December 9, 2009 3:02 PM

Series of Deadly Bombings Rocks Baghdad

(CBS/AP)  Last updated 6:40 p.m. Eastern

A suicide car bomb flattened a court building and an explosives-rigged ambulance blew down walls like dominos near the Finance Ministry during a wave of coordinated attacks Tuesday that targeted high-profile symbols of Iraqi authority. At least 127 people were killed.

The blasts - at least five in total - marked the third major strike on government sites since August and brought uncomfortable questions for Iraqi leaders. These include signs al Qaeda in Iraq is regrouping and concerns over the readiness of Iraqi forces to handle security alone as U.S. forces depart.

The bombings also brought swift accusations about the motives behind the attacks. Officials claimed a Sunni insurgent alliance, including members of Saddam Hussein's banned Baath Party, seeks to undermine the pro-Western government ahead of elections set for March 7 and the later withdrawal of U.S. combat forces.

Authorities also faced angry questions about how bombers again found holes in Iraqi security.

"If security falls apart, then everything will collapse," said Abbas al-Bayati, head of parliament's defense committee and an ally of the Shiite government, as lawmakers convened an emergency session.

Another lawmaker, Saadi al-Barazanji, shouted: "If I were the interior minister, I would resign!"

The attacks began with a suicide strike on a police patrol. An hour later, four more explosions rumbled across Baghdad in the span of a few minutes. Suicide car bombings hit three sites: the main Appeals Court, an area outside the Finance Ministry and a government compound that includes the Labor Ministry. A roadside bomb also went off near a university.

Iraq's Health Ministry reported at least 513 people were wounded.

Not all today's casualties were political, reports CBS News Correspondent Elizabeth Palmer. One bomb went off near the School of Fine Arts where National Symphony musicians had gathered to rehearse. It's too early to know how many of them were hurt or killed.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility. However, multiple bombings are a hallmark of al Qaeda. The past two major strikes on Iraqi government sites were coordinated blasts in August and October that took more than 255 lives. Sunni groups linked to al Qaeda eventually issued statements saying they carried out the attacks.

Iraq's government, however, has tried to cast blame on Saddam loyalists - even parading three suspects on national television who gave what officials termed confessions for the October attacks.

No independent evidence has emerged to support a possible resurgence of the militant Baath Party cells. Instead, the government allegations are seen as attempts to deflect suspicions that al Qaeda and its insurgent allies could be regrouping before the March elections and the withdrawal of U.S. combat forces at the end of August.

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's government has pointed to the sharp drop in overall violence around Iraq as one of its main achievements going into the elections. Any hints of instability could cost them at the polls.

Just hours after the bombings, the government set March 7 as the date for parliamentary elections. The voting was delayed by nearly seven weeks because of bickering over election rules. The postponement - coupled with any upsurge in violence - could complicate the Pentagon's pullout timetable as pressure builds to shift troops and equipment to Afghanistan.

Al-Maliki drew a direct connection between the attacks and the political compromises that cleared the way for elections.

"The timing of the cowardly terrorist attacks ... shows that the enemies of Iraq aim to create chaos in the country and foil the political process and the elections," said a statement from the U.S.-backed prime minister.

Iraq's military spokesman, Maj. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi, blamed the "same hands" the government claims were behind the August and October attacks: Baath loyalists and al Qaeda-linked extremists.

In Washington, White House press secretary Robert Gibbs condemned the attacks, saying Iraqi leaders who passed an elections law this week were moving the country in the right direction and "there are clearly those who are threatened by that."

In a joint statement, U.S. Ambassador Christopher Hill and Gen. Raymond Odierno, the top commander in Iraq, pledged to assist the Iraqi government "to bring to justice those individuals or groups for such murder."
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Other statements decrying the attacks poured in from around the world.

One stood out: Neighboring Syria said it "strongly condemns the terrorist bombings." Iraq's relations with Syria have soured recently after accusations by Baghdad that the Damascus government harbors Baath Party exiles who have masterminded and waged attacks in Iraq.

The bombings marked the most serious spate of violence in Baghdad since twin car bombs on Oct. 25 struck outside Baghdad administration offices, killing at least 155. In August, four suicide truck bombers hit the finance and foreign ministries, killing more than 100.

On a Web site known to express militant views, messages exchanged congratulations for the attacks and praised insurgents linked to al Qaeda in Iraq - with no mention of Baath Party alliances.

The first attack came at midmorning in southern Baghdad. A suicide car bomber struck a police patrol in the mostly Sunni district of Dora. At least three policemen and 12 civilians were killed, said a police official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to media.

About an hour later, four blasts roared through different parts of Baghdad in less than 10 minutes, bringing the overall death toll to at least 127, according to police and hospital officials.

"What crime have we committed? Children and women were buried under debris. Why did they (Iraqi troops) let this car bomb pass?" cried Ahmed Jabbar as he staggered through the debris near the new Finance Ministry building alongside the Tigris River - an area where all cars pass through checkpoints manned by Iraqi forces.

