BAGHDAD, June 20, 2009

Truck Bomb Kills At Least 55 In Iraq

Nearly 200 Wounded In Blast; Maliki Declares Impending U.S. Withdrawal Of Troops From Cities A "Great Victory"

  • The crater left behind by a truck bombing is seen near Kirkuk, 180 miles north of Baghdad, June 20, 2009. Brig. Gen. Sarhat Qader said Saturday's explosion occurred following noon prayers south of the disputed city.

    The crater left behind by a truck bombing is seen near Kirkuk, 180 miles north of Baghdad, June 20, 2009. Brig. Gen. Sarhat Qader said Saturday's explosion occurred following noon prayers south of the disputed city.  (AP Photo/Emad Matti)

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(AP)  Last updated 1:35 p.m.ET.

A truck bomb exploded near a Shiite mosque in northern Iraq following prayers, killing at least 55 people and wounding nearly 200, police said, making it the deadliest blast in nearly two months.

The explosion came hours after Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki called the withdrawal of U.S. troops from cities by the end of this month a "great victory" and promised it would go ahead as scheduled. Officials have warned that insurgents are likely to stage more attacks in the wake of the withdrawal to try to undermine confidence in the government's ability to protect its people.

Worshippers were leaving the mosque in Taza, 10 miles south of Kirkuk, following noon prayers when the truck exploded, according to police Brig. Gen. Sarhat Qader.

He said the mosque and at least eight nearby houses were demolished. Rescue teams searched for hours to find people buried under the rubble.

Kirkuk's police chief, Maj. Gen. Jamal Tahir, gave the casualty toll but said the exact nature of the attack was not yet determined.

"Investigations are still going on. We have not decided yet if it was a suicide bomber or a parked truck," he said.

Women begged police to let them near the site so they could search for loved ones while ambulances rushed victims to the overwhelmed hospital in Kirkuk. Three babies cried as they were placed on a single hospital bed to be treated.

Yellman Zain-Abideen, who was wounded by shrapnel in his hand and face, cried for his missing son.

"He was only 10 feet away from me where we were leaving the mosque. I don't know what happened to him," the 43-year-old said, blaming local authorities for not providing sufficient security. "There should have been guards around the mosque, we are living in an area surrounded by enemies."

Tensions have risen in the oil-rich area of Kirkuk as Kurds seek to incorporate it into their semiautonomous region despite opposition from Arabs, Turkomen and other rival ethnic groups. That has raised concerns about an outbreak of ethnic violence in northern Iraq even as attacks elsewhere decline.

Taza is mostly Turkomen.

U.S. and Iraqi officials have warned they expect insurgents to stage attacks to try to provoke a new outbreak of sectarian violence.

Saturday's explosion was the deadliest since April 24 when back-to-back suicide women bombers killed 71 people outside a Shiite shrine in Baghdad.

A U.S.-Iraqi security pact requires the Americans to pull back combat troops from cities by the end of this month as a first step toward a full withdrawal by 2012. The deal includes a provision for the Iraqi government to ask for U.S. help if violence surges.

Al-Maliki insisted earlier Saturday that the withdrawal will take place on schedule. He acknowledged that more attacks were likely but said Iraqi security forces were prepared.

Any extension would show a lack of confidence and would be a "historic setback," he said during a speech to members of the Turkomen ethnic minority.

"We will not retreat no matter what happens and, God willing, nothing will happen because of the capabilities that our security forces have," he said.

The Interior Ministry, meanwhile, warned it has received intelligence that some militants will try to stage attacks after the June 30 deadline.

Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Abdul-Karim Khalaf, however, said the U.S. withdrawal will give the Iraqis more power to deal with the violence because they won't be limited by the need to coordinate with the Americans.

"That will provide a more flexible opportunity for Iraqis to reach their targets quickly," he said.

The U.S. military already has begun handing over inner-city bases to the Iraqis.

On Saturday, American commanders turned over control of a key base on the edge of Baghdad's main Shiite district of Sadr City. The sprawling slum was a militia stronghold that saw fierce clashes until a cease-fire following a U.S.-backed government crackdown.

The Iraqis also reopened Zaytoun Street, which had been part of the walled-off Green Zone that houses the U.S. Embassy and the Iraqi government headquarters. The Iraqis have begun removing some of the protective blast falls around the Green Zone - part of a campaign to restore a sense of normalcy as violence has waned.

© MMIX The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by nextgenman09 June 21, 2009 6:07 AM EDT
4. "clowns that vote Republican" - so apparently 50% of the population of this country are clowns. Well, I'd rather be a clown that voted Republican rather than a fool that voted Democrat.
--------

The only difference between clowns and fools is the Lord and Master that controls them as the perform for them.
Reply to this comment
by ajjaxtheleast June 20, 2009 4:00 PM EDT
And there-in lies the rub,,,A leader of a lesser form of
government committing a war crime is either gladly or
not so happily stuck with it come hell or high water,,,

In a democracy someone who commits or, arguably, commits
a war crime gets to hand it off to the next fellow which
gives supporters-of-this-arguable-war-crime a world of
talking points allowing in a sophistacted fashion to
transfer the mess off to the "new owner" washing theirs
and hopefully their arguably war criminal's hands of murder.

Just like the seven nurses killed by Richard speck 30
years ago are just as dead today the couple hundred
thousand dead due Bush's decision regardless of
intent are still as dead today,,,,,no,,,
Bush and Cheney will never become "old" stuff.

The rest of the post was well taken.
Reply to this comment
by indivthinker June 20, 2009 2:30 PM EDT
I still don't understand why mcintoshlou thinks that caps make anyone respect his/her opinion any more. Sure, it gives him/her attention when he/she does it because others are drawn to his "loud" post. But screamers, much like little kids whining to their mommies, only end up getting disciplined and told no. Whereas, if mcintoshlou would not type in caps, then maybe we would respect his post a little more.
And it's not just the caps either. Some other things that show his ignorance:
1. using terms like "republi'con'" rather than republican. I can insult the Democrats myself... "demon"crats, demo"crappers", "dumb"ocrats. Yet I choose not to because it shows lack of intellect and professionalism.
2. "war of choice" - "choice" is a liberal term not a Republican term. It reserved for the democratic party, much like "family values" and "life" are republican terms (even if they indirectly describe them)
3. Using Bush/Cheney is irrelevant these days. Get over it. This is Obama's war now. If he wanted to pull out immediately and end this war immediately, he could, but he has his plan, and it is HIS plan. Now I hate Bush and Cheney just as much as this guy, but using him as an excuse for everything is lame and shows lack of originality.
4. "clowns that vote Republican" - so apparently 50% of the population of this country are clowns. Well, I'd rather be a clown that voted Republican rather than a fool that voted Democrat.
Reply to this comment
by YrSoWrong June 20, 2009 12:49 PM EDT
Americans are glad to be unhappy, witless parrots who dance to the beat.
Reply to this comment
by mcintoshlou June 20, 2009 12:40 PM EDT
AND THE REPUBLI''CON'' WAR OF CHOICE KEEPS ON GIVING

THANKS BUSH/CHENEY AND ALL YOU CLOWNS THAT VOTE REPUBLI''CON''
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