Bombings kill nearly 60 in Sunni areas of Iraq

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KIM GAMEL | April 15, 2008 06:48 PM EST | AP

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Women injured in a car bomb attack are brought to a hospital in Baqouba, 60 kilometers (35 miles) northeast of Baghdad, Tuesday, April 15, 2008. According to police and hospital officials, at least 38 people were killed and 64 wounded in the blast when a car parked in front of a restaurant in downtown Baqouba exploded, just before noon on Tuesday, across the street from the central courthouse and other government offices. (AP Photo/Adem Hadei)

BAGHDAD — Bombings blamed on al-Qaida in Iraq tore through market areas in Baghdad and outside the capital on Tuesday, killing nearly 60 people and shattering weeks of relative calm in Sunni-dominated areas.

The bloodshed _ in four cities as far north as Mosul and as far west as Ramadi _ struck directly at U.S. claims that the Sunni insurgency is waning and being replaced by Shiite militia violence as a major threat.

The deadliest blasts took place in Baqouba and Ramadi, two cities where the U.S. military has claimed varying degrees of success in getting Sunnis to turn against al-Qaida.

In Baqouba, the Diyala provincial capital 35 miles northeast of the capital, a parked car exploded about 11:30 a.m. in front of a restaurant across the street from the central courthouse and other government offices.

Many of the victims were on their way to the court, at the restaurant or in cars passing through the area. A man identifying himself as Abu Sarmad had just ordered lunch.

"I heard a big explosion and hot wind threw me from my chair to outside the restaurant," he said from his hospital bed.

The force of the blast jolted the concrete barriers erected along the road to protect the courthouse, witnesses said.

At least 40 people were killed and 70 wounded, according to hospital officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to release the information.

The U.S. military in northern Iraq gave a slightly lower toll, saying 35 Iraqi citizens were killed, including a policeman, and 66 wounded. It said the blast destroyed three buses and damaged 10 shops.

AP Television News footage showed many of the bodies covered in crisp white sheets and black plastic bags in a hospital courtyard while the emergency room inside was overwhelmed with the wounded.

It was the deadliest bombing in Iraq since March 6, when a twin bombing killed 68 people in a crowded shopping district in the central Baghdad district of Karradah. The attack was also the deadliest in Baqouba since The Associated Press began tracking Iraqi casualties in late April 2005.

The U.S. military said Tuesday that attacks in Baqouba have dropped noticeably since last June. But a series of assassinations and other high-profile attacks have occurred in and around the city this year, and American commanders have consistently warned that al-Qaida-led insurgents continue to pose a serious danger.

"Although attacks such as today's event are tragic, it is not indicative of the overall security situation in Baqouba," Maj. Mike Garcia, a spokesman for U.S. forces in Diyala province, said in a statement.

According to an AP count, at least 126 Iraqis have been killed in war-related violence in Baqouba so far in 2008; the majority, 65, were killed in 10 separate bombings. At least 818 Iraqis were killed in war-related violence in the city last year, up slightly from 793 the year before.

Baqouba and Ramadi were strongholds of al-Qaida in Iraq and saw some of the fiercest fighting of the U.S.-led war until local Sunni tribal leaders fed up with the terror network's brutal tactics joined forces with the U.S. military against it last year.

The Sunni revolt, an influx of some 30,000 American troops and a cease-fire by radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr led to a decline in violence there as well as in Baghdad.

In particular, the U.S. military has touted Ramadi as a success story. The former al-Qaida stronghold, 70 miles west of Baghdad, is the capital of Anbar province and has largely been sealed off by checkpoints.

Tuesday's bombing in Ramadi came about an hour after the Baqouba attack.

A suicide attacker on a motorcycle drove up to a kebab restaurant, went inside and detonated his explosives vest, killing at least 13 people, including three off-duty policemen and two children, and wounding 20, according to police and hospital officials.

Ahmed al-Dulaimi, a 27-year-old mechanic, escaped injury because he was sitting at a back table. But he said his cousin, who owned the restaurant, was killed.

