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Iraq: Coordinated Bomb Blasts Leave 63 Dead (video)

REBECCA SANTANA and HAMID AHMED   08/15/11 05:11 PM ET   AP

BAGHDAD — A relentless barrage of bombings killed 63 people Monday in the most sweeping and coordinated attack Iraq has seen in over a year, striking 17 cities from northern Sunni areas to the southern Shiite heartland.

The surprising scope and sophistication of the bloodbath suggested that al-Qaida remains resilient despite recent signs of weakness. Such attacks, infrequent as they are deadly, will likely continue long after American forces withdraw from the country.

"This is our destiny," said Eidan Mahdi, one of more than 250 Iraqis wounded Monday. Mahdi was lying in a hospital bed in the southern city of Kut. One of his eyes was closed shut with dried blood, and burns covered his hands and head.

While some Iraqis expressed resignation, others voiced fury at security officials and Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.

"Where is the government with all these explosions across the country? Where is al-Maliki? Why doesn't he come to see?" said Ali Jumaa Ziad, a Kut shop owner. Ziad was brushing pieces of human flesh from the floor and off equipment in his shop.

The bombs went off on a hot and sunny morning as people were headed to work. Explosive devices were planted in the vests of suicide attackers, in parked cars, along the sides of roads and even on light poles.

No group immediately claimed responsibility, but the simultaneous attacks, the targeting of Shiite civilians and Iraqi security forces and the use of suicide bombers indicated that al-Qaida in Iraq was responsible.

That the terror group was able to pull off such an attack, spanning half of Iraq's 18 provinces, came as somewhat of a surprise.

A little over a year ago, U.S. and Iraqi officials said the deaths of al-Qaida in Iraq's two top leaders in a raid had dealt a severe blow to the organization. The group has suffered from a drop in funding and just last week was calling on former members to come back to the fold, a sign of the group's diminished status.

But time and again, al-Qaida in Iraq has shown an ability to resurrect itself.

"Al-Qaida in Iraq has been resting and waiting and is now making itself heard to both disrupt the internal Iraqi political process and send a message to the Americans, which have called al-Qaida in Iraq dead and buried," said Theodore Karasik, a Middle East security expert at the Dubai-based Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis.

Monday's violence came less than two weeks after Iraqi officials said they would discuss with the U.S. whether to have some American forces stay in the country past their Dec. 31 withdrawal deadline. U.S. officials have offered to keep about 10,000 of the 46,000 American soldiers currently here into next year if Iraq agrees.

Karasik said the timing may be no coincidence, and that al-Qaida may be using reverse psychology. Greater violence could lead to calls for the U.S. to extend its military presence, but the terror group knows that the U.S. is very unlikely to resume a full-scale combat mission and that the troop numbers would be too small to make much of a difference.

"If the U.S. extends its military presence, al-Qaida in Iraq can use it as a tool by saying, `Look, the Americans have reversed their decision to leave and are staying on as occupiers.' They could use this as a justification for more attacks," Karasik said.

Joost Hiltermann from the International Crisis Group said such attacks are likely to continue regardless of whether the American forces withdraw because the Sunni population from which al-Qaida in Iraq gets its support still feels threatened by the Shiite-led Iraqi government.

"The point is how strong and cohesive the government, the ruling coalition and the security forces are. That is going to determine whether these guys (al-Qaida) have an opportunity or not. You need to dry up their opportunities," Hiltermann said.

"The Sunnis are still very unhappy with the Maliki government and the role that they play in it," he added.

President Barack Obama's spokesman, Jay Carney, said the White House strongly condemned the bombings, but emphasized that overall violence was down.

U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland told reporters in Washington that the U.S. remains concerned about terrorist attacks.

"In net terms, though, overall, the violence in Iraq is significantly down this year over previous years," she said. "We consider these to be desperate acts by desperate people. We believe that the Iraqi security forces are getting stronger by the day. And our goal is to continue to strengthen them. And we remain on track to withdraw all our forces at the end of the year."

A U.S. military spokeswoman, Maj. Angela L. Funaro, said Iraq had asked U.S. forces in Tikrit for assistance but that was the only request they received.