Police say the bomber, driving an ambulance rigged with explosives, was stopped at the last checkpoint before the Finance Ministry. Its previous headquarters was destroyed in the August attacks.

The blast ravaged an outdoor market and collapsed rows of brick walls in stores and homes. The ministry was largely unscathed, but a corner was peppered with metal chunks from the exploding vehicle.

At one home, a ginger-colored dog stood with a chain still around its neck, stranded atop a section of wall above the wreckage that killed its owners and their children. The dog's water bucket was beside him.

About two miles (three kilometers) to the west, another suicide bomber rammed through one checkpoint near a judicial compound that included the main Appeals Court, said the spokesman of Iraq's Supreme Judicial Council, Abdul-Sattar Bayrkdar. Guards opened fire before a huge blast that leveled the court and left dozens of cars crushed and shredded.

Near the protected Green Zone in central Baghdad, which includes the U.S. Embassy and Iraqi parliament, a third suicide bomb struck close to an area with government offices including the Labor Ministry.

Finally, a roadside bomb exploded near the Technology University in eastern Baghdad, missing a passing police patrol but killing one civilian passer-by and wounding four others, police said.

The U.S. military has sent some troops and forensic equipment to assist the Iraqis in the aftermath, said Army Master Sgt. Nicholas Conner, a military spokesman.

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon condemned the attack, calling the bloodshed "horrendous."

A Kurdish parliament member, Mohammed Shareef Ahmed, was among several lawmakers demanding a full-scale inquiry.

"The parliament today is so angry toward the security services which we feel have failed to prevent these attacks ... We all feel and all the world feels - that the Iraqi people are fed up of sufferings and something should be done to stop this."

The blast tore through a nearby market and toppled at least one building nearby. Rescue teams - some using construction cranes - tried to pull away the rubble to look for survivors.

Rescue workers climbed through twisted steel bars and crushed concrete at the flattened court building. Dozens of cars and trucks were burned and crushed.

Firefighters pulled survivors from behind huge slabs of toppled concrete. U.S. soldiers helped provide security and assisted the Iraqis with the collection of evidence from the rubble.

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 25 Comments
by shylove2 February 4, 2010 8:34 PM EST
Occupying and dominating someone else's country does not work. The national strategic interests we felt we were protecting are less secure and more destablized than they were before and our disregard for having a legitimate reason for doing this and risking our soldier lives to begin with has only made the region less safe.
Reply to this comment
by morgan378 January 12, 2010 1:23 PM EST
Why are cars, vans and trucks allowed in Baghdad at all? Driving is not a right - it's a priveledge. Let them park their cars and take government buses to take care o* their business in the city. At least until the militants know that their cars and other transport can't be used to level city blocks. Those who live their only walk to the markets - many don't even have cars - it's the allowing o* others into the city that use cars that end up blowing things up. No need *or checkpoints - just tell them to back their cars up, park in the parking lot, then let them walk to the right bus stop. I think the sa*ety o* the people warrents some type o* lack o* priveledge to counter the senseless slaughter raining down on the city o* Baghdad at the present time, and especially as a run up to the elections.
Reply to this comment
by lemonskinkus December 8, 2009 2:22 PM EST
Get out of Iraq, and get out of Afghanistan. Kharzi said today, he would need the US's help and money for 15-20 years. This is all horse crap, and the US is getting bled to death all because of Bush. Now, Obama wants to carry this over, and it's ridiculous, and none of it will work. 15-20 years of bankrolling the opium growers, get out now.
Reply to this comment
by newsterl December 8, 2009 1:49 PM EST
They love us over there so much just like the right wingers and Repubicons said!! they love us so much they are willing to blow up Govt buildings and kill people to keep us there LONGER!!!

Damn, it's humbling to be wrong on that kind of thing, the repubicons were right- they really DO love us over there and this is how they show how much they want us to stay another few years!
Reply to this comment
by brianbwb-2009 December 8, 2009 2:04 PM EST
But what happened to the flowers and candy, or the statue of Bush?
by YoureSoWrong14 December 8, 2009 9:29 PM EST
Does the US have a monopoly on cowards? Or just this board?
by brianbwb-2009 December 8, 2009 1:43 PM EST
"In a joint statement, U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Christopher Hill and Gen. Raymond Odierno, America's top commander in Iraq, called on Iraqis to unite against violence and pledged to assist the government "to bring to justice those individuals or groups responsible for such murder."

Wow, so they are going to extradite Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rice, Powell, and Wolfowitz to Iraq?
Reply to this comment
by infantryman1968 December 8, 2009 1:52 PM EST
As soon as you get extradited to Wahington State!
by brianbwb-2009 December 8, 2009 1:57 PM EST
To infantryman1968

No need to extradite, show my crime, and I will go voluntarily.