"Suddenly a motorcycle parked near the restaurant and a man came running in and then a huge explosion took place," al-Dulaimi said. "Pieces of flesh flew into the air and the roof fell over us."

The blast in central Baghdad also took place shortly after midday. A parked car bomb targeted a police patrol, killing four civilians who were passing by and wounding 15 other people, police said.

The U.S. military condemned the bombings in Baqouba, Ramadi and Baghdad and said they appeared to have been carried out by al-Qaida in Iraq.

The fourth bombing took place in Mosul, a city 225 miles northwest of Baghdad that the U.S. military has called the last urban stronghold for al-Qaida in Iraq.

At 3:45 p.m., a double car bombing wounded three Iraqi policemen and 15 civilians, the U.S. military said. Iraqi police Brig. Gen. Khalid Abdul-Satter said the attack killed one civilian was killed and wounded 16 others.

U.S.-allied Sunni fighters have found themselves increasingly targeted by violence and frustrated by a perceived lack of support by the Shiite-dominated government.

The purported leader of the al-Qaida umbrella group, the Islamic State of Iraq, called on those who switched sides to return to the insurgency. He made his statement in an Internet audiotape posted Tuesday on a militant Web site.

Abu Omar al-Baghdadi, whom the U.S. has described as a fictitious character used to give an Iraqi face to the organization, urged the Sunnis to direct their arms against "the Crusaders and those who support them," using typical militant rhetoric for the United States.

While the Sunni insurgency has recently appeared to wane, the U.S. military has increasingly pointed to Shiite militia violence as one of the greatest threats to Iraq's stability.

On Tuesday, Shiite extremists clashed again with U.S.-Iraqi forces in Baghdad and the oil-rich southern city of Basra.

U.S. soldiers backed by an airstrike killed six militants after a gunbattle broke out in the Sudayrah area, near Baghdad's main Shiite militia stronghold of Sadr City, the military said. Iraqi police in the area claimed that two boys were among those killed in the airstrike, but the military said no civilian casualties were reported.

In southern Iraq, three aides to Iraq's top Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, escaped assassination in separate attacks Tuesday, although two of them were seriously wounded, police said.

The attacks came four days after a top al-Sadr aide was assassinated in Najaf.

___

Associated Press writers Sameer N. Yacoub and Bushra Juhi in Baghdad, Katya Kratovac in Cairo, Egypt, and the AP News Research Center in New York contributed to this report.

 
 

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the idea that violence is decreasing in iraq was never more than statistical BS anyway.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 AM on 04/16/2008

Dead Iraqi's ? As if Americans really care - all that matters is Oil and Arms profits.

The "War" is just begining. Americans, prepare to lose your freedom - Bush is planning the next false flag 9/11 attack.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:05 AM on 04/16/2008

One of the great things by Huffingtonpost is their ability to share both sides of the story.

I agree with many of the bloggers on this post that Congress has not made the Bush Administration accountable for their actions. What saddens me is if we stay in Iraq, the concept of the draft is inevitable. America does not have the resources to continue this war. How can we continue to disrupt the lives of the Iraq people for the sake of Democracy? It hurts me to view these photos. America is engaged in a political nightmare that will haunt us for the next 100 years. Terrorist groups are using this war to rallying young men and women globally to defeat American forces. The president should have allowed the United Nations embargo against Iraq to take its course. I am sure Saddam Hussein would of yielded by the political pressure.

We must pray for the next President-who ever he or she may be. They have a big battle ahead of them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:32 AM on 04/16/2008

I agree whole heartedly with your sentiments, but should the worst happen, whereby the Republicans steal the White House again I fear no amount of praying will be enough to save us.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:04 PM on 04/16/2008

Let's have this debate with McIdiot about the reduction in violence!!! They the GOP argue about how we have bases and troops in other countries, but fail to realize those other countries aren't separated by religious beliefs!!! You may be able to change someone's mind on ideology or democracy, but you can't make someone change their religious beliefs especially in Muslim cultures!!! Therefor we will never be able to sustain a peaceful occupation of Iraq no matter how long we're there!!! The very existence of or presence there is a just cause for the people there to raise arms against western occupiers!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:34 AM on 04/16/2008

America will continue to suffer from the ill-decisions of a sophomoric nincompoop masquerading within the corridors of power in Washington by the name of George Bush.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:24 AM on 04/16/2008

LOL

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 AM on 04/16/2008

O M G... This would have NEVER happened under Sadaam!

