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At least 75 killed in Iraqi bombing

 

Top Shiite cleric among the dead
in daylight attack
on Najaf mosque

 

Image: Crowd Of People Look At The Burned Car In Najaf

Iraqis look at the car belonging to bodyguards of Shiite Muslim leader Mohammad Baqir al-Hakim.

 

 


MSNBC NEWS SERVICES

 

 

NAJAF, Iraq, Aug. 29 —  A massive car bomb at Iraq’s holiest Shiite shrine killed 75 people Friday, including one of the country’s most important Muslim clerics, Ayatollah Mohammed Baqir al-Hakim, the chief doctor at the city’s central hospital said.

 

 

 

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       DR. SAFAA AL-AMEEDI, who determined the death toll in telephone calls to all of the city’s hospitals, said medical facilities were mobbed by people looking for relatives and loved ones. He estimated that 140 people were wounded, many of them seriously.
       Al-Ameedi said the car bomb outside the Imam Ali mosque was detonated as thousands of people were pouring out after noon prayers on Friday, the Muslim day of rest.
       The blast created a crater about 3½ feet deep in the street in front of the mosque and destroyed nearby shops, witnesses said. Cars near the blast were twisted hunks of metal. Rescuers pulled the dead and injured from the rubble.
       “I saw al-Hakim walk out of the shrine after his sermon, and moments later there was a massive explosion. There were many dead bodies,” said Abdul Amir Jassem, 40, a merchant who was in the mosque. “He was praying for Iraqi unity.”
       Al-Hakim was tortured under the regime of deposed President Saddam Hussein and spent more than 20 years in exile in Iran before returning to Iraq earlier this year after the U.S.-led victory over Saddam.
       “We deplore this horrible act of terrorist violence,” a White House official said. “We will not be deterred in our efforts to help the Iraqi people rebuild their country and establish a representative democratic government.”
       The U.S. civilian administrator in Iraq, L. Paul Bremer, issued a statement denouncing the bombing.
       “The bombing today in An Najaf shows again that the enemies of the new Iraq will stop at nothing. Again, they have killed innocent Iraqis. Again, they have violated one of Islam’s most sacred places. Again, by their heinous action, they have shown the evil face of terrorism.”
       
SHIITE POWER STRUGGLE
       Al-Hakim was the spiritual and top leader of the Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq and had divided his time since the end of the war between Tehran and Najaf, the holiest Shiite Muslim city in Iraq. His family is one of the most influential in the Shiite community in Iraq.

 

 

Shiite leader Ayatollah Mohammad Baqer al-Hakim returned to Najaf fom Iran in May.

 

Image: Muslim Shi'ite Leader Ayatollah Mohammad Baqer Al-hakim       Younger Shiites have conducted an ongoing power struggle with the more traditional Shiite Muslims in Najaf and the region, trying to grab control from the al-Hakim family. But there was no immediate evidence that the bombing was the work of the younger faction, which has its strongest support in Baghdad’s Sadr City slum.
       A gas cylinder also exploded July 22 along the outside wall of the home in Najaf of one of the ayatollah’s relatives, Mohammed Saeed al-Hakim, who was one of three Shiite leaders threatened with death by a rival Shiite cleric shortly after Saddam was toppled April 9.
       Iraqi newspapers reported two weeks ago that Mohammed Saeed al-Hakim had received threats against his life.
Al-Hakim was a key leader

       
BLAMING THE U.S.
       The leader of the Iraqi National Congress and Ahmad Chalabi, a member of the provisional Governing Council, blamed the United States in an interview on the al-Jazeera satellite television station for failing to provide security and said the bombing was the work of loyalists of Saddam who were trying to create sectarian discord.

 

 

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       Chalabi said he had been told of the death by the cleric’s brother Abdel-Aziz al-Hakim, a leader of the armed wing of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq and a fellow member of the U.S.-picked interim government.
       Chalabi blamed the attack on the same group that carried out the suicide truck bombing Aug. 19 at the U.N. headquarters in Iraq, which killed at least 23 people and injured more than 100 others. He offered no evidence to support his claim.
       Chalabi called the cleric a martyr who would stand as an example to Iraq’s postwar struggle for peace. Al-Hakim, he said, had spent most of his life fighting Saddam.
       Sheik Muqtada al-Sadr, who is not yet 30, and his young followers have sought tirelessly to replace more traditional factions as the voice of Iraq’s Shiite majority, portraying themselves as the ones doing the most to redress decades of suppression by Sunni Muslims under Saddam.
       “It is a blow to Iraq’s unity,” said Morad Veisi, an Iranian political analyst in Tehran. “The killing appears to have sought to deny Shiite Muslims an effective role in Iraq’s future at a time when Iraq is gradually preparing for elections.”

