"SUCCESS STORY" - Iraq in grave danger of unraveling, as sectarian violence spreads- 34 killed in latest bomb blast.
"SUCCESS STORY" - Iraq in grave danger of unraveling, as sectarian violence spreads- 34 killed in latest bomb blast.HT:
Reuters.
Obama: If We Work Hard, Afghanistan Could Be a Success...Like Iraq!
Car bomb attacks killed at least 34 people in
Baghdad on Thursday but the Interior Ministry said it would not allow al Qaeda,
which it blames for a surge in sectarian violence, to turn Iraq into another
Syria. More than 100 people were wounded in at least eight blasts, one of which
was near the “Green Zone” diplomatic complex, part of a wave of bloodshed that
has taken the monthly death toll in Iraq to the highest levels in five years.
“Iraq’s streets have become a battleground for sectarian people who are
motivated by hatred and religious edicts and daring to kill innocent people,”
the Interior Ministry said in an unusually frank statement. “It is our destiny
to win this battle which is aimed at destroying the country and turning it into
another Syria,” the ministry said. However, earlier on Thursday it put the death
toll far lower, at three dead and 44 wounded. Mainly Sunni Muslim rebels have
been fighting for more than two years to topple Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad, whose Alawite minority support base is a branch of Shi’ite Islam.
Sunni Muslim militant groups, including al Qaeda, have stepped up their
insurgency against Iraq’s Shi’ite-led government in the past four months,
raising fears of a return to full-blown sectarian conflict 18 months after U.S.
troops left. Police sources said one bomb exploded 200-300 meters (yards) from
Baghdad’s international zone, close to Iraq’s Foreign Ministry. Four people died
and 12 others were wounded. The central zone is a highly-fortified area housing
Western embassies including the U.S. mission and the nearby Iraqi ministry has
been a frequent target of attacks. Since the start of the year, attacks using
multiple car bombs have become an almost daily occurrence. Religious holidays
have failed to stem the slaughter, bombers at the weekend targeting families
celebrating the end of the Muslim fasting period of Ramadan. Each of the past
four months has each been deadlier than any in the previous five years, dating
back to a time when U.S. and government troops were engaged in battles with
militiamen.
The government has launched a security sweep to
try to round up suspected militants and Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said on
Wednesday the crackdown would continue. The civil war in neighboring Syria,
which has stoked sectarian tensions across the Middle East, has boosted Sunni
insurgents in Iraq who are also benefiting from general discontent in the
minority Sunni population. The Interior Ministry described the conflict last
month as “open war” and the United States has said it will work closely with the
Iraqi government to confront al Qaeda. Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshiyar Zebari is
in Washington on Thursday. Thursday’s car bombs targeted districts in central,
eastern, northern and southern Baghdad, including Shi’ite areas, police said.
Five people died when a bomb exploded near a traffic police station in
Baladiyat, in eastern Baghdad, crushing the roofs of nearby vehicles, their
wheels splayed on the ground by the force of the explosion. “Windows were
smashed and my children started screaming and running everywhere, smoke and dust
filled my house,” said a man wounded by flying shards of glass. He declined to
be named. “The politicians are responsible for the deterioration in security,”
he said. In the al-Shurta al-Rabaa district a bomb on tractor trailer carrying
gas cylinders killed four people while in Husseiniya, on the capital’s
northeastern outskirts, a minibus exploded in a repair shop, killing three, said
police. The Interior Ministry said security forces were cracking down on
“hotbeds of terrorism” outside Baghdad, raiding bomb-making factories and
recruitment centers for suicide bombers.Hmmm......Other 'success stories' ....Egypt, Syria and coming soon Afghanistan. Read the full story here.
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