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Baghdad Blasts: Al Qaeda In Iraq Reportedly Claims Attacks

SINAN SALAHEDDIN   12/27/11 04:07 AM ET   AP

Baghdad Blasts Al Qaeda
Iraqis inspect the damage after a wave of attacks in Baghdad killed at least 57 people on December 22, 2011. (KHALIL AL-MURSHIDI/AFP/Getty Images)

BAGHDAD — An al-Qaida front group in Iraq has claimed responsibility for the wave of attacks that ripped through markets, cafes and government buildings in Baghdad on a single day last week, killing 69 people and raising new worries about the country's path.

The coordinated attacks struck a dozen mostly Shiite neighborhoods on Thursday in the first major bloodshed since U.S. troops completed a full withdrawal this month after nearly nine years of war. They also coincided with a government crisis that has again strained ties between Iraq's Sunnis and Shiites to the breaking point, tearing at the same fault line that nearly pushed Iraq into all-out civil war several years ago.

The claim of responsibility made no mention of the U.S. withdrawal. Instead, it focused its rage on the country's Shiite-dominated leadership, which Sunni insurgents have battled since it came to power as a result of the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003.

"The series of special invasions (was) launched ... to support the weak Sunnis in the prisons of the apostates and to retaliate for the captives who were executed," said the statement in the name of the Islamic State of Iraq.

According to the SITE Intelligence Group, a U.S.-based organization that monitors jihadist Web traffic, the claim of responsibility was posted late Monday on militant websites.

The group said the attacks were proof that they "know where and when to strike and the mujahedeen will never stand with their hands tied while the pernicious Iranian project shows its ugly face."

The remark was in reference to accusations by Sunni militants that Iraq's Shiite-dominated government has allied itself too closely with neighboring Shiite power Iran, a bitter enemy of Iraq under the regime of Saddam Hussein.

The Baghdad military spokesman, Maj. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi, said al-Qaida in Iraq – no longer focused on fighting U.S. forces – is hoping to take advantage of the current political tension to re-ignite sectarian warfare.

"It has become a clear scheme to draw Iraq into a sectarian war again," al-Moussawi said. "Al-Qaida in Iraq played a major role in 2005 and 2006 in pushing the county into a civil war and they succeeded."

On Tuesday morning, a car bomb exploded near a police station in the town of Hawija, 150 miles (240 kilometers) north of Baghdad, killing two civilians and injuring another, said Kirkuk police commander Brig. Gen. Sarhad Qadir.

U.S. and some Iraqi officials have warned of a resurgence of Sunni and Shiite militants and an increase in violence after the U.S. troop withdrawal.

Along with the security challenge, Iraq is facing an increase in political tension as Iraq's Shiite prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, is engaged in a showdown with the top Sunni political leader in the country.

Al-Maliki's government has issued an arrest warrant for Sunni Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi on charges that he ran hit squads against government officials.

Al-Hashemi has denied the charges and said they are politically motivated.

___

Associated Press writer Qassim Abdul-Zahra contributed to this report.

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Iraqis inspect the damage after a wave of attacks in Baghdad killed at least 60 people on December 22, 2011. The apparently coordinated blasts were the first major sign of violence in a row that has threatened Iraq's fragile political truce and heightened sectarian tensions just days after US forces completed their withdrawal. (KHALIL AL-MURSHIDI/AFP/Getty Images)
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BAGHDAD — An al-Qaida front group in Iraq has claimed responsibility for the wave of attacks that ripped through markets, cafes and government buildings in Baghdad on a single day last week, kil...
BAGHDAD — An al-Qaida front group in Iraq has claimed responsibility for the wave of attacks that ripped through markets, cafes and government buildings in Baghdad on a single day last week, kil...
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09:13 AM on 01/03/2012
and this is a surprise to who?
09:18 AM on 12/28/2011
The only ones who can stop this stuff are the people themselfs they need to start going after those who want to kill and kill them.
08:12 AM on 12/28/2011
We really need to get busy in N America becoming energy independent and just get completely out of the Middle East. These people have been killing each other for 3 thousand years. Silly to think it will stop in our lifetimes. We have the resources. Get it done and bring our people home and let them kill each other if they want.
04:56 AM on 12/28/2011
Sadam is dead, so why I ask certain talk show propaganda pumps, who feverishly supported these wars who is doing the killing now.!
04:30 AM on 12/28/2011
Funny thing but it was already declared that the Sunni's were attacking Shite's to try to get their power back in Baghdad. Now it's suddenly Al Qaeda?
We spent a fortune training the Iraqi Army, let them fight their own battles now. We can't afford to keep nation building. It doesn't work... We need to learn our lesson and stay out of Mid-East countries. They have been fighting each other for thousands of years.
05:00 AM on 12/28/2011
Two top talk show pumps of propaganda and finatical supporters of these (wars?) stated repeatedly when they get Sadam they will be at peace.!
02:56 AM on 12/28/2011
The continued bombings and violence is sad.

