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Terrorists Kill 30 at Police Station, Mosque
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Puck
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Joined: 05 Jan 2004
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PostFri Dec 03, 2004 8:31 am    Terrorists Kill 30 at Police Station, Mosque

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Terrorists Kill 30 at Police Station, Mosque

Friday, December 03, 2004

BAGHDAD, Iraq � A rebel group led by Jordanian terrorist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi (search) is claiming responsibility for some of the 30 deaths from two major attacks Friday against a Shiite mosque and a police station in Baghdad.

The attacks were the deadliest insurgent attacks in weeks as Iraq girds itself against increasing violence heading into the country's Jan. 30 elections.

The police station attack occurred in the western Amil district. Enemy gunmen stormed the station near the dangerous road to Baghdad International Airport (search), killing 16 policemen, looting weapons, releasing detainees and torching several cars, police Capt. Mohammed al-Jumeili said. He said several policemen were wounded.

In the Sunni Muslim stronghold of Azamiyah, police said a car bomb exploded at a Shiite (search) mosque called Hameed al-Najar, killing 14 people and wounding 19.

Azamiyah was a major center of Sunni (search) support for former dictator Saddam Hussein, and the targeting of the mosque may have been a bid by Sunnis to stoke civil strife in the area. It wasn't clear who was behind the bombing.

The Zarqawi Connection

Zarqawi's Sunni rebel group, Al Qaeda in Iraq, claimed responsibility for the police station attack. The claim, which appeared on an Islamic Web site, could not immediately be verified.

"The destructive effect that such operations has on the morale of the enemy inside and on its countries and people abroad is clear," the claim said.

Zarqawi's group is believed to be behind many of the insurgent attacks against coalition and Iraqi forces.

Bodies of executed Iraqi police and other security officials have been found littered across former insurgent strongholds that U.S. and Iraqi forces have been cleaning out. His terrorist group is also supposedly responsible for the kidnapping and beheading of a number of western and other contractors and workers in Iraq.

U.S. military spokesman Lt. Col. Jim Hutton said the battle began when gunmen in 11 cars attacked the station with rocket-propelled grenades and small arms fire. He said a U.S. military Humvee was also damaged. There were no American casualties.

Detainees being held at the station were also hurt, al-Jumeili said. There was no word on the insurgents' casualties.

The rebels had first shelled the station with mortars. Thick black smoke rose from the burning vehicles after the attack.

The claim from al-Zarqawi's group said 30 people were killed in the Amil attack and only two escaped. The group also claimed responsibility for an attack on another police station in Azamiyah, the same neighborhood where the mosque was bombed. There were no reports of casualties from the strike on that police station.

In the same claim, Zarqawi's group said it attacked two police patrols in the western Baghdad area of Nafq al-Shorta, killing everyone, but that could not be verified.

City Councilmen Killed

Meanwhile, two city councilmen from Khalis were ambushed and killed by gunmen Friday, officials said.

The two were driving from Khalis, 50 miles north of Baghdad, to Baqouba, the capital of Diala province, to attend the regional meeting on the country's Jan. 30 elections, said deputy governor Ghassan al-Khadran. He said a third councilman was injured in the attack.

The attacks in Amil and Azamiyah were the latest against Iraq's police and security services, which have been targeted throughout central, western and northern Iraq in recent weeks.

The U.S. Embassy on Thursday barred employees from the dangerous highway leading to Baghdad's airport.

Also Thursday, insurgents killed an American soldier in the restive city of Mosul, and mortar strikes pummeled central Baghdad. Despite the violence, a top Iraqi official insisted the security situation had improved since U.S. forces scattered insurgents in the Sunni Muslim city of Fallujah last month.

To provide security for the election, the U.S. government has announced it is raising troop strength in Iraq to its highest level of the war. The number of troops will climb from 138,000 now to about 150,000 by mid-January - more than in the 2003 invasion.

While Iraq's Kurds and majority Shiites back the elections, Sunni groups have demanded a postponement because of the poor security. President Bush dismissed those calls Thursday, insisting the elections must not be delayed.

"It's time for Iraqi citizens to go to the polls," Bush told reporters in the Oval Office.

Lt. Col. Paul Hastings said Iraqi and U.S. forces discovered 14 unidentified bodies in Mosul on Thursday. He said there were also reports of five more bodies picked up by family members. That brings to at least 66 the number of bodies - many of them believed members of the Iraqi security forces - found there since Nov. 18.

Mosul's police force disintegrated during an insurgent uprising last month, forcing the U.S. command to divert troops from the offensive in Fallujah.

Also Thursday, attackers launched at least five mortars in central Baghdad, including two that crashed into the Green Zone, the compound that houses Iraq's interim administration and U.S. diplomatic missions.

U.S. senators visiting Iraq on Thursday said they were pleased with Bush's decision raising troop levels, but criticized him for not doing so earlier.

"We should have leveled with the American people in the beginning," Sen. Joseph Biden, a Democrat from Delaware, told reporters. "It was absolutely inevitable" that more troops would be needed, he said.

The U.S. Embassy decision to ban its employees from using the highway to the airport followed a nearly identical warning Monday from Britain's Foreign Office. The embassy also cautioned Americans in Iraq to review their security situation and warned those planning to travel to Iraq to consider whether the trip was "absolutely necessary."

However, Qassim Dawoud, Iraq's national security adviser, said insurgent attacks were down since the invasion of Fallujah. He provided no details but said Iraq didn't need U.S.-led coalition forces' help to safeguard the election.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Curtis
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PostFri Dec 03, 2004 2:45 pm    

What a bunch of sickos, killing 30 people...probably innocent, those terrorists discuss me .

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Republican_Man
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PostFri Dec 03, 2004 6:45 pm    

Captain Skenandore wrote:
What a bunch of sickos, killing 30 people...probably innocent, those terrorists discuss me .


Same here.



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