Two Car Bombs Kill 41 Iraqis, Wound 138 

BAGHDAD, Iraq - A sport utility vehicle packed with artillery shells 
blew up Thursday in a crowd of people waiting to volunteer for the 
Iraqi military, killing at least 35 people and wounding 138. Another 
car bomb north of the capital killed six members of the Iraqi 
security forces. 

The explosion in Baghdad, the deadliest attack since a bombing 
outside another recruiting center in February, was part of a surge of 
violence on U.S. coalition forces and their Iraqi allies ahead of the 
transfer of sovereignty to Iraqis on June 30. 

The blast scattered bodies and debris across a four-lane highway 
outside Baghdad's Muthanna airport, which is used as a base by both 
the Iraqi Civil Defense Corps and the U.S. military. The explosion 
could be heard for several miles and sent a cloud of smoke over the 
city. 

Iraq (news - web sites)'s interior minister said he believed an al-
Qaida-linked militant, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, was connected to the 
bombing. 

No American or Iraqi troops were wounded, U.S. Army Col. Mike Murray 
said. Most of the victims appeared to be poor Iraqis hoping to join 
the security forces because job opportunities here are limited. 

"This clearly again was an attack that has hurt the Iraqi people," 
Murray said. 

Another car bomb exploded Thursday afternoon in a village near Balad, 
50 miles north of Baghdad, killing six ICDC members and injuring four 
others, the U.S. 1st Infantry Division said. The ICDC is the main 
internal security force, created by U.S. administrators to battle 
insurgents. 

The bombing came a day after a rocket slammed into a U.S. logistics 
base near Balad, killing three U.S. soldiers and wounding 25 other 
people, including two civilian workers. 

A top U.S. military official said Thursday's bombing in Baghdad 
appeared to fit a new pattern from al-Zarqawi's terror network in 
Iraq: simpler, more frequent car bombings to shake confidence in 
Iraqi security forces ahead of the handover. 

Asked by reporters if he saw al-Zarqawi's hand in the attack, interim 
Interior Minister Falah Hassan al-Naqib said "I think there is some 
links." 

"We are quite sure and confident they are not Iraqis," al-Naqib 
said. "And we have very good indications that they came from abroad." 

Al-Naqib said that one of al-Zarqawi's aides had been arrested, 
though he didn't say, who, where or when. 

Many of the Baghdad victims had just gotten off a bus at about 9 
a.m., Murray said. About 100 volunteers were trying to enter the 
recruiting center when the white sport utility vehicle crashed into 
the crowd, ICDC Capt. Hani Hussein said. 

Another 175 Iraqis already accepted into the security force were 
inside the gate of the facility, but none of them was injured. 

"We were standing waiting for our turn to register," Rafid Mudhar 
told The Associated Press from his hospital bed. "All of a sudden, we 
heard big explosion and most of those standing fell on the ground 
including me." 

He said he was unconscious for a while, then managed to reach a 
nearby ambulance. 

Bloody bodies covered in dust were scattered around the blast site. 
One dead man lay prostrate in the center of a highway median. 

An artillery shell could be seen lying on the road. Insurgents in 
Iraq often fashion bombs out of artillery shells and other military 
ordnance. 

At least 35 people died and 138 were injured and the toll was likely 
to increase, health ministry official Saad al-Amili said. 

The bombing was the bloodiest single attack since a car bomb killed 
47 people on Feb. 11, also outside an army recruiting center in 
Baghdad. 

Surrounded by Western security guards and Iraqi police, interim Prime 
Minister Iyad Allawi visited the scene of Thursday's blast and 
described it as a "cowardly attack." 

"We are going to face these escalations," he said. "The Iraqi people 
are going to prevail and the government of Iraq is determined to go 
ahead in confronting the enemies, whether they are here in Iraq or 
whether they are anywhere else in the world." 

Yas Khudair, an ICDC member, said all the victims were "poor people" 
who "wanted to volunteer to support their families." 

British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said the string of recent 
attacks would not affect the handover of sovereignty. 

"The terrorists used to justify their terror saying it was against 
the occupation. The occupation is going to end in 12 days time; now 
the terrorists appear to be trying to stop the transfer of power to 
the Iraqi people themselves. 

"We and the Iraqi people will not be deterred. The transfer of power 
will take place. Iraqis will take control of their lives," he said. 

Britain announced Thursday that it will send more troops to Iraq, 
increasing the number of soldiers there by 270 to a total of about 
9,200. 

In other violence, an explosion next to a convoy of water trucks 
killed a Hungarian soldier and wounded another Thursday, 40 miles 
northeast of the Hillah base south of Baghdad, the Hungarian Defense 
Ministry said. It was Hungary's first military death in Iraq. 

British soldiers clashed with Shiite fighters loyal to radical cleric 
Muqtada al-Sadr in southeastern Iraq after coalition troops detained 
one of the militia's leaders, but no one was injured, witnesses and 
the British military said. 

Three British military vehicles also were fired upon early Thursday 
with small arms fire and a rocket propelled grenade in two separate 
attacks in the city of Amarah, 180 miles southeast of Baghdad, a 
British military spokesman said. None of the vehicles was damaged, 
the spokesman said on condition anonymity. 

The attacks occurred after British forces detained militia leader, 
Ahmed Hachi. 

Witnesses said the fighting lasted about an hour and a shop was 
burned. 

The trouble began only one day after al-Sadr took steps to honor an 
agreement meant to end fighting with American forces in the holy 
cities of Nafaj and Kufa, ordering fighters who did not live in those 
twin cities to return home. 

President Bush (news - web sites), in a speech beamed live to U.S. 
forces worldwide, said democracy was being born in Iraq despite the 
killings and pipeline attacks. 

"We have come not to conquer, but to liberate people and we will 
stand with them until their freedom is secure," Bush told several 
thousand troops at MacDill Air Force Base, Fla., home of the U.S. 
Central Command. 



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