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Iraq
Al-Qaeda in Iraq says it was behind Baghdad blasts
2011-12-28
BAGHDAD: An Al-Qaeda front group in Iraq has claimed responsibility for the wave of attacks that ripped through markets, cafes and government buildings in Baghdad on a single day last week, killing 69 people and raising new worries about the countryÂ’s path.

The coordinated attacks struck a dozen mostly Shiite neighborhoods on Thursday in the first major bloodshed since US troops completed a full withdrawal this month after nearly nine years of war. They also coincided with a government crisis that has again strained ties between IraqÂ’s Sunnis and Shiites to the breaking point, tearing at the same fault line that nearly pushed Iraq into all-out civil war several years ago.

The claim of responsibility made no mention of the US withdrawal. Instead, it focused its rage on the countryÂ’s leadership, which insurgents have battled since it came to power as a result of the US-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003.

“The series of special invasions (was) launched ... to support the weak Sunnis in the prisons of the apostates and to retaliate for the captives who were executed,” said the statement in the name of the Islamic State of Iraq.

According to the SITE Intelligence Group, a US-based organization that monitors jihadist Web traffic, the claim of responsibility was posted late Monday on militant websites.

The group said the attacks were proof that they “know where and when to strike and the mujahedeen will never stand with their hands tied while the pernicious Iranian project shows its ugly face.”

The remark was in reference to accusations by militants that IraqÂ’s government has allied itself too closely with neighbor Iran, a bitter enemy of Iraq under the regime of Saddam Hussein.

The Baghdad military spokesman, Maj. Gen. Qassim Al-Moussawi, said Al-Qaeda in Iraq — no longer focused on fighting US forces — is hoping to take advantage of the current political tension to reignite sectarian warfare.

“It has become a clear scheme to draw Iraq into a sectarian war again,” Al-Moussawi said. “Al-Qaeda in Iraq played a major role in 2005 and 2006 in pushing the county into a civil war and they succeeded.”

On Tuesday morning, a car bomb exploded near a police station in the town of Hawija, 150 miles (240 kilometers) north of Baghdad, killing two civilians and injuring another, said Kirkuk police commander Brig. Gen. Sarhad Qadir.
Posted by:Steve White

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