Iraqi President Jalal Talabani called the attackers cowards but acknowledged in a statement that faults in the security apparatus were to blame for the violence. Al-Maliki vowed in a statement to hunt down those responsible but provided no explanation for how the violence occurred.

The most lethal explosions took place at an outdoor market in Kut, 100 miles (160 kilometers) southeast of Baghdad. The first bomb went off in a freezer used to keep drinks cold. As rescuers and onlookers gathered, a parked car bomb exploded, officials said. Thirty-five people died and 64 were wounded.

Police sealed off the area where human flesh was scattered on the ground and bloodstained walls were punctured by shrapnel.

"I was heading to a shop when a car bomb went off just less than 70 meters (yards) away from me, a big fire erupted and I fell on the ground," said 18-year-old Karar Ali, speaking from his hospital bed.

"There were a lot of dead bodies on the ground."

Elsewhere in southern Iraq, a suicide bomber crashed his vehicle into a checkpoint outside a police building just outside the holy city of Najaf, killing six people and wounding 32, said Luay al-Yassiri, head of the Najaf province security committee.

Three policemen were killed when a parked car bomb blew up on the outskirts of the nearby city of Karbala, according to two police officers.

Northeast of Baghdad, seven bombs went off in the Diyala provincial capital of Baqouba and in nearby towns, killing 11 people including five soldiers said Faris al-Azawi, the province's health spokesman.

In the northern city of Tikrit, two men wearing explosives belts were able to carry out a deadly and embarrassing security breach. A provincial spokesman, Mohammed al-Asi, said men disguised in military uniforms drove into a government compound, parked their car and attacked a building. Three people were killed.

Earlier this year, insurgents penetrated the exact same compound and attacked a mosque.

According to police and hospital officials around the country, other attacks included:

_ A parked car bomb targeting a police patrol in Iskandiriyah, south of Baghdad, killed two people.

_ Bombs strapped to light poles in the northern city of Mosul exploded, killing one person.

_ A parked car bomb exploded near an Iraqi military patrol in Taji north of Baghdad, killing one person.

_ A roadside bombing near a fuel truck in Balad, north of Baghdad, wounded 16.

_ A motorcycle bomb exploded in the northern city of Kirkuk, one of three violent attacks in the city over a 24-hour period including a late-night series of blasts at a church. One person was killed.

_ A parked car bomb exploded in Baghdad near a convoy carrying officials from the Ministry of Higher Education, wounding eight.

All the officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

__

Associated Press reporters Sinan Salaheddin in Baghdad and Brian Murphy in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and Matthew Lee in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.

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BAGHDAD — A relentless barrage of bombings killed 63 people Monday in the most sweeping and coordinated attack Iraq has seen in over a year, striking 17 cities from northern Sunni areas to the s...
BAGHDAD — A relentless barrage of bombings killed 63 people Monday in the most sweeping and coordinated attack Iraq has seen in over a year, striking 17 cities from northern Sunni areas to the s...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mercedes1947
Elizabeth Warren 2016
02:08 PM on 08/16/2011
$791 billion, no $792 billion, no $793 billion spent on the Iraqi War. Well done.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
06:37 AM on 08/16/2011
Does anyone still believe we will be pulling out the troops at the end of the year?
banana republican
Provoking Progressives with unwelcome perspectives
08:41 PM on 08/15/2011
Instead of announcing the surrender of the US by giving dates of when we would pull out, Obama should have just pulled out all the troops all at once. It would have caused a huge loss of life initially, but there would be less dead and maimed in the end.
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wom122
Primum non nocere
07:56 PM on 08/15/2011
According to Senator McCain, we "already won" the Iraq war.
According to presidential candidate Obama, Bush's "surge" succeeded beyond "our wildest dreams".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
toofarleft4thisworld
the Lord giveth; the Landlord taketh away
09:17 AM on 08/16/2011
absolutely, even Say It Ain't S'Obama is deluded on this subject. it seems to be the politicians are united on that lie. it diminshes their standing when they go on about their Iraq success to justify Afghanistan.not that their standing can be greatly diminished.
07:38 PM on 08/15/2011
GASP! wuhhhhaaatttt???
06:57 PM on 08/15/2011
No change, just more of the same.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mercedes1947
Elizabeth Warren 2016
02:10 PM on 08/16/2011
So simple to grasp, unless you are a politician. Faved.
06:21 PM on 08/15/2011
"Joost Hiltermann from the International Crisis Group said such attacks are likely to continue regardless of whether the American forces withdraw because the Sunni population from which al-Qaida in Iraq gets its support still feels threatened by the Shiite-led Iraqi government.
"The point is how strong and cohesive the government, the ruling coalition and the security forces are. That is going to determine whether these guys (al-Qaida) have an opportunity or not. You need to dry up their opportunities," Hiltermann said.
"The Sunnis are still very unhappy with the Maliki government and the role that they play in it," he added."

