News and Document archive source
copyrighted material disclaimer at bottom of page

NewsMinewar-on-terroriraqinsurgency200606-jan-apr — Viewing Item


Bomb kills 80 sunnis turns city against alqaeda

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2006-01-23T183936Z_01_L20177754_RTRUKOC_0_UK-IRAQ.xml

http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2006-01-23T183936Z_01_L20177754_RTRUKOC_0_UK-IRAQ.xml

Iraqi rebels in western city turn against Qaeda
Mon Jan 23, 2006 6:39 PM GMT

By Aseel Kami

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Iraqi nationalist rebels in the Sunni Arab city of Ramadi have turned against their former al Qaeda allies after a bomb attack this month killed 80 people.

Residents said on Monday at least three prominent figures on both sides were killed in tit-for-tat assassinations after local insurgent groups formed an alliance against al Qaeda, blaming it for massacring police recruits in Ramadi on January 5.

In Baghdad, bomb blasts killed five Iraqi policemen and a U.S. soldier despite a security clampdown on the capital to thwart attacks by Sunni Arab rebels angry over election results. The attacks took place the day before the trial of Saddam Hussein was due to resume.

The Ramadi bloodshed, which one resident described as "all-out war", has taken place as political parties prepare for talks on forming a coalition government the United States hopes will undermine support for a Sunni Arab insurgency.

Since U.S. forces overthrew Saddam Hussein's Sunni-dominated government in 2003, disparate Iraqi groups have made common cause with foreign Islamists like al Qaeda leader in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, seeking to force out U.S. troops and bring down the U.S.-backed government of Shi'ites and Kurds.

But there are signs that their goals may be diverging, with some nationalists seeing political negotiation in Baghdad as a way of attaining some of their goals.

Despite increased security throughout Baghdad, a suicide car bomber struck a checkpoint into the Green Zone government compound, close to the Iranian embassy, killing two policemen and a television sports journalist.

A burnt-out police vehicle stood still smouldering in the street and the twisted, blackened wreckage of the bomber's car. A foot lay among the blast debris scattered in the street.

Bombs killed two more policemen and a U.S. soldier in four other attacks in the capital. Several mortar bombs fell short of the Green Zone into a park that also houses Baghdad zoo and an amusement park. Police said no one was injured.

SECURITY CLAMPDOWN

Iraq's Interior Ministry said a security clampdown in the capital was still in force, amid fears of a spike in insurgent violence as political parties gear up for negotiations on a coalition government of national unity.

The results, announced on Friday, gave the ruling alliance of Shi'ite Islamic parties 128 seats in the 275-seat parliament and 55 seats to two Sunni blocs. The Kurdish Alliance won 53.

The United States, anxious for a stable consensus, wants the Kurds and majority Shi'ites to form a government that includes Sunnis, hoping that their involvement in the political process will weaken support for the insurgency.

Iraq's parliament will ignore a constitutional provision setting a firm deadline for its first meeting after the election but could meet to choose a president and prime minister from mid-February, officials said on Monday.

"I don't think we're going to meet before mid-February. We have to reach an overall deal first in which we name the president, prime minister and the speaker," Abbas al-Bayati, an official in the dominant Shi'ite Alliance bloc.

He said there was already consensus on Kurdish leader Jalal Talabani staying on as president and on the Alliance, with a near-majority, having the right to name the prime minister. It hoped to decide by the end of the week between the incumbent Ibrahim al-Jaafari and Adel Abdul Mahdi.

As the candidates jockey for position, Saddam is due to return to court on Tuesday, although his defence team have said they will seek a halt to proceedings.

The court named a new chief judge on Monday after the original presiding judge resigned and his replacement was accused of being a supporter of the former Iraqi president.

The Iraqi High Tribunal has been in turmoil since Kurdish chief judge Rizgar Amin resigned two weeks ago, complaining about government pressure to speed up the trial and clamp down on tirades by Saddam and some of his seven co-accused.

