Baghdad: Bicycle Bomb Kills 2 As Wednesday's Death Toll Rises To 101

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - Baghdad: Bicycle Bomb Kills 2 As Wednesday's Death Toll Rises To 101 stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

HAMZA HENDAWI and KIM GAMEL | 08/19/09 11:48 PM | AP

What's Your Reaction?
Baghdad

BAGHDAD — Nearly simultaneous truck bombs struck Iraq's Foreign and Finance ministries Wednesday as a wave of explosions killed at least 95 people, bringing the weaknesses of Iraqi security forces into sharp focus less than two months after U.S. forces withdrew from urban areas.

It was the deadliest day of coordinated bombings since Feb. 1, 2008, when two suicide bombers killed 109 people at pet markets in Baghdad. More than 400 were wounded in Wednesday's blasts.

The new American role was on sharp display as the military said it responded to onsite requests from Iraqi commanders for assistance, providing intelligence to help guide rescue crews and deploying explosives experts to clear areas of potential bombs.

U.S. transition teams assisted with security cordons and medics helped the wounded. Helicopters buzzed overhead.

"We helped the victims when and where we could, in accordance with our Iraqi allies' requests," said Lt. Col. Philip Smith, a spokesman for U.S. forces in Baghdad.

The extent of the carnage shocked the Shiite-led government and dealt a devastating blow to Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's efforts to return Baghdad to normal and reinforce his chances in parliamentary elections in January.

Al-Maliki blamed Sunni insurgents linked to al-Qaida in Iraq and said the attacks were designed to foil plans to open streets and remove concrete blast walls from Baghdad's main roads by mid-September.

He said the Iraqi government must reassess security measures – the first government acknowledgment that his moves may have been premature so soon after U.S. troops left the cities at the end of June.

Story continues below

"The criminal acts that took place today require us to re-evaluate our plans and security mechanisms in order to confront the terrorist challenges and to increase cooperation between security forces and the Iraqi people," he added in a departure from his usual calls on the public to hold steady in the face of an escalation of attacks.

He said an alliance of al-Qaida in Iraq and Saddam Hussein loyalists was behind the attacks, and that the government has placed Iraq's army and police forces on high alert.

The violence began when a suicide truck bomber took aim at the Finance Ministry complex in northern Baghdad, causing part of a nearby overpass to collapse. A female employee emerged from the building after the blast in an apparent state of shock, her clothes stained with blood.

Hospital officials said at least 28 people were killed and 117 wounded in that blast.

Minutes later, a truck bomb exploded outside the Foreign Ministry, charring dozens of cars in a parking lot and shattering the facade of the white, 10-story building located near the Green Zone.

The massive blast left a 30-by-15-foot crater and knocked down part of the concrete wall surrounding the ministry's perimeter, killing at least 59 people and wounding 250.

It blew out windows of the building and left furniture turned upside down inside exposed offices. Wires dangled and air conditioning pipes were ruptured. Slabs of concrete hung precariously from the front of the building.

Firefighters extracted charred bodies from vehicles that had been caught in the explosion.

Several of the apartment buildings across the street from the ministry complex were extensively damaged. Satellite dishes were mangled or blown away.

Young men complained of partisan politics and the failures of the security forces in anger that echoed across the city.

"Today's failure is the final straw for me," said Salem Mattar, a 31-year-old construction worker. "Government officials have 30-strong security details and don't care about ordinary folks."

Suspected mortar shells also slammed into the Green Zone, Iraqi officials said, with one landing near the U.N. compound, briefly delaying a news conference being held to discuss humanitarian issues on the sixth anniversary of the Aug. 19, 2003, bombing at the world body's headquarters that killed 22 people, including top U.N. envoy Sergio Vieira de Mello.

The U.S. military, which turned over responsibility for securing the Green Zone to the Iraqis on Jan. 1, said it could not confirm any mortar attacks.

Another blast in the commercial area of western Baghdad's Baiyaa district killed two people and wounded 16, while a bombing in the commercial district of Bab al-Muadham killed six people and wounded 24, authorities said.

Shiite politicians, including some close to al-Maliki, have been charging recently that Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia and other Arab neighbors were orchestrating a violent campaign to destabilize Shiite majority Iraq.

