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Baghdad Suicide Bombings Target Embassies, Kill Dozens

ELIZABETH A. KENNEDY and QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA   04/ 4/10 03:53 PM ET   AP

Iraq Baghdad Ebassies Suicide Bombings

BAGHDAD — Suicide attackers detonated three car bombs in quick succession near foreign embassies in Baghdad on Sunday, killing more than 40 people in coordinated strikes that Iraqi officials said were intended to disrupt efforts to form a new government.

The bombings followed the execution-style killings of 24 villagers in a Sunni area two days earlier, a spike in violence that suggests insurgents are seizing on the political uncertainty after the recent election to try to destabilize the country as U.S. troops prepare to leave. No clear winner emerged from the March 7 vote.

Sunday's explosions went off within minutes of each other, starting shortly after 11 a.m. One struck near the Iranian Embassy and two others hit an area that houses several diplomatic missions, including the Egyptian Consulate and the German and Spanish embassies. It was not immediately known whether diplomatic staff were among the victims.

Authorities said they foiled two other attacks aimed at diplomatic targets by stopping the would-be bombers' vehicles and defusing the explosives.

Stunned victims in bloody clothes were loaded into ambulances as gray smoke rose over Baghdad.

"I saw children screaming," Hassan Karim, 32, who owns a clothing shop in Baghdad, told The Associated Press. "Cars were crashing into each other in streets, trying to find a way to flee."

There was no immediate claim of responsibility, although multiple, coordinated bombings in the capital are a hallmark of al-Qaida in Iraq.

The violence suggests insurgents are trying to regroup in the political vacuum left after the elections.

Former Prime Minister Ayad Allawi's cross-sectarian bloc tapped into heavy Sunni support to come in just two seats ahead of the mainly Shiite list of the incumbent, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. But neither side has enough seats to govern alone, which means they are scrambling to cobble together enough parliamentary support to form a government.

Iraq's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the bombings were an attempt to inject more turmoil into the political scene as the election front-runners try to forge a coalition government.

"These terrorists will not be able to stop Iraqis and friends of the Iraqi people from building a free, secure and prosperous future," the ministry said.

Several Iraqi guards from the German and Egyptian missions were confirmed dead, authorities said. One police official said many of the victims were employees at a state-run bank near the Iranian Embassy. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly.

The Spanish embassy building suffered "considerable damage" but nobody was injured, the Spanish government said.

The attackers wore suicide vests and drove cars laden with explosives, said Maj. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi, a spokesman for the city's operations command center. Guards at the Egyptian Consulate opened fire on one of the attackers as he drove toward them, but they were unable to stop him.

At least two other planned attacks were thwarted.

Security forces fatally shot a man wearing a suicide belt before he could detonate a fourth bomb-rigged car near the former Germany Embassy, which is now a bank, al-Moussawi said. A fifth would-be bomber was captured on his way to the area where two of the explosions happened, said a senior Iraqi security official. He spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

The official said Iraqi forces were tipped off about a possible attack against diplomatic targets and had started beefing up security Saturday, which he credited with keeping the embassies from serious damage.

"We were fortunate they weren't able to reach their targets," the official said.

While overall violence has dropped considerably in Iraq since 2006 and 2007, the ability of insurgents to carry out well-planned attacks against prominent targets shows that significant security lapses remain. Many fear such attacks will complicate American efforts to speed up troop withdrawals in the coming months.

On Friday, gunmen trying to pass themselves off as U.S. and Iraqi soldiers raided a Sunni village outside Baghdad and killed at least 24 people in an execution-style attack, apparently targeting a Sunni group that revolted against al-Qaida in Iraq.

The killings were reminiscent of those that plagued Iraq at the height of the sectarian bloodshed of 2006 and 2007, when men, sometimes dressed in police or army uniforms, snatched people from their homes at night.

After Sunday's attacks, U.S. military spokesman Capt. Jay Ostrich said American forces, including explosives disposal teams, were assisting Iraqi troops at the government's request. He said the U.S. military is "ready to support any further requests for assistance" from Iraqi authorities.

Sunday's bombings were among the worst this year, but there have been deadlier attacks recently.

Late last month, twin bombings near a restaurant north of Baghdad killed 57. On Feb. 1, a female suicide bomber killed at least 54 people when she detonated explosives hidden beneath a cloak while mingling among Shiite pilgrims on the outskirts of Baghdad.

On Jan. 25, suicide bombings of three hotels favored by Western journalists killed more than 40 people, and on Dec. 8, a wave of coordinated attacks targeted high-profile government sites in Baghdad, killing at least 127.

___

Associated Press Writers Saad Abdul-Kadir, Hamid Ahmed, Sinan Salaheddin and Adam Schreck in Baghdad and Juergen Baetz in Berlin contributed to this report.

