Suicide Attack On Iraq Tribal Leaders Kills More Than 30

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ROBERT H. REID | March 10, 2009 05:58 PM EST | AP

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Iraqi police stand around a vehicle destroyed in a parked car bomb blast in the town of al-Hamadaniya, 40 kilometers north of Mosul, Iraq, Tuesday, March 10, 2009. Two civilians were killed in the blast and another eight were wounded. (AP Photo)

BAGHDAD — A suicide bomber struck Sunni and Shiite tribal leaders touring an outdoor market after a reconciliation meeting in a Baghdad suburb Tuesday, killing up to 33 people in the second major attack in the capital area in three days. The bombings are raising fears that Sunni insurgents may be escalating operations as the U.S. phases out its combat role in Iraq and prepares to withdraw troops from cities by the end of June.

The attacks also suggest that insurgents are capable of exploiting weaknesses in Iraqi security procedures. The Iraqis have been relatively successful in curbing huge truck bombings that were common years ago _ but less so against other tactics.

More than 40 people were wounded Tuesday when the bomber detonated an explosives belt as tribal leaders, security officials and journalists strolled through the market in the town of Abu Ghraib, site of the infamous prison at the center of the 2004 detainee abuse scandal.

The leaders had just left a meeting called as part of a government campaign to reconcile local Sunni tribes and Shiites who fled the mostly Sunni town on Baghdad's western outskirts two years ago but have been trickling back to their homes.

No group claimed responsibility for the attack, but U.S. and Iraqi officials blamed al-Qaida, suspecting the extremists want to sabotage government overtures to the Sunnis _ the terror group's support base.

"These are small al-Qaida-related cells that are conducting these attacks," the top U.S. commander, Gen. Ray Odierno, told The Associated Press. "The unfortunate part is they're still able to recruit people to do this."

Iraqi police, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to release the information, said 33 people died in the blast and 46 were wounded.

A military spokesman, Maj. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi, said 29 people were killed, including at least three children. He said 41 people were wounded.

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The dead included two Iraqi journalists for independent Baghdadiya TV _ cameraman Haidar Hashim Suhail and reporter Souhaib Adna _ as well as an Iraqi battalion commander, whose troops began firing wildly after the blast.

Four staffers for government television were wounded, one of them critically _ reporter Ibrahim al-Katib, the station said. It quoted its employees as saying gunmen also opened fire from nearby buildings, sending terrified survivors scurrying for cover.

Mayor Shakir Fizaa blamed al-Qaida, saying the militants "seized on today's big meeting to carry out the attack." He also said some of the casualties were caused by the ensuing gunfire from security forces.

"This terrorist attack was aimed at stopping reconciliation and the improvement in the security situation," Fizaa told the AP. "But we will not be deterred by the acts of the vicious group against innocent civilians."

Ahmed Ali, who owns an auto repair shop in the market, said he heard someone shout "God is Great," just before the blast, then volleys of automatic weapons fire from security forces.

"I hid for a while, but then I raised my head to see scattered bodies, including women and children. Some surviving women and children were screaming out of fear," he said.

The horrific blast followed a suicide attack Sunday that killed 30 people _ many of them police recruits _ outside the police training academy in eastern Baghdad.

Although U.S. officials say violence has fallen to its lowest level since the summer of 2003, militants have carried out a series of high-profile attacks since last month.

They also include a March 5 car bombing that killed 13 people at a livestock market in the Shiite city of Hillah and a suicide attack against Shiite pilgrims Feb. 13 that claimed 40 lives near Musayyib.

Also Tuesday, a car bomb exploded near the municipal building in the mainly Christian town of Hamdaniya in northern Iraq, killing two civilians and wounding eight others, according to police.

The attacks suggested that Sunni extremists may have regrouped after suffering major setbacks on the battlefield and may be planning a new wave of violence as the U.S. military role fades.

The U.S. command announced Sunday that 12,000 American troops and 4,000 Britons will leave Iraq by September _ the first step toward ending America's role in the war by the end of 2011.

