3 more Sunni Mosques Attacked in Iraq

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Pastor Dale Morgan

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Jun 20, 2007, 5:40:05 PM6/20/07
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*Perilous Times

3 more Sunni Mosques Attacked in Iraq *

Jun 20 01:04 PM US/Eastern
By SINAN SALAHEDDIN
Associated Press Writer

BAGHDAD (AP) - Militants blew up three Sunni mosques south of Baghdad on
Wednesday—apparently revenge strikes for a suicide truck bombing a day
before that killed at least 87 people and badly damaged an important
Shiite mosque in the capital.

U.S. forces expanded their push against insurgent strongholds outside
Baghdad, meanwhile, as Iraqi units joined the offensive and took control
of several districts in the key city of Baqouba, the military said.

The commander of U.S. ground forces, Lt. Gen. Raymond Odierno, said the
campaign seeks to uproot insurgents—including Sunni factions linked to
al-Qaida—in areas north and east of Baghdad and allow Iraqi forces to
take greater control over the four-month-old effort to restore control
of the capital.

The offensive, launched Tuesday, "allows us to pressure" militants on
the militant bases outside Baghdad, Odierno told CNN.

"More important, I'm hoping it will allow us to maintain it over a long
period of time and continue to buy the time and space necessary for the
Iraqi security forces to take over" in Baghdad, he said.

The U.S. military said at least 30 al-Qaida fighters were killed and
several bombs and weapons caches destroyed as the soldiers fought their
way through the streets of Baqouba.

The operation involves some 10,000 American soldiers in Diyala province,
an al-Qaida bastion. It matched in size the force that American generals
sent against the insurgent-held city of Fallujah in By late Tuesday, the
military had reported only one American death, a Task Force Lightning
soldier killed by an explosion near his vehicle.

Iraqi Defense Ministry spokesman Mohammed al-Askari said about 5,000
Iraqi soldiers and 2,000 paramilitary police were fighting. Iraqi forces
said they took control of neighborhoods in Baqouba and were greeted by
cheering people.

"Our goal is to have no safe havens in Iraq and of course the Iraqi
security forces play a huge role in this and we're working very closely
with them to make this happen," Odierno said.

The head of a Sunni insurgent group that has turned against al-Qaida and
is cooperating with U.S. and Iraqi forces in the area said his fighters
were participating in the operations and had succeeded in clearing
several neighborhoods in eastern and western Baqouba.

The militant leader, who declined to be identified for fear of
retribution, spoke as his fighters linked arms, chanted and danced while
women ululated in celebration. An Associated Press reporter also saw
residents in the Mustafa area in western Baqouba serving food to
fighters who had battled al-Qaida and starting to repair their stores.

Wednesday's mosque bombings south of the capital caused no casualties,
because no prayers were going on at the time.

Police said suspected Shiite militiamen detonated a bomb inside a Sunni
mosque in Haswa, 30 miles south of Baghdad, at about 1 a.m. About six
hours later, militants struck again at mosque near Hillah, about 60
miles south of the capital. A third Sunni mosque was attacked and
damaged in an explosion in Iskandariyah, 30 miles south of Baghdad; the
mosque was first attacked last week.

Police officials who reported the bombings spoke on condition of
anonymity because they feared retribution.

The attackers near Hillah also targeted the imam's house near the
mosque, but the cleric fled when he saw them coming, according to the
police.

Tuesday's suicide truck bombing against the Khulani mosque in central
Baghdad was the deadliest single attack in Iraq since April 18, when at
least 127 civilians were killed when a bomb detonated parked car at a
mostly Shiite market in central Baghdad.

At a joint briefing with a U.S. military spokesman, Iraqi army spokesman
Brig. Qassim al-Mousawi said the truck was carrying about 50 cooking gas
cylinders and about 1,100 pounds of TNT.

Asked how the suicide bomber managed to drive his truck bomb through
Baghdad and next to the mosque, al-Mousawi said that it was booby-
trapped in the nearby industrial area of Sheik Omar. There were no
checkpoints between there and the mosque, he said.

Authorities are planning to put security fences near the mosques.

Police initially said the bomb was hidden in a truck piled high with
electric fans and air conditioners.

The U.S. military spokesman, Rear Adm. Mark Fox, acknowledged "an
increasing pattern of attacks" against the Green Zone, a day after a
mortar barrage against the heavily fortified area sent soldiers and
contractors scrambling for cover.

Fox declined to provide details on the number of attacks against the
Green Zone, which is also known as the International Zone, but said they
were increasing.

"It's clear that there is an attempt to get lucky shots and there is
unquestionably an increasing pattern of attacks here against the
International Zone. There's no doubt about that," he said.

Battles also continued south of Baghdad between Iraqi security forces
and Shiite militiamen loyal to radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.

Four soldiers were killed and a Humvee was burned in nearly two hours of
clashes in the Shiite town of Numaniyah, 75 miles southeast of Baghdad,
police said. The fighting erupted hours after five other Iraqi soldiers
were killed and three were wounded by a roadside bomb in the mainly
Sunni town of Madain, on the southeastern outskirts of Baghdad.

Farther south, the U.S. military said three militants had been killed,
including a senior leader of al-Sadr's Mahdi Army, and 45 detained after
two days of clashes in Nasiriyah, about 200 miles southeast of Baghdad.
Iraqi police and hospital officials put the casualty toll at 35 killed
and 150 wounded.

A British soldier died Wednesday after an attack on a military facility
in the southern city of Basra, the British defense ministry said in London.

In all, 142 people were killed or found dead in sectarian violence
Tuesday, a toll reflecting carnage associated with the months before the
U.S. security crackdown in the capital began Feb. 14.

U.S. and Iraqi soldiers found 24 severely malnourished children in a
Baghdad orphanage—some tied to their beds and too weak to stand, the
U.S. military said Wednesday.

Labor and Social Affairs Minister Mahmoud Mohammed al-Radhi criticized
publicity surrounding the boys and said news reports about the case were
inaccurate.

"We totally reject the tricks they used to manipulate and distort facts
and show the Americans as the humanitarian party. That could not be
further from the truth," he said.

The minister said the institution in which the boys were housed had
saved them from a certain death on the streets of Baghdad. All the boys,
he said, were severely handicapped and abandoned by their families.

The U.S. military, which leaked the story and pictures of the orphanage
to CBS News earlier this week, said they were all boys between the ages
of 3 and 15. It said many of the youngsters were found naked in a dark
room with no windows. Supplies of food and clothing were found in a
nearby storeroom.

___

Associated Press writer Bushra Juhi in Baghdad contributed to this report.

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