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IRAQ WARS
Iraq to open talks with US on training mission
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Aug 3, 2011

Three police killed in Baghdad liquor store blasts
Baghdad (AFP) Aug 3, 2011 - Successive bombings targeting an alcohol shop on Baghdad's western outskirts killed three policemen at the beginning of the holy Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, a security official said on Wednesday.

An Iraqi policeman was also killed by an improvised explosive device (IED) on Wednesday, while an army officer and two members of an anti-Qaeda militia were killed in attacks the day before.

The blasts at the alcohol shop occurred late on Tuesday in the suburb of Rasala and also left 14 other people wounded, including three policemen, the interior ministry official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

At around 10:00 pm (1900 GMT), a roadside bomb initially detonated near the store, wounding nine people. When police arrived at the scene, another explosion took place.

The explosions come shortly after the beginning of Ramadan, during which Muslims abstain from food, drink and sex from dawn until dusk. Ramadan began on Monday for Iraq's Sunnis and a day later for the country's majority Shiites.

The interior ministry official also said that one Iraqi policeman was killed and three Iraqi translators wounded in the Wednesday IED attack in Al-Rusafa prison complex, and that two US soldiers were also killed in the attack.

But a spokesman for US forces in Iraq said that there was an IED attack in the Rusafa area, but that it did not result in any US casualties.

He said the attack targeted a convoy, but he did not know if the attack occurred inside or outside the prison complex.

Meanwhile, unidentified gunmen on Tuesday evening shot dead Iraqi army Lieutenant Colonel Azad Mohammed Ahmed in the Khadra area in the south of Kirkuk while he was driving to his house with one of his guards.

And two explosions on Tuesday night within the central Baghdad compound of Shiite cleric and politician Ayad Jamal Adin wounded him and two others, security officials said.

It was unclear how the bombs were placed within Adin's compound in the Jadriyah neighbourhood, according to the interior ministry official and a senior counter-terrorism official.

Adin is a former MP who unsuccessfully campaigned for a seat in parliament in March 2010 elections on a secular anti-Iran platform.

On Tuesday morning, two members of an anti-Qaeda tribal militia, the Sahwa, which turned against Al-Qaeda and sided with the US military from late 2006, were shot dead north of the city of Baquba by unknown gunmen, an Iraqi army colonel said.

Violence in Iraq has declined from its peak in 2006 and 2007, but attacks remain common. A total of 259 Iraqis were killed in attacks in July, the second-highest figure for 2011.

Iraq will open talks with Washington over a military training mission to last beyond a 2011 pullout deadline, Baghdad's Foreign Minister said on Wednesday, after months of US appeals for a decision.

The move is a key first step to reaching an agreement on the future of the American troop presence, but any final deal still needs to resolve contentious details such as the size of the force, the duration of its stay and whether its members would enjoy immunity from prosecution.

"The political blocs have agreed to let the government start negotiations with the American side only on the issues of training," Hoshyar Zebari told AFP, following an hours-long closed-door meeting of Iraqi politicians, including Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, in Baghdad.

"This is a declaration of intent to let the government start the negotiations," added Zebari who attended the meeting, before noting that there were as yet "no details about the numbers or about new agreements."

It was not immediately clear when the discussions would begin.

President Jalal Talabani, who hosted the talks, said in a statement that there was a general consensus on opening the negotiations, except for representatives of radical anti-US cleric Moqtada al-Sadr's parliamentary movement.

Sadrist officials did not immediately comment on the talks, which began on Tuesday evening, but Jawad al-Hasnawi, a Sadrist MP, labelled the decision to start the talks "a new occupation in a new form" when contacted by AFP.

Sadr's Mahdi Army fighters engaged in bloody battles with the US army in the years following the 2003 invasion, although the militia has since been deactivated.

A US embassy official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the mission was "reviewing the decision" and "appreciated the comments... as well as the support expressed by most political leaders."

The Pentagon in Washington declined to respond to the news, and the US military in Iraq did not immediately reply to requests for comment from AFP.

Approximately 47,000 US troops remain stationed in Iraq, all of whom must leave by the end of the year under the terms of a bilateral security pact signed in 2008, which remains in force if a deal for a training mission is ultimately not agreed.

Wednesday's decision follows a visit to Iraq by Admiral Mike Mullen, the chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, during which he insisted US forces needed a decision "now."