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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       Veisi said al-Hakim’s assassination also sought to sow seeds of discord between Shiite and Sunni Muslims.
       “The winners of the killing are Saddam loyalists and terror group al-Qaida, and the losers are the Iraqi people,” he told The Associated Press. “The killing proves that the U.S. is incapable of providing adequate security in Iraq. The U.S. shares the blame because it failed to provide security.”
Baghdad bombing 'U.N.'s 9/11'

       
U.S. SOLDIER KILLED
       No coalition troops were in the area of the mosque out of respect for the holy site, said Lt. Col. Jim Cassella, a spokesman for the Pentagon. U.S.-led troops have been asked to stay away from the mosque by Shiite officials.
       Spanish forces, who are taking control of the region from the U.S. Marines, were seen in small numbers on its outskirts.
       Earlier Friday, a U.S. soldier was killed and four others were wounded, the U.S. military said.
       Insurgents fired three rocket-propelled grenades at a support convoy on a main road northeast of Baqouba, 40 miles northeast of Baghdad, and small arms fire also hit the group. spokesmen said.
       One of the wounded soldiers had to have a leg amputated.

 

 

U.S. deaths in postwar Iraq

 

       The soldiers belonged to the 8th Infantry Regiment’s 2nd Battalion and were traveling from the town of Muqdadiyah to 2nd Brigade headquarters in Baqouba.
       The soldier’s death raised the number of U.S. personnel killed in Iraq to 282, of which 67 have died in combat since May 1, when President Bush declared an end to major combat operations in Iraq.
       The commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, told reporters Thursday that casualty figures since the end of major conflict were “about what we would expect to get in this kind of conflict.” Since then, 144 U.S. soldiers have died — six more than during the war itself.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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       The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.
       

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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1 NAJAF, Iraq, Aug. 29 — A massive car bomb at Iraq’s holiest Shiite shrine killed 75 people Friday, including one of the country’s most important Muslim clerics, Ayatollah Mohammed Baqir al-Hakim, the chief doctor at the city’s central hospital said. New Page 1

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The American military also announced the arrest of 92 people in a series of raids aimed at those responsible for attacks against Americans north of the capital. One of the raids included the largest joint operation between U.S. military police and about 200 American-trained Iraqi police. 


The two bombings hit U.S. military convoys in the adjacent towns of Habaniyah and Khaldiyah at about the same time. The bombing in Khaldiyah prompted the big firefight in which two soldiers and one civilian were injured, according to Lt. Col. Jeff Swisher of the 1st Infantry Division. 


The Khaldiyah fighting began at 9 a.m. when an American patrol was hit by roadside bombs, then insurgents opened fire with rocket-propelled grenades and small arms, Swisher said. The patrol returned fire and support was called in, he said. 


Americans began withdrawing at about 5:30 p.m. from the al-Qurtan neighborhood on the north side of Khaldiyah, scene of several previous firefights between the U.S. military and guerrilla fighters. Angry residents cursed at reporters who entered the fire zone after the battle. Swisher said 14 people were detained.

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Top Stories - The New York Times
White House to Overhaul Iraq and Afghan Missions
Mon Oct 6, 8:53 AM ET
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By DAVID E. SANGER The New York Times

WASHINGTON, Oct. 5 The White House has ordered a major reorganization of American efforts to quell violence in Iraq (news - web sites) and Afghanistan (news - web sites) and to speed the reconstruction of both countries, according to senior administration officials.

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The new effort includes the creation of an "Iraq Stabilization Group," which will be run by the national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice (news - web sites). The decision to create the new group, five months after Mr. Bush declared the end of active combat in Iraq, appears part of an effort to assert more direct White House control over how Washington coordinates its efforts to fight terrorism, develop political structures and encourage economic development in the two countries.

It comes at a time when surveys show Americans are less confident of Mr. Bush's foreign policy skills than at any time since the terrorist attacks two years ago. At the same time, Congress is using President Bush (news - web sites)'s request for $87 billion to question the administration's failure to anticipate the violence in Iraq and the obstacles to reconstruction.

"This puts accountability right into the White House," a senior administration official said.

The reorganization was described in a confidential memorandum that Ms. Rice sent Thursday to Secretary of State Colin L. Powell, Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld, and the director of central intelligence, George J. Tenet.

