BAGHDAD, Feb. 4, 2007

Baghdad Bombing Death Toll Rises

Casualty Count Reads 137 Dead From Worst Single Bomb Attack Since Start Of War

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    • People walk past destroyed buildings in the obliterated Sadriyah outdoor market in a predominantly Shiite area of Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, Feb. 4, 2007, after a suicide bomber driving a truck loaded with a ton of explosives detonated in the area Saturday, killing at least 137 people.

      People walk past destroyed buildings in the obliterated Sadriyah outdoor market in a predominantly Shiite area of Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, Feb. 4, 2007, after a suicide bomber driving a truck loaded with a ton of explosives detonated in the area Saturday, killing at least 137 people.  (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)

    • Abu Abdullah, a shop owner who lost two of his sons in Saturday's bomb explosion, cries while walking through the debris of what used to be his shop in the obliterated Sadriyah outdoor market in Baghdad, Sunday, Feb. 4, 2007.

      Abu Abdullah, a shop owner who lost two of his sons in Saturday's bomb explosion, cries while walking through the debris of what used to be his shop in the obliterated Sadriyah outdoor market in Baghdad, Sunday, Feb. 4, 2007.  (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed)

    • A man wounded in a bomb blast is brought to the Imam Ali hospital in the Shiite enclave of Sadr City in Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday, Feb. 3, 2007.

      A man wounded in a bomb blast is brought to the Imam Ali hospital in the Shiite enclave of Sadr City in Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday, Feb. 3, 2007.  (AP)

    • The widow of Jassim Talib, one of the victims of Saturday's Sadriyah market bombing, stands besides the coffin of her husband during his funeral in the Shiite holy city of Najaf, 100 miles south of Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, Feb. 4, 2007.

      The widow of Jassim Talib, one of the victims of Saturday's Sadriyah market bombing, stands besides the coffin of her husband during his funeral in the Shiite holy city of Najaf, 100 miles south of Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, Feb. 4, 2007.  (AP Photo/Alaa al-Marjani)

    • Smoke billows from the site of an explosion in central Baghdad, where a suicide truck bomb slammed into a market in the district of Al-Sadriyah. More than a hundred people were killed and more than 200 were injured.

      Smoke billows from the site of an explosion in central Baghdad, where a suicide truck bomb slammed into a market in the district of Al-Sadriyah. More than a hundred people were killed and more than 200 were injured.  (Joseph Eid/AFP/Getty Images)

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(CBS/AP)  Stunned Iraqis picked through the rubble of devastated buildings and loaded coffins onto minivans Sunday after a suicide truck bomber obliterated a Baghdad market in a mainly Shiite area, killing at least 132 people in the deadliest single strike by a suicide bomber since the war started.

The explosion Saturday was fifth major bombing in less than a month targeting predominantly Shiite districts in Baghdad and the southern Shiite city of Hillah. It also was the worst in the capital since a series of car bombs and mortars killed at least 215 people in the Shiite district of Sadr City on Nov. 23.

Hospital officials said 137 people were killed and at least 300 were wounded in the thunderous explosion that sent a column of smoke into the sky on the east bank of the Tigris River. Heavily bandaged women, children and men filled hospital beds, while several bloodied bodies were piled onto blankets on the floor of the morgue, which was filled to capacity.

The blast shaved the walls off nearby buildings, sending bricks, desks and other debris spilling onto Kifah Street, where the Sadriyah market was located. Minivans carried wooden coffins as funeral services were held for the victims.

Adnan Lafta, a 51-year-old seller of gas cylinders, said people had recovered two bodies and body parts from under the rubble, while Shiite militiamen prevented anyone from entering the emptied buildings.

Police used loudspeakers to ask people to leave the area, fearing another suicide bomber could slip into the crowd.

"It is a tragedy. The terrorists want to punish the Iraqi people. There was no police or American presence in this market yesterday," Lafta said.

The bombing came just days before American and Iraqi forces were expected to start an all-out assault on Sunni and Shiite gunmen and bombers in the capital.

Only a day earlier, 16 American intelligence agencies made public a National Intelligence Estimate that said conditions in Baghdad were perilous.

"Unless efforts to reverse these conditions show measurable progress ... in the coming 12 to 18 months, we assess that the overall security situation will continue to deteriorate," a declassified synopsis of the report declared.

Suspicion fell on Sunni insurgents — al Qaeda in Iraq and allied groups in particular. The militant bombers are believed to have stepped up their campaign against Shiites in the final days before the joint U.S.-Iraqi crackdown in Baghdad. Many saw the operation as a last-chance effort to clamp off violence that has turned the capital into a sectarian battleground.