Btw, the opinion of right wing neo nazis, that anyone disagreeing with them is guilty of a crime doesn't count.
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by mljohns00 December 8, 2009 1:38 PM EST
Nice. I like what we've done to the place.
Reply to this comment
by brianbwb-2009 December 8, 2009 12:12 PM EST
Here is some news that the western media is not giving you.

"First World Immigration Services Inc. 350, 5th Avenue New York

First World Immigration Services Inc. - Chicago, Illinois

First World Immigration Services Inc.2650, Monte Carlo Shifa, Stockton, Bay Area -95203

New World Immigration Reviews, 374 Ouellette Ave #808, Windsor, Ontario, Canada"

What do these four addresses have in common?

They are a business that deals in immigration matters, which means it has ties to the US State department, and embassies around the world, and as everyone around the world knows, The US State Dept. and the US embassies around the world are the regional HQs for CIA operatives.

To set up such a business in several major cities around the world takes a considerable sum of cash.

Now here is where it gets interesting.

"The Times of India PTI 8 December 2009, 12:35pm IST

WASHINGTON: Pakistani-origin American national David Coleman Headley, charged with criminal conspiracy in the Mumbai terror attacks, had
misrepresented facts while applying for an Indian visa, the FBI has charged.

"In applying for his visa to travel to India, Headley misrepresented his birth name, father's true name and the purpose for his travel," the FBI said in its 12-count charge sheet filed against him in a Chicago court.

For applying for a visa to travel to India, he took the help of his school-time friend Tahawwur Hussain Rana, who ran an immigration service in Chicago, named the...

"...First World Immigration Services."

Rana, a 48-year-old Canadian of Pakistani-origin, too has been arrested by the FBI on terror charges. Headley, 49, obtained Rana's approval to open a First World office in Mumbai as cover for this activity.

The FBI charge sheet alleges that Rana instructed one of his employees to prepare documents to support Headley's cover story and advised him on how to obtain a visa for travel to India.

According to the charge sheet, Headley approached Rana for help after being tasked by Pakistan-based terror outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba in late 2005 with gathering surveillance in Mumbai."

So the links to the Mumbai terror attacks also include the US State Department, and US embassies in India and Pakistan.

It is not unreasonable to think that the State department would know, after the usual background checks for visa applicants, that Headly had changed his name from Daud (Daood, Dawood) Gilani to David Coleman Headly, and that statements on his visa application regarding his father's name, and his own, were false.

Why is this relevant to this story?

Because it illustrates that the bombers in many of these attacks could very well have ties to the US CIA, and commit these acts to justify US military hostilities in these areas.
Reply to this comment
by infantryman1968 December 8, 2009 12:51 PM EST
LOL

Yea, I thought the cops popped this guy up in Washington State last week.
by brianbwb-2009 December 8, 2009 1:35 PM EST
To infantryman1968

A part of my point.

We are wasting trillions of dollars murdering people who have not harmed us, using the lame neonazi excuse, "better fight them there than here", when the ones that need to be dealt with are already here, and not over there.

To YoureSoWrong11

Nah, it will be much more fun if they set you on fire in their own protest, then I can say "See, we must be vigilant, they are here, and next time they might burn someone actually worth the air they breathe."
by mljohns00 December 8, 2009 9:05 AM EST
Anybody notice a pattern here?
Reply to this comment
by egresor December 8, 2009 8:52 AM EST
wyodutch December 8, 2009 7:50 AM EST
Why the nerve of those ungrateful Iraqis!!!
.
We brave and bold Americans spend well over $1,000,000,000,000 (money we had to borrow from Japan and red china) in our decade-long war against Iraq.
.
We destroyed their infrastructure so successfully that they can't flush a toilet or turn on a reading lamp... We assassinate their national leadership... We level entire cities.
.
And now they're not happy!!???
.
Well... just see the next time some country like Iraq wants our expert help!

============

DANG IT!

here is was going to ask if everyone was happy with what we had done to iraq, but you pretty much summed it up.

i would add that we chose karzai and the other puppets too

we also chose a known drug dealer to pay for sending hard drugs into our country.

we are the moral leaders of the world.

we are the shining light----look at what we illuminate.

makes one feel proud doesn't it?
Reply to this comment
by wyodutch December 8, 2009 7:50 AM EST
Why the nerve of those ungrateful Iraqis!!!
.
We brave and bold Americans spend well over $1,000,000,000,000 (money we had to borrow from Japan and red china) in our decade-long war against Iraq.
.
We destroyed their infrastructure so successfully that they can't flush a toilet or turn on a reading lamp... We assassinate their national leadership... We level entire cities.
.
And now they're not happy!!???
.
Well... just see the next time some country like Iraq wants our expert help!
Reply to this comment
by liberalme December 8, 2009 9:13 AM EST
They never asked for our help remember? The "decider" decided to free the opressed Iraquis instead of continuing the the "hunt" for Bin Laden, his blood brother.

Get our troops out of all of these countries where they have been killing each other since the beginning of time we aren't going to "save" anyone, on the contrary we will be responsible for getting more innocent people killed.
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