Independent (UK)
Bomb attacks on the rise as 'New Baath party' is born
By Patrick Cockburn in Baghdad
03 May 2005

Flames and smoke rose over Baghdad from a blazing building after an
explosion that was aimed at a police patrol killed six and wounded seven
passers-by instead.

"We saw a minivan parked outside an electrical goods store from the
morning," said Abu Zahra, who has a stand selling refreshments, yesterday.
"At 10, we heard the car blow up and it threw me to the ground. I nearly
choked from the smoke. I saw at least five bodies scattered in the street."

Meanwhile, US and Iraqi army forces sealed off the northern town of Tal
Afar, the scene of heavy fighting in the past, and imposed a curfew after a
suicide bomb driven into the funeral tent of a Kurdish official killed 30
people and wounded 50 at the weekend.

The scale of the continuing violence in Iraq over the past year was
underlined by a US report on the 4 March shooting by American troops of
Italian security agent Nicola Calipari, the rescuer of the journalist
Giuliana Sgrena who had been held hostage.

It also reveals there were 15,527 attacks on coalition forces, largely
American, from July 2004 to late March 2005. Some 2,404 attacks took place
in Baghdad from 1 November to 12 March.

The report was first issued by the US in a heavily censored form with
sensitive information blocked out. But an Italian computer specialist
discovered that the censorship was easy to remove.

The picture painted by the uncensored military report is in sharp contrast
to the more optimistic views given by the Pentagon to the US media.

The bombings in the past week underline that the insurgents have lost none
of their ability to carry out attacks, almost always without regard for
civilian casualties, all over Iraq. In the three months since the elections
on 30 January there was a drop in American losses which led to official
optimism that the guerrilla war was on the wane.

There has been an increase in the number of assassination attempts against
Iraqi senior security officers based on precise intelligence about their
movements. A bomb yesterday slightly wounded Major-General Fuleih Rasheed,
the commander of a police commando unit linked to the interior ministry, and
two of his men in the Huriya district of northwest Baghdad. The bomb
exploded as Maj-Gen Rasheed's convoy raced past the point.

A third bomb in Baghdad in the Zayouna district killed two policemen and
wounded 10 people.

It is not clear how far the wave of bombings, some 17 of them in Baghdad, is
a response to the formation of a new government dominated by the Shia and
the Kurds. The Sunni community, the backbone of the insurgency, received few
ministerial positions.

The insurgents are less interested in participation in the present
government than in direct talks with the US, a timetable for the withdrawal
of American forces and the right to rebuild the Baath party. In Sunni Arab
towns and cities a so-called New Baath party is beginning to emerge and is
said to be very well organised.

The attack on the Kurdish funeral in Tal Afar, a Shia Turkoman town west of
Mosul, will sharpen sectarian and ethnic differences in the area. The bomber
blew himself up as Kurds gathered to mourn Sayed Taleb Sayed Wahab, an
official of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), who was murdered three
days earlier.

The Kurds see Tal Afar as being a stronghold of the resistance. "There are
more than 250 dangerous terrorists there," Khasro Goran, the KDP leader and
deputy governor in Mosul, said before the attack on the funeral. He was
trying to get US support for an Iraqi army assault on the town.

Mr Goran said he had received a sympathetic hearing from the American
military when he proposed a joint assault. There are two Iraqi National
Guard battalions, whose men are all Kurds, in the region, supported by a
police commando force "Wolf", which is mostly Shia.

A problem for the US is that political differences in northern Iraq are
based on ethnic differences between Kurds, Turkoman and Sunni Arab. The
Kurds are moving back into lands west of Mosul known as Sinjar from which
they were evicted by Saddam Hussein.

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