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IRAQ WARS
US forces to stop joint operations in Iraq's north
by Staff Writers
Tikrit, Iraq (AFP) July 23, 2011

In one week US troops will cease joint operations with Iraqi and Kurdish forces, begun in early 2010 to dampen tensions between Kurds and Sunni Arabs in disputed northern zones, a US military official said on Saturday.

Colonel Michael Bowers said that from August 1, American forces will no longer be part of the trilateral operation.

"By August 1, they (operations) will be bilateral" between Iraqi Kurd and Arab forces, Bowers told AFP at the US Contingency Operation Base Speicher outside the city of Tikrit north of Baghdad.

He indicated that US troops would no longer be on the streets in the northern zones.

"Once they're all bilateral supervised, the only place we are is in the command and control centres," said Bowers, the strategist for Major General David Perkins, the Commanding General for the army's US Division North.

He said that out of 22 checkpoints across the disputed zones, 15 already had no US participation. He said seven checkpoints remained with an active US presence, which would stop at the end of this month.

"If something were to go wrong, obviously we could go help mediate," he added.

US forces began the tripartite operations with Kurdish and Iraqi army forces, that are dominated by Sunni Arabs, in the northern areas early last year. That marked a new chapter in the US military's role since the 2003 invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.

The US military, which currently has 47,000 troops in Iraq, began jointly manning checkpoints and carrying out security patrols in the provinces of Kirkuk, Nineveh and Diyala.

Apart from the oil-rich province of Kirkuk that is claimed by both Baghdad and the autonomous Kurdish government in the north, there are 11 other disputed territories in northern Iraq.

All US forces are scheduled to pull out of Iraq at the end of this year in accordance with a 2008 security pact.

American forces suffered their worst month in three years in June, when 14 soldiers were killed, mostly in rocket attacks that Washington says were launched by Iranian-backed Shiite insurgents.

Four US soldiers have been killed in attacks this month.

The spike in attacks against US troops comes as Iraqi leaders approach decision time on whether they want to maintain a contingent of soldiers after the end of 2011.

earlier related report
Iraq attacks kill five policemen, doctor
Baghdad (AFP) July 22, 2011 - Separate bomb and gun attacks on Friday killed five Iraqi policemen and a doctor and wounded 17 other people in Baghdad, Baquba north of the capital, and Kirkuk, security officials said.

In Baghdad's western Mansur district, a roadside bomb killed two policemen, including a captain, an interior ministry official said. Eight people were also wounded, among them four policemen, he said.

"The explosion happened when the police went to check on an earlier explosion outside a liquor shop which had inflicted no casualties," the official said.

Liquor stores are frequent targets of insurgents, attacked because they are usually owned by Christians, and because drinking alcohol is forbidden by Islam.

In Baquba 60 kilometres (37 miles) north of Baghdad, gunmen sprayed policemen guarding the compound of a Turkish company involved in a garbage collection project, killing three and wounding one, a security official said.

All the gunmen fled, leaving behind a vehicle that exploded shortly afterwards, wounding eight people, including a woman, the official said.

In the oil city of Kirkuk, 240 kilometres north of the capital, police said a paediatrician was killed in his car.

They said Ibrahim Shaeer Jabbar al-Jumaili, 55, who also teaches medicine at the university, was murdered after he resisted attempts by four people to kidnap him.

An official with the security services said there have been at least 45 abductions in Kirkuk since the start of the year, with most victims coming from well-to-do families.

In mid-July another paediatrician Safi Harzan, 48, was freed after his family paid a half-million-dollar ransom.

June was the deadliest month in Iraq so far this year, with 271 people killed in attacks including 155 civilians, 77 policemen and 39 soldiers, according to a government count.




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Murderous Qaeda cell in Baghdad smashed: police
Baghdad (AFP) July 24, 2011 - Iraqi security forces have smashed an Al-Qaeda network allegedly responsible for more than 100 killings in Baghdad, an anti-terrorism official said on Sunday.

"Interior ministry forces dismantled (an) Al-Qaeda network that was responsible for more than 100 murders of policemen, soldiers, judges, officials and jewellers in Baghdad," said Major General Ahmed Abu Raghif, head of an anti-terrorism police unit.

The cell was also behind the May 26 assassination of Ali al-Lami, head of the Justice and Accountability Commission which investigates issues relating to the former regime of executed dictator Saddam Hussein, he said.

The group was responsible for a failed May 8 prison escape at an interior ministry detention centre in Baghdad which resulted in the deaths of 11 Al-Qaeda militants and six police, the official added.

That mutiny was triggered by Huthaifa al-Batawi, suspected of masterminding an October 31 Al-Qaeda raid on a Baghdad church in which 44 worshippers, two priests and seven members of the security forces were killed.

Abu Raghif said the network consisted of 16 militants and had been led by Wissam Yasin Alwan -- also known as Abu Samir -- who committed suicide last week when police tried to arrest him in central Baghdad's Baab al-Muadham district.

The network also included Yusef Salman Khazaer, a mufti or Islamic teacher responsible for the group's religious education. His role was also to carry arms and ammunition to the scene of attacks.

"To escape police vigilance, he was always accompanied by his wife and children," Abu Raghif added.

The Al-Qaeda network also included a traffic police officer, whose role was to pass on information about licence plates of official vehicles, the general said.





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IRAQ WARS
US training plans gain traction in Iraq: Zebari
Baghdad (AFP) July 20, 2011
Plans to keep a small number of American army trainers in Iraq after a year-end deadline for US forces to pull out are gaining traction among political leaders, Baghdad's foreign minister said on Wednesday. Hoshyar Zebari's remarks to reporters come a day after Iraq's President Jalal Talabani said there is a greater acceptance among politicians that a limited number of American trainers will ... read more


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