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IRAQ WARS
Baghdad attacks kill 23 in worst day in a month
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Oct 12, 2011

Iraq rocket attack wounds three US soldiers
Amara, Iraq (AFP) Oct 12, 2011 - A rocket attack on a US military base in Iraq's southern Maysan province wounded three American soldiers on Wednesday, a US military spokesman and an Iraqi security official said.

"We have operational reports of five rockets landing on or near COS (Contingency Operating Station) Garry Owens that injured three service members," the spokesman said.

"Reports indicate the attack took place this evening," the spokesman said, adding that COS Garry Owens is on Al-Batirah airfield, about 10 kilometres (six miles) west of Amara, the capital of Maysan province.

The Iraqi security official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, had earlier said that four Katyusha rockets hit a US base west of Amara at about 8:00 pm (1700 GMT).

Emergency vehicles were seen heading to the area as helicopters flew overhead, an AFP journalist reported.

The rocket attack comes with less than three months to go before a year-end withdrawal deadline for the roughly 41,500 US soldiers currently in Iraq, with Baghdad and Washington yet to reach any accord on a post-2011 training mission.

The United States insists that any trainers must have immunity from Iraqi prosecution, as US forces in the country currently do, while Iraqi officials say such immunity is unnecessary.

Despite a decline in violence nationwide since its peak in 2006 and 2007, attacks remain common, though Iraqis rather than Americans are usually the victims.

A total of 185 Iraqis were killed in violence in September, according to official figures.


Attacks mainly targeting security in Baghdad, including two suicide car bombs minutes apart against police stations, killed 23 people on Wednesday, the Iraqi capital's deadliest day in more than a month.

The violence, in which more than 70 people were wounded, showed insurgents' ability to plan and carry out coordinated attacks on well-secured targets, as Iraq weighs its options over a post-2011 American military training mission.

Two suicide attackers detonated their explosives-packed vehicles at police stations in Hurriyah in north Baghdad, and Alwiyah in the centre, at about 8:30 am (0530 GMT), killing at least 18, interior and defence ministry officials said.

"I saw the bomber trying to pass the barriers, but he blew up his vehicle. The concrete T-walls collapsed and I fell on the ground," said Ali, a policeman at the Alwiyah station who only gave his first name.

He said he was not injured thanks to the walls, but that his colleagues who had been standing at the gate of the station had been torn apart.

Human remains and shrapnel from the bomb were scattered for about 100 metres (yards), and security forces cordoned off the scene, an AFP correspondent said.

Parliament speaker Osama al-Nujaifi condemned the attacks in a statement released by his office.

Baghdad provincial council member Mohammed al-Rubaie, who was at the scene of the Alwiyah explosion, said "these attacks are a challenge against Iraq and the political process, because the terrorists want to confirm that they exist here just before the departure of US soldiers."

An interior ministry official put the toll from that attack at 14 dead and 25 wounded, while a defence ministry official said 15 people were killed and 25 wounded.

Rubaie said seven of the wounded were policemen, including one woman. The bomber tried to enter the Alwiyah station but was blocked by concrete walls, he said.

Both officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said four people were killed in the Hurriyah blast, and at least 22 people wounded.

Differing tolls are common in the confusion that follows major attacks in Iraq.

The attack seriously damaged the police station in Alwiyah and created a crater in the street about four metres (yards) wide and two metres deep. It also damaged a nearby primary school.

The street in front of the police station had been closed from 2004, but was reopened about a month ago to ease the flow of traffic, Rubaie said.

Another car bomb killed three people and wounded 11, including police, at Al-Ilam in southwest Baghdad on Wednesday, the interior ministry official said.

Baghdad's Yarmuk hospital received six wounded from the explosion in Al-Ilam, among them a police major, a medical source said.

A car bomb in Hurriyah killed one civilian and wounded an Iraqi army brigadier, nine of his bodyguards and two civilians, according to the officials.

The defence ministry official said the brigadier general was seriously wounded.

One policeman was also killed and another wounded by shots from a silenced pistol in the Jihad neighbourhood in south Baghdad, said the interior ministry official.

In other attacks, a magnetic "sticky bomb" wounded a police brigadier general in Al-Sulaykh in north Baghdad, according to the interior ministry official, while the defence ministry official said a roadside bomb wounded seven people in Hurriyah.

Wednesday's attacks come with less than three months to go before a year-end withdrawal deadline for the roughly 41,500 US soldiers currently in Iraq, with Baghdad and Washington yet to reach any accord on a post-2011 training mission.

The apparently coordinated attacks were the deadliest to hit the capital since August 28, when a suicide attack blamed on Al-Qaeda at Baghdad's biggest Sunni mosque killed 28 people, including an MP.

Despite a decline in violence nationwide since its peak in 2006 and 2007, attacks remain common. A total of 185 Iraqis were killed in violence in September, according to official figures.

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Iraq: The first technology war of the 21st century




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Saddam's bronze buttock up for auction in Britain
London (AFP) Oct 12, 2011 - A bronze buttock from the statue of late Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein toppled in Baghdad after the US-led invasion in 2003 is to be auctioned in Britain, an auction house said Tuesday.

A former soldier from Britain's elite SAS regiment retrieved the two-foot (0.6-metre) wide piece of history and took it back to Britain shortly after US marines dragged the statue down on live television.

Nigel "Spud" Ely, now 52, was working with media covering the fall of Baghdad at the time. He said the marines gave him permission to remove the buttock using a hammer and a crowbar.

"The US Marines had erected a cordon of tanks to guard the square. But I wanted a piece of the statue -- and when I mentioned to the marines that I was an old soldier and with the press they told me, 'No problem, buddy -- help yourself,'" Ely said.

"I only wanted a piece big enough to put in my pocket, but I ended up with a chunk about two foot square. "I thought, 'What the hell am I going to do with this?'

"I threw it in the back of my truck and forgot about it until we tried to re-enter Kuwait, where the Kuwaiti army arrested us and searched us for plunder."

The ex-serviceman was allowed to keep it after saying it was armour for a truck, but had to pay a �385 ($606, 439 euros) excess baggage charge to fly his unique souvenir back to Britain.

Ely recently set up his own company to promote 'war relic art', but has handed the sale of the memento over to Hansons Auctioneers, based in Derby, central England.

Auctioneer Charles Hanson called the bronze body part a "piece of modern history" and said he expects it to be sold for at least �10,000 when it goes under the hammer on October 27.

"It should appeal to military and art collectors alike, not to mention anyone who has an interest in the major events that have helped shape the world we live in," he said.



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IRAQ WARS
Twin Baghdad blasts kill nine
Baghdad (AFP) Oct 10, 2011
Two bomb attacks minutes apart in west Baghdad on Monday evening killed at least nine people and wounded more than 20 others, security officials said, amid nationwide violence that left 12 dead. The first explosion occurred at around 8:30 pm (1730 GMT) in the Iskan neighbourhood near a group of civilians, an AFP journalist at the scene and an interior ministry official said. The second b ... read more


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