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Title: Coordinated Attacks Strike 13 Towns and Cities in Iraq
Source: NY Times
URL Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/26/w ... middleeast/26iraq.html?_r=1&hp
Published: Aug 25, 2010
Author: Anthony Shadid
Post Date: 2010-08-25 13:46:09 by war
Keywords: None
Views: 75818
Comments: 79

BAGHDAD — In one of the broadest assaults on Iraq’s security forces, insurgents unleashed a wave of roadside mines and a more than a dozen car bombings across Iraq on Wednesday, killing dozens, toppling a police station in the capital and sowing chaos and confusion among the soldiers and police officers who responded.

The withering two-hour assault in 13 towns and cities, from southernmost Basra to restive Mosul in the north, was as symbolic as it was deadly, coming a week before the United States declares the end of combat operations here. Wednesday was seemingly the insurgents’ reply: Despite suggestions otherwise, they proved their ability to launch coordinated attacks virtually anywhere in Iraq, capitalizing on the government’s dysfunction and perceptions of American vulnerability.

For weeks, there had been sense of inevitability to the assaults, which killed at least 51 people, many of them police officers. From the American military to residents here, virtually everyone seemed to expect insurgents to seek to demonstrate their prowess as the United States brings its number of troops below 50,000 here. But the anticipation did little to prepare security forces for the breadth of the assault. Iraqi soldiers and police officers brawled at the site of the biggest bombing in Baghdad, and residents heckled them for their impotence in stopping a blast that cut like a scythe through the neighborhood.

“A bloody day,” Khalil Ahmed, a 30-year-old engineer, said simply, as he stared at the cranes and bulldozers trying to rescue victims buried under the police station.

“From the day of the fall of Saddam until now, this is what we have — explosions, killing and looting,” he said. “This is our destiny. It’s already written for us.”

The assaults began at 8:20 a.m. when a pickup truck packed with explosives detonated in a parking lot behind the police station in the northern Baghdad neighborhood of Qahera. The police station collapsed, and the blast sheared off the top floors of nearby homes. Windows were shattered a half-mile away. One family was pulled out alive. Hours later, cranes and bulldozers tried to remove others trapped beneath the rubble.

Police officers kept angry residents from entering the scene.

“You get millions of dinars in salaries and you won’t let us help our families?” one youth shouted.

Another cried, “You just take money and don’t care about us!”

An Iraqi investigator walked by the scene.

“This is the state?” he muttered. “This is the government?”

Twice, soldiers and police officers brawled at the scene, and shots were fired in the air.

The rest of the capital was snarled with traffic, as police and army vehicles, sirens blaring, tried to break through the traffic jams. American soldiers in Humvees and armored vehicles, with a token Iraqi escort, drove through parts of the city.

For weeks, insurgents have carried out a daily campaign of bombings, hit-and-run attacks and assassinations against the security forces and officials, seeking to undermine confidence in their ability to secure the country. They remained the target Wednesday in attacks in Falluja, Ramadi, Tikrit, Kirkuk, Basra, Karbala, Mosul and elsewhere.

In one of the worst assaults, in the southern city of Kut, Iraqi officials said a car bomb detonated by its driver killed 19 people and wounded 87, most of them police, in an attack that destroyed the police station near the provincial headquarters.

In Diyala Province, five roadside bombs detonated in the morning in Buhriz, the first against a police patrol, a second against reinforcements who were heading to the scene and three others intended for houses belonging to policemen, officials said. They were followed by a car bombing that struck the provincial headquarters in Baquba, northeast of Baghdad, killing three people. Another car bombing struck a hospital in nearby Muqdadiya.

“The beginning of the storm,” said Saleh Khamis, a 38-year-old teacher in Buhriz.

In Ramadi, a car bomb tore through a bus station, killing eight people.

Under a deadline set by the Obama administration, the United States has brought its number of troops here to a little below 50,000, a presence it intends to maintain through next summer. The administration and the American military have sought to portray the partial withdrawal as a turning point in the American presence here, insisting that Iraq’s army and police are ready to inherit sole control over security here.

Military officials have said they believe that insurgents only number in the hundreds, and the military has issued a daily drumbeat of announcements that leaders and cadres in the insurgency have been arrested in American-Iraqi operations.

“The message the insurgents want to deliver to the Iraqi people and the politicians is that we exist and we choose the time and the place,” said Wael Abdel-Latif, a judge and former lawmaker. “They are carrying out such attacks when the Americans are still here, so just imagine what they can do after the Americans leave.”

The attacks come amid deep popular frustration with the country’s politicians, who have failed to form a government more than five months after elections in March. Shoddy public services, namely electricity, have only sharpened the resentment.

At the scene of the bombing in Baghdad, residents grimly swept up glass from storefronts. Others milled among the dozens of police and army vehicles. No one seemed to express optimism; most said they were bracing for more of the same.

“The situation doesn’t let us live our lives here,” said Mahmoud Hussein, a 26-year-old mechanic. “No water, no electricity no security. Every day it gets worse.”

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 43.

#1. To: All (#0)

The end result of the worst foreign policy decision ever made: Invading Iraq

war  posted on  2010-08-25   13:47:23 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: war (#1)

The end result of the worst foreign policy decision ever made: Invading Iraq

Care to support that statement with some facts?

