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Iraq-Jordan
Iraqi Insurgents Go on Rampage, Kill 69
2005-05-12
Suicide bombs ripped through a crowded market and a line of security force recruits Wednesday as a wave of explosions and gunfire across Iraq killed at least 69 people _ pushing the death toll from insurgent violence to more than 400 in less than two weeks. The bloody attacks, which also wounded 160 people, came despite a major U.S. offensive targeting followers of Iraq's most-wanted terrorist near the Syrian border, a remote desert region believed to be a staging ground for some of the insurgents' deadliest assaults.
I'm not sure how booms in Baghdad would immediately tie to the operation in Qaim...
Insurgents averaged about 70 attacks a day at the start of May, up from 30-40 in February and March, said Lt. Col. Steven Boylan, a spokesman for U.S. forces in Iraq.
The objective is to cause the country to collapse into anarchy, from which it can then be "saved" by Baathists and/or Islamists. The mistake in that sort of assumption is that you're not going to become Algeria and have the next bunch use the same tactics against you.
In Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit, 80 miles north of Baghdad, a suicide car bomb exploded in a small market near a police station, killing at least 33 people and injuring 92, police and hospital officials said. The attacker swerved into a crowd of day laborers waiting to be picked up for work at construction sites after heavy security prevented the vehicle from reaching the station, police said. The attack came despite a new regulation barring anyone from driving alone in Tikrit. The rule, announced by local police and officials after a suicide car bombing last week, was designed to make it easier for security forces to spot suicide attackers, who generally act alone. It was not immediately clear why it did not help prevent Wednesday's attack. The rule may not have been firmly enforced, or the 7:15 a.m. attack may have happened so early that police were not prepared for it. The Sunni militant Ansar al-Sunnah Army claimed responsibility for the attack in a posting on its Web site Wednesday. But it differed in the details, denying the attack was carried out by a suicide bomber and saying it was aimed at Iraqis who work in the U.S. base in Tikrit. The claim of responsibility could not be verified.
A big boom. Indiscriminate slaughter. Sounds like them.
About 90 minutes later, in Hawija, a town 150 miles north of Baghdad, a man with hidden explosives slipped past security guards at a police and army recruitment center and blew himself up outside the building where applicants were lined up. At least 30 people were killed and 35 injured, police said. Four more car bombs exploded in Baghdad, including one that wounded three U.S. soldiers, the U.S. military said. In the other three, four Iraqis were killed and 14 wounded, including at least three policemen, Iraqi police said. In western Baghdad, gunmen clashed with a police patrol on a highway, killing one officer and wounding another. Another bomb exploded at Iraq's largest fertilizer plant in the southern city of Basra, killing one person and wounding 23, police and employees said. The blast set fire to a gas pipeline and destroyed about 60 percent of the plant. Late Wednesday, several large explosions were heard in the southern city of Samawah, where about 600 Japanese troops are based, the Kyodo News agency reported. There were no immediate reports of injuries or damage, the agency said.
Posted by:Fred

#6  This suicide offensive is really beginning to remind me of the Japanese Kamikaze onslaught during the final year of World War 2, the last gasp of a dying monster. The big difference of course is that the original Kamikazes targeted military forces rather than their own people.

Given that this is a media war, "terrorism is an extension of advertising by other means," the place to strike would be the boomers' primary media and public-relations support, which is found not in Iraq but in the West.
Posted by: Atomic Conspiracy   2005-05-12 21:55  

#5  Good catch, Bobby!
Posted by: trailing wife   2005-05-12 16:52  

#4  Looks like they've regressed to terrorizing Saddam's hometown, which suggests there's not too much support for their "insurgency" even in Tikrit. And this is even though they suggest "a major US offensive" really has no impact. See how you can find good news in between the lines?
Posted by: Bobby   2005-05-12 11:59  

#3  Did the Algerians ever have much of an issue with suicide bombers?

The simple answer is there was a lot less weaponry and explosives around back them. Most of the savagery was by knife and blade as the previous poster stated. Savagery done up front, up close and personal.
Posted by: sea cruise   2005-05-12 04:39  

#2  Everyone in Iraq is armed. I don't think everyone with Algeria is armed. I've heard that some of the attacks in Algeria were carried out with edged weapons. Wouldn't work in Iraq.
Posted by: Zhang Fei   2005-05-12 00:46  

#1  Did the Algerians ever have much of an issue with suicide bombers?
Posted by: Classical_Liberal   2005-05-12 00:10  

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