Saturday's death toll surpassed a Feb. 28, 2005, suicide car bomb targeting mostly Shiite police and national guard recruits in Hillah that killed 125.

In the hours after the explosion, Shiite and Sunni mortar teams traded fire across the darkened city. Two people were killed and 20 wounded in one predominantly Sunni district.

The White House called the bombing an atrocity.

U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad said the bombing was "an example of what the forces of evil will do to intimidate the Iraqi people."

Maj. Gen. Jihad al-Jabiri of the Iraqi Interior Ministry said the truck had been packed with a ton of explosives.

The Sadriyah market sits on a side street lined with shops and vendors selling produce, meat and other staples. The market is about 500 meters from a Sunni shrine.

Not far from the Sadriyah marketplace, a suicide bomber crashed his car into the Bab al-Sharqi market 12 days ago and killed 88 people.

South of Baghdad, a pair of suicide bombers detonated explosives Thursday among shoppers in a crowded outdoor market in Hillah, killing at least 73 people and wounding 163.

Iraqi authorities said that 145 people were killed or were found dead Saturday, including those killed in the market bombing. Of the total, 19 were found dumped in the capital, most of the bodies showing signs of torture.

In other developments:

  • The U.S. military reported the deaths of five more soldiers — four in fighting and one of an apparent heart attack. All died Friday.

  • For the first time the U.S. command has publicly acknowledged that the three Army and one private helicopters which have crashed in Iraq since Jan. 20 appear to have been brought down by "some kind" of ground fire, but it is unclear whether this represents any new threat to U.S. aviation, the chief U.S. military spokesman said Sunday. Maj. Gen. William Caldwell told reporters that the investigations into the crashes are incomplete but "based on what we have seen, we're already making adjustments in our tactics and techniques and procedures as to how we employ our helicopters."

  • At least 22 people are dead in Iraq violence today, including eight people killed in two Baghdad car bombings. Among the dead are two cell phone company employees in a drive-by shooting and four policemen who were struck by a roadside bomb.

  • A parked car bomb also exploded near a transit area in northern Baghdad where buses pick up people going to the eastern Shiite district of Sadr City, killing at least four people and wounding 21, police said.

  • Iraqi soldiers arrested detained 32 militants and discovered four weapons caches in western Baghdad, seizing 1,128 mortar rounds, five rocket-propelled grenades, a rocket launcher, 50 anti-aircraft shells and other ammunition, according to the Defense Ministry.

  • Suspected Sunni attackers have appeared emboldened in recent weeks after radical anti-American Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, under pressure from fellow Shiites who dominate the government, ordered the thousands of gunmen in his Mahdi Army militia to avoid American attacks in the coming assault.

  • An Iraqi militant group tied to al Qaeda in Iraq announced Saturday it had launched its own new strategy to counter the coming U.S.-Iraqi crackdown. In an audiotape posted on a Web site commonly used by the insurgents, a voice purported to be that of Abu Abdullah Rashid al-Baghdadi, also known as Abu Omar al-Baghdadi, said the group would "widen the circle of battles" beyond Baghdad to all of Iraq. Al-Baghdadi heads The Mujahedeen Shura Council, an umbrella organization of insurgent groups in Iraq.

    © MMVII, CBS Interactive 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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    by feelfree1 February 6, 2007 2:28 AM EST
    usadvisor101,

    The source that I supplied was the first one that I found after a 2 second search. I you had any idea what was going on in Iraq, you would have already known about this event. it was covewred in mainstream media sources.

    Do your own research and find a source that suits you. There is really no question about this event, and it is a good example of Black-OPS terrorism. Most of the bombs are probably coming from agents like these. They are the only ones who obviously benefit from them, after all.

    Re: "or is just the usa that the STOPUSA website wants to somehow...stop?"

    I don't know, and I do not speak for them. Why don't you ask them instead of me?
    Reply to this comment
    by clestes-2009 February 5, 2007 3:33 PM EST
    This is beyond sad, beyond stupid, beyond comprehension. Our leaders are committing mass murder and we are complicit in it. The time to stand up and say enough is now!

    Bush, cheney, Rice and everyone single neocon who supported this war should be tried as war criminals and should spend the rest of their lives living in Iraq, helping to rebuild it.

    IMPEACH THE WHOLE BUSH ADMINISTATION!
    Reply to this comment
    by lars008-2009 February 5, 2007 9:30 AM EST
    this is a better to the real threat to humanity.....

    http://stopislam.cjb.net/
    Reply to this comment
    by feelfree1 February 5, 2007 3:49 AM EST
    Re: "Unless... in the coming 12 to 18 months, we assess that the overall security situation will continue to deteriorate,"

    Anyone following this realized that this was true, 3 years ago.

