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

August 15, 2011

Wave of Attacks in Iraq Leaves at Least 57 Dead


By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT and YASIR GHAZI

BAGHDAD -- Insurgents across Iraq launched their most significant and wide-ranging attacks in months on Monday, killing 68 people and wounding over 300, marking the most violent day in Iraq this year.

The violence touched nearly every region of the country, except for Kurdistan, and appeared to be aimed at security forces in both Sunni and Shiite areas.

In all, there were 37 attacks, more than double the daily average this year, nearing the level of violence at the height of the sectarian conflict here in 2006 and 2007. The attacks included 11 car bombs, 19 improvised explosive devices and 2 suicide bombers.

Coming a little less than two weeks after the Iraqi government said it would negotiate with the United States about keeping some of its 48,000 troops here after the end of the year, the violence raised significant questions about the capabilities of the Iraqi security forces.

The most lethal attack occurred in the city of Kut, south of Baghdad, where a series of explosions inside the city's main market around 8 a.m. killed 35 people and wounded 71, according to a local security official. It was the country's deadliest attack since July 5, when nearly three dozen people were killed in the city of Taji, north of the Iraqi capital. It too, was attacked on Monday.

"I heard the sound of the explosion when I was walking towards the market," said Fathel Kadhem, 27, the owner of a candy store in Kut. "I went running to see what's going on and another explosion happened."

He added: "I saw all the people that got hurt and they were all young men."

Ahmed Abdul-Razzaq, a 35-year-old who sells produce, was wounded in the second explosion and blamed the local security forces for the attack.

"The market is blocked off and no cars are supposed to get in," he said, adding that the car had been parked inside the market since Sunday night.

"I was there helping the injured people but five minutes later the second explosion went off. This is all because of the government's neglect. I wonder how this car got in? It was only the police who could have allowed it in."

Violence had appeared to be trending down. In July, 178 people were killed in Iraq, excluding the semi-autonomous region of Kurdistan, according to statistics complied by the Interior Ministry. That marked a significant decrease from June, when 342 people were killed, and May, when 321 were killed.

A spokeswoman for the United States military in Iraq said they had not received any reports of attacks on American forces.

"We're trying to keep up with the news pouring out from Iraqi media about attacks in most of the major cities today, mostly VBIEDs," the spokeswoman said, referring to military's acronym for car bombs.

In Diyala Province, north of Baghdad, there were at least a dozen explosions that left 6 dead and wounded 29, according to a local security official. One blast struck near the convoy for the mayor of Baquba, the capital of Diyala, injuring him and three of his guards. Gunmen attacked two checkpoints in Baquba, killing five members of Iraqs security forces.

Two suicide bombers in Salahuddin Province, which borders Diyala, attacked an Iraqi counterterrorism unit in the city of Tikrit, killing 3 a high-ranking officer and two other members of the unit and wounding at least 10 people, according to a security official.

Two car bombs were detonated in the southern Iraqi city of Najaf, killing 8 and wounding 20, according to a health official.

There was violence in the capital, Baghdad, too. A car bomb was detonated near a government convoy in the neighborhood of Mansur, wounding five people, including two security guards, according to security officials.

The violence was so severe that the interior minister sent out a message to all of the country's security forces and traffic police to be vigilant about parked cars.

Saad Ahmed, a 38-year-old policeman who was wounded  in Taji, said that he opened fire on a suicide bomber who was driving towards him.

The car struck Mr. Ahmed, he fell on the ground and then stood up and fired on him again. Seconds later, the attacker detonated the car bomb.

"I looked at my body and I was drowning in blood," he said at Khadumiya Hospital in Baghdad, where he was being treated for wounds to his legs, arm and neck. "I just thought about my friends and if they were O.K. because it was 9:15 in the morning and there was a change in shifts."

He added: "It is Ramadan this month and we should pray that we won't kill each other. What crime did we commit? We were just trying to protect our country."

Another policeman being treated at the hospital, Amir Khazal, 33, said that he was leaving work at the time of the attack.

"I was just about the leave the checkpoint for vacation," he said. "All I wanted was to get home to my kids. I heard gunfire at the beginning and then I heard shouting saying 'Car bomb, car comb.'"

"After that there was a boom," he added. "I heard my friend calling me 'Help, help, I lost my leg.'"

Iraqi employees for The New York Times contributed reporting from Kut, Diyala Province, Salahuddin Province and Kirkuk.

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August 15, 2011

Threat Resurges in Deadliest Day of Year for Iraq

By MICHAEL S. SCHMIDT

BAGHDAD -- A chilling series of fatal attacks across Iraq on Monday sent a disheartening message to the Iraqi and American governments: After hundreds of billions of dollars spent since the United States invasion in 2003, and tens of thousands of lives lost, insurgents remain a potent and perhaps resurging threat to Iraqis and the American troops still in the country.

