Car bombs in Baghdad, Kirkuk kill dozens By RYAN LENZ, Associated Press
BAGHDAD, Iraq - Bombs exploded Sunday in Baghdad and the northern oil center of Kirkuk, killing more than 60 people and dramatically escalating tension as the prime minister left for Washington for talks on reversing the country's slide toward civil war.
The blasts occurred as Iraqi forces and the U.S.-led coalition mounted a major crackdown on the country's most feared Shiite militia, the Mahdi Army, blamed by Sunnis for many of the sectarian kidnappings and killings that threaten to tear the country apart.
The USA military is having a tough time in Iraq due to so many American Troops being shot.
Elsewhere in Baghdad, the ( USA ) Marines and Army continue their fight to free Iraq from the violence but are not making progress due to the insurgents putting up a severe fight. This was not expected when Bush over threw the Iraqi Government. It looks as if the USA will once again eat Crow.
2006-07-23
03:19:39
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8 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
in
Politics & Government
➔ Military
Iraq was a big mistake I never wanted our country to get into. I didn't even support Afganistan. Does it really stop acts of terror by creating more acts of terror? If I blow you up for blowing me up does it stop there? No.
2006-07-23 03:22:40
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answer #1
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answered by ? 5
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I expected that much out of Bush...after all a guy who invented the word misunderstimate is bound to misunderstimate anything.
And so...while I am saddened by the 60 deaths (while I aint a war supporter, I dont enjoy this), this alone wont mean that the war will be over. There were far more violent days before...and the Iraqis arent going under (yet...). And yes there will always be difficult times...no such thing as a free lunch.
And another thing...should the USA lose, they wont be the only ones who'll be eating crow (seriously...who in their right minds would eat crow), but the poor Iraqis who will be left in the "mercy" of the insurgents will also be eating it.
2006-07-23 10:32:48
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answer #2
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answered by betterdeadthansorry 5
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The Bush Nazis are building pemanent buildings that will house thousands of U.S. troops in Iraq.This is an occupation not a Liberation and Iran,Syria,Jordan, and Lebanon are next on the road to total domination for oil,profit,and The New World Order.
2006-07-23 10:37:19
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answer #3
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answered by theforce51 3
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as a person who just enlisted in the navy i don't look at being in iraq so much as a war. i see it as a fight and a nasty dirty one at that. to be honest i don't think we can help whats going on there. there will never be peace in the middle east and i think that we the government needs to come up with a plan to get the "bad guys" ASAP and get the hell out. every day we lose several american soldiers who are just doing there job of being there. its time to get the show on the road and gradually start pulling out.
2006-07-23 10:46:26
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answer #4
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answered by n_need_of_help 2
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Oh yeah we love war! It is so fun that is all we think about 27/7. Give me a break! I am a supporter because I know it will help Iraq in the long run.
2006-07-23 10:27:47
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answer #5
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answered by Luekas 4
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I'm enjoying that there hasn't been an act of domestic terrorism since 9/11.
How can anyone "enjoy" a war?
I believe in supporting our soldiers and killing our enemies. How would YOU do this- give them AIDS?
2006-07-23 10:27:35
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answer #6
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answered by R J 7
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You really like talking about eating crow. You are using such an old saying. Update your old hippy assface and get a new saying like the one below which fits you well.
Your an idiot.
2006-07-23 11:07:52
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answer #7
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answered by Michael A 3
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LIAR ERUDITE has struck again with another flight of fantasy that he has masked as a news story. He has drawn you imbeciles into it, as well, in that everyone who has responded to this story without actually doing the research is too stupid to be listened to in the first place. Here is the ORIGINAL story:
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/I/IRAQ?SITE=TNKNN&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT
Car bombs in Baghdad, Kirkuk kill dozens
By RYAN LENZ
Associated Press Writer
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- Bombs exploded Sunday in Baghdad and the northern oil center of Kirkuk, killing more than 60 people and dramatically escalating tension as the prime minister left for Washington for talks on reversing the country's slide toward civil war.
