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Wave of violence in Iraq kills
more than 100
Baghdad -
Deadly violence rocked central Iraq early Wednesday, killing at least
104 people and wounding 186 others, police said.
At least one suicide car bomb
exploded near a gathering of laborers in Kadhimiya -- a Shiite area of
north-central Baghdad. Hospital officials told police that at least 80
people have been killed, and another 162 wounded. The bombing took
place around 6:50 a.m. (10:50 p.m. ET Tuesday).
About three hours later, another
suicide car bomb targeted shoppers in the busy Shiite neighborhood of
Shu'la in northwestern Baghdad, killing four people and wounding 22
others.
In Taji, about 10 miles (16
kilometers) north of Baghdad, men wearing Iraqi army uniforms stormed
homes and pulled 17 Shiite men from their homes, shooting them
execution style, police said.
The men were killed around 4 a.m.
Taji is a mixed Sunni-Shiite community.
Attacks were also staged on at least
three military convoys.
A suicide car bomb targeted an Iraqi
army convoy in the al-Adil intersection in western Baghdad around 9:40
a.m. (1:40 a.m. EDT). According to police, three Iraqi soldiers were
killed and two of their vehicles were damaged.
About 40 minutes earlier, another
suicide car bomber hit a U.S. military convoy in eastern Baghdad,
wounding two soldiers and damaging their Humvee.
A roadside bomb also exploded near a
U.S. convoy in the capital. There were no reports of casualties.
The violence comes a day after U.S.
President George W. Bush met in Washington with Iraqi President Jalal
Talabani.
Bush renewed his pledge to assist
Baghdad in building a democracy and to help the fledgling government
defeat insurgents.
"America will stand with the Iraqi
people as they move forward with the democratic process," Bush said at
a joint news conference in the White House East Room.
"American troops will stay on the
offensive, alongside Iraqi security forces, to hunt down our common
enemies."
Talabani
said he hopes that Iraqi forces will be ready to take full
responsibility for the nation's security by the end of 2006.
"We will set no timetable for
withdrawal," Talabani said. "A timetable will help the terrorists. ...
"As soon as possible, of course, we
hope that American troops can proudly return home."
Iraqi and U.S. forces were continuing
to battle insurgents in the north, Bush said.
"At this hour, American and Iraqi
forces are conducting joint operations to root out terrorists and
insurgents in Tal Afar," Bush said. "Our objective is to defeat the
enemies of a free Iraq. And we're working to prepare more Iraqi forces
to join the fight."
In addition to security issues, the
Iraqi president faces a national referendum in October on Iraq's draft
constitution.
Iraqi lawmakers are debating the
draft constitution, which was approved by a special committee that
wrote the document. Sunni Arabs dislike some aspects of the document,
which has support from Shiite Arabs and Kurds in the government.
"We have agreed [to] a draft
constitution," Talabani said. "Of course, it is not a perfect
document. But I think it is one of the best constitutions in the
Middle East."
The leaders both criticized Syria,
accusing the country of allowing insurgents to enter Iraq across its
border.
"The Syrian government can do a lot
more to prevent the flow of foreign fighters into Iraq," Bush said.
"These people are coming from Syria into Iraq and killing a lot of
innocent people. They're killing -- they're trying to kill our folks
as well."
Bush threatened increased
international isolation for Damascus, accusing Syrian President Bashar
Assad of not doing enough to secure the border. "The Syrian leader
must understand we take his lack of action seriously," Bush said.
On Monday, Zalmay Khalilzad, U.S.
ambassador to Iraq, said that Syria is "the No. 1 offender" of
impeding success in Iraq.
"There is blatant interference by
Syria in Iraqi affairs, by allowing these terrorists to come across,"
Khalilzad said. "And as I said before, our patience is running out.
"We have given it every opportunity.
The time is running out for more of the same."
When asked whether a military option
against Syria was under consideration, Khalilzad said, "Everything is
on the table."
Two of Iraq's four border crossings
with Syria are closed -- one near Tal Afar and one farther south near
Qaim.
In the Iraqi-U.S. operation in Tal
Afar, multinational soldiers detained 78 suspected terrorists Monday,
according to a U.S. military news release.
The suspects were taken into custody
in separate operations, including door-to-door searches and military
operations, with no injuries reported, the release said.
Operation Restore Rights was launched
in Tal Afar two weeks ago to try to drive out insurgents around the
northern Iraqi city.
The insurgency has forced an
estimated 6,600 families to flee the area in recent months, a senior
official with Iraq's Ministry of Displacement and Migration said
Monday.
The operation has focused on the
Serai neighborhood in southeast Tal Afar, where U.S. Maj. Gen. Rick
Lynch estimated 350 to 500 insurgents, many of them foreign fighters,
had been cornered.
Lynch said at least 141 terrorists
have been killed and 236 captured since the operation began August 26.
The Islamic Army in Iraq -- a group
that has claimed responsibility for attacks and kidnappings in the
country -- posted a statement Sunday on a Web site saying it wanted to
avenge the deaths of Sunnis in Iraq, including those killed in Tal
Afar. -- CNN News
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