So you blow yourself up?
05:42 PM on 08/15/2011
"...in a voice recording posted on a Web site for Al Qaeda in Iraq last week, the spokesman for the terrorist group said that they were preparing a wide-scale attack.

“I promise you that we are on the right path,” said the spokesman, Abi Muhhamed al-Adnani. “Thank God that we are doing very well here.”

“Do not worry, the days of Zarqawi are going to return soon,” he said, referring to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the former leader of Al Qaeda in Iraq who was killed by American forces in 2006. ”We have men who have divorced themselves from life and love death more than you love life, and killing is one of their wishes,” he said."

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/16/world/middleeast/16iraq.html?hp

*They are proud to love death more then they love life...
lqw
Justmyopinion
05:40 PM on 08/15/2011
They are blowing the country apart themselves and the US has rebuild it ?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mercedes1947
Elizabeth Warren 2016
02:11 PM on 08/16/2011
Welcome to Bizarro world.
lqw
Justmyopinion
05:38 PM on 08/15/2011
The US is not leaving at the end of the year and the Iraqis are mad.
What happened to Obama's promise to bring the troops home? That was almost 3 years ago .
05:27 PM on 08/15/2011
What a surprise.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ron C
05:22 PM on 08/15/2011
Pull out the troops and make all that sand turn to glass.
04:54 PM on 08/15/2011
The well publicized 10,000 troop draw down in Afghanistan has been negated by 10,000 troops in Iraq that have orders to return stateside that are staying in Iraq. So the net draw down in the war zone of Iraq and Afghanistan is zero. $325 million a day in Afghanistan no numbers for Iraq but it has to be $150 million. 14+Billion/month, and I am probably way low.
"Sua Sponte"
75th Regiment
Company O
3rd Brigade
82nd Airborne
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
06:45 AM on 08/16/2011
Whereas the Repbs are very big in giving speeches about supporting the troops there will surely be no new taxes to pay for them. So what will happen?
10:15 AM on 08/16/2011
Print money...How is the Fed offering banks and corporations 0% money for the next 2 years? Bernake and Geithner will just print it (can't borrow it), further deflating the dollar and inflating prices a double punch to middle class (if the US has one left).
"Sua Sponte"
75th Regiment
Company O
3rd Brigade
82nd Airborne
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
omobob
left coast, usa
04:14 PM on 08/15/2011
> Time and again, al-Qaida in Iraq has shown an ability to resurrect itself.