    Re: "It is a tragedy. The terrorists want to punish the Iraqi people. There was no police or American presence in this market yesterday," Lafta said."

    Who are these bombers?

    'British prison break and blown covert operation, exposes war on terrorism lie'

    www.stopusa.be/scripts/texte.php?section=BDBN&langue=3&id=24039
    Reply to this comment
    by lars008-2009 February 4, 2007 7:32 PM EST
    At least these 137 people will not have to face the torture chambers and the rape-rooms of the sunni and shiite radicals.
    Reply to this comment
    by feelfree1 February 4, 2007 7:04 PM EST
    Re: "Casualty Count Reads 137 Dead From Worst Single Bomb Attack Since Start Of War"

    At least these 137 people will not have to face the torture chambers and the rape-rooms of the Bush regime.
    Reply to this comment
    by lars008-2009 February 4, 2007 6:11 PM EST
    and here are some more of them skippy....... they are everywhere......
    UK TV AIRS SHOCK 'UNDERCOVER' LOOK INTO MAINSTREAM BRIT MOSQUES...

    Dispatches: Undercover Mosque
    This is part one of the much-anticipated UK Channel 4 documentary Dispatches: Undercover Mosque, exposing evidence of Islamic supremacism, shocking misogyny, and support for violence at a number of Britain%u2019s leading mosques and Muslim institutions. (Thanks again to LGF operative kasper.)

    http://littlegreenfootballs.com/weblog/?entry=24018_Dispatches-_Undercover_Mosque&only

    Dispatches - Undercover Mosque (1 to 6)

    UK Channel 4, aired 15th January 2007.
    Radicalisation of UK mosques by Saudi Wahabbism

    http://youtube.com/watch?v=peFQWuk4nuo
    http://youtube.com/watch?v=MuCLC8kjWCI
    http://youtube.com/watch?v=x5t5EqWX92k
    http://youtube.com/watch?v=yMztM0Z7BYE
    http://youtube.com/watch?v=V4Zv3BUmwqs
    http://youtube.com/watch?v=KvjvNScmTQA
    Reply to this comment
    by bellal-2009 February 4, 2007 6:05 PM EST
    I never supported this war to begin with.

    However, as recently as a month ago I thought:

    - We shouldn't leave Iraq prematurely, otherwise the chaos over there would only get worse and potentially involve the whole Middle East region as opposed to just Iraq.

    Now, my thoughts are:

    F'CK THEM! F'CK THEM ALL!! LET THEM ALL KILL EACH OTHER OR DEFEND THEMSELVES. NO MORE AMERICANS SHOULD BE KILLED FOR THIS BS!
    .
    .
    Posted by acauble1 at 08:37 AM : Feb 04, 2007

    I'm almost there with you acauble1. I find it amazing that European Union is not concerned.
    Reply to this comment
    by lars008-2009 February 4, 2007 6:04 PM EST
    here's your enemy skippy....... try to remember that......there will be a test later...... hahahahahaha

    'Obsession'
    Documentary gives insight into radical Islam%u2019s global threat
    http://www.foxnews.com/video2/launchPage.html?110506/110506_fnl_obsession&%27Obsession%27&FNL&Documentary%20gives%20insight%20into%20radical%20Islam%92s%20global%20threat&Foxlife&-1&%27Obsession%27&Video%20Launch%20Page&News

    http://www.obsessionthemovie.com/12min.htm
    http://myspace.com/waragainstthewest
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3BL4-mxE87w
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EUpcpEQtgp4
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7BUqXSeCDJc
    Reply to this comment
    by emhawks February 4, 2007 5:53 PM EST
    Is there no deliverance from the madness & bloodshed caused by Bush & Cheney?! Now we are heading towards war with Iran, predicted to happen this spring in several articles I've read.
    We must continue to keep up the pressure on our elected representatives in Washington to impeach Bush & indicte Cheney & close the pursestrings on the money for the Iraq war & the upcoming Iran war.
    "The most common way people give up their power is by thinking they don't have any."
    - Anonymous
    The American people do have power. We proved that in Nov. '06.
    "In the eyes of empire builders, men are not men but instruments."
    - Napoleon Bonaparte (1769-1821)
    "...fascism will come to America in the name of national security."
    - Jim Garrison
    "I know not with what weapons WWIII will be fought, but WWIV will be fought with sticks & stones."
    - Albert Einstein (1879-1955)

    Reply to this comment
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