Series Of Iraq Attacks Mark Bloody Sunday
Bombs Kills Dozens Of Civilians, As Insurgents Battle U.S.-Allied Fighters And Iraqi Forces
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A newly-redesigned Iraqi flag, in which elements reminiscent of the Saddam Hussein regime were removed or altered in order to promote unity within the war-torn country, was raised outside the Kurdish parliament in Irbil, Iraq on Feb. 10, 2008. Meanwhile, more than 1,000 people demonstrated in Baghdad, chanting pro-Sunni and anti-American slogans and unfurling an Iraqi flag dating back to Saddam's rule. (AP Photo/Yahya Ahmed)
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Photo Essay Week In Iraq Photos A daily diary with scenes of the latest attacks and snapshots from the effort to rebuild a nation.
The violence was among a series of attacks in northern Iraq.
The military said U.S. and Iraqi forces had secured the area and the wounded had been evacuated to hospitals.
Iraqi police said earlier that a suicide car bomber targeted U.S.-allied fighters and Iraqi security forces at a checkpoint in Yathrib, near Balad, 50 miles north of Baghdad.
Police and members of an anti-al Qaeda group opened fire as the attacker sped toward a joint checkpoint, but he managed to detonate his explosives near some shops about 20 yards away, according to police at the Salahuddin provincial coordination center. Police said eight civilians were killed and 20 wounded.
The differing casualty figures and details could not immediately be reconciled.
Meanwhile, Iraqi police said four civilians were killed Sunday when a tanker truck exploded near an Iraqi Army checkpoint south of Mosul.
In an attempt to avert a suicide attack, Iraqi soldiers opened fire on the tanker about 30 yards from their post, an officer said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to media. The tanker exploded, killing four civilians and damaging six cars nearby, he said.
The blast also damaged a gas station near the checkpoint on the outskirts of Mosul, which lies 225 miles northwest of Baghdad.
The explosions came hours after suspected al Qaeda-linked insurgents stormed two villages in northwestern Iraq but were repelled by U.S.-allied fighters and Iraqi security forces in clashes that left at least 22 people dead, according to Sheik Fawaz al-Jarba, a Sunni lawmaker and the head of the anti-al Qaeda group in Mosul.
The attack began about 5 a.m. when about 25 carloads of heavily armed gunmen, drove into the villages of Khams Tlol (Five Hills) and al-Madina, about 50 miles west of Mosul, said Sheik Fawaz al-Jarba, a Sunni lawmaker and the head of the anti-al Qaeda group in Mosul.
He said villagers fought back against the militants, who were wielding rocket-propelled grenades, mortars and assault rifles, prompting clashes that lasted about five hours.
An Iraqi army officer in Mosul, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to disclose the information, confirmed the attack and said the fighting ended after Iraqi soldiers joined the battle.
The 22 killed included 10 militants and six members of the so-called awakening group in the area, as well as four women and two children, the officials said, adding that 10 civilians were wounded in the clashes.
The U.S. military in northern Iraq confirmed that an attack on compound housing its Sunni allies against al Qaeda in Iraq near Sinjar killed five U.S.-allied fighters dead and five wounded. It said 10 insurgents were killed.
Insurgents also attacked a group of civilians elsewhere in the northern Ninevah province on Sunday, killing two men and one child and wounding two other men, two women and two infants, according to the military.
Mosul, 225 miles northwest of Baghdad, the provincial capital of Ninevah is believed to be the last major urban stronghold for al Qaeda in Iraq after many insurgents were driven north by U.S.-led offensives in Baghdad and surrounding areas.
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has promised a "decisive battle" against the terror network there but given no start date. The U.S. military has warned it will not be a swift strike, but rather a grinding campaign that will require more firepower.
An al Qaeda front group for northern Iraq warned last week in an Internet statement that it was launching its own campaign in Mosul and surrounding areas and urged volunteers to join them to carry out suicide attacks on U.S. troops, Iraqi Shiites and the Kurdish peshmerga troops.
Meanwhile, two Iraqi Army officers were severely wounded in a drive-by shooting as they drove to work through western Baghdad, police said.
Gunmen opened fire on the officers' car in the predominantly Sunni Yarmouk neighborhood around 9 a.m., another officer said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release the information.
Brig. Mohammed Bassem Abdul-Ridha and Col. Firqad Salman Alwan - who work at the Defense Ministry's General Inspector Office - were both severely injured, he said.
Sen. Ensign: We Shouldn’t Leave Iraq Soon
Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev., rejected calls Saturday for the withdrawal of U.S. troops in Iraq by the end of the year, saying the decision should be based on "conditions on the ground and not on politics."