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BAGHDAD — Suicide attackers detonated three car bombs in quick succession near foreign embassies in Baghdad on Sunday, killing more than 40 people in coordinated strikes that Iraqi officials sai...
BAGHDAD — Suicide attackers detonated three car bombs in quick succession near foreign embassies in Baghdad on Sunday, killing more than 40 people in coordinated strikes that Iraqi officials sai...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
themodernleader
03:44 AM on 04/05/2010
There is only a single reasonable, unsatisfactory response. Exit the country and only become involved when our national interests are in grave danger. Iraqis, like Afghanies don't want foreigners meddling in their affairs
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cybersense
07:46 AM on 04/05/2010
I wish it were that easy - but "Al Queda" has already put us in grave danger. Think about the recent attempts on America.
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Wolf Larsen
The Country You Want Back No Longer Exists
02:14 AM on 04/05/2010
The Shia and the Sunnis settling scores as they have done for years. The Shia are the majority and can rule with impunity where elections are concerned. The Sunnis are the minority and need to seize power by force. The Sunni's ruled with vicious tactics under Sadaam.......they long to be in power again because there will never be an equitable division of resources and rights given the long standing blood feuds.

As we begin to cycle the troops out of the country the chaos rises. It feels orchestrated to get us to remain in Iraq.....to tie up troops and put a strain on the military. Stick to the withdrawal plan. Exit the country as safely as possible and leave the future of Iraq in the hands of the iraqis. Ultimately they will decide their own fate. It has been nearly a decade.....if they aren't ready now they never will be.

I believe in the end a democracy is a pipe dream. Their society has been ruled for so long by monarchies and dictators they almost have a comfort zone with that kind of rule....it is predictable...
09:43 PM on 04/04/2010
What do you think the terrorists are fighting for? There have been several free and fair elections (unlike in almost any other Arab country) and the government is now a representative democracy, but for some reasons these "insurgents" are wreaking havoc on the Iraqi civilian population. I wonder what they want and what they would do if they were the ones ruling Iraq?
11:22 PM on 04/04/2010
Remember when Saddam got 100% of the vote. That’s what Al-Qaeda has in mind. They want to replace Saddam and get 100% of the vote. These guys are like campaign geniuses I guess, who can explain that kind of popular support.
09:38 PM on 04/04/2010
Day after day we see the religion of Islam presented to the world this way. And where is the outrage? The silence from the Islamic scholars is deafening.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
omobob
left coast, usa
10:03 PM on 04/04/2010
Most Muslims Reject Extremism
By Khody Akhavi

WASHINGTON, Jul 25, 2007 (IPS) - Growing numbers of Muslims in the Middle East and in predominantly Muslim countries in Asia and Africa are rejecting "Islamic extremism" and the use of suicide bombing, according to a new 47-nation global attitudes survey released by the Pew Research Centre on Tuesday.

The percentage of Muslims who say that suicide bombing is justified in the defence of Islam has declined dramatically over the past five years in countries such as Lebanon, Bangladesh, Jordan, Pakistan and Indonesia.

While the Pew survey generally focused on the mood of respondents in developing countries as a result of economic growth and their hope for a brighter future, in the Middle East, the general tenor of questions reflected more sensational topics of Islamic extremism, support for suicide bombing, and confidence in international terrorist Osama bin Laden.

In Lebanon, just 34 percent of Muslims surveyed said that suicide bombings are often or sometimes justified, compared to 74 percent who expressed the same view in 2002. Only eight percent of those polled in Egypt believed suicide bombing was justified, as did 11 percent in Morocco.
More than 45,000 people were surveyed in 47 countries from mid-April to early May.

http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=38662
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
omobob
left coast, usa
10:04 PM on 04/04/2010
Little Support for Terrorism Among Muslim Americans
by Richard Wike, Pew Global Attitudes Project, Greg Smith, Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life_December 17, 2009

Recent events such as the Fort Hood shootings and the arrest of five Muslim American students in Pakistan have raised questions about the threat of homegrown terrorism in the United States. However, the Pew Research Center's comprehensive portrait of the Muslim American population suggests it is less likely to be a fertile breeding ground for terrorism than Muslim minority communities in other countries. Violent jihad is discordant with the values, outlook and attitudes of the vast majority of Muslim Americans, most of whom reject extremism.

http://pewresearch.org/pubs/1445/little-support-for-terrorism-among-muslim-americans
08:54 PM on 04/04/2010
Another Muslim-on-Muslims killing! Many more Muslims killed by other Muslims than by ANYONE else!!! When will the Israel haters admit THAT fact??? Islam..the religion of Peace??? Poppycock!!
09:36 PM on 04/04/2010
It is a religion of piece. A piece here, a piece there.
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11:49 PM on 04/04/2010
Yes, you're right. What that country needs is a strong leader, one who will have no truck with rebels of any colour.
Oh...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PlayTOE
Morals evolved due to cooperative group living
07:49 PM on 04/04/2010
How does anyone think a suicide that involves killing lots of innocent people will somehow be rewarded by the Muslim god of peace?

