Scores Dead In String Of Iraq Blasts
Double-Bombing In Baghdad Targeted Police Recruits; Car Bomb In Mosul Kills At Least 16
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A security guard is seen looking at schoolbooks of students who were on a mini bus that was hit by a car bomb near the entrance to a police academy in Baghdad, Iraq, Dec. 1, 2008. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)
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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.
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Interactive Iraq: 5 Years At War Five years after the U.S.-led invasion, the war wears on.
Four U.S. soldiers and an Iraqi general were among the wounded.
The bloodiest attack in the capital began when a suicide bomber detonated an explosives vest packed with ball-bearings in a line of recruits at the entrance to Baghdad's police academy. Minutes later, the U.S. military says a car parked 150 yards away exploded, apparently aimed at those responding to the first blast. At least 16 people were killed and nearly 50 wounded.
In Mosul, police say a suicide car bomber detonated his explosives as a joint U.S.-Iraqi convoy drove by in a crowded commercial area. At least 15 people were killed and 30 wounded in that attack, officials said.
The wave of violence took place after U.S. combat deaths dropped to eight in November - one of the lowest monthly levels of the war.
Bloodied police uniforms and a military boot left by victims were scattered with the crumpled metal hulk of the car bomb on the charred street in the aftermath of the bombing, according to Associated Press Television News footage.
The attacker apparently was a teenage boy whose head was taken to a local hospital, a police officer said. An AP photographer saw the head and confirmed it appeared to be a teenage boy.
Those killed included five policemen and 11 recruits, while the wounded included 11 policemen and 35 recruits, according to police and hospital officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to release the information.
The U.S. military initially said the death toll appeared to be about 20 but later said reports indicated six people were killed and 20 wounded.
In Mosul, a suicide car bomber detonated his explosives as a joint U.S.-Iraqi convoy drove by in a crowded commercial area, a police officer said. The officer also declined to be identified for the same reason.
At least 15 people - most civilians - were killed and 30 wounded in that attack, the officer said. An official at the morgue where the bodies were taken confirmed the death toll.
The U.S. military said initial reports show eight Iraqi civilians were killed in Monday's attack. It says two U.S. soldiers and 30 Iraqis were wounded.
Conflicting casualty tolls are common in the chaotic aftermath of bombings in Iraq.
Earlier Monday, a senior Defense Ministry official was wounded in a roadside bomb attack that killed one of his bodyguards, Iraqi military spokesman Maj. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi said.
The blast occurred in the Sulaikh neighborhood, a mainly Sunni area in northern Baghdad.
The wounded official, Maj. Gen. Mudhir al-Mola, is in charge of affairs related to the Sunni guards known as the Sons of Iraq who have joined forces with U.S. troops against al Qaeda in Iraq, according to al-Moussawi.
The move is considered a key factor in the overall decline in Iraq violence.
The Shiite-led government assumed responsibility for the Sunnis in Baghdad this fall.
Iraqi forces will need to shoulder a greater share of security responsibility in the coming year. While the new Status of Forces agreement will keep American forces in Iraq for three more years, the agreement essentially states that U.S. forces will be confined to their bases as of June 2009.
CBS News correspondent Elizabeth Palmer reported from Baghdad that, while most military analysts say the Iraqis are not ready to take over security duties yet, there is broad recognition that the national forces have made huge strides in the last year.
In exchange for their vote, the Sunnis won a major concession from the pacts largely Shiite supporters; a national referendum on the agreement will be held by July 30.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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See all 40 CommentsPosted by angel-jo at 08:58 PM : Dec 03, 2008
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******now that those warmongering neoconservatives are gone..these terrorists are now free and has full right to killing and violating your rights..
if you wonder what happened..watch a cindy sheehan speech
Posted by Centerfall94 at 12:32 PM : Dec 01, 2008
And what do we do about all the effort to build the infrastructure again? We have a large Embassy over there I think, should will just leave that too?
You know the Iraqis may just blame America for not staying long enough to make the difference--that''s why they will have failed. Not because of religious intolerance.
John McCain: "The surge is working"
Sarah Palin: "The surge is workin'''' gosh darnit, and Joe the Plumber knows that!"
Posted by ByeNeocons at 04:07 PM : Dec 01, 2008
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********
obama: "lets pretend it does not exist"
and it seems like its warming up now..pretty much everywhere you look..everywhere you go..you hear nothing but terrorist attacking and at ITS WAKE...the liberals are busy defending it..
Posted by earache4 at 06:45 PM : Dec 01, 2008
In a just world, the liar.
Posted by IwasHungry68
These terrorists in Iraq today come from Iran, and other stan countries, like Terrorstan
John McCain: "The surge is working"
Sarah Palin: "The surge is workin'' gosh darnit, and Joe the Plumber knows that!"
Posted by mr22587 at 02:02 PM
Dead or alive!!!!
Posted by RondoGCD at 01:39 PM : Dec 01, 2008
So I gather you raised bloody hell when this country''s civil and military response teams failed during Katrina?
Because, you see, their FIRST responsibility is to US - and not to the oil companies and Bush, Cheney, & PNAC, LLP.
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