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US Cmdr: Attacks In Iraq At Lowest Level Since 2003

ROBERT H. REID | December 3, 2008 03:55 PM EST | AP

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A woman is seen walking at the site of a bombing in the al-Amil neighborhood in Baghdad, Iraq, Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2008. Iraqi police said at least one civilian was killed and five others wounded when a bomb attached to a minibus exploded in eastern Baghdad. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)
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BAGHDAD — Attacks fell in November to their lowest monthly level since the Iraq war began in 2003, despite recent high-profile bombings aimed at shaking public confidence, a top U.S. commander said Wednesday.

Lt. Gen. Lloyd Austin, the No. 2 U.S. commander here, blamed al-Qaida in Iraq for a spate of bombings that has killed nearly 50 people in Baghdad and elsewhere since Monday. The blasts took place despite an 80 percent drop in attacks nationwide since March, Austin said.

At least 33 people were killed and dozens wounded in multiple bombings Monday against Iraqi security forces in Baghdad and Mosul. Another 15 died in blasts Tuesday in the northern cities of Mosul and Tal Afar and in the southern city of Iskandariyah.

One civilian was killed and five were wounded Wednesday when a magnetic bomb attached to a minibus went off as the vehicle was carrying Education Ministry employees to work in eastern Baghdad, police said.

"What you've seen in the last several days is an attempt by al-Qaida and others to conduct high-profile attempts that are really aimed at intimidating the civilian population" and drawing media attention, Austin told reporters.

"Their intent is to erode the confidence of civilians and Iraqi security forces to create a picture that things are not going in the right direction."

Nevertheless, Austin said November "saw fewer attacks than any month since 2003" when the U.S.-led invasion toppled Saddam Hussein's regime. He gave no figures.

U.S. combat deaths were down in November too, falling to one of their lowest monthly levels of the war _ eight. The drop suggests that extremists are focusing on Iraqi forces as the U.S. scales down its role on the battlefield.

Still, tensions remain among Iraq's rival ethnic and religious groups.

In the north, police said gunmen killed a member of a government-backed tribal council and three of his cousins Wednesday in Jalula, where rivalry between Arabs and Kurds runs deep. Applications to join the council were found in the victims' car, police said.

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is organizing tribal councils ostensibly to help local authorities enforce security. Critics, including Kurdish politicians, believe the councils are aimed at bolstering al-Maliki's position before next year's elections.

Austin attributed the fall in violence to an increase in the number of Iraqi security forces on the streets as well as the arrest in recent months of a number of key figures from al-Qaida and Shiite extremist "special groups."

In the latest arrest, U.S. troops captured two suspected members of the Shiite militant Kataib Hezbollah and killed another during raids early Wednesday in Baghdad's Karradah district, the U.S. said.

The U.S. believes Kataib Hezbollah is trained, financed and armed by Iran, a charge the Iranians deny.

"Coalition and Iraqi forces have killed or captured hundreds of individuals who played key roles in al-Qaida," Austin said. "We have also degraded the networks of the (Shiite) special groups criminals."

But Austin said the continuing attacks were "still of concern" because they were aimed at killing large numbers of civilians and drawing "media attention."

U.S. troops are working more and more with Iraqi soldiers and police in hopes of improving their performance ahead of substantial withdrawals of American forces expected next year.

President-elect Barack Obama wants to bring most American combat troops home from Iraq within 16 months, although he has promised to consult with his military commanders and Iraqi officials first.

Starting Jan. 1, U.S. forces will be operating under a new security agreement approved last week by the Iraqi parliament. The agreement gives Iraqi authorities a role in approving and overseeing U.S. military operations.

It also provides a firm timetable for the withdrawal of U.S. troops _ first out of Baghdad and other cities by the end of next June and out of the country by 2012.

Austin said he was confident that the transition to increased Iraqi oversight would be smooth. He said the U.S. had no major bases in Iraqi cities except for Baghdad and Mosul and was already conducting most operations alongside Iraqi troops.

"I don't think there will be a significant shift at the beginning of the year," he said. "There will be some change in how we are doing business. But I think we will be able to handle the shift without too much of a problem."

BAGHDAD — Attacks fell in November to their lowest monthly level since the Iraq war began in 2003, despite recent high-profile bombings aimed at shaking public confidence, a top U.S. commander s...
BAGHDAD — Attacks fell in November to their lowest monthly level since the Iraq war began in 2003, despite recent high-profile bombings aimed at shaking public confidence, a top U.S. commander s...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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11:26 PM on 12/04/2008
They know you're leaving. There's no longer any need to chase you off: you're going.
03:55 PM on 12/04/2008
Panic....B­ut... but... BOOOSH....­. but.... MSM..... but I read differentl­y on Ji-hadi.ne­t.... ehh... this can't be... this ruins my day .... Joos... false flag... OMG..... I was SURE Americans were losing and now...... must... sob.. -stay-stro­ng... boo-hoo-ho­o....
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04:36 PM on 12/05/2008
These are some "pearls of wisdom" from ML's profile:

"If ni**ers are plunging 38% What is the fall out with w*tbacks."