Speaking at the Foreign Ministry bomb site, Shiite Mayor Saber al-Issawi echoed those charges when he suggested that Iraq's "enemies" in the region were determined to reverse what he called the government's recent successes.

The White House condemned the attacks, with spokesman Robert Gibbs saying they show "how far extremists will go to wreak havoc." But he said that the overall number of attacks in Iraq is "at or near an all-time low."

The U.S. military has warned that militants are trying to provoke new bloodshed to re-ignite retaliatory sectarian warfare and undermine public trust in the Iraqi government.

U.S. troops withdrew from Iraq's cities June 30 under a security pact that outlines the American withdrawal by the end of 2011. President Barack Obama has ordered all U.S. combat troops out of Iraq by Aug. 31, 2010, leaving up to 50,000 U.S. troops in training and advising roles.

"The terrorists are trying to rekindle the cycle of violence of past years by creating a climate of tension among the Iraqi people," President Jalal Talabani said in a statement. "Our security forces must be more alert and firm. Also, the political groups must unite."

Sunni and Shiite extremists remain active in Iraq, and the U.S. military has detected some political violence ahead of the national elections. But truck bombs and suicide attacks bear the hallmarks of al-Qaida in Iraq.

"The security forces have failed to protect the government buildings despite tight security measures and advanced equipment and this reflects huge shortcomings," said Saeed Jabar, a 35-year-old government employee. "It is a message to Iraqi officials that they should stop their exaggerations about the stability of this country."

___

Associated Press writers Sameer N. Yacoub and Hamid Ahmed contributed to this report.

BAGHDAD — Nearly simultaneous truck bombs struck Iraq's Foreign and Finance ministries Wednesday as a wave of explosions killed at least 95 people, bringing the weaknesses of Iraqi security forc...
BAGHDAD — Nearly simultaneous truck bombs struck Iraq's Foreign and Finance ministries Wednesday as a wave of explosions killed at least 95 people, bringing the weaknesses of Iraqi security forc...
Report Corrections
 
Comments
111
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: 1 2 3 Next › Last » (3 pages total)
- macohmz I'm a Fan of macohmz 21 fans permalink
photo

The Sorrow for Oil Program.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:25 PM on 08/20/2009
- AntonioR I'm a Fan of AntonioR 3 fans permalink

Our guys have no reason to be in Iraq at this point...we can't do nothing else for them...this isn't our fight...the Iraq gov't need to step up to the plate and deal with their own country and issue just like we are doing here....Bring our guys home now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:02 PM on 08/20/2009
photo

When is Obama going to bring the troops home. There is nothing more they can do in Iraq and Afghanistan is nothing but rocks on top of rocks. The graveyard of empires. Get out, NOW.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:37 PM on 08/20/2009
- SamEllison I'm a Fan of SamEllison 16 fans permalink
photo

A years ago the Iraqi people would have blamed the US military for not protecting them.
Now they blame the Iraqi security forces for not protecting them.

Does anyone see the difference?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:43 PM on 08/20/2009
- CRUMBOWSKI I'm a Fan of CRUMBOWSKI 19 fans permalink

I don't see any details in this article..regarding the actual..'nature' of the DEVICE itself..

Saddam was a Custom Weapons Lover..he was a "lottery" client for weapons makers the world over..Bombs..Guns..Missiles...I mean recall please..'Scuds' were in fact some kind of insane mutation of a rocket and a tank or something like that...I recall it was Russian parts...New parts...Chinese elements..somethin like that..THEN there was "The Big GUN!" Saddams..ridiculous..GIANT...."Gun"..built on a HUGE..I mean an actual small..man-made..MOUNTAIN..or Hill I guess..and this 'Barrel' laying on it..like a giant PIPE..but it could launche "Bullets"..aka.."Lunar Lander" size "bullets"..in effect 'Shooting' them..like..into Israel..all over the place...the inventor was this NUT..that did not care WHO got the weapon..he just needed to PROVE his hypothesis..and he did...he was MURDERED..allegedly by Saddam...