Speaking to reporters by conference call from Baghdad, Ensign said he now has "much more optimism" about the war in Iraq because of improved security following last year's increase in American troops.
His comments came amid a weekend tour of Iraq with Republican Sens. Tom Coburn of Oklahoma and Jim DeMint of South Carolina. The contingent met Saturday with top Iraqi leaders, as well as with Gen. David Petraeus, the top U.S. military commander in Iraq, and Ryan Crocker, the U.S. ambassador to Iraq.
The visit came two days after Rep. John Murtha, D-Pa., chairman of the House defense appropriations subcommittee, said he's preparing legislation that would give President Bush the war funding he wants this year, but on the condition that troops leave Iraq by the end of the year.
I strongly believe the American policy in Iraq should be to ensure a stable Iraq ... able to defend itself not only from within but from without. If we leave now, Iran will over-run it.
Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev."It should be based on conditions on the ground and not on politics," he said. "I strongly believe the American policy in Iraq should be to ensure a stable Iraq ... able to defend itself not only from within but from without. If we leave now, Iran will over-run it."
Petraeus has said he did not want to see the remainder of U.S. forces cut back too quickly after the withdrawal of an extra 30,000 troops by summer - a move that would leave roughly 130,000 to 135,000 troops, the same number as before President Bush sent the reinforcements.
Petraeus is scheduled to report to the president and Congress in April on possible additional cutbacks and any recommended changes in strategy.
Ensign, a strong supporter of the Bush administration's war policy, said he saw progress firsthand Saturday when he visited a town south of Baghdad.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- Prinzowhales, WHEN the surge ends - are you willing to admit you were wrong on it not being able to end ?
- Reply to this comment
- "The differing casualty figures and details could not immediately be reconciled."---I bet they couldn''t! The false-flag operations of the Green Zone Regime have become increasingly obvious--not only to their victims, but to Americans as well. The Regime is using the "Dirty War" strategy of Algeria and Argentina...committing acts of horror and terror and blaming the insurgency.
The surge cannot end...the surge allowed the Regime to keep up appearances in Iraq...the withdrawal of these forces would lead to disaster from a public relations and military perspective.
Troops Home Now!! Down with the Demopublican Regime! - Reply to this comment
- PNAC traitors
Demolition of WTC7
Cheney running NORAD on 9/11
Lies to invade Iraq
Ashcroft Color Warning System during election run-up
Rumsfeld and torture
Wolfowitz
Halliburton
Renditi
on flights
Bu$h
Gates
Death of Gitmo ''dupes''
Just counting Republicon blessings.
OK, off to work to pay more taxes... - Reply to this comment
- "SURGE" USURPED? A RETURN TO T!T FOR TAT?
ONLY NOW THE INSURGENTS ARE SUPPLYING THE
"TATS" AMD BUSH, CONDI & COMPANY ARE
SUPPLYING THEIR . . . . . RESPONSES ? - Reply to this comment
- Cut-and-Run from Iraq?...Surrender to Jihadis?..Heil Jihadistan? Yeah?..."Feel Good!" you are in Fairy-Land!
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Posted by dumbshun at 09:46 PM : Feb 10, 2008
+ report abuse
ROFLMAO So another Kool Aid Drinker!! ROFLMAO How much Kool Aid did you drink Sparky?? ROFLMAO It was LIES you pathetic loser! Yep that''s right the WHOLE thing was a LIE... 935 of them to be exact! ROFLMAO Sieg Heil Bush!! - Reply to this comment
- Well we TOLD YOU to quit making them.
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Posted by ilikecats1 at 11:54 PM : Feb 10, 2008
+ report abuse
This from a bootlicker who actually BELIEVED "mission accomplished"! ROFLMAO Yep that''s right folks when Bush make his "Landing" on the carrier way back when, this MORON was on here calling anyone who dared caution us about this VERY stupid statement, a Traitor or a "Liberal". ROFLMAO I''d say YOU are the LAST person on planet EARTH anyone should be listening to about Iraq! Now get your hood and sheet ready we''re going to salute the fuhrer and YOU know you want him to hear you! Ready? SIEG HEIL MEIN FUHRER! Good little nazi!! ROFLMAO - Reply to this comment
- How To Kill 4,000 Americans & over 150,000 For Politics -- The Political Easy Way
---- IGNORE ALL WAR PLANNING AS BUSH & HIS GOP DID & LIE ABOUT IT ---
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/11/washington/11army.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&hp - Reply to this comment
- Only dozens were killed? The surge is working real good. Normally there''s be hundreds dead, not dozens.
- Reply to this comment
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STOP THE TERROR IN IRAQ, BRING OUR TROOPS BACK.- Reply to this comment
Ex-NBA ref Tim Donaghy 