His resignation rocked a court whose ability to mount a fair trial amid sectarian and ethnic strife had already been thrown into doubt by the killing of two defence lawyers and mutual accusations of intimidation.

Amin's deputy on the five-judge panel, Shi'ite Arab Sayeed al-Hamashi, was chosen by fellow judges last week to preside over Tuesday's session but was swiftly accused of belonging to Saddam's Baath Party, a charge he has denied.

The court said on Monday that Raouf Abdel Rahman, 64, a Kurd like Amin, would preside on Tuesday.

Rahman's home town is Halabja, where Saddam's security forces are accused of killing 5,000 people in one day in 1988 in a poison gas attack. The massacre is one of the atrocities for which Saddam could ultimately be tried.

Saddam is now on trial for crimes against humanity for having 148 men from the Shi'ite town of Dujail killed after an assassination bid there in 1982.

(Additional reporting by Mariam Karouny)



© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.



130 dead in series of iraq attacks { December 2006 }
36 dead after blast in baghdad vegetable market
3800 executed in iraq first three months of 2006
65 thousand refugees flee sectarian violence
70 iraqis killed in spasm of violence { March 13 2006 }
Air strikes target civilians { January 3 2006 }
Apparent iraqi death squad discovered { February 17 2006 }
Big assault has no contract with insurgents { March 17 2006 }
Blast destroys golden dome of shiite shrine
Blast hits sunni mosque in iraq
Blast kills 16 near shiite mosque in baghdad
Bomb explodes in crowded market
Bomb kills 80 sunnis turns city against alqaeda
Bombed sunni shrine is mistaken as shiite { February 24 2006 }
Brits deny iran bombing allegations
Cheney says iraq is not in civil war { February 2006 }
Cost of war to pass 1 trillion { March 17 2006 }
Fears of civil war after reprisals { February 23 2006 }
Foreigners not civil war says US military
Government bans traffic in baghdad
Gunmen kill woman after car bomb hits sunni mosque { February 10 2006 }
Gunmen posing as police kill sunnis in retaliation
Insurgents posing as police attach shiite shrine { February 22 2006 }
Iran says US and israel destroyed iraqi shrine
Iraq abductors threaten to kill peace activists { January 29 2006 }
Iraq blast kills 10 shiite leader delay parliament
Iraq civil war to spread across middle east { March 19 2006 }
Iraq politican blames foreign intelligence for shrine attack { February 24 2006 }
Iraqis 700k christians celebrate easter
Iraqis burn flag before prayer fri mar 10 2006 [jpg]
Largest air assault since 2003 invasion 2006 mar
Major january attacks kill 70 sunnis { January 6 2006 }
Marines beat back sunni arab insurgents { March 2006 }
Militants attack iraq fuel convoy
Military asserts most iraq is peaceful { February 2006 }
Over 100 iraqis killed in sectarian violence { February 24 2006 }
Palestinians targeted in iraq
Peace activist quaker slain in iraq { March 12 2006 }
Police chief claims attack on alsadr to divide iraqis
Political progress destabilized by another attack { March 13 2006 }
Press says iraq near civil war after 68 killed
Retaliation on sunnis after deliberate sectarian attempt
Shiites pissed at US military raid on mosque
Sister of iraqi vice president shot dead
Suicide bomber kills 36 at funeral procession { January 4 2006 }
Sunni chief seeks release of US reporter
Sunni mosque bombed as iraqi tanks deploy in baghdad { February 27 2006 }
Three explosions at shiite mosque in baghdad
Troops cant find insurgents in major assault
Unknown kidnapped briton freed by accident
US commander says iraq crisis has passed { February 2006 }
US military seizes iraqi reporter for guardian { January 9 2006 }
US troops raid sunni clerical scholars group
Young clerics call for american hatred { February 26 2006 }

Files Listed: 54



Correction/submissions

CIA FOIA Archive

National Security
Archives
Support one-state solution for Israel and Palestine Tea Party bumper stickers JFK for Dummies, The Assassination made simple