I wonder if Bush & McBush is thinking about sending... oh maybe another 40,000 troops to Iraq now?

Ya know... lets get the numbers up to 200,000 total troops there. And if they rotate them over the next hundred years, then so be it!

All over the invisible/transparent, "Weapons of Mass Destruction".

And these decisions were made by people who supposedly are "EXPERIENCED" (Bush, Rumsfeld, Bremer, Petraeus, Rice, Cheney... and CLINTON TOO!)

Give me the so-called, "INEXPERIENCED" anyday over these messes!

"OBAMA THE GREAT" in 08'

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:17 AM on 04/16/2008

The war in Iraq is not a war to defend the United States; it is a war of CONQUEST by the Bush administration. The reason for the war can't be to bring the perpetrators of the 9/11 terrorism to justice; they're in remote regions of Pakistan and/or Afghanistan. The reason for the war can't be to prevent Iraq from having nuclear weapons; such weapons have been thoroughly searched for and never found. The reason for the war can't even be to get rid of Saddam Hussein because he wanted to have nuclear weapons; Saddam Hussein has been executed. The war is a CONQUEST, pure and simple. I prefer to call it a CONQUEST rather than an occupation, because Germany and Japan were under occupation after World War II, but in those occupations, the U.S. actually sought to abide by international laws and provide for the humanitarian treatment of the people of the countries being occupied. But in this war, the Bush administration doesn't believe in the humanitarian treatment part; that would be socialistic and welfare-state-like and therefore evil.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:15 AM on 04/16/2008

Thank you Huff post for putting the war back on the front page, for two long it has been buried in the back pages on this site and most others, it need to be in americas face 24/7 instead of the he said she said politics, maybe then those runing for president will talk issues like the war, jobs, the economy,gas prices etc. instead of the bullshit of the past.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:15 AM on 04/16/2008

We NEED to get ALL our troops out and send in Bush and Cheney. Its their war let them fight it. It certainly isnt America's war. Maybe we can send in McCain too and they can all try to figure out the enemies goodness knows they cant do it from here maybe they'll do it better over there.

Carol

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:04 AM on 04/16/2008

You report the destruction of life around your world in cold uncaring numbers. One wonders if you will report the swift end of life as you know it for your species on your world in the years to come?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:43 AM on 04/16/2008

". . .it is not indicative of the overall security". When will we stop hearing these same OLD remarks from our military hierarchy? After 5+ years of the massacre in a country that we should never have gone into and had no reason to go into (other than W wanting to show daddy that he could get him the grand prize that daddy did not get in Kuwait). Haven't we yet learned that we are NOT WANTED in Iraq? How many more lives and bloodshed has to be spilled before our ignorant pres. and co. will let our men and women ? We don't belong there and the Iraqi's don't want us there! Too many innocent Iraqi's lives lost for this "oil". WHEN WILL WE GET OUT??? LEAVE NOW!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:30 AM on 04/16/2008

88, that's how many brave service men and women have died from my state of Wisconsin. 2 more service men died last week. When will it stop?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:10 AM on 04/16/2008

When republicans no longer infest our government.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:54 AM on 04/16/2008

A slowdown in violence: The Surge Is Working!
An increase in violence: The Surge Is Working!

