Six More GIs Dead In Iraq Violence
Total Of 11 U.S. Troops Killed Thursday Amid Surge In Attacks
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Play CBS Video Video Violent Day In Iraq On one of the deadliest days in Iraq in months, suicide bombers and insurgent gunmen killed at least 125 Iraqis, and five Americans died in a roadside bombing. Kelly Cobiella reports.
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Video Carnage In Iraq It has been an extremely deadly day in Iraq. At least 130 people have been killed, including five U.S. soldiers. Claudia Coffey reports.
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Video More Than 100 Dead In Iraq Roadside bombings have killed five U.S. troops, and suicide bombers targeting Shiite pilgrims and police recruits have claimed more than 100 lives. Scott Rapoport reports.
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U.S. soldiers of the 501 Special Troops Battalion inspect an abandoned house in a rural area on the outskirts of the northern city of Tikrit, January 2, 2006. (Getty Images/Filippo Monteforte)
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A coffin is carried for burial of one of the victims of Thursday's Karabala suicide bombing January 6, 2006. (Getty Images/Qassem Zein)
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Relatives indentify an infant victim in a suicide bomb attack, outside of the hospital in Karbala, Iraq, Jan. 5, 2006. (CBS/AP)
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Bodies lie in the street after suicide bomb attack in Karbala, Iraq, in this image taken from TV, Jan. 5, 2006. (AP)
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This video still shows a child with a face stained by blood after an attack near a Shiite shrine in Karbala, Iraq, Jan. 5, 2006. (AP /APTN)
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Interactive Battle For Iraq The government, the insurgency, key players, background and photos.
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Interactive Attacks Map Details on the insurgency and terrorism that has continued to take lives since the fall of Saddam.
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Interactive To The Polls Iraqis vote for their first permanent, democratically-elected government. Find out what's at stake.
In Ramadi, a Sunni insurgent stronghold 70 miles west of the capital, Marine Capt. Jeffrey S. Pool said police recruits got back in line to continue the screening process after a suicide bomber attacked. At least 56 recruits — apparently desperate for a relatively well-paying job in the impoverished area — were killed.
Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari, a Shiite, denounced the violence as an attempt to derail the political process at a time when progress was being made toward a broad-based government that would include the Sunni Arabs and thus possibly weaken the insurgency.
Iraq's main Shiite religious party, the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution, issued a veiled threat to Sunnis supporting the insurgency that its patience was wearing thin.
But in a chord struck by several politicians, the party also condemned policies it said were imposed by the U.S.-led coalition that were hampering Iraqi security forces' counterterrorism work. The Americans have increased their oversight of Shiite-dominated security forces following widespread charges of abuse, especially of Sunni Arab detainees.
"Not allowing these two ministries to do their job means exposing helpless Iraqis to ruthless terrorists," SCIRI said. "They should know that the patience of our people will not last for a long time with these sectarian dirty crimes."
The warning to Sunnis carried the possibility of using militias like the Badr Brigade, the former military wing of SCIRI, to exact vengeance against Sunni supporters of insurgents.
Hadi al-A'meri, the secretary general of the Badr Brigade, also blamed the attacks on the U.S.-led coalition. "Why are they putting obstacles in the way of the work of the Interior Ministry?" he asked.
The U.S. Embassy in Baghdad said it was appalled by the attacks. "This terror aims simply to kill innocent Iraqis and provoke further conflict between them," the embassy said.
The Iraqi Accordance Front, the main Sunni coalition that is negotiating with Shiites and Kurds over a coalition government after the Dec. 15 election, denounced the violence but blamed Iraq's leaders for allowing it to happen.
"This government ... has become an accomplice in the cycle of violence by adopting sectarian policies and by weakening the state and strengthening militia groups," said Izzat al-Shahbandar, a senior official with the Sunni coalition.
The three main attacks Thursday all took place within an hour. The death toll — the largest single-day total since Sept. 14, when 162 died
Mohammed Saheb, who was wounded in the head in the Karbala attack, said he travels to the shrine every Thursday in advance of Friday prayers — as many pilgrims do.
"I never thought that such a crime could happen near this holy site," Saheb said. "The terrorists spare no place from their ugly deeds."
The Karbala bomber detonated a vest stuffed with about 18 pounds of explosives and several hand grenades, Col. Razaq al-Taie said.
The bombing brought back memories of the deadliest civilian attack in Iraq since the war began. On March 2, 2004, coordinated blasts from suicide bombers, mortars and planted explosives exploded near shrines in Karbala and Baghdad, killing at least 181 people. Since then, however, Karbala had been relatively free of violence.
©MMVI, 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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