"Time is quickly running out for us to be able to consider any other course," Mullen told reporters at a news conference at the US military's Victory Base Camp on the outskirts of the Iraqi capital on Tuesday.

Mullen, who met Maliki and Talabani during his two-day trip, also insisted that any deal would require parliamentary approval stating that US soldiers stationed in Iraq would enjoy immunity from prosecution.

When asked if the issue of immunity was raised at the meeting, Nasser al-Ani, head of Talabani's presidential office, responded: "We only focused on discussing the issue of training."

US and Iraqi military officials assess Iraq's security forces to be capable of maintaining internal security, but note the country is lacking in terms of defending its borders, airspace and territorial waters.

Iraq's top military officer Lieutenant General Babaker Zebari has repeatedly said that his forces will require training for another decade before they are fully capable of securing the country.

Baghdad has restarted talks with the United States on the purchase of 36 American F-16 fighter jets, double the figure that had originally been mooted.

Iraq and the US had been close to a final agreement on the F-16s deal earlier this year, but nationwide protests forced the Baghdad government to divert funds earmarked for the warplanes to programmes to help the poor.

Wednesday's news comes days after the US Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction, Stuart Bowen, warned in a report that the country was less safe than one year ago and that security was deteriorating.

Figures released on Monday showed the number of Iraqis killed as a result of violence in July declined from the previous month, but still marked the second-highest such toll for 2011.




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Key dates in Iraq since US invasion
Baghdad (AFP) Aug 3, 2011 - Iraq said on Wednesday it will open talks with Washington over a military training mission to last beyond a 2011 pullout deadline, almost eight and a half years after a US-led invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein.

Here are some key dates in the American presence in Iraq:

2003

March 20: US-led forces begin onslaught against Iraq, which they accuse of harbouring weapons of mass destruction.

April 9: US forces topple a large Saddam statue in Baghdad.

May 1: US President George W. Bush announces the end of major combat operations using a "Mission Accomplished" banner.

October 2: US admits no weapons of mass destruction found.

October 16: UN Resolution 1511 legitimises the US-led occupation.

December 13: Saddam captured.

2004

April-August: Clashes between coalition forces and militiamen of Shiite radical leader Moqtada al-Sadr.

April 28: Photographs emerge of US forces humiliating inmates at Abu Ghraib prison.

June 28: The US-led administration hands Iraqis power.

November 8: US offensive against rebels at Fallujah, west of Baghdad.

December 21: A powerful explosion at a US army mess hall in Mosul claimed by Al-Qaeda-linked militants kills 22 people, including 14 US soldiers.

2005

January 30: Iraqis vote in the first multi-party poll in 50 years despite deadly attacks, a poll Sunni Arabs largely boycott.

April 6: Jalal Talabani becomes president, the first Kurd in the post.

2006

February 22: Revered Shiite shrine in Samarra blown up; sectarian unrest kills 450 people.

June 7: US air strike kills Al-Qaeda in Iraq leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.

July: The US hands over to Iraq's security control of 18 provinces.

December 30: Saddam hanged.

2007

January 10: Bush sends 30,000 more troops in so-called "surge" strategy.

2008

March 23: 4,000 US soldiers killed since 2003.

November 27: Parliament ratifies a security agreement setting the framework for a US troop presence beyond the end of the year.

2009

January 1: The US transfers control of Baghdad's high-security Green Zone.

February 27: President Barack Obama sets August 31, 2010 deadline for end to US combat operations.

June 30: US forces quit urban areas.

August 19, October 25 and December 8: at least 386 killed in bomb attacks on government buildings.

2010

January 1: US troops re-name their force "United States Forces-Iraq," from "Multi-National Forces-Iraq," after all other countries pull soldiers out.

March 7: Inconclusive second parliamentary elections unleash political crisis.

August 24: The number of US troops in Iraq falls below 50,000.

August 31: End to US combat operations, with US troops now tasked with training Iraqi forces.

November 10: Iraq's political factions seal a power-sharing deal including all sides.

December 21: Iraq's parliament gives Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's government a vote of confidence. Additional ministers added on February 11.

2011

March 29: 58 are killed in an hours-long shootout in the the provincial council building in Saddam's hometown of Tikrit claimed by Al-Qaeda.

June 6: Attacks kill five American soldiers, the deadliest day for US forces in Iraq in more than two years.

July 26: Iraqi forces take charge of security at the oil export terminals at the southern port of Basra from US troops.

August 3: Iraq gives the green light to talks with Washington over a military training mission.





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