Rice: Syria Stirring Up Iraq Woes
U.S. Flag Stomped; Soldier Killed; Sec. Of State Slams Syria
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Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has a word with Iraqi's Planning and Development Minister Barham Salih as they arrive for a press conference at the State Department Friday, May 20, 2005. (AP)
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A woman and child pass by the scene of a car bomb which exploded late Thursday outside the Imam al-Mahdi mosque in Baghdad's Saadiya neighborhood. (AP)
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A boy riding his bicycle looks at the mangled wreckage of a vehicle after a car bomb exploded near the airport road in Baghdad, Iraq Thursday, May 19, 2005. (AP)
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After a meeting with Iraq's planning minister, Barham Salih, Rice again accused Syria of supporting terror. To that she added an allegation that Syria may also be providing financial support for insurgents as well as "allowing its territory to be used to organize terrorist attacks against innocent Iraqis."
Her harsh contentions that Syria is stirring up trouble in Iraq came as thousands of Shiites stomped on American flags painted on roads outside mosques in a show of anger over the U.S. presence in Iraq, while Sunni leaders called Friday for a closure of places of worship to protest the sectarian violence many fear may erupt into civil war.
An American soldier was killed in a roadside bombing north of Baghdad, the military said. At least 1,628 U.S. military members have died since the Iraq war started in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.
In an effort to curb the daily violence, Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari said he will travel to Damascus to appeal in person for the government to take stronger steps to block insurgents from entering Iraq via Syria. Al-Jaafari and American officials blame foreign fighters for plotting many of the attacks.
For months, the State Department has complained that Syria was not guarding its borders to prevent infiltration of fighters into Iraq. "We are concerned in particular about Syrian behavior on its own border," she said Friday.
In other recent developments:
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