On Tuesday, the White House downplayed any suggestions linking the recent bombings with President Barack Obama's plans to withdraw the troops.

"The previous administration negotiated and signed an agreement that ends not just our combat commitment, but our entire military commitment," spokesman Robert Gibbs said. "And I don't think that that would be done if it presented a scenario in which the country would fall into further danger."

As part of the drawdown, U.S. troops plan to withdraw from Iraqi cities by the end of June, turning over primary security responsibility to Iraqi forces.

Odierno said he does not expect the Iraqi government to ask the U.S. military to keep some forces in Iraq after the 2011 departure deadline, which was set down in a U.S.-Iraqi security agreement which took effect this year.

"I think that the Iraq leadership is focused on that this ends in 2011," Odierno said. "The progress we're making now and what I see today, I say that I don't see anything that would have us have to renegotiate in 2011."

___

Associated Press writers Lara Jakes, Sinan Salaheddin and Sameer N. Yacoub contributed to this report.

BAGHDAD — A suicide bomber struck Sunni and Shiite tribal leaders touring an outdoor market after a reconciliation meeting in a Baghdad suburb Tuesday, killing up to 33 people in the second majo...
BAGHDAD — A suicide bomber struck Sunni and Shiite tribal leaders touring an outdoor market after a reconciliation meeting in a Baghdad suburb Tuesday, killing up to 33 people in the second majo...
 
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- realpolitic I'm a Fan of realpolitic 150 fans permalink

Iraq again will soon be in turmoil. If we stayed another 50 years, there would be turmoil and chaos. It is time to begin drawing down.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:27 PM on 03/10/2009
- AliMB I'm a Fan of AliMB 68 fans permalink
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Part I

While this is tragic news, the target of the a t t a c k speaks volumes as to the current political conditions of that particular area. The key part of the article:

“The reconciliation meeting the Sunni and Shiite sheiks were holding Tuesday before they were a t t a c k e d was one of many the Iraqi government has been encouraging to heal the rifts between the Muslim sects after years of sectarian vi0lence that pushed the country to the brink of civil war.”

Since the completion of the successful “Surge” strategy and after the provincial elections, the Iraqi political process has taken a positive trajectory, making a withdrawal of the majority of MNF forces both feasible and utilitarian. Evidence in the above piece is that the expl0sive belt-laden terr0rist targeted tribal leaders of both sects.

I know when there is a terr0rist attack in Iraq the gh0uls like to come out and say that this proves Iraq is a failure, but empirical evidence suggests otherwise. January and February had some of the lowest civilian casualty counts post- S a d d a m (maybe ever, but data is unclear from 2003-2004). As the piece points out, "the area was once one of the most dangerous in Iraq but has seen a sharp decline in vi0lence after a decision by local Sunni tribal leaders to turn against AQI."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:47 PM on 03/10/2009
- AliMB I'm a Fan of AliMB 68 fans permalink
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Part II

The recent string of s u i c i d e b0mbings in March could be attributed to the following: the election results have been settled, and it clear that secular and nati0nalist factions have been strengthened (particularly PM Al-Maliki's Dawa List). Also, the President announced a tentative withdrawal plan (remember, according to SOFA c0mbat forces will be pulling back this summer), and thus terr0rists are looking to positions themselves for a possible security vacuum.

There is a growing desperation among a n t i -government forces in Abu G h r a i b , in particular because of the reconciliation forces that are weakening the I s l a m i s t movement, and also because the area's rebounding economy. For example, according to a UN report, Abu G h r a i b has one of the best electrical services in the country. Only 2% of its population suffers from long power outages.