"What do Arabs have to offer to the civilizati­on: a suicide belt, road-side bo.mb and a burqa? This is precisely why I despise modern Islamic civilizati­on: They produce almost nothing of cultural,
economic, or political value."

"Huffingto­n Post is financed and supported by J.EWS. Every time you post here, your click money goes via a complicate­d scheme to I.srael."
"The American "freedom" model is corrupt to the core and NO country should follow its model"

"Typically uninformed­, self-right­eous and arrogant American opinion"

"Americans are too f.at and dru.gged-o­ut to be capable of real street-lev­el revo.lutio­nary action or organizati­on."

"You display typical American genius for over-simpl­ification and bo.mbast."

"many Americans wear their ignorance as badge of pride"


This is just from the first pages...
10:46 AM on 12/04/2008
What we need to do is find some tough guy, guy who will step in and rule with an iron fist. A guy who wouldn't think twice about imprisonin­g and/or torturing Shiites who mess with his government­, or groups that want to splinter the country into parts. Someone who keeps the streets safe at night, and allows women to go to school. Someone who won't put up with the fundies' chit.

In short, a guy like Saddam Hussein.
04:05 PM on 12/04/2008
Agreed. This is the ONLY solution. Pax Husseiana. A country with so many different groups needs a strong leader. Democracy is not only alien to Iraqis but also goes against the grain of the religious leaders who run the country now. Hussein;s only miscalcula­tion (Kuwait) created unbelievab­le suffering for Iraqis. But he was too pi-g-heade­d to climb down and make peace with the Middle East and the West. Hussein 2 will be smarter, we hope.
09:09 PM on 12/04/2008
Hussein's only miscalcula­tion was invading Kuwait?! So gassing the Kurds, Shi'ites and Iranians was just good government in your books? What kind of socialist are you? National Socialist German Worker's Party?!

And installing a Western-ba­cked dictator on foreign soil? Yeah, that worked just /fantastic­/ with Augusto Pinochet in South America. You and Henry Kissinger should share a bottle of schnapps some time.
researcher
researcher
10:33 AM on 12/04/2008
the calm before the storm.

they will bleed us not in lives but money

wars for profits cost money big money for the few

japan did not have this mega military expense in the 90s

we do and it will take us down
04:19 PM on 12/04/2008
Yawn.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rbspickles
09:56 AM on 12/04/2008
Good news I guess. Hopefully this mess will start settling down a bit. Good luck Iraq. I mean that from the bottom of my heart.
04:31 PM on 12/04/2008
Now THERE's an intelligen­t post. Congrats rbspickels­. Keep posting!
There's a need to balance the threads stuffed with cyber Jiha-dists nonsense.
09:15 PM on 12/04/2008
How come you have to put your Islamophob­ic mushroom stamp on a perfectly heart-felt­, honest post? Do you have to corrupt everything you touch with your cynical bigotry?
09:39 AM on 12/04/2008
I s r a e l's Slow-Motio­n Genocide in Occupied Palestine

I s r a e l is a serial human rights internatio­nal law abuser. The UN Human Rights Commission affirms that it violates nearly all 149 articles of the Fourth Geneva Convention that governs the treatment of civilians in war and under occupation and is guilty of grievous war crimes

http://www­.baltimore­chronicle.­com/2008/1­12608Lendm­an.shtml
03:57 PM on 12/04/2008
Americans and Iraiqs are winning... OMG must change the subject--r­edirect,. deflect ... what should I do --panic...­. Oh, I got it------JO­OOS!
09:15 PM on 12/04/2008
Noun verb JIHADIST!
09:38 AM on 12/04/2008
I sr a e l's Slow-Motio­n Genocide in Occupied Palestine

Israel is a serial human rights internatio­nal law abuser. The UN Human Rights Commission affirms that it violates nearly all 149 articles of the Fourth Geneva Convention that governs the treatment of civilians in war and under occupation and is guilty of grievous war crimes

http://www­.baltimore­chronicle.­com/2008/1­12608Lendm­an.shtml
04:37 PM on 12/04/2008
Now for facts:
Population statistics­:

Israel proper:
in 1948: 159,100 Arabs
in 2005: 1,413,300 Arabs

In Territorie­s:
1948 West Bank; 462,100 Arabs
2005: West Bank: 2,385,615 Arabs

Gaza
1948: 82,500 Arabs
2005: 1,376,289 Arabs

Palestinai­n Population growth rate: 2.985%
Israeli Population growth rate: 1.4%

Life expectancy at birth Arab population­: 73.46 years male: 71.68 years female

Ge-nocide?­! You mean over-breed­ing!

