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Iraq
Iraq attacks down nearly 60 percent
2009-05-25
BAGHDAD - High-profile attacks in Iraq have fallen nearly 60 percent in the past year, the U.S. military said Sunday, though violence continues to plague the northern city of Mosul, where a suicide car bomber targeting an American convoy killed one Iraqi and wounded 45 others.

Mosul is considered the last urban stronghold of al-Qaida in Iraq, and SundayÂ’s attack comes as military operations are being conducted there before a June 30 deadline for U.S. forces to pull out of IraqÂ’s cities.

The Iraqi government has said that deadline will not be extended, despite concerns by American military commanders that Iraqi forces may not be ready to take on security for Mosul.

U.S. military spokesman Maj. Gen. David Perkins said Sunday that high-profile attacks — those involving a high number of casualties — have fallen 58 percent from last March and more than 50 percent from a month ago. There were 28 high-profile attacks in April and 13 so far this month, Perkins said. Those April attacks killed about 235 people and raised fears that the security gains of the past two years were eroding.

Iraqi military spokesman, Maj. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi, insisted Iraq’s security forces were ready to take over as U.S. forces leave Iraq’s cities. “We are confident that Iraqi security forces are able to eliminate the remaining terrorist groups despite desperate acts by them to destabilize the situation,” he told reporters during a joint U.S.-Iraqi briefing in Baghdad.

Perkins said the two sides were still working out the details of the June 30 withdrawal, but said some U.S. noncombat personnel would remain inside Iraq’s cities. “It is justified to be concerned because, historically, transition has been a vulnerable period,” he said. Perkins said the two sides were working closely to try to minimize attacks during the transition.
Posted by:Steve White

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