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Baluarte
12-21-2013, 05:38 PM
Top-ranking officers killed in Iraq ambush

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2013/12/at-least-15-army-officers-killed-iraq-201312219203178226.html

http://www.aljazeera.com/mritems/Images/2011/9/12/2011912214930959734_20.jpg

At least 18 military servicemen were killed in an ambush in western Iraq, including several top-ranking officers, security sources have told Al Jazeera.

The killings took place on Saturday in the Huran valley of the Sunni Muslim-dominated province of Anbar, when a convoy of the 7th army was hit by the members of the Islamic State of Iraq, the military wing of al-Qaeda, according to sources.

The commander of the army division and his aid were among those killed in the attack.

Posts on online forums dominated by fighters called the slain commander, Mohammed Ahmed al-Kurwi, a "criminal" and celebrated the attack, which security sources described as carefully planned and executed.

The circumstances of Saturday's attack are disputed, with the Defence Ministry saying Kurwi, commander of the army's Seventh Division, and several other high-ranking officers were killed by a roadside bomb while pursuing fighters from an al-Qaeda training camp in Anbar's desert.

But other military sources said the officers were killed when three suicide bombers wearing explosive belts detonated
themselves among them in the western town of Rutba, 360km west of Baghdad.

"All that we know so far is three suicide bombers wearing explosive vests came from nowhere and detonated themselves among the officers," a military officer who was at the scene told Reuters by phone.

Some security officials suggested informants may have lured the commanders to the area under the pretext of raiding the al-Qaeda camp.

Rising violence

No specific group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack, but suicide bombing is the trademark of al-Qaeda's Iraqi affiliate, which merged this year with counterparts in Syria to form the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).

The assistant commander of the Seventh Division, the commander of its 27th Brigade, and several other high-ranking officers were also among those killed in the attack, sources said. Another 32 soldiers were wounded.

Violence has been on the rise in Iraq since a deadly security offensive on a Sunni protest camp in a northern town in April.

Two years after US troops withdrew from Iraq, violence is at its highest level since 2006-7, when strife between Sunnis and Shia Muslims killed tens of thousands of people.

At least 352 people have died in attacks across the country so far this month, according to an Associated Press news agency count.

Baluarte
12-21-2013, 05:42 PM
A 2013 Disaster: Death Toll More Than Doubles in Iraq

By Jason Ditz

http://news.antiwar.com/2013/12/20/a-2013-disaster-death-toll-more-than-doubles-in-iraq/

For a nation still reeling from a devastating multi-year US occupation, 2013 was definitely a year Iraqis would prefer to forget. Violence spiked more than two-fold nationwide over 2012 numbers, and the trend shows no signs of slowing down.

http://news.antiwar.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/iraq1.jpg

2013 started much the same as the past several years did, but a late April crackdown against Sunni protesters by the military sparked a series of strikes from Sunni militant factions, and coupled with spillover violence from Syria (http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Security-Watch/Backchannels/2013/1220/Iraq-violence-more-than-doubles-in-2013-is-country-headed-off-the-cliff), the toll is back to the levels of 2007, the height of the US surge.

The UN’s tentative figures for 2013 are 7,157 killed, not counting December. The UN’s figures are also usually lower than the media reports of violence in the nation.

Whatever the toll ends up being, there’s no denying 2013 was a calamitous year for Iraqi security, and much as the occupation-era violence lasted for years, this could be the beginning of another grim span of Iraqi history.

Gospodine
12-21-2013, 06:06 PM
The partition of Iraq is in full swing... the Swan song of the American withdrawal. Sunnis have been sitting on the fence for a long time, watching the teacher's pet (Shi'ites) bask in American favouritism and open Sunni discrimination and segregation; now with them mostly out of the way and the incompetent government bastards exposed for what they are; they see it as the beginning of hunting season.

The media blackout on post-withdrawal Iraq has people thinking it's ready to host a Pan-Asian games or something. It is literally the worst it's ever been.

The largest embassy compound that's ever been built by any nation (bigger than the Vatican City) is in Iraq along with three of America's largest, permanent overseas bases (Balad, Camp Victory, Al-Asad). That's not a temporary deal. Nobody is going anywhere.

All that's needed is the right catalyst and people will accept a reoccupation and formal partition of Iraq into three competing quagmires.

Baluarte
12-24-2013, 04:58 PM
The violence continues to worsen

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At least 20 people killed in attacks across Iraq: police

BY GHAZWAN HASSAN

http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/12/23/us-iraq-violence-idUSBRE9BM0LL20131223

(Reuters) - At least 20 people were killed in a spate of attacks across Iraq on Monday that included the seizure by gunmen of a television station, the targeting of Shi'ite Muslim pilgrims and a desert offensive by the army.

Two years after the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq, violence is at its highest levels since the sectarian bloodshed of 2006-7, when tens of thousands of people were killed.

Al Qaeda-linked Sunni militants have recently stepped up attacks on Iraqi security forces, civilians and anyone seen as supporting the Shi'ite-led government of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.

In the northern city of Tikrit, four gunmen wearing explosive vests seized the building of the local government channel Salahuddin after detonating a parked car bomb near the entrance, police sources said.

Security forces retook the building after killing the militants in a firefight.

"Two of the attackers blew themselves up when security forces raided the station and the others were killed in the clashes before they managed to detonate the explosive vests they were wearing," a senior police officer told Reuters.

The militants killed four employees of the station, including a female presenter, a program director and a news editor, the police sources said.

"IRON HAMMER"

In a desert region of the Sunni-dominated western Anbar province, the Iraqi military launched an operation against militants a day after at least 18 soldiers including a division commander were killed in the area.

The operation - codenamed "Iron Hammer" - was being carried out "to avenge the martyr Mohammed al-Kurwi", Maliki said in a statement, referring to the commander of the army's Seventh Division, who was killed in the attack.

Islamist militants had targeted the commander over his role in a raid on a Sunni protest camp in April.

Military officials described the operation as the largest launched by Iraqi forces since U.S. troops withdrew and said they had killed at least 20 militants and had taken control of several areas so far.

It was not possible to independently verify the reports.

Separately, the Iraqi capital was hit by a string of bombings and shootings.

In eastern Baghdad, gunmen opened fire on a bus ferrying Shi'ite pilgrims to the city of Karbala south of the capital to mark the holy Shi'ite day of Arbaeen on Tuesday, killing two people and wounding three, police said.

A further three people were killed and eight wounded when a roadside bomb went off in a commercial street in the Tobchi district of northern Baghdad.

Gunmen using silenced weapons shot dead four people in a mainly Sunni district of southern Baghdad and three Iraqi soldiers were killed by a roadside bomb in the western outskirt of Abu Ghraib, police said.

(Reporting by Ghazwan Hassan in Tikrit, Kamal Namaa in Ramadi, Kareem Raheem and Suadad al-Salhy in Baghdad; Writing by Alexander Dziadosz; Editing by Gareth Jones)