Sounds exactly like the reasoning of a spoiled little rich brat from Texas doesn"t it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:23 AM on 04/16/2008

I'm thinking of all of these years of joy that we've brought to the Iraqis and how they must be remembering us with gratitude for the freedom from tyranny we've exported to them, how they must have applauded the rockets' red glare and bombs bursting in air, how sadam's abu grahb was bad and how our abu grab, as rush playfully stated, was good, how five cent a gallon gas under sadam was plentiful but now is difficult to obtain, how horrible it was to fear uday and chemical ali but how much better it is to fear blackwater rapists and brutalizers, how democratic fascism is worth the deaths of fathers and brothers. I could continue this run on sentence, but they'll be coming for me soon, so I'll close now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:50 AM on 04/16/2008

The latest news out of Iraq proves beyong any shadow of a doubt that the "surge" is working!
(It doesn't matter what the news is, the conclusion is the same. Don't bother me with facts and logic!)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:12 AM on 04/16/2008

Here's one way they're getting the explosives:

"Bomblets are individual units of cluster bombs and are made of metal. They are shaped like a soft drink can and are packed with high explosives. Cluster bombs contain about 200 small so-called bomblets designed to scatter themselves over a large area, targeting troops and military vehicles.

A written release from the U.N. International Children's Emergency Fund said, "Confusing unexploded ordnance with food places children at huge risk of injury or death. UNICEF urges coalition forces to urgently change the color of these rations."

http://www.cnn.com/2003/WORLD/meast/04/02/sprj.irq.aid.bomblets/index.html

We used the same color wrapping around the rations as for the bomblets. Iran isn't arming them with bombs.. We did. some of our soldiers getting killed could be unexploded bomblets we left along the roads ourselves. Insurgents need only pick a few of them up, toss them in a car, and it's done. Who in congress approved the use of cluster bombs?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:38 AM on 04/16/2008

americans dont care how many iraqis are dying they dont care that much how many americans are dying.

now if this war hits their pocket books then they might stop shopping long enough to read a paper or watch a bias cable news show.

little know fact: capitalism must self destruct. not based in love but profits.

thank the universe for laws of karma that is causing capitalism to self destruct.

it wont be pretty but it will be effective. bye bye middle class.

years of poverty then revolution. jefferson time in 30 years.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:27 AM on 04/16/2008

I think you're wrong.
Americans, true Americans, do care about the incredible loss of life in Iraq.
Real Americans do care, its just that real Americans aren't in charge of the country anymore.
This nation is now run from the profit at all costs, board room.
Execs at these companies bury their humanity behind cries of "we do it for the stockholders."
They have monopolized our government by buying thousands of lobbyists who, in turn, buy our politicians.
Capitalism is a wonderful thing...unbridled capitalism is as dangerous as any terrorist could ever hope to be.
Heck, we invaded Iraq because Halliburton executives told our leaders to invade Iraq!
Then they told our leaders to hand them hundreds of millions of dollars in tax payer funded no-bid contracts!
Now, does that sound like America to you?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:33 AM on 04/16/2008

whats a true american?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:36 AM on 04/16/2008

Your logic is not quite a symphony but I heard more than a few soaring notes of promise. It is not a symphony because of the darkness it portends, but maybe that is necessarily just the brooding part of the work. Capitalism calls for no love and it calls for being cut throat in the interest of maximizing outcome. Hillary is a perfect example of the disease of capitalism exposed. It can become all about ambition driving the pursuit of profit. Theoretically nothing wrong with that. In practice we get corruption leading to regulation leading to still more corruption and an inequitable distribution of wealth across the mass of people. Humane capitalism allows for a big middle class but it can become a beast that eats its middle in a vain attempt to solidify its top by creating a huge base class as conditions for maintaining wealth over generations change. A billion dollars is not required for one life, but if your interest is legacy and all of that then the accumulation of wealth allows one to think they can play king maker from the grave. A truly pitiful thought process when you think about it. I would much rather heal and help a thousand while alive then try to amass a fortune that allows my great grand descendant to ascend to power at some future time. The idea of such a thought process saddens me but I know the ego and arrogance of the insatiable.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:14 AM on 04/16/2008

The question of what is to replace capitalism also crops up as I read your words. What is that system that can provide for ~300 million people living and working together in harmony and in a way that is sustainable, moral, and equitable for all over foreseeable generations? That would be the discord in the symphony you wrote; that would be the compelling note that is missing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:14 AM on 04/16/2008

Jeffersonian Democracy in 30 years? Is that the crescendo, the climatic note?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:22 AM on 04/16/2008

Street gangs rule through numbers and the threat and use of force. The surge works the same way, with a little bribery and attempts at nation building thrown in. Cutting off the money or the threat of force will revert conditions back to pre-surge levels. I can buy that logic. I cannot buy the logic that it is the job of the United States to be police officer to the world when kids are dying on U.S. streets in Chicago in record numbers. I cannot buy the logic that the Iraqi's like all humans are not self-interested and not predisposed or prone to mass breakout of a will to survive. If America drastically (and eventually entirely) reduces its military (not diplomatic) footprint in Iraq, the people would find their footing. At some point you have to --when.

