Iraqis suffer deadliest day of 2012

A man stands in front of the scene of a bomb attack in Madain, Iraq, July 23, 2012. / AP Photo
Updated at 3:21 p.m. ET
(AP) BAGHDAD - Bombings and shootings ripped across Iraq on Monday, killing at least 106 people in the deadliest day in more than two years. The coordinated attacks in 15 cities sent a chilling warning that al Qaeda is slowly resurging in the security vacuum created by a weak government in Baghdad and the departure of the U.S. military seven months ago.
Though there was no immediate claim of responsibility, the leader of al Qaeda in Iraq declared last week a new offensive aimed at sowing instability across the country.
Iraqi militants have kept up a steady drumbeat of deadly attacks since the U.S. pulled out in December, ending nearly a decade of war. They have sought to increase the chaos created by the deepening sectarian political crisis that pits Sunni and Kurdish leaders against Shiite political powers.
"Al Qaeda is trying to send a message that it is still strong and can choose the time and places to attack," said Shiite lawmaker Hakim al-Zamili, a member of parliament's security and defense committee. He said weaknesses in Iraq's ability to gather intelligence about terror plots, or stop them despite security checkpoints has shown how toothless the government is in protecting its people.
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Al-Zamili also raised the specter of al Qaeda infiltrating security forces. If these gaps are not closed quickly, he said, "the attacks and explosions will continue and al Qaeda will be stronger."
In one brazen assault on Monday, three carloads of gunmen pulled up at an Iraqi army base early Monday near the northeastern town of Udaim and opened fire, killing 13 soldiers before escaping, two senior police officials said.
The deadliest attack, however, took place just north of Baghdad in the town of Taji, where a double bombing killed at least 41 people. The blasts were timed to hit as police rushed to help victims from a series of five explosions minutes earlier.
Monday's violence bore most of the hallmarks of al Qaeda: the bombings and shootings all took place within a few hours of each other and struck mostly at security forces and government offices favorite targets of the predominantly Sunni militants. And most of it happened in the capital and in northern areas the terror group used to control and where they now stand the best chance of regaining a foothold.
More than 200 people also were wounded in the onslaught Monday, Iraq's bloodiest day since a string of nationwide attacks on May 10, 2010, killed at least 119 people. Spokesmen for Iraq's government and Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki could not be immediately reached for comment.
Iraq's Interior Ministry, which oversees the country's security, condemned the attacks, calling them a "flagrant violation" of the ongoing Muslim holy month of Ramadan. It said security officials now planned to devise a new strategy to protect the public, but said complaints about the security gaps were "not useful."
For years, al Qaeda in Iraq has been seeking to re-assert its might, although U.S. and Iraqi officials insist it is nowhere as strong as it was when the nation came to the brink of civil war between 2006 and 2008.
The militant group made a series of missteps shortly afterward targeting civilians, imposing overly strict Islamic discipline, alienating tribal leaders that undercut its support in Iraq's Sunni communities and helped lead to the widespread defection of fighters to groups allied with the U.S. The flow of funding, arms and fighters slowed to a trickle, and al Qaeda in Iraq since has struggled, but failed, to command much power.
But the militant group's local wing known as the Islamic State of Iraq is now seizing on the vacuum left by the Americans and Baghdad's fragmented government.
Baghdad political analyst Hadi Jalo said al Qaeda in Iraq, as a Sunni group, feels emboldened by the success of the Sunni-dominated uprising in neighboring Syria against Damascus' Alawite rulers. The Alawites are an offshoot of Shiite Islam.
"It is leading a sectarian war and Iraq is part of its war and ideology in this region," Jalo said.
In a statement issued Saturday, the leader of al Qaeda's affiliate in Iraq warned that the militant network is returning to strongholds from which it was driven from while the American military was here.
"The majority of the Sunnis in Iraq support al Qaeda and are waiting for its return," Islamic State of Iraq leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi said in the statement that was posted on a militant website.
The local wing of al Qaeda, known as the Islamic State of Iraq, has long been at odds with al Qaeda's central leadership. The global network's current leader, Ayman al-Zawahri, has in the past criticized Iraq's movement for targeting civilians. But earlier this year, al-Zawahri softened his stance, and included ISI militants in a network plea for fighters to join the Syrian uprising.
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Take a page form higher thinkers. Feuds are made violent by taking away food and water from either side. Read history, Iraq was bad but it wasn't this bad. The madness was brought to the surface by the US invasion.
Imagine how many racially-based shootings would cause the same kind of anger to sprout up in a state like Alabama or Mississippi?
At the same time it will help stop the oil companies and their Republicon slaves workers from starting the next illegal invasion.
All the good intentions of its fighting men and women giving candies to children citing burkha-clad women will never make up for the destruction they wreaked on this country. They have no moral excuse for what they have done.
To would-be dissenters/commenters, please use something more original than libtard or f*cktard. It makes me believe there is just one guy insulting me using different names.
in a few years. If you support open immigration, this is the future that you are cursing your children and grandchildren to.
and then passing hefty political contributions (disguised bribes) to our congress and presidential candidates to keep more orders coming.
This is not my imagination. This is how the late president Dwight Eisenhower predicted in his speech to the U.S. Congress in 1956 that the political situation will be in the U.S. is the future time. That future time is "NOW!" (Eisenhower's speech is available in any library - for anyone with doubt!)
Al Qaeda is not nearly finished - as Obama's terrorism experts claim. It has learned how to avoid infiltrators by Western agents posing as jihadists, and how to become indistinguishable among the crowds. And that Al Qaeda aspect is now at work in Syria. It may come to haunt us later! Nikos Retsos, retired professor
Weird, how that worked out, huh? I mean, a cathedral is so much shinier, expensive and populated with attendees. You can fit like 3 thousand people in there - but nope... just those little Christian churches with less than 100 people in it.