The 42 apparently coordinated attacks underscored the reality that few places in Iraq are safe. The number of American troops killed this year has jumped, ahead of their planned withdrawal. Monday's strikes against civilians and security forces across the country made it the deadliest day of the year for Iraqis, and it came in many forms: suicide attacks, car bombs, homemade bombs and gunmen.

By sundown, when Iraqis broke their fast in observance of the holy month of Ramadan, the death toll had reached 89, including 3 suicide bombers, and an additional 315 people were wounded. The widespread and lethal nature of the attacks -- compared with an average of 14 a day this year -- frightened many Iraqis, because it suggested that radical Sunni insurgents, led by Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, may have regained the capacity for the kind of violence that plagued Iraq at the height of the sectarian war in 2006 and 2007.

But it also demonstrated the multiple and simultaneous threats gripping the nation at this pivotal time, with Shiite militants being linked with the killing of American troops, and threatening more violence if they remain, and Iraqi forces clearly unable to preserve the peace.

"Our forces are supposed to have the intelligence capabilities to prevent these types of breaches," said Shawn Mohammed Taha, a Kurdish member of Parliament who serves on its security committee. "The fact is, the insurgents have acted like our security forces don't even exist."

No group claimed responsibility for the attacks on Monday. But in a voice recording posted on a Web site for Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia last week, a spokesman for the terrorist group said that it was preparing a wide-scale strike.

"I promise you that we are on the right path," said the spokesman, Abu Muhammad 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 Mesopotamia 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."

The attacks came just two weeks after the Iraqi government agreed to formally negotiate with the United States about possibly leaving some troops in Iraq after the end of the year.

"The insurgents are able to attack anywhere and everywhere and no one can really stop them," Mr. Taha said, adding that the United States has achieved little in trying to improve Iraq's own intelligence operation.

Still, one political analyst said he saw the attacks as a calculated bid to frighten the Iraqis into asking the American forces to stay behind, because if they completely withdraw, Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia will have lost its rationale for existing.

"If the Americans leave, Al Qaeda will no longer have an excuse to operate throughout the country," said Hamid Fhadil, a professor of political science at Baghdad University. "Al Qaeda wants Americans to stay here so they will have Iraq as a battlefield to fight the Americans."

Mr. Fhadil said that one of the biggest problems with the Iraqi security forces was that they were more loyal to armed groups like Al Qaeda and Shiite militias than to the Iraqi government. "This army is not able to take control by itself," he said. "It's hard to talk about the existence of an Iraqi Army and a Ministry of Interior without them being loyal to Iraq."

The attacks began around 3:30 a.m. on Monday in the city of Ramadi, when two improvised bombs exploded near a police patrol, killing three officers and wounding two others. A half-hour later in the city of Baquba, gunmen attacked a checkpoint, killing one police officer.

About 5:45 a.m., two suicide bombers attacked an Iraqi counterterrorism unit in the city of Tikrit, killing three officers.

Fifteen minutes later, gunmen with silencer weapons attacked a group of Iraqi Army officers in Baquba, killing five.

At 7:45 a.m., the day's most lethal attack occurred when two car bombs exploded in a market in the southern city of Kut, killing 35 people and wounding 71 others.

An hour and a half after that attack, two suicide car bombers struck a police checkpoint in the city of Taji, just north of Baghdad, killing one person and wounding nine, including seven officers.

Saad Ahmed, 38, a policeman who was wounded in Taji, said he opened fire on a suicide bomber who was driving toward him.

The car struck Mr. Ahmed and knocked him to the ground. He said he stood up and fired again. Seconds later, the attacker detonated the car bomb.

"I looked at my body, and I was drowning in blood," he said at Kadhimiya Hospital in Baghdad, where he was being treated for wounds to his legs, arm and neck. "I just thought about my friends and if they were O.K., because it was 9:15 in the morning and there was a change in shifts."

He added: "It is Ramadan this month, and we should pray that we won't kill each other. What crime did we commit? We were just trying to protect our country."

Another policeman being treated at the hospital, Amir Khazal, 33, said that he was leaving work at the time of the attack.

"I was just about the leave the checkpoint for vacation," he said. "All I wanted was to get home to my kids. I heard gunfire at the beginning and then I heard shouting saying, 'Car bomb, car bomb!' " "After that there was a boom," he said. "I heard my friend calling me: 'Help, help, I lost my leg!' "

Around 8 p.m., gunmen dressed in military uniforms stormed into a mosque in the city of Yusufiya, just south of Baghdad. The gunmen read off the names of seven people who had been loyal to the United States and joined the Awakening movement, took them outside the mosque and executed them.

After the execution, the gunmen told the people gathered in the mosque that they were from Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia and then left.

Reporting was contributed by Yasir Ghazi and Duraid Adnan from Baghdad, and Iraqi employees of The New York Times from the provinces of Diyala, Salahuddin, Babil and Anbar, and the cities of Kirkuk, Najaf, Kut and Mosul.