Rows of graves are dug for victims of Saturday's massive car bombing in Baghdad, after a funeral procession, July 2, 2006, in the holy city of Najaf, Iraq.
A relative of a victim in Saturday's massive car bombing in Baghdad mourns during a mass funeral procession, July 2, 2006, in the holy city of Najaf, Iraq.
Local Iraqis gather to inspect damage following an early morning car-bomb attack, July 2, 2006, in the Karradah district of Baghdad, Iraq. The bomb injured four Iraqis, while damaging three vehicles and numerous local shops.
Iraqi football fans huddle around a TV to watch England vs. Portugal during the World Cup soccer tournament, July 1, 2006, in Suleymaniyah, northern Iraq. Portugal won a shootout, 3-1, following 120 minutes of scoreless soccer and advanced to the World Cup semifinals for the first time since 1966.
U.S. Marines enter a house in Ramadi, 70 miles west of Baghdad, Iraq, July 1, 2006. Elsewhere, a parked-car bomb struck a popular outdoor market in the Shiite slum of Sadr City, killing at least 66 people and wounding dozens in the bloodiest attack to hit Iraq since the death of terror leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
Hundreds of locals gather around the scene of a massive car bomb attack, July 1, 2006, in the Sadr City area of Baghdad, Iraq. The car bomb exploded in the morning outside of a popular Baghdad market, killing 45 and wounding 41, while 14 vehicles and 22 shops and stalls were destroyed, said police.
A U.S. Marine photographs a man in Ramadi, 70 miles west of Baghdad, June 29, 2006. Elsewhere, U.S. and Iraqi troops clashed with gunmen northeast of Baghdad after armed Shiites attacked a convoy of Sunni villagers in retaliation for a suicide attack.
Two men ride a donkey and cart past a police checkpoint in central Baghdad June 30, 2006, just before the vehicle ban came into effect. (The ban does not apply to equine transport.)
A sister of the secretary, center, grieves with other unidentified relatives, after unknown gunmen shot dead dentist Sa'adi Younis and wounded his secretary Mohammed Ali near their clinic in Al-Tayaran square in the city center of Kirkuk in northern Iraq, at the hospital in Kirkuk, June 29, 2006.
U.S. Marine Cpl. Anthony Rusciano of New York stands under a portrait of the head of the household in a home in Ramadi, 70 miles west of Baghdad, June 28, 2006.
A man walks past a bomb scene after a bomb was left in a bag in a minibus in southeastern Baghdad and struck a police patrol, wounding two policemen, according to police in Baghdad June 29, 2006.
U.S. Marines play basketball at their camp in Ramadi, 70 miles west of Baghdad, June 29, 2006. Insurgent and government officials said 11 militant groups have offered an immediate halt to all attacks, including those on American troops, if the United States agrees to withdraw foreign forces from Iraq in two years.
Kurdish boys harvest melons in a field near Darawish village, north of Mosul in northern Iraq, June 28, 2006. The melons are either eaten or sold as melon juice by roadside vendors to quench the thirst of passersby in the hot Iraqi summer.
U.S. military personnel attend the scene after a suicide car bomber struck a gas station, killing at least three people and wounding 17, in the northern city of Kirkuk in Iraq, June 27, 2006. The provincial council of Kirkuk ordered all fuel stations to be closed for the rest of the day to prevent more attacks.
Detainees being released are seen reflected in the sunglasses of a member of U.S. military personnel, at the Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad June 27, 2006.
U.S. Marine Cpl. Mark Schumaker of Queensbury, N.Y., wears a joker playing card on his helmet before a patrol in Ramadi, 70 miles west of Baghdad June 26, 2006. U.S. troops have begun setting up new outposts and pushing patrols deeper into parts of this insurgent stronghold that previously went largely unpatrolled.
U.S. Marines patrol in Ramadi, 70 miles west of Baghdad, June 26, 2006.
A youth walks past the scene after gunmen shot dead Mahdi Murad, the owner of a bakery and supermarket, then left after leaving a timed bomb inside the bakery, in the New Baghdad area of Baghdad June 26, 2006. There were no further casualties.
A forensic expert holds a human skull showing a bullet hole at a laboratory on the outskirts of Baghdad June 26, 2006. Forensic experts and archaeologists working in a tented laboratory in the Iraqi war-torn capital are painstakingly piecing together stories from skeletal remains in mass graves, evidence for prosecutors preparing new cases against ousted Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.
Residents gather at the scene after a blast killed at least 15 people and wounded 56 in the mainly Shiite city of Hillah in Iraq, June 27, 2006.