Anyway..long winded..but "BICYCLES BOMBS" are an OLD favorite..the IVANS used them in Trashcanistan...and then the Afghans used them against the Ivans..Saddam STOCKPILED caches of Weapons FOR a prolonged resistance to invasion...INCLUDING "Bicycle Bombs"..SO..was THIS..one of THOSE? Is there STILL a supply chain for the 'Resistance"? Or was this..some Basement Job?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:48 PM on 08/20/2009
- NoMercy I'm a Fan of NoMercy 63 fans permalink
photo

Sad@am would have gone like Khaddafi - surrender - if we had done the right thing initially in Afghanistan and dealt with Iran and Syria to put pressure on him. A few billion in bribes would have cost a lot less in lives and ... the trillion spent so far.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:42 PM on 08/20/2009
- Durango I'm a Fan of Durango 151 fans permalink

Actually, Saddam was probably the most effective block against al Qaida in the Middle East.

Osama bin Ladin was far more of a threat to Saddam than he would be to the West. And saddam made sure none of his people operated anywhere near Iraqi territory.

Territory he controlled. The al Qaida operatives were in the North which Saddam did not control.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 PM on 08/20/2009
- NoMercy I'm a Fan of NoMercy 63 fans permalink
photo

Freedom courtesy of GWB.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:31 PM on 08/20/2009
photo

Majority of people are are incapable to discuss and/or condemn the actual perps in the wave of these crimes. Most wallow in incrimination about 7 years too late. Leave the past and join the present.
With this kind of useless constituency no wonder Obama has zero help on the matter. As expected.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:27 PM on 08/20/2009
- Durango I'm a Fan of Durango 151 fans permalink

The majority of people have little or no understanding of Iraq, Afghanistan or Iran for that matter.

In the runup to both the Afghan and Iraqi wars i did not see one single television program that described the history, society, politics or even the ethnic make up of the countries we were poised to ivade and occupy.

NOT ONE SINGLE PROGRAM.

The closest was Frontline program that assumed all the problems in Iraq went back to the Reagan Administration.

There were a couple programs on the Travel Channel. One about Marsh Arabs and one about an interview with Massoud.

The Travel Channel scored the only points in informing the American people.

It was a national disgrace. Still is.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 PM on 08/20/2009
photo

Political expediency is the rule and not the exception. The political effectiveness of a U.S. Presidency lasts at best for three years, even out of a two term stint. We make deals with the likes of Mubarak, Maliki, and Karzai, they make a show at development and democratization but ally themselves with the available power brokers (usually a very unsavory cast). Arab nationalism is ginned up when the boogie-man is Israel, where is this nationalism when it comes to what Arabs would do to one another? How can innocent Arabs men - women - and children continue dying in the most horrific manner imaginable, directed killings by so called religio-political organizations? And then the silent cancer of the Arab world. The great oil kingdom run with an absolutely ruthless puritanical brand of Islam, lavishing upon itself such opulence while at the same time sending its tentacles forward to disrupt any form of progress in the Middle East. If I was an Iraqi I would rather look to Iran, where you do see religion & oil, but you also see a functioning state that has a grounding in the 21st century. Look to Saudi Arabia and embrace social & political suicidality.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:18 PM on 08/20/2009
- Vicks123 I'm a Fan of Vicks123 97 fans permalink
photo

If our troops are now largely confined to bases in Iraq these days - why are they still there?

Bring our troops home please!

No Blood for Oil!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:01 PM on 08/20/2009
photo

attac.k on Iraqis by Jiha.dists.... but.... but... .I can't even bring myself to condem.n the people who actually did this thing..... so c-c-onfsed....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:19 PM on 08/20/2009
- NoMercy I'm a Fan of NoMercy 63 fans permalink
photo

No Jiha.dists there before GWB tore down the society.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:37 PM on 08/20/2009
- greyhound2 I'm a Fan of greyhound2 11 fans permalink

The title of this piece says "Iraq Stunned By Level of Violence". How could Iraq be stunned by violence with their long history of violence. In Iraq, it is just another day in the sunshine.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:43 AM on 08/20/2009
- laminators I'm a Fan of laminators 2 fans permalink

The big question, what should President Obama do now in Iraq?? http://www.governmentalityblog.com/my_weblog/2009/08/question-of-the-day-82009-iraq.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:28 PM on 08/20/2009
- siasina I'm a Fan of siasina 112 fans permalink
photo

This really pisses me off. Why the whole Bush administration is not in jail right now for war crimes, lying to the American people, torture and other heinous crimes is beyond me!!