I expect AQI and other r a d i c a l m i l i t a n t s to increase their a t t a c k s over the months in the Baghdad province (while most of Iraq is pacified, Baghdad, Ninawa, and Diyala remain v0latie), primarily as a means to influence the parliamentary elections later this year. But the important indicator will be if political reconciliation proceeds as it has been, and not whether terr0rists can increase the b o d y count.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:53 PM on 03/10/2009
- carnelld I'm a Fan of carnelld 10 fans permalink

I watched Thomas Barnett on C-Span over the weekend. I learned a lot about what has happened in Iraq, based on the history of the United States. If you look back at history, what is happening in
Iraq and the Middle East is the same thing that happened in Europe after WW II. It is the same thing
that happened in Southeast Asia and Korea after the Korean Conflict.

The troops will be left in Iraq the same way they were left in Europe, the same way they were left in South Korea, etc.

If you look back at history , what is happening in Iraq has played out before. It has played out in India,
China, etc. It's called capitalism.

Thomas P Barnett...­..look him up. He makes it seem simple.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:43 PM on 03/10/2009

MN-Sen: Coleman's hopes take another hit as registration search only yields 88 or 89 additional ballots:

http://voteforamerica.net/editorials/Comments.aspx?ArticleId=249&ArticleName=Secrecy+Envelope+Search+Complete

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:41 PM on 03/10/2009
- LuckyLeif I'm a Fan of LuckyLeif 2 fans permalink

FEAR, DOOM, FOREBODING, CIVIL WAR, GLOOM, FAILURE! That's all the news you'll get from the MSM folks, unless you look a bit deeper than hysterics like Juan Cole and Frank Schaeffer:

http://allanerickson.wordpress.com/2009/02/28/democracy-in-iraq-what-happened-to-fiasco/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:07 PM on 03/10/2009
- DaleR I'm a Fan of DaleR 18 fans permalink

Uh oh ... we better cancel the withdraw of forces and start another surge. This time could work as well as the last surge, when we spent billions to increase troop levels in Iraq. A stunning military success as Bush admin placed additional soldiers in harms way so they could have front row seat to watch the US Gov bribe insurgents and tribes to decrease the violence. Yay for paying off the groups that have killed thousands of US soldiers and tens of thousands of Iraqis.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:47 PM on 03/10/2009
- grn1 I'm a Fan of grn1 7 fans permalink

After spending 6 years chasing around Iraq trying to quell violence? Our administration has decided to escalate in Afghanistan. It seems the next move for occupation resistance would be when troops are drawn down in Iraq, violence will escalate. making a withdrawal of more troops questionable or impossible. The draw down in Iraq while escalating in Afghanistan is an invitation to keep us in the chase and spend us into catastrophe. Escalation in Afghanistan will quell violence for the short term while resistance fighters move their front to Iraq. It is a trap!!!! No amount of killing will curb this cycle. When we move they move.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 03/10/2009
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They wont escalate too much in Afghanistan

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:32 PM on 03/10/2009
- DumbDad I'm a Fan of DumbDad 32 fans permalink
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Well at least we can fight them there instead of, like, in Pakistan or Afghanista­n...or anywhere else..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 PM on 03/10/2009

We can be sure all this nonsense will stop as soon as Cheney, W, Pearle, Rice,Wolfowitz, Rumsfeld, Bremmer, Feith, and the rest of the Neo-Con "Dream Team" arrive in Baghdad to begin their hand in hand collaboration with the Iraqi people.
That's where all these "True Believers" will end up, isn't it?
They do have such a deep conviction to the goal of a democratic Iraq that they will go there, live there, work there until the task is completed, won't they?
Only a pathetic, lying, hypocrite, would walk away from what they started.
That doesn't describe the Neo-Cons, does it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:59 PM on 03/10/2009
- rsprags I'm a Fan of rsprags 26 fans permalink
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Last post on this distraction; Senators want to let U.S companies and citizens failed however, they plugged trillions into a foreign failed state. And if it was up to them we would stay there forever.
It is unbelievable!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:48 PM on 03/10/2009
- DumbDad I'm a Fan of DumbDad 32 fans permalink
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It was the audacity of delusional solipsism.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 03/10/2009

6) Typically, Presidents don't pick fights with pundits and talk radio hosts for obvious reasons. It draws more attention to their criticisms, elevates their status, and comes across as thin skinned and a little creepy, much like Richard Nixon's "Enemies list."

