oregon State Police said the area was secure and the situation was contained.



Troutdale, about 12 miles east of Portland, has a population of about 16,400, according to the Census Bureau.Troutdale, about 12 miles east of Portland, has a population of about 16,400, according to the Census Bureau.




Shooting at Oregon high school

Shooting at Oregon high school

Shooting at Oregon high school

Shooting at Oregon high school

Shooting at Oregon high school

Shooting at Oregon high school

Shooting at Oregon high school

Shooting at Oregon high school

Shooting at Oregon high school

Shooting at Oregon high school



Photos: Shooting at Oregon high schoolPhotos: Shooting at Oregon high school



Jared Padgett, a student at the school, shot and killed another student before taking his own life.





Oregon shooting victim was a 'sweet boy'




Police: Shooter and victim not linked




Police: Victim, shooter dead in Oregon

The 15-year-old Padgett arrived at school on a bus, carrying a guitar case and a duffel bag, Troutdale Police Chief Scott Anderson told reporters Wednesday.


The freshman student had an AR-15 type rifle, a semi-automatic handgun, nine loaded magazines capable of holding several hundred rounds, and a large knife, Anderson said.


Authorities have found no link between Padgett and his victim, 14-year-old freshman, Emilio Hoffman, and no known motive.


Padgett shot and killed Hoffman in a locker room. He also shot and wounded a teacher.


Padgett then moved through a main hallway, where he ducked into a small restroom as officers closed in, Anderson said.


There was a brief exchange of gunfire, but, based on autopsy reports, Padgett died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.


"Given the weapons and the amount of ammunition that the shooter was carrying, the early notification and the initial law enforcement response were critical," the police chief said.


The school shooting, the second in a week, is the latest in a long string. An attack at Seattle Pacific University last week killed one person and wounded two others.


Timeline of U.S. school violence


Speaking in Washington, President Barack Obama said the nation should be ashamed of its inability to get tougher gun restrictions through Congress in the aftermath of mass shootings that he said have become commonplace in America.






"Our levels of gun violence are off the charts. There's no advanced, developed country on Earth that would put up with this," he said.


Heroics by coach


Todd Rispler, a teacher and coach at the school, was praised by police for what they called heroic actions.


Witnesses at the school said that after the shooter killed Hoffman, he chased Rispler out of the building while shooting at him. Several students said they saw blood on Rispler's white shirt as he ran.


What they didn't see was that the coach ran to the main administrative office, where he alerted the school's leadership about the gunman on the premises.


Officials immediately initiated a lockdown on the school.


"Despite being injured, (he) was able to make his way to the office and initiate the school lockdown procedure," Anderson said.


The news was warmly received by students at the school, who made a celebrity of Rispler by posting about him on social media.


"Everyone on Twitter is talking about how he's a boss and how even if he was shot and injured he'd be fine," student Kara Ikebe told CNN.


The debate


So, what now? Will this latest instance of gun violence compel Congress to act?


The President isn't optimistic.


Most members of Congress are "terrified" of the National Rifle Association, he said Tuesday, adding that nothing will change until public opinion demands it.


"The country has to do some soul-searching about this. This is becoming the norm, and we take it for granted, in ways that, as a parent, are terrifying to me," Obama said.


There was no immediate response from the NRA.


The number of active shooter events -- defined as one or more people whose primary motive is mass murder in a confined or populated area, not including gang and family-related shootings -- has risen somewhat in real numbers in recent years.


A report by the Advanced Law Enforcement Rapid Response Training Center found that the number of these types of mass shootings has increased from an average of about five a year prior to 2009 to 15 in 2013.


The focus





Student describes the Oregon shooting




Police: Oregon school shooter dead




Student's parent: We just panicked

The NRA and its supporters have previously said that no number of laws can effectively stop anyone out to kill.


"The violence is in the person, not in the gun," Jerry Henry, executive director of GeorgiaCarry.Org, said this year. "And until you figure out how to treat the violence, then you're going to have that. And taking all the guns off the street is not going to make anybody any safer."


CNN analyst Fareed Zakaria disagrees.


"Every time there is a serious gun massacre in the United States -- and alas, these are fairly common -- the media focuses on the twisted psychology of the shooter and asks why we don't pay more attention to detecting and treating mental illness," he wrote.


"The question we should really be focused on is not the specific cause of a single shooting, but why there are so many of them in America."


America's per capita gun homicide rate in 2009 was 12 times higher than the average of Canada, Germany, Australia and Spain.


"Does anyone think that we have 12 times as many psychologically troubled people as they do in these countries?"


It's a point Obama also touched on Tuesday.


"The United States does not have a monopoly on crazy people. It's not the only country that has psychosis," he said.


The aftermath


Back at Reynolds High School on Tuesday, anxious parents waited for news that their children were safe as word of the shooting spread.


Evacuated students were bused to a local grocery store parking lot and released after clearing a police pat-down for weapons.


One couple, Craig Tuholski and Tawnjia Reimer, were talking with CNN affiliate KGW about how agonizing the wait for news was, when Tuholski's cell phone rang.


"Is that Chris?" Reimer asked before letting out a sigh of relief. "Oh, thank God."


"That's what we were waiting for," Tuholski said after hanging up.


The vigil


Several hundred people turned out Tuesday night for a vigil to honor Hoffman, including his family.


Although senior Jaylen Edwards didn't know Emilio Hoffman well, he posted one of the early tweets calling the community to attend.


"At the end of the day, we can come together for a great cause and support Emilio and his family," he told affiliate KATU.


As candles flickered in the fading light, the heartbroken community sang "Amazing Grace."


"We just have to make sure that we all stick together and have each other's backs," Edwards said.


Special sentence sought for Seattle college shooting suspect


Las Vegas shooting victim's friend: 'You never expect it'


CNN's Jason Hanna, Mariano Castillo, Steve Almasy, Tom Cohen, Evan Perez, Pam Brown, Shimon Prokupecz and Stefan Simon contributed to this report.