More Blasts In Iraq
Mortar Attack On U.S. Troops In Tikrit; Explosions In Baghdad
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Play CBS Video Video Anger In Iraq
Shiite Muslims voiced anger at U.S. troops and officials a day after bomb attacks that killed at least 169 Iraqis, almost all of them Shiites, Kimberly Dozier reports.
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Video Bloody Tuesday In Iraq In the latest attempt to spark civil war in Iraq, terrorists launched coordinated bomb attacks on mosques in two cities, killing over 140 Shiite muslims, Elizabeth Palmer reports.
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Video Iraq & Al Qaeda Richard Roth reports the attacks in Iraq fit a timetable for civil war outlined in a memo from Iraqi insurgents to al Qaeda. But a homegrown culture of Jihad is also taking root.
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As a crowd jeers, U.S. Army soldiers prepare to pull back to their base after stone-throwing mob attacked U.S. forces outside Camp Bonzai in Baghdad Tuesday. (AP)
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A flash from an explosion is seen between two buildings in Karbala Tuesday. (AP)
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U.S. Army soldiers run to reinforce the gate of Camp Bonzai in Baghdad after a stone-throwing mob attacked U.S. troops, who had been helping Iraqi victims of Tuesday's shrine attacks. (AP)
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In Baghdad, five large explosions rumbled through the center of Baghdad late Wednesday, and sirens sounded from the green zone where the headquarters of the U.S.-led occupation authority is located.
The blasts, which happened in quick succession just after 8 p.m., came nearly two-and-a-half hours after two other explosions were heard. The latter blasts were followed by a siren and a warning in English to "take cover." An "all clear" was sounded about a half hour later.
The U.S. military press office said it had no information where the blasts occurred.
U.S. administrator L. Paul Bremer said Wednesday it was "increasingly apparent" that a large part of terrorism comes from outside Iraq and pledged to increase controls of Iraq's borders to prevent infiltrators from entering the country.
Bremer spoke a day after devastating suicide attacks and bombings at Shiite shrines in Baghdad and Karbala.
In other developments:
Tuesday's attacks fanned the Shiites fears and anger at a time when leaders of Iraq's Shiite majority are pressing for more power in a future government after years of oppression under Saddam Hussein's regime.
Those killed and wounded were observing the Ashoura holiday, which commemorates the 7th century martyrdom of the prophet Muhammad's grandson Hussein, the event that triggered the schism between Shiite and Sunni Muslims.
Just two hours after Tuesday's attacks on Shiite pilgrims in Iraq, attackers in Quetta, Pakistan, sprayed gunfire and lobbed grenades into a solemn religious procession of Shiite Muslims, then blew themselves up as survivors scattered. At least 42 people died, and more than 160 were wounded.
Bremer said it was "increasingly apparent that a large part of this terrorism comes from outside the country."
"Tuesday showed us the dark vision of the evil doers. They fight to ward off harmony and are happy to pave the road to power with the corpses of their innocent victims," Bremer said. "The terrorists are dead set against the vision of a democratic Iraq, a vision shared by an overwhelming majority of the Iraqi people."
Some outraged Shiites lashed out Tuesday at U.S. forces. Iraq's most powerful Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Hussein al-Sistani - who holds enormous influence among Shiites - blamed the Americans for not providing security.
Shiite leaders complained Wednesday that the U.S.-led coalition has failed to protect the country's porous borders and demanded more controls to prevent terrorists and criminals from moving in and out of Iraq with ease.
"There are 8,000 border police on duty today and more are on the way," Bremer said. "We are adding hundreds of vehicles and doubling border police staffing in selected areas. The United States has committed $60 million to support border security. These are practical measures and they will have an effect."
Earlier Wednesday, Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt, deputy chief of operations, told reporters that a "mile high wall" around Iraq would not have been enough to have stopped Tuesday's attacks.
©MMIV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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