Simple, they don't think.

But the only solution is to put Iraqi people in charge of Iraq. Only when the defense troops are made up of integrated Sunni/Shiite units and the government is also integrated will their be no logical independent targets for this kind of violence.
However, judging by various bombings in other countries that had little if any motivation, we will always need vigilance for the malcontent.
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maslin
At 6 bn km, it's mostly small stuff.
06:53 PM on 04/04/2010
Awful story, but big seed of hope in it.

The embassies were tipped off.
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07:01 PM on 04/04/2010
A plane crashes in the desert. The pilot says to the co-pilot, "We could be be here for a long time. Go out and see what you can find for us to eat."
The co-pilot goes out and comes back a few hours later.

"And?," says the pilot, "did you find anything?" The co-pilot answers, "Well, sir, I've got some good news and some bad news. Which do you want first?"
The pilot thinks and then says, "Let's have the bad news, then."

The co-pilot says, "The bad news is that the only thing to eat is camel droppings."
"Great," comes the reply. "What's the good news?"
"There's lots of it."
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Pavane
I pick my battles and walk from the rest.
02:37 AM on 04/05/2010
Lol. :)
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06:45 PM on 04/04/2010
Ah yes, a small matter of someone keeping a lid on the problem. You removed him and now it is what it is.

Well done.
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06:37 PM on 04/04/2010
Yes but Saddam was evil. He killed thousands of innocent men women and children. He tortured people. He locked them up without evidence and denied them lawyers, even denied having locked them up.
Iraq is a much better place now. They have freedom and democracy. It's a happier country now that Saddam is no more!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cloudmaker
09:17 AM on 04/05/2010
It's not happier for those who lost their husbands, wives and children. By the way, much of the same statements at the front of your post could be made about the U.S.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cloudmaker
05:09 PM on 04/04/2010
It's very important that we stay in Iraq if we want to steal their oil. Just as it is important that we stay in Afghanistan just in case we ever have a shortage of rocks and dirt.
11:12 PM on 04/04/2010
We can buy oil on the open market for $80 a barrel but much better to get it for $680 a barrel with casualties and bad press to boot.
04:57 PM on 04/04/2010
Cheney, 3/2003.
"I think it'll go relatively quickly, …Weeks rather than months."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cavegal
The Revolution Will Not Be Privatized
06:19 PM on 04/04/2010
I remember them bouncing the term cakewalk around a lot on the punditard shows.
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07:51 PM on 04/04/2010
Footprints in Iraqi Sands

"Oh Democrats", said Bush. "As I look back at my presidency, I see two sets of footprints in Iraqi sands. You were with me each step of the way. When I cut taxes for the rich, you were there. When I passed the Patriot Act, you were there. But when I look at my darkest moments, when I asked Congress for the money and the permission to illegally attack defenseless Third World countries that had done us no harm, I see only one set of footprints. Why did you desert me in the desert?"

"Oh, dear Bush" came the reply. "We supported you in all you did. We were at your side through all your deeds. When you look at those darkest of times and see only one set of footprints; it was then that we carried you."
04:56 PM on 04/04/2010
Cheney, 5/2005.
"They're in the last throes, if you will, of the insurgency."
joefoss
They'll never take my panache!
03:48 PM on 04/04/2010
Is it time yet for the Republicans to demand that the withdrawal of U.S. combat troops from Iraq be suspended? Or, for the blonde fembots on FOX to hint that the current rash of bombings there has been "caused" by President Obama's troop reductions?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realitytrumpsbull
two 'alves of coconut!
02:49 PM on 04/04/2010
I think every one of these violent stories about Iraq is one more vote in favor of pursuing our alternative energy strategies. Iraq, to me at least, is about oil. I think if they didn't have oil in the ground, no one would frankly give a tinker's darn about the place, and the people that live there would be free to do as they pleased, generally, without a lot of intervention from outsiders. But, since there IS oil in the ground, and billions in potential profits to be realized, there's much political and economic contention over the place, hence the constant struggle for social/governmental primacy. I think there's probably faith-based agitators here and there dumping gasoline on the fire, from points far and distant as well as near and central, but if we can point ourselves in a different direction, and start focusing more on learning how to do for ourselves, and then doing it, then someday, maybe those people can re-attain their own internal equilibrium without all the outsiders. Religion, like petroleum, is a hallmark of the middle east. But, come right down to it, neither one is honestly life-essential, or worth killing/getting killed over.
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02:24 PM on 04/04/2010
This is a Civil War for Iraq... time to leave... let them work it out.
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06:42 PM on 04/04/2010
So what you are saying is that when the USA simply doesn't like someone they should ...

1. Overwhelm the minnow, take out its government and carpet-bomb the country killing hundreds of thousands of civilians

2. Unleash Hell, chaos, mayhem, bedlum.

3. Leave the people to their American-created misery.