Time and time again the American Press believes the only way to get Americans to care about Iraq is to repeat al-Qaida as often as possible. (6 in this article) Sunnis and Shiites need little interference to kill and maim each other. The Sunnis did it to the Shiites under Sadaam. Now it is the Shiites turn. All they have been waiting for is better odds and less US interference. This was always the end result of the Bush administration’s lack of an exit strategy. The end result of the Bush administration’s lack of comprehending the religious dynamics of Iraq and indeed the Middle East.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mercedes1947
Elizabeth Warren 2016
02:13 PM on 08/16/2011
But.t ugly pig-headedness.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rotinfx16
03:52 PM on 08/15/2011
To all those who lost loved ones. To all those whose young vibrant loved ones were returned as invalids, I apologize for this administrations betrayal. The sacrifces made, were made worthless the day this President first declared he was willing to surrender.
That which your loved ones had within our grasp, has been squandered.
It is time that we withdraw from all possible theaters and not allow another drop of American blood be shed for any foreigner. It is time that we reinstitute the Draft, so that those who gain so much, share in the sacrifice. While these young people were away, at war, the less courageous were home getting a leg up on their careers.
To the public,at large, I say: When next you see someone in the uniform of this country, don't thank them. Apologize. Apologize for your weakness and betrayal.
If you did not have a loved one serve in either theater, do not comment for you know not whereof you speak.
04:34 PM on 08/15/2011
we needed you when the now-necons stabbed us in the back during Vietnam.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rotinfx16
04:49 PM on 08/15/2011
What do you think I was doing during Viet Nam? Do you think this bitterness welled up over night? It has gone too far now. I had to sit it out waiting for my own son to return from Iraq, knowing all the time that it would put him behind those who did not serve. Do you believe that his employer thought he did not need a passport because he had been in Iraq? That is how much these people of today know about service to country.
05:16 PM on 08/15/2011
Excuse me, LBJ was my Commander in Chief and he was no neo-con, whatever that is, and he FUBARed Vietnam in a big way. Our civilian government does not know how to prosecute a war. Especially a guerilla war. "The guerilla army only has to keep from loosing to win while the conventional army has to win to keep from loosing. Time is on the side of the guerilla"
"Art of War" Sun Tzu. The US won WWII in less than 4 years because FDR told Eisenhower and MacArthur to go WIN, the world depends on it. Truman told MacArthur to go TIE in Korea and for the life of me I have know idea what the game plan was in Vietnam. I know JFK took the hot potato off of France's hands.
BTW: we won our own Revolution by fighting a guerilla war against the conventional army of the British for 8 years...time is on the side of the guerilla.
"Sua Sponte"
75th Regiment
Company O
3rd Brigade
82nd Airborne
04:58 PM on 08/15/2011
"It is time that we withdraw from all possible theaters and not allow another drop of American blood be shed for any foreigner. It is time that we reinstitut­e the Draft, so that those who gain so much, share in the sacrifice. While these young people were away, at war, the less courageous were home getting a leg up on their careers."

Let's examine your post: "not another drop of American blood be shed for any foreigner." Rubbish. We attacked Iraq for Israel and oil, and Afghanistan for oil. "...so that those who gain so much..." I thought the blood was being shed for foreigners. "It is time we reinstitute the draft," We had a draft when we were at war with North Vietnam, but Bush, Cheney, Perle, Wolfowitz, Fleischer, etc. managed to stay safe, "getting a leg up on their careers." A draft brings a mix to the army, not all the troops buy into the slogans once they are confronted by the truth. That is why we will not reinstate the draft. The ones who enlist tend to be the under educated and slogan believers. A draft gets thinking people in the army. That's what ended the Vietnam War. Remember the words of the Marine Corps' greatest hero, Major-General Smedley D. Butler, the man who turned pacifist after leaving the Corps and wrote 'War is a Racket': "For the 35 years I was in the military, I never had an original thought."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rotinfx16
11:59 AM on 08/17/2011
You are wrong about us being uneducated. We may not have worthless degrees in Political Science,Sociology, English Literature etc, but we are educated. Stupid, we are. Stupid to believe in our country above our selves because that allows people like you to sit home and never risk a thing.That is is how you gain so much.
Oil? Where is this oil? We walked over their defenses, but I don't know of a drop of oil we took. Afghanistan has no oil. I t does have what your type would cherish. Opium!.
Instead of rationalizing your cowardice, why not accept it? Accept it and thank your good fortune that there are those willing to protect you.
As for some Marine Corps General who has gone a little mad, that is of no consequence.
The sad truth for you, is that you would not last a month in one of our service academies. The academics would be way beyond your sad little mind. Add to that the mandatory athletics and the strict discipline, you would be a mental wreck.
Your statement regarding the Draft, screams that you have never spent a day in military service and if you had, you would have been discharged as "unfit for military duty."
Now you run along and enjoy what so many have sacrificed so much for, while you contributed nothing.