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Iraq Foreign Embassies Bombed, Scores Killed

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Sunday, 04 April 2010 18:09
An Iraqi policemen stands guard outside the Iranian Embassy where a bomb killed at least 12 people, 04/04/10. (photo: Hadi Mizban)

An Iraqi policemen stands guard outside the Iranian Embassy where a bomb killed at least 12 people, 04/04/10. (photo: Hadi Mizban)


Bombings Target Foreign Embassies, Kill Dozens;
25 Iraqis Killed by Sunni Extremists;
Sadrists Close Referendum Vote


he headlines out of Iraq Sunday are mainly owing to the consequences of the US troop withdrawal from that country.

Update Three suicide bombs rocked the capital Sunday morning, in different districts, but each appearing to target foreign embassies, killing dozens. The Iranian and German embassies were among the targets. The Times of London correspondent also heard a report that a security firm may have been another target.

In a pre-dawn Saturday raid, Sunni Arab militants dressed as Iraqi army troops or US soldiers attacked families of the Jubur tribe. As long as the US military was actively patrolling Iraqi cities, and while it was paying the Awakening Council fighters directly, they were relatively safe. But as US troops have pulled back and as the government of PM Nuri al-Maliki has reduced the pay of these fighters and most often declined to induct them into the security forces, they have become increasingly vulnerable to such attacks. And this attack could well be the beginning of a vaster trend toward reprisals as the US departs and those who cooperated with it are coded as collaborators. (And as the US withdraws, foreign embassies and other institutions will require special protection by the Iraqi security forces or insurgents will try to force them out.)

Aljazeera English has video:



In other news, the Sadr Movement closed their two-day referendum on which prime ministerial candidate their party should support. The vote has been criticized for having insufficient safeguards to prevent multiple voting by a single individual and other forms of fraud. The referendum is in a sense non-binding, since it was held at the bidding of Muqtada al-Sadr and is not mandated in the constitution.

That Muqtada al-Sadr should have emerged as the kingmaker in Baghdad is also an artifact of the US withdrawal from Iraq. As the US fades, those movements that are able to mobilize the masses will no longer be curbed by the US military, and so can assert themselves politically.

Welcome to the glimmers of a post-American Iraq...


Open Article On Originating Site

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute.

 

Comments  

 
+4 # Guest 2010-04-05 06:08
Iraq is looking more and more like the proverbial 'Tar Baby' described for us by Joel Chandler Harris. We went after the tar baby, and now he's about to lock us into a permanent occupation - similar to the ones we've had on Okinawa-island, and Kaiserslautern, Germany for over 60 years, not.
When WILL we learn??
 
 
+5 # Guest 2010-04-05 06:35
So, are you saying that the US needs to stay in Iraq and continue to police a nation that we had no right nor reason to invade?
OMG, what could be worse, the Iraqi adopt a communist government?
We need to get out of Iraq and Afghanistan faster than we are.
Let's attend to the problems inside the USA and stop protecting corporate interests.
 
 
+1 # Guest 2010-04-05 16:25
Every day that the US remains in Iraq, the Bush/Chaney machine probably makes LITERALLY millions of dollars.

Why rush to get out? And deprive them of their share of what's left in the treasury?
 
 
+2 # Guest 2010-04-05 11:59
I agree with Ron Maier. We have no business being in Iraq, it's not clear why we are in Afghanistan, since many if not most of the Taliban have moved to Saudi Arabia, where they know they are safe. Our national debt is increasing to disastrous proportions, and the only possible but ugly, reason for keeping troops in Afghanistan is that it keeps the unemployment rate down.
 

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