The blasts occurred as Iraqi forces and the U.S.-led coalition mounted a major crackdown on the country's most feared Shiite militia, the Mahdi Army, blamed by Sunnis for many of the sectarian kidnappings and killings that threaten to tear the country apart.
Elsewhere in Baghdad, Saddam Hussein was hospitalized Sunday on the 17th day of a hunger strike, the chief prosecutor in his trial said. Jaafar al-Moussawi said he visited the prison Sunday where Saddam and the seven other co-defendants are held and was told that the ex-president's health "is unstable because of the hunger strike."
The Baghdad bombing occurred Sunday when a suicide driver detonated a minivan in the Mahdi Army stronghold of Sadr City at the entrance to the Jameelah market, which was packed with shoppers and vendors on the first day of the Iraqi workweek.
An Iraqi army statement said 34 people were killed and 73 were wounded. Eight more people were killed and 20 wounded when a second bomb exploded two hours later at a municipal government building in Sadr City, the Iraqi army said.
In Kirkuk, a car bomb detonated at midday near a courthouse in the city market district, killing 20 and wounding more than 150, according to police Brig. Gen. Sarhat Qadir. It was the fourth car bombing this month in Kirkuk, where tensions are rising among Arabs, Kurds and Turkomen for control of the area's vast oil wealth.
A wave of bombings, shootings and sectarian killings has plunged Iraq's new unity government into a deep crisis only two months after Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki took office, pledging to pursue national reconciliation and to pave the way for a U.S. military withdrawal.
Instead, the U.S. military is now planning to bolster its forces in Baghdad to cope with the security crisis.
Al-Maliki and a large delegation left Sunday for Washington, where he will meet President Bush on Tuesday. Security is expected to dominate the talks.
In Sadr City, dazed and angry people milled about the car bombing site, many of them still reeling from the effects of a raid against what the U.S. military described as "death squad" members.
"We could not sleep because of the raid, and today we woke up with the explosion of the car bomb," one man told Associated Press Television without giving his name. "How long is it going to be like this?"
Police searched through the wreckage of the car bomb for more victims and warned bystanders to leave or they would be arrested. An elderly man, his clothes soaked in blood, wept as he called out the name of a missing relative.
It was the second major car bombing in Sadr City this month. A blast July 1 killed 66 people, and set off a new wave of reprisal killings and kidnappings of Sunnis by Shiite extremists seeking revenge.
Key to ending the reprisal attacks is to rein in sectarian militias and death squads that U.S. officials say are a greater threat to Iraq than the Sunni insurgents who have been fighting the coalition since 2003. The Mahdi Army is believed to be the biggest Shiite militia.
Before dawn Sunday, Iraqi troops and U.S. advisers raided Sadr City and the mostly Shiite district of Shula, U.S. and Iraqi officials said. The sounds of explosions and bursts of automatic fire echoed through the heart of the capital.
Two hostages were freed in the Sadr City operation. Two people were arrested in Shula, officials said.
Last weekend, British troops arrested the commander of Mahdi forces in Basra, Iraq's second largest city.
On Saturday, U.S. and Iraqi troops battled Mahdi fighters in Musayyib. 40 miles south of Baghdad in a three-hour gunbattle that killed 15 extremists and one Iraqi soldier.
The security crisis has diverted attention among the Shiite political establishment from the Israeli attacks against the Shiite militia Hezbollah in Lebanon. Nevertheless, some Shiite politicians had urged al-Maliki to cancel his Washington trip to protest the Lebanon attacks.
Al-Maliki, a former Shiite activist who spent years in exile in Syria, has condemned Israel's offensive and has complained that the United States and the international community have not done enough to stop it. He told reporters he would convey that message personally to Bush.
2006-07-23 10:41:06
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answer #8
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answered by A Guy 3
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