Asked about the memorandum on Sunday, Ms. Rice called it "a recognition by everyone that we are in a different phase now" that Congress is considering Mr. Bush's request for $20 billion for reconstruction and $67 billion for military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. She said it was devised by herself, Vice President Dick Cheney (news - web sites), Mr. Powell and Mr. Rumsfeld in response to discussions she held with Mr. Bush at his ranch in late August.

The creation of the group, according to several administration officials, grew out of Mr. Bush's frustration at the setbacks in Iraq and the absence of more visible progress in Afghanistan, at a moment when remnants of the Taliban appear to be newly active. It is the closest the White House has come to an admission that its plans for reconstruction in those countries have proved insufficient, and that it was unprepared for the guerrilla-style attacks that have become more frequent in Iraq. There have been more American deaths in Iraq since the end of active combat than during the six weeks it took to take control of the country.

"The president knows his legacy, and maybe his re-election, depends on getting this right," another administration official said. "This is as close as anyone will come to acknowledging that it's not working."

Inside the State Department and in some offices in the White House, the decision to create the stabilization group has been interpreted as a direct effort to diminish the authority of the Pentagon (news - web sites) and Mr. Rumsfeld in the next phase of the occupation. Senior White House officials denied that was the case, and said in interviews on Sunday that the idea had been created by members of the National Security Council and embraced by Mr. Rumsfeld, who has been a lightning rod for criticism about poor postwar planning.

"Don recognizes this is not what the Pentagon does best, and he is, in some ways, relieved to give up some of the authority here," a senior official insisted, noting that L. Paul Bremer III, the head of the allied provisional authority in Iraq, will still report to the Defense Department. But one of Mr. Bremer's key deputies will sit on the new stabilization group, giving him a direct line outside the Pentagon.

Mr. Rumsfeld's spokesman, Lawrence Di Rita, said Sunday that the defense secretary was "aware of the new approach" and noted that Mr. Bremer's "relationship with Rumsfeld remains unchanged."

If Mr. Rumsfeld is giving up some authority, officials say, so is Mr. Powell. The State Department has been in charge of the Afghan reconstruction effort, but now the White House will assert new control over the interagency effort there.

"While the problems in Afghanistan are less complex," a senior official said, "the president wanted to know how come it took so long to get the highway under construction." That project has become symbolic of the slow pace of reconstruction, especially outside the capital.

The creation of the stabilization group appears to give more direct control to Ms. Rice, one of the president's closest confidantes, who signed the memorandum announcing it. For the first two and a half years of Mr. Bush's presidency, Ms. Rice often seemed hesitant to take a more active role, eschewing the kind of hands-on approach for which Henry A. Kissinger and other national security advisers were known, and viewing her job chiefly as providing quiet advice to Mr. Bush.

Now, four of her deputies will run coordinating committees on counterterrorism efforts, economic development, political affairs in Iraq and the creation of clearer messages to the media here and in Baghdad.

Each working group will include under secretaries from the State, Defense and Treasury Departments, and senior representatives from the Central Intelligence Agency (news - web sites).

State Department officials have complained bitterly that they have been shut out of decision-making about Iraq, even as attacks on American troops increased, lights failed and oil production remained stuck far below even prewar levels.

 

Mr. Bush, a senior administration official said, made it clear that he wanted "all the powers of the government" turned toward making the reconstruction work in both Iraq and Afghanistan. "The president is impatient with bureaucracy," the official said.

In the interview, Ms. Rice described the new organization as one intended to support the Pentagon, not supplant it.

"The N.S.C. staff is first and foremost the president's staff," she said, "but it is of course the staff to the National Security Council." That group will in effect be taking more direct responsibility.

The council is made up of top advisers to the president who meet three times a week in the Situation Room. They have often seemed unable to coordinate efforts on the main issues relating to the occupation of Iraq. "The Pentagon remains the lead agency, and the structure has been set up explicitly to provide assistance to the Defense Department and coalition provisional authority," Ms. Rice said.

Other officials said the effect of Ms. Rice's memorandum would be to move day-to-day issues of administering Iraq to the White House.

The counterterrorism group, for example, will be run by Frances F. Townsend, Ms. Rice's deputy for that field. Economic issues from oil to electricity to the distribution of a new currency will be coordinated by Gary Edson. He has been the liaison between the National Security Council and the National Economic Council.

Robert D. Blackwill, a former ambassador to India, will run the group overseeing the creation of political institutions in Iraq, as well as directing stabilization for Afghanistan.

Anna Perez, Ms. Rice's communications director, will focus on a coordinated media message a response to concerns about the daily reports of attacks on American troops and lawlessness in the streets.


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