But the right thing was to get our troops out of the country and out of harms way.

We were just a road block between factions that no matter what we did would have end up fighting, with us in the middle getting it from all sides.

Army Chief of Staff General Shinseki warned at the time that the war was not the most difficult part of the invasion, it was the police action later that will take the most troops and resources.

But the Bush administration ignored the advice and put in place their yes men. This is what we ended up with, a situation where the middle east is worst off then before.

It is now up to the Iraq citizens to work out the mess that we started.
photo
tonyaxsmithey
Extremely Right Wing.
10:53 PM on 12/27/2011
The religion of peace.
09:38 PM on 12/27/2011
Gee, in another forum Obama was criticized for being concerned about Libya. How about a little consistency here?

Who will be picked to run from the group consisting of Slowly Whit and the [six] Warts?

That Republi-can't will fire every Federal govenrment employee including the military which will be unnecessary since war will be unilaterally outlawed, 100% employment and the eradication of all crime...well, not white-collar...ah... imaginative re-direction of funds.

There wil be no ambilivalent foreign policy since there won't be one. No second guessing or having to retreat to a different position. No decisions therefore no problems.. Simple for simple minds.

And God will be worshiped and His name shalt be: "PROFIT!"
fworfe
Registered Independent; Writer; Thinker.
09:26 PM on 12/27/2011
If it's true that al Qaeda is responsible for these attacks, it should come as a surprise to no one.
With the help of the Iranians, the Iraqis imported, fed, housed, trained, equipped, cultivated and enabled these demons for the entire time uniformed Americans were in that country trying to do the impossible.
Is it any wonder that al Qaeda would not fold their tents in some sort of conversion and peacefully leave their Iraqi bosom buddies behind?
I know it sounds crass and cruel, but the plain truth is that very few people in the USA now give much of a hoot how many Iraqis attack Iraqis. And even if we cared, do you think it would make one iota of difference?
Not one of us was deluded enough to believe that what we did in Iraq made much of a change in the behavior and nature of that country or any other country in the Middle East.
Iraq is another world about which we knew almost nothing before the war, and about which we know even less after the war.
And now, it's their world or their funeral—their choice.
--And it does little good to look back; most people won’t bother to do so.
03:04 AM on 12/28/2011
Wow! I always thought that Al Qaeda was Sunni. And, I always thought that most of the foreign insurgents in Iraq were from Saudi Land to the south.

I'm going to update my maps and get the CIA director on the horn.

Thanks!
08:36 PM on 12/27/2011
Oba foreign policy?well none at all,we do not have a clue,of who or what is the future of Egypt,do not have clue about Tunisia,or Libya "now in the hands of a former Al Qaeda,a war that we spend close to 2 biilions,and no clue at all about N Korea
07:44 PM on 12/27/2011
Apparent the US presence in Iraq was not the reason al Qaeda was bombing and killing their own people by the thousands. Perhaps a more benevolent and less brutal version of Saddam Hussein is what Iraq needs right now.....before it explodes in further sectarian violence.
06:42 PM on 12/27/2011
...Iraq has the worlds 2nd largest oil reserves...think Bush knew that back in '01 ?
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08:45 PM on 12/27/2011
Ever since the U.S. congress voted to invade Iraq, there have been constant accusations, implied or explicit, that Pres. Bush was going to "steal" Iraq's oil. Has the U.S. stolen any oil from Iraq? Have we? Anyone?
04:40 AM on 12/28/2011
Bush tried for years to get contracts for American oil companies from Al Maliki to no avail. He finally did an agreement to leave Iraq to save face. His war was a total failure in every way. One billion dollars, tens of thousands dead and NO OIL for Bushy.
06:37 PM on 12/27/2011
.....If Saddamn had WMD's, how come he didn't use them?
06:32 PM on 12/27/2011
Before the '03, Saddamn banned all AMERICAN & BRITISH oil companies from drilling in Iraq.

Guess who were the first to start drilling AFTER the invansion????
08:38 PM on 12/27/2011
So what?...we should make them pay for the war
08:58 PM on 12/27/2011
we invaded and we pay and still are
09:30 PM on 12/27/2011
right....make them pay for war we started
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08:46 PM on 12/27/2011
Link?
09:26 PM on 12/27/2011
must I do all your HOMEWORK?
06:18 PM on 12/27/2011
...Same thing happen to Yugoslavia after TiTo died......ethnic groups exploded and now Yoguslavia is now Macodonia, Croatia, Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia, etc...
08:39 PM on 12/27/2011
He did not use a good quality glue
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08:48 PM on 12/27/2011
That's what they were BEFORE they became Yugoslavia.
09:26 PM on 12/27/2011
point is...after strong leader is gone and country made up of many ethnic groups will explode..like Iraq