This is a morally tough love decision because of course we all know that Iraq would not be facing the problems it is facing if America had not decided a romp to Iraq to capture and kill Saddam Hussein was a national priority.

Set' em up Joe, I will have one for my baby, and one for the road. America, we need to say when, we have had enough.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:38 AM on 04/16/2008

How do we say it any louder? I have tried the democratic way, writing my Congressman, my Senator. I spoke my mind before the war - those within my own family wouldn't listen. I have written Bush - over and over and over. My bitterness....my frustration is rooted in exactly what Obama has said - there's NOBODY listening. And 50% would vote for McCrazy - go figure.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 AM on 04/16/2008

Face it, we are not liberators of Iraq, we are occupiers. We are not there for "freedom and democracy." We are there for oil. In the western deserts of Iraq, there are probably over 100 billion barrels of untapped oil. Do you really think that those facts escaped Dick Cheney's secret Energy Task Force? Do you seriously think that we are in Iraq for "moral" reasons? If so, you and Dick Cheney and Joe Lieberman must belong to the same sub rosa Masonic cult -- that of greed and imperialism.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:05 AM on 04/16/2008

I am a member in good standing in your church and I sit with the choir. I do believe there is an energy calculation to U.S. presence in Iraq and I do deem that the presence is an occupation that was facilitated by unprovoked invasion.

Now the hard part, what we are going to do about it. I am suggesting beyond just voting, a pre-election mass rally this summer to be the grand-daddy of all protest gatherings. I am suggesting two million people go to Washington and with one voice say no more and never again to all things Bush/Cheney. I am suggesting we scream that message for two days straight.

How do we get started?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:44 AM on 04/16/2008

How are these explosives getting in?

We have troops all over Iraq. They have been subject to searches and have been shocked and awed into compliance. We armed their security forces with old rifles from some crackpot company here in the US probably, we have their borders covered with troops and satellite surveillance....they're having trouble getting food, gas, oil and freakin electricity, how are they finding it so easy to put together these complex devices and get the materials for them?

How are they getting military-grade explosive devices into the country? And coordinating attacks no less?

Think about this...if martial law were declared in a few states here, with 140,000 odd troops, how would you get a hold of explosive devices powerful enough to do something like this?

Either our military is incompetent, which I do not believe for a minute, or someone else is doing it for them....

Makes me think.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:37 AM on 04/16/2008

Bush/Cheney cannot blame Iran since the report is that this is the handy work of al-Qaida.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:41 AM on 04/16/2008

Good observation. And al Qaeda can get the materials in how?

We're all over the country, including satellite-wise. Nothing gets in or out without us knowing.

Our Congress approved the use of cluster bombs. I wonder what for. It seems to me they're getting used against us somehow.....

I wonder how that's happening......

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:07 AM on 04/16/2008

My trust level is pretty low also. I am suggesting a two day mass demonstration on the white house lawn with two million of my closest friends. We can demand some answers as well as bring some handcuffs for the criminals we meet. It would be like a huge posse. It will never change until we can confirm that we are united in large numbers beyond one person one vote. What I am proposing I would like to see happen so I am going to start dropping seeds for it. Help if you really want change.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:38 AM on 04/16/2008

So 60 is the new number to activate the media to report the shit still happening in Iraq.
It is so sad because I don't believe we will ever have a reliable source of news anymore. And it could be this is the only place this tragedy has been reported as I have not looked at the msm sites lately.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:33 AM on 04/16/2008

So, let me get this straight: the "surge" is working, but more and more civilians and troops are getting killed.

How STUPID does this government think the American people are?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:23 AM on 04/16/2008