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Analysis : Middle
East : Iraq
More than 200 dead in Baghdads deadliest day of bombings
By Peter Symonds
25 November 2006
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Sectarian warfare in Iraq further escalated on Thursday after
more than 200 people died and at least 250 were wounded in Baghdad,
in the deadliest single day of attacks since the US invasion in
2003.
A coordinated series of car bombs ripped through Sadr City,
creating havoc in crowded marketplaces and intersections of the
working class Shiite suburb, which is the stronghold of Shiite
cleric Moqtada al-Sadr and his militiathe Mahdi Army. According
to police, the first suicide bomber struck at around 3.15 p.m.
at a checkpoint leading to the area. Two other suicide car bombs
and two unattended car bombs followed in rapid succession. Mortar
shells also struck the area.
The car bombings destroyed dozens of other vehicles,
scattered charred and mangled bodies and sent flames and thick
pillars of smoke into the air. Frenzied crowds clawed through
the wreckage, pulling bloodied bodies from trapped vehicles and
taking them away in wooden carts, the New York Times
reported. Residents and Shiite militiamen flooded the streets,
firing assault rifles into the air, shouting epithets against
Sunni Arabs, the American authorities and the Iraq government,
and vowing revenge.
The carnage in Sadr City followed an attack on the Health Ministry
earlier the same day. Several mortar rounds hit the building followed
by fire from gunmen stationed on the tops of nearby buildings.
Hundreds of employees were kept pinned down as security guards
attempted to keep the attackers at bay. Health Minister Ali al-Shemari
is one of al-Sadrs supporters and the ministry is widely
regarded as a Sadrist bastion.
In a live interview on Iraqi TV, Deputy Health Minister Hakim
Zamili accused Iraqi soldiers of doing nothing to stop the attack.
We can see the terrorists through the windows, moving freely.
Nobody is stopping them, he said. A spokesman Qasim Yahia
Allawi later accused the Iraqi army of not responding to calls
for assistance during the three-hour siege. The attackers only
dispersed after US helicopters finally reached the area.
The assault is the latest in a series of attacks on the Health
Ministry and its officials. Zamili narrowly escaped an ambush
on Monday when gunmen attacked his convoy, killing two of his
guards. The previous day, another Shiite deputy health minister,
Ammar al-Saffar, was seized from his home. His fate is still unknown.
The cycle of sectarian attacks and reprisals by rival Shiite
and Sunni militias has intensified since the bombing of the Al-Askariya
mosque in the city of Samarra in February. But there is every
reason to believe that Thursdays large-scale slaughter in
Sadr City is not simply part of the ongoing violence. Like the
attack on the mosque, it is a deliberate provocation aimed at
inflaming sectarian hatreds and heightening the atmosphere of
political uncertainty and instability. While extremist Sunni militia
may well have been responsible, in the current political climate
nothing can be ruled out, including the possible complicity of
US occupation forces.
The bombings took place amid an intense debate within the Bush
administration and American ruling circles over the future course
of the US occupation. The bipartisan Iraqi Study Group headed
by James Baker and Lee Hamilton is widely expected to recommend,
not a reduction, but a substantial increase in the number of US
troops in Iraq with the aim of imposing stability
in Baghdad in particular.
The prime target of such a move is no secret. The Bush administration
has been pressuring the puppet Iraqi government of Prime Minister
Nuri al-Maliki for months to endorse a massive crackdown on the
Shiite militia, particularly the Madhi army in Sadr City. Al-Sadr,
while indicating his willingness to accommodate to the US occupation
by participating in the US-backed government, has nevertheless
repeatedly called for a timetable for US withdrawal. His social
base among working class Shiites is deeply hostile to the US presence
and the devastation it has wrought.
The discussions in Washington about Iraq have been accompanied
by numerous hints that the Maliki government may have to be removed
if it refuses to follow US dictates. Maliki is based on a Shiite
coalition that includes the Sadrists who hold 30 parliamentary
seats and a number of important ministries. He has been reluctant
to permit a massive military operation against Sadr City, which
would only result in a further erosion of Shiite support for his
government.
Maliki is due to fly to Jordan next Wednesday for direct talks
with President Bush. The main purpose of the meeting can only
be to issue an ultimatum to Maliki to take action against the
Shiite militia or face the consequences. Whatever the prime minister
decides will plunge his governmentwhich is completely dependent
on US political, economic and military supportfurther into
crisis.
In the wake of Thursdays bombings, the Sadrist movement
has issued its own ultimatum to Maliki: cancel the trip to Jordan,
or it will withdraw support for the government. On Friday, Saleh
al-Iqaili, a pro-Sadr parliamentarian, angrily blamed the US presence
in Iraq for the attacks, saying: The occupation forces should
shoulder the full responsibility for these deeds, and we call
on them to end their rule in Iraq by withdrawal or at least setting
a timetable for withdrawal.
Al-Iqaili went on to warn: If the security situation
does not improve, as well as the issue of basic services, and
if the prime minister does not retreat from his intent to meet
the criminal Bush in Amman, we will suspend our membership in
the Iraqi parliament and the government. In his Friday sermon,
al-Sadr reiterated his call for a timetable for US withdrawal
and made an appeal to Sunni cleric Sheik Harith al-Dhari to issue
a religious edict outlawing the murder of Shiites.
Desperate to contain the situation, President Jalal Talibani,
a Kurd, appeared on TV, with the countrys Shiite and Sunni
vice-presidents, to make a joint appeal for calm. The government
imposed an indefinite curfew on Baghdad and closed the capitals
airport to civilian aircraft. But the measures had little effect
as Shiite militia carried out reprisals yesterday on Sunni neighbourhoodsincluding
on several mosques. In a particularly gruesome attack, it was
reported that six Sunnis were seized, doused in kerosene and burned
alive as they left Friday prayers.
The chief responsibility for this sectarian bloodbath rests
with the Bush administration. From the outset, the illegal US
occupation of Iraq based itself on Shiite and Kurdish parties
and encouraged the persecution of the Sunni minority, on which
the Saddam Hussein regime rested. Having provoked a determined
Sunni armed resistance, the US is now seeking to incorporate sections
of the Sunni elite into the Baghdad government as a means of undermining
Sunni insurgents.
Far from creating a national unity government,
the US encouragement of communal politics has fuelled sectarian
tensions and turned Baghdad into a battleground of rival Shiite
and Sunni militias. Having generated a sectarian nightmare, the
Bush administration is exploiting the situation to justify not
only the continuing US occupation, but preparations for a bloody
military crackdown in Baghdad. The pretext could well be provided
by continuing the recent provocative forays by the US military
into Sadr City.
See Also:
UN report documents huge October
death toll in Iraq
[24 November 2006]
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