But of course, the Obama administration won't prosecute them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:17 AM on 08/20/2009
- colah I'm a Fan of colah 45 fans permalink
photo

There are a lot of bait & switch posters here. You arent one of the better ones.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:29 AM on 08/20/2009
- siasina I'm a Fan of siasina 112 fans permalink
photo

W/e dude, I don't label myself a "democrat" or "republican" by any means. I just look at the facts and see what's going on in reality. I don't need you telling me what I should say.

But I would just tell you to go to some research. Our government is not so holy and pure, and don't think they have the people's intention in mind all the time.

You sound more like a average sheeple. Keep moving.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:44 AM on 08/20/2009
- siasina I'm a Fan of siasina 112 fans permalink
photo

Is it that hard to see that Bush committed War crimes and should be in jail now?

Is it also that hard to see that Obama talks SO MUCH about "transparency" yet he won't even go after the previous administration. His motto is "we need to move on and not look at the past," but that's precisely where he is dead wrong. If we don't learn from history and come to a realization that this was a HUGE mistake, we can NEVER move on.

JFK said in a speech: "An error does not become a mistake, until you refuse to correct it"

Obama sold out, and he's a fraud. Not to mention he's a Wall Street puppet like Bush was with all these bail outs, TARP, etc.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:49 AM on 08/20/2009
- siasina I'm a Fan of siasina 112 fans permalink
photo

Is it that hard to see that Bush committed War crimes and should be in jail now?

Is it also that hard to see that Obama talks SO MUCH about "transparency" yet he won't even go after the previous administration. His motto is "we need to move on and not look at the past," but that's precisely where he is dead wrong. If we don't learn from history and come to a realization that this was a HUGE mistake, we can NEVER move on.

JFK said in a speech: "An error does not become a mistake, until you refuse to correct it"

We need to go back and address the mistakes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 AM on 08/20/2009
- den1953 I'm a Fan of den1953 58 fans permalink
photo

When are people going to realize 19 Saudi men plotted and carried out the attack on the world trade center, there leader was a Saudi,the Bush family had ties with the Bin Laden family, the Bush administration allowed them to leave the US right after the attack yes strange but true and no one seems to know the truth yet!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:42 AM on 08/20/2009
- Tuckerndfw I'm a Fan of Tuckerndfw 111 fans permalink

Actually, the bin Ladens are Yemenis, not Saudis.

The record of the Bush family's close ties with the Saudi royal family & the bin Ladins has been reported so anyone who doesn't know about it doesn't care.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:45 AM on 08/20/2009
- colah I'm a Fan of colah 45 fans permalink
photo

While your facts are accurate, you present them like a truther or a birther.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:08 AM on 08/20/2009
- siasina I'm a Fan of siasina 112 fans permalink
photo

Ha you're funny, why don't you go do your own research, then come back and talk.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:11 AM on 08/20/2009
- den1953 I'm a Fan of den1953 58 fans permalink
photo

The whole Iraqi Government should sent President Bush and his merry men of mass destruction and thank you card for the invasion and killing of innocents because of the revenge and oil grab of there country. Because of President Bush and his skillful planing and well thought out plan Iraq is no so much closer to civil war and will most likely end up with a dictator the likes of Sadam again nice work ace!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:37 AM on 08/20/2009
- podios I'm a Fan of podios 5 fans permalink

Wasn't it May of 05 that Cheney said of the insurgency "I think they're in their last throes"? You were right on the money with that one Dick. But don't worry, FoxNews, CNN, MSNBC, or any other MSM outlet will not be doing an expose' on how out of touch the Bush administration was. Reporting on Cheney's statement in May of 05 and then fast forwarding to the carnage which just took place days ago would be too much of a strain on their "journalistic" abilities. I for one remember being called Anti-American for having the audacity to disagree with President, oh I mean Vice President Cheney's prediction.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:36 AM on 08/20/2009
Page: 1 2 3 Next › Last » (3 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect