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Al-Qaida Fingered in
Iraq Bombings That Killed More than 50
16 April 2008
U.S. and Iraqi military authorities have blamed al-Qaida for a series of
bombings in Sunni Arab areas of Iraq Tuesday that killed more than 50
people and wounded 94 others.
U.S.
Army Spc. Chris Burnely provides security at the site of a possible
improvised explosive device, Baghdad, Iraq, April 9, 2008. Burnely is
assigned to the 10th Mountain Division's Company C, 2nd Battalion, 30th
Infantry Regiment, 4th Brigade.
In Baquba, an explosives-laden car exploded in front of a restaurant
near government offices around lunchtime. Women and children were among
the 40 people killed. Eighty other people were wounded.
At least 13 people died in a second attack west of Baghdad, in Ramadi,
and 14 people were wounded. Police initially thought a parked car had
exploded, but later determined it was a suicide bomb attack.
Elsewhere, in Mosul, twin car bombs exploded in quick succession,
wounding at least 17 people.
Meanwhile, police say unidentified gunmen attacked two aides to Iraq's
top Shi'ite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani. Police say both
representatives survived the separate attacks Tuesday in the southern
cities of Basra and Kut.
Four days earlier, a top aide to radical Shi'ite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr
was assassinated in Najaf.
Separately, Defense
Department officials today praised Iraq’s security forces for
yesterday’s rescue of CBS journalist Richard Butler, who was kidnapped
in February.
“The operation showed great initiative and demonstrated the increasing
capability of Iraq security forces to take on the terrorists and
extremists who are trying to derail the progress in Iraq,” Pentagon
Press Secretary Geoff Morrell in a news conference here.
Butler was kidnapped while on assignment as a cameraman in Basra. The
Iraqi soldiers acted on a tip and raided a house outside of Basra where
Butler was held. One terrorist was captured.
“The [Iraqi] military still has a long way to go, however it is slowly
but surely becoming a professional fighting force,” Morrell said.
In the news conference, Morrell fielded questions ranging from troop
presence in Afghanistan to today’s car bombings in Iraq and how long it
will take to select a new commander for U.S. Central Command.
He was pressed about today’s series of car-bomb explosions in Baqouba
and Ramadi that killed more than 50 people and marked one of the worst
days of violence in Iraq in months. In Baqouba, at least 38 people were
killed and dozens more injured after a car blew up near government
offices. In Ramadi, 14 people died when a car exploded outside a
restaurant, according to media reports.
Morrell called the bombings “tragic,” but said he does not believe
violence is getting worse in Iraq.
“All the statistics, everything that we monitor, in terms of violence,
civilian deaths, sectarian killings, all the trend lines are pointing
down. They have been for months. They continue to trend that way,”
Morrell said. “At this point I have heard no one in any position of
authority pronounce any concern that the progress we have made
security-wise is unraveling or trending in the wrong direction.”
Morrell also fielded questions about how long the U.S. will have a troop
presence in Afghanistan. A commander there was reported to have said
that U.S. troops will serve there until at least 2011.
“All of us engaged in [Afghanistan] need to view this beyond the near
term and see this as a much longer-term mission than we have,” Morrell
said. “This is a three- to five-year mission that we need to be focused
on.”
“Clearly the United States government and our coalition partners in
Afghanistan need to be viewing the threat there as one that needs to be
combated … at least five years down the line,” he said.
But, Morrell said, officials cannot predict or project troop-level
requirements that far out.
Morrell also was asked for an update on the progress of the
investigation into the accidental shipment of ballistic missile parts to
Taiwan, instead of the requested helicopter batteries. The department
acknowledged last month that four nose-cone fuses were shipped to the
island in 2006.

Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates meets today with Navy Adm. Kirkland
Donald, who is charged with conducting the investigation, for about 30
minutes for a review of the progress of the investigation. The admiral
is due to be finished with the investigation in May.
Morrell said a nomination is forthcoming to fill the top spot at U.S.
Central Command left vacant by last month’s retirement of Navy Adm.
William J. Fallon. The admiral is replaced temporarily by his deputy,
Army Lt. Gen. Martin Dempsey, who will serve until a permanent commander
is nominated by President Bush and confirmed by the Senate.
Gates has started the process of finding a permanent replacement,
holding his first meeting on the issue a few weeks ago, Morrell said.
But recently, all efforts have been focused on the recent reports from
Iraq. Now more efforts will be channeled toward making a selection.
Morrell said that he expects a permanent replacement for Fallon to be on
the job in May. |