Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Firestorm In Baghdad - Al Qaeda in Iraq Sets Off 13 Bombs, 76 Killed


The war is back on in the eyes of al Qaeda in Iraq as just two days after the brutal murder of Christian hostages in Baghdad, the terror group today set off 10 explosions across the city killing 76 people and wounding in the neighborhood of 200.

Think of it. 10 bombs going off in one day in Baghdad. Look at the photo above and see the fear on that Iraqi's face. I'll have more to say, believe me but let me show part of the article at DAWN:



Up to 30 people were killed in a series of explosions around Baghdad on Tuesday, a police source said, two days after al Qaeda militants staged a bloodbath when they took hostages in a Christian church in the Iraqi capital.

More than 10 car bombs and roadside bombs exploded, some outside cafes, in the early evening in several mainly Shi'ite areas of the city, officials said.

That is from the original article, this is from the updated one where the deaths went from 30 to 76:

Rapid-fire bombings and mortar strikes in mostly Shia neighborhoods of Baghdad killed 76 people and wounded nearly 200 on Tuesday, calling into question the ability of Iraqi security forces to protect the capital.

The blasts _ at least 13 separate attacks _ came just two days after gunmen in Baghdad held a Christian congregation hostage in a siege that ended with 58 people dead. Tuesday morning, hundreds of Christians gathered at a downtown church to mourn their lost brethren.

''They murdered us today and on Sunday, they killed our brother, the Christians,'' said Hussein al-Saiedi, a 26-year-old resident of the Shia slum of Sadr City where 21 people were killed in the most deadly incident of the day. He said he was talking to friends on a busy street, when the blast occurred.

''We were just standing on the street when we heard a loud noise, and then saw smoke and pieces of cars, falling from the sky,'' he said. People were fleeing the site in panic, frantically calling the names of their relatives and friends. ''They (the government) say the situation is under control. Where is their control?''

Okay, here's the deal. I said it a dozen times that the timing was horseshit for U.S. forces to leave the major cities in Iraq - it was too damn soon. And it certainly was too soon to have the withdrawals that we did - now, granted we have a good number of troops in Iraq right now but they are out in the countryside while the war is now on in Baghdad.

What we learned during the surge was that you had to keep al Qaeda from making these bombing runs into the city - the American troop barriers to that...those rings of our troops eminating outward from Baghdad have been removed and the city today is burning like a roman candle.

What has to be realized here is this - with the "success" that al Qaeda in Iraq had two days ago coupled with this blitzkrieg today, you might as well set up a 1000 foot neon sign over the country that says "Jihadis from all over...come back to Iraq...we will win this time!"

This HAS to be put down immediately. Iraq isn't in high danger at the moment but once the jihadis start filling that pipeline again, you wait....you'll see...just as I have said before...it will be like 2005 all over again. And we've got a spineless terror appeaser as Commander-in-chief who probably will never pull the trigger to squash this. This has the look of one hellish bloody mess.



Series of blasts in Baghdad kills 76


BAGHDAD: Rapid-fire bombings and mortar strikes in mostly Shia neighborhoods of Baghdad killed 76 people and wounded nearly 200 on Tuesday, calling into question the ability of Iraqi security forces to protect the capital.

The blasts _ at least 13 separate attacks _ came just two days after gunmen in Baghdad held a Christian congregation hostage in a siege that ended with 58 people dead. Tuesday morning, hundreds of Christians gathered at a downtown church to mourn their lost brethren.

''They murdered us today and on Sunday, they killed our brother, the Christians,'' said Hussein al-Saiedi, a 26-year-old resident of the Shia slum of Sadr City where 21 people were killed in the most deadly incident of the day. He said he was talking to friends on a busy street, when the blast occurred.

''We were just standing on the street when we heard a loud noise, and then saw smoke and pieces of cars, falling from the sky,'' he said. People were fleeing the site in panic, frantically calling the names of their relatives and friends. ''They (the government) say the situation is under control. Where is their control?''

There was no immediate claim of responsibility. But the coordination of the blasts, the complexity of the operation and the predominantly Shia targets point to al-Qaida-linked Sunni insurgents.

Iraq has been plagued by conflict between Shia and Sunni Muslim sects since the 2003 collapse of Saddam Hussein's regime, which was dominated by the minority Sunnis. It was supplanted by a Shia-dominated government that remains in power until today.

The bombings began at about 6:15 p.m. The assailants used booby-trapped cars, roadside bombs, mortars and at least one suicide bomber on a motorcycle. Though most of the neighborhoods hit were Shia-dominated, a couple struck Sunni neighborhoods as well.

The attacks stretched from one side of Baghdad to the other and were spread out over hours, indicating a high degree of coordination and complexity from an insurgency that just a few months ago US and Iraqi officials were saying was all but defeated.

The casualty information all came from police and hospital officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

Earlier Tuesday, hundreds of grieving Christians and other Iraqis packed a funeral service for members of the faith killed in the militant siege on a Baghdad church.

The attack, which an al-Qaida-linked group claimed it carried out, left 58 people dead and dozens wounded.

The complex attack carried out Sunday evening on parishioners celebrating Mass at the Our Lady of Salvation church in an affluent Baghdad neighborhood emphasized the ease with which militants can still strike in Iraq and the particularly dangerous position that the country's Christians occupy among Iraq's sectarian structure.

Iraq's top Catholic prelate, Chaldean Cardinal Emmanuel III Delly, urged the government to protect the nation's Christian community and not let their promises just be ink on paper.

''We are gathered here in this sacred house to say farewell to our brothers who were just the day before yesterday exclaiming love and peace,'' Delly told a weeping congregation at the Chaldean St. Joseph Church in central Baghdad.

In a show of force, Iraqi security forces flooded the streets around the church where black-clad parishioners mourned for the dead parishioners.

But as the security forces concentrated their efforts in the central Karradah neighborhood where the funeral took place, militants appeared to have spread out in a ring across the capital where the evening attacks took place just hours later.

The immediate reaction from many Iraqis was frustration with the attacks that continue despite assurances that the city and country are safe.

''Where is the government?'' said Adnan Anbar, a 42-year-old man from Sadr City who was crossing the street when the blast went off. ''What are all these checkpoints about,'' he said, referring to the hundreds of police and army checkpoints scattered all over Baghdad.


1 comment:

in the vanguard said...

This is muzlim against muzlim.

Want to know what a muzlim is: The Bible tells us: He is preoccupied with disturbing another person's peace, and therefore he instigates reprisal.

His motto is:
"Me against my brother. My brother and I against my cousin. My brother, cousin and I against the world."