Nebuchadnezzar  posted on  2010-08-25   17:17:01 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: Nebuchadnezzar (#9) (Edited)

Care to support that statement with some facts?

Iraq has no functioning government for which over 4000 Americans died.

Iraq has LESS functioning infrastructure now than it did when we invaded and for that over 4000 Americans died.

Iraq has fomented MORE terrorism not less and for this 4000 Americans died.

Iraq caused a massive run up in debts and deficits with no return on the dollars spent and for this over 4000 Americans died.

Want some more, NeoCon Shilliar?

war  posted on  2010-08-25   18:40:40 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: war (#13)

Iraq has no functioning government for which over 4000 Americans died.

Iraq has LESS functioning infrastructure now than it did when we invaded and for that over 4000 Americans died.

Iraq has fomented MORE terrorism not less and for this 4000 Americans died.

Hmmmm...so this really a screwed up situation, the worst EVER in the history of the United states, primarily due to 4000+ dead????

Nebuchadnezzar  posted on  2010-08-25   19:26:40 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#21. To: Nebuchadnezzar (#15)

Hmmmm...so this really a screwed up situation, the worst EVER in the history of the United states, primarily due to 4000+ dead????

Nope.

But I knew you'd see it from the most moronic point of view.

war  posted on  2010-08-25   21:09:28 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#22. To: war (#21)

Nope.

But I knew you'd see it from the most moronic point of view.

Still care to clarify, or do you realize, again, that I have you.

Nebuchadnezzar  posted on  2010-08-25   23:25:12 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#23. To: Nebuchadnezzar (#22) (Edited)

Still care to clarify, or do you realize, again, that I have you.

Stay away from the keyboard when you're drunk, Nebby.

We were told that iraq ould be paid for with oil revenues. We were told that we'd be greated as liberators. We were told that the safety of the region was at stake. We were told it would be a cakewalk. We were told that the insurgency was in its last throes.

What more do you need? It was alll bullshit. Iraq and the region are LESS stable today. Occum's Razor tells us that the invasion was STOOOOPID.

war  posted on  2010-08-26   9:31:31 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#28. To: war (#23)

We were told that iraq ould be paid for with oil revenues. We were told that we'd be greated as liberators. We were told that the safety of the region was at stake. We were told it would be a cakewalk. We were told that the insurgency was in its last throes.

4000 KIA and you consider it a horrible loss?

Sorry Eisenhower, it was a victory. We removed a dictator who was a destablizing influence on the world.

And we did it cheap, unlike Johnson's CLUSTER Fuck which cost us 58,000 and we were run out of town on a mule in the process.

Military history isn't your forte, is it? You seen to know very little about it.

Nebuchadnezzar  posted on  2010-08-26   10:32:24 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#30. To: Nebuchadnezzar (#28)

We removed a dictator who was a destablizing influence on the world.

Now tap your ruby slippers together three times Dorothy and maybe that bullshit will come true.

The US, in it's insane thirst for all aspects of the oil market, is a far more destablizing force in the mideast than Saddam ever was. If he was so destablizing, neocon bullshit artist that you are, you should be able to explain to me why both Iraq and the region is more destable NOW than at any time while Saddam was in power.

Thanks.

war  posted on  2010-08-26   10:37:02 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#32. To: war (#30)

The US, in it's insane thirst for all aspects of the oil market, is a far more destablizing force in the mideast than Saddam ever was. If he was so destablizing, neocon bullshit artist that you are, you should be able to explain to me why both Iraq and the region is more destable NOW than at any time while Saddam was in power.

Sorry, we need the oil. "real politik" is how the world operates, not in some fantasy land where we don't go to war for oil.

Nebuchadnezzar  posted on  2010-08-26   16:04:14 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#39. To: Nebuchadnezzar (#32)

Sorry, we need the oil. "real politik" is how the world operates, not in some fantasy land where we don't go to war for oil.

Is it also acceptable for individual citizens to take what they need and use force if necessary, or just governments?

lucysmom  posted on  2010-08-27   12:01:16 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#41. To: lucysmom (#39) (Edited)

I never cease to be amazed at how self proclaimed small government types love to see power exercised in its rawest form..."What's mine is mine and what's yours I can take at will..."

They wholly ignore the fact that If we existed in the form the Framers expressed we'd have never fought a war in Iraq...

That's why I call these guys "Convenient originalists"...

Kind of like the inherent contradiction that the government can legistlate abortion, school prayer and marriage but not feed, clothe or tend to the health of the people.

war  posted on  2010-08-27   12:17:03 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#42. To: war (#41)

They wholly ignore the fact that If we existed in the form the Framers expressed we'd have never fought a war in Iraq...

I think Carter's energy policy was more in tune with the founding fathers.

Kind of like the inherent contradiction that the government can legistlate abortion, school prayer and marriage but not feed, clothe or tend to the health of the people.

Convenient is right - makes them feel like they're doin good by exercising governmental power over behavior they don't like just as long as it doesn't cost them anything important like money.

lucysmom  posted on  2010-08-27   12:57:26 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#43. To: lucysmom (#42)

I think Carter's energy policy was more in tune with the founding fathers.

Riiight, cause the Founders thought gas lines were a good thing...(eyes rolling)

Sheesh, goofy.

Badeye  posted on  2010-08-27   13:10:31 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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