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Dozens Killed In Baghdad Blasts, But U.S. Iraq Dispute Cause

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  • Dozens Killed In Baghdad Blasts, But U.S. Iraq Dispute Cause

    DOZENS KILLED IN BAGHDAD BLASTS, BUT U.S. IRAQ DISPUTE CAUSE
    Qassim Abdul-Zahra

    AP Worldstream
    Aug 14, 2006

    Residents dug through wrecked buildings Monday in a predominantly
    Shiite neighborhood devastated by explosions that killed at least 47
    people. Iraqis blamed bombs and rockets, but U.S. military experts
    pointed to a gas explosion.

    U.S. ordnance teams went to the Zafraniyah neighborhood and found
    "no evidence" of anything other than a "significant gas explosion"
    Sunday night followed by subsequent blasts related to a gas leak,
    the U.S. military spokesman, Maj. Gen. William B. Caldwell, said.

    "If in fact there had been a hole in the ground, there would be some
    residue from a Katyusha rocket if one had been fired there," he told
    reporters without elaborating.

    Iraqi officials insisted the damage was caused by car bombs and a
    rocket barrage fired from Dora, a mostly Sunni district _ evidence
    that sectarian violence roiling the capital shows no sign of stopping
    despite an additional 12,000 U.S. and Iraqi troops soldiers rushed
    in to enforce peace.

    Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's office said in a statement that the
    attack started with a number of Katyusha rockets falling on a building
    followed by a car bomb, more rockets on a post office, a motorcycle
    bomb near a public library and mortar rounds near an Armenian church.

    The statement said 47 people were killed and 100 injured.

    "The terrorists planned this ugly crime so that it would inflict
    maximum harm on innocent civilians, and this is proof of their
    deep-rooted hatred for Iraq and their attempt to incite sectarianism,"
    al-Maliki said.

    A Sunni extremist group, the al-Sahaba Soldiers, claimed responsibility
    in a statement posted on the Internet Monday. It said its fighters
    exploded two booby trapped cars and fired mortar shells, killing
    "more than 50 malicious Shiites."

    The statement warned the Shiites "to stop killing unarmed Sunnis and
    stop supporting the Crusaders," a reference to Americans. "Or else,
    wait for operations that will shatter your neighborhoods, God willing."

    The group had also claimed responsibility for a similar attack on
    July 27 on Karradah, another mostly Shiite neighborhood, which had
    killed 31 people.

    In Zafraniyah, huge slabs of concrete that once were ceilings in an
    apartment building lay atop each other in a heap at one spot.

    A middle-aged man in a bloodstained disdasha, the traditional
    Arab robe, wandered aimlessly, hitting his face with his hands in
    grief. Residents said his six children were crushed to death when
    his house collapsed.

    "This is terrorism against the whole nation," said Ali al-Sayedi,
    a municipal council member.

    A pedestrian bridge, ripped off its mooring, crushed a car
    underneath. The roof of a house displayed a wide hole, exposing the
    steel reinforcing rods bent inwards. The blackened wreckage of an
    overturned car lay nearby.

    The explosions Sunday night reinforced worries about the Sunni-Shiite
    violence that American officials consider the greatest threat to
    Iraq's stability more than three years after the U.S.-led invasion
    toppled Saddam Hussein's regime.

    On Sunday, U.S. and Iraqi soldiers began searching more than 4,000
    homes in the Sunni neighborhood of Amariyah in Baghdad while conducting
    a similar operation simultaneously in the Shiite district of Shula,
    the U.S. command said.

    Much of the violence has been blamed on Sunni insurgents and Shiite
    extremists, who have been waging retaliatory attacks since the bombing
    of a Shiite mosque on Feb. 22. The United Nations estimates nearly
    6,000 Iraqis were killed in May and June.

    Caldwell, the U.S. spokesman, said Shiite extremists here are receiving
    arms, munitions and training from Iran. But he added it is not clear
    if Iran's Shiite clergy-dominated government is involved.

    "We know that some Shiite elements have been in Iran receiving
    training ...

    We do know that weapons have been provided and IED technology been
    made available to these extremist elements," he said, referring to
    "improvised explosive devices" _ the homemade bombs that are widely
    used in the anti-U.S. insurgency and sectarian violence.

    On Sunday, unidentified gunmen killed Col. Mahjoub Khalaf Ghulam,
    a commander in the Iraqi oil protection force, in Tikrit, 80 miles
    north of Baghdad, police said. More than 250 Oil Ministry officials,
    workers and oil security personnel have been assassinated since the
    fall of Saddam.

    At least 10 other people were killed Monday in shootings and bombings
    across Iraq, including three blacksmiths shot by gunmen in the northern
    city of Mosul.
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