But, the Obama Administration hasn't figured this out -- yet. They've launched attacks at Rick Santelli, Jim Cramer, and most prominently, Rush Limbaugh. Ratcheting up the creepiness factor a couple of notches in Limbaugh's case, the President of the United States, members of the mainstream media, and liberal interest groups are all coordinating an attack on a private individual for daring to criticize Barack Obama. That sounds more like something that would happen in the old Soviet Union than in the United States.

But happily, if you look at the results of the White House campaign, it has backfired in every instance. Rush Limbaugh is on pace to make more revenue by the end of March than he made all last year, there are Santelli inspired "Tea Parties" popping up all across the country, and every criticism of Obama that Jim Cramer utters is now linked by the Drudge Report.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:23 PM on 03/10/2009
- WSKI77 I'm a Fan of WSKI77 8 fans permalink
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Hey Rush, yea know what else sounds like something that would happen in the old Soviet Union? Attacking a sovereign nation..."­W" is right up there with Khrushchev.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:36 PM on 03/10/2009

Obamateur , Do you actually believe anyone reads your posts?!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:14 PM on 03/10/2009

7) A large part of Barack Obama's appeal was the idea of racial reconciliation. The implicit deal was that by putting our first black President in office, America would prove once and for all that it wasn't racist, and we could put all this silly squabbling about race in the rear view mirror once and for all. However, not only has it failed to work out that way, Obama's Attorney General Eric Holder issued an an insulting challenge on the topic to the American people,


"Though this nation has proudly thought of itself as an ethnic melting pot, in things racial we have always been and I believe continue to be, in too many ways, essentially a nation of cowards."

Maybe someone should ask the poor guy who did an innocent cartoon for the New York Post that made fun of the stimulus bill and the rampaging monkey that was in the news why people might be afraid to get dragged into a debate about race.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:22 PM on 03/10/2009

8) When Barack Obama was trying to sell America his stimulus bill that will put the country more than a trillion dollars in debt, he alerted America that, "Caterpillar's chief executive…told him the company will rehire some laid-off workers if the stimulus bill passes." But, when he was asked about Obama's statement, Caterpillar CEO Jim Owens said, "I think realistically no. The truth is we're going to have more layoffs before we start hiring again."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:22 PM on 03/10/2009

9) In a juvenile stunt, reminiscent of something a third grader might come up with, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton handed Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov a button that was supposed to say "reset." However, incredibly, the word on the button translated to "overcharge," not "reset." Apparently, despite the enormous deficit the government is going to run up this year, Team Obama forgot to budget enough money to hire someone who speaks Russian for the State Department. If only America could just press a button and reset the entire Obama presidency so far and start over.


http://townhall.com/columnists/JohnHawkins/2009/03/10/the_10_biggest_amateur_mistakes_by_the_obama_administration_so_far?page=full&comments=true

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:21 PM on 03/10/2009
- WSKI77 I'm a Fan of WSKI77 8 fans permalink
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But reading "My pet goat" while your country is attacked and you happen to be President is OK...Right Rush.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:29 PM on 03/10/2009

10) After doing the "We've got to have this stimulus package passed right this second or the economy is going to explode" routine so convincingly that not one single soul in Congress actually had time to read the entire bill before it was signed, Barack Obama then promptly went on a three day vacation to celebrate before he signed it. If the bill was so important that no one could even have time to read it before it was passed, then why wasn't it important enough for Obama to skip dinner at Table Fifty-Two in Chicago to immediately make it a law?

http://townhall.com/columnists/JohnHawkins/2009/03/10/the_10_biggest_amateur_mistakes_by_the_obama_administration_so_far?page=full&comments=true

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:20 PM on 03/10/2009
- WSKI77 I'm a Fan of WSKI77 8 fans permalink
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Don't even go there on vacations Rush....It is called a week-end. But seeings how "W" never took vacations, I guess you could make a case for Barry taking a week end off.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:27 PM on 03/10/2009
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