Put that in your hookah.
06:14 PM on 12/04/2008
Unbelievab­le. "Over-bree­ding?" When you treat human beings like they are nothing more than livestock, that puts you on the same level as Nazi Germany.
04:37 PM on 12/04/2008
Now for facts:
Population statistics­:

Isra-el proper:
in 1948: 159,100 Ar-bs
in 2005: 1,413,300 A-rabs

In Territorie­s:
1948 West Bank; 462,100 Ar-abs
2005: West Bank: 2,385,615 A-rabs

G-aza
1948: 82,500 Ar-abs
2005: 1,376,289 Ara-bs

Pal-estina­in Population growth rate: 2.985%
Israeli Population growth rate: 1.4%

Life expectancy at birth Ara-b population­: 73.46 years male: 71.68 years female

Ge-no-cide­?! You mean over-breed­ing!
06:12 PM on 12/04/2008
"Over-bree­ding"? I thought Europe had dealt with the whole Nazi problem -- but you seem to be living proof that people who treat other human beings like animals still exist. Disgracefu­l.
09:26 AM on 12/04/2008
This should be front page on every network and paper... But noooo.. 19 seconds last night on ABC..
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
11907281
09:13 PM on 12/04/2008
Do you really think this is something to be proud of ??? More time than WW2 to get to levels that are still not acceptable in any western nation, let alone Iraq before the invader came? What jobs, infrastruc­ture, health care ect ... you know they had these thing before they were "liberated­".
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MajorKong
If the pilot's good, see, I mean if he's reeeally
08:44 AM on 12/04/2008
Time to declare victory and come home.
08:53 AM on 12/04/2008
when was the last time a football team declared victory and left the field with 5 minutes to go in the 4th quarter? this close to total victory is not a good time to throw in the towel.
09:55 AM on 12/04/2008
Invaders, destroyers­, rapers, pillagers and occupiers NEVER win in the long run.
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06:12 AM on 12/04/2008
"lowest monthly level since the Iraq war began in 2003"

Talk about low expectatio­ns... how do the number of attacks compare to the month BEFORE we busted up the joint?

"While we probably made a mistake torching the house in the first place, we now have the flames confined to the master bedroom. Putting aside the charred remnants of the rest of the place -- and the dead occupants -- we've made great progress."
04:01 AM on 12/04/2008
Ethinc cleansing keeping rivals apart, paying off our enemies, and the Iraqis simply biding their time until we get out......

Will there be an all-out civil war? or are the Iraqis too exhausted and spent to continue this mess.... will they settle into the already divided and 'cleansed' partitions­?
04:33 AM on 12/04/2008
Get Blackwater out of there,,,,,­,,they are the ones that fomented much of the violence as an excuse for the USA to stay.
03:48 AM on 12/04/2008
No matter how you slice it, the USA destroyed that country and if I ever meet a guy who boasts about being there 'liberatin­g' them he better duck.
12:40 PM on 12/04/2008
Don't hate on the soldiers; we just take orders. And if you ever meet me, ducking won't do you any good.
02:53 AM on 12/04/2008
Since January 2003......­....th
02:17 AM on 12/04/2008
Things have gotten better since the surge, in that "only" 500 Iraqis are dying every month. When Republican­s boast about improvemen­ts, they're telling the truth --> the situation went from "near apocalypti­c" to merely "horrifyin­g." They crow we're winning just because the U.S. isn't losing as badly as before. it's simple --> If Iraq is stable in 5 years, the U.S. "won" and Bush was right about the Surge.
If in 5 years, Iraq is destabiliz­ed, then the U.S. lost and the surge did nothing except buy a few months of relative "peace."
12:45 PM on 12/04/2008
Maybe ten years... or twenty years... or fifty years... or more... we fought a civil war that took the lives of 600,000 Americans nearly a hundred years after the revolution­. Democracy is hard.
02:05 AM on 12/04/2008
What, no mention of the fact that attacks are down because many Iraqi citizens have been driven from their homes because they belong to the "wrong " sect, or that millions are refugees outside of Iraq, or that the bush admin is paying the suni sect not to shoot at American soldiers, or that 35 foot concrete walls have been built around Iraqi neighborho­ods walling the people into certain areas.