U.S. reports 80 percent drop in Iraq insurgency strikes
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SPECIAL TO WORLD TRIBUNE.COM
Thursday, March 8, 2007
BAGHDAD — The U.S. Army has reported a sharp decrease in insurgency attacks in Baghdad.
In the week of Feb. 24 to March 2, officials said, insurgency strikes
and suicide bombings dropped for the fourth consecutive week in Baghdad.
They linked this to the steady increase of security patrols in the city.
The army said violence has decreased by 80 percent in the
most insurgency-ridden areas of Baghdad. Officials said Shi'ite and Sunni
insurgents have been overwhelmed by the current joint Iraqi-U.S. operation
in the Iraqi capital.
However as Shi'ite fighters have gone underground, Sunnis have launched a campaign of car bombings and other violence against Shi'ite civilians.
Brig. Gen. John Campbell, deputy commander of Multi-National
Division-Baghdad, told a briefing on March 6 that 19 people were killed in
insurgency strikes in Baghdad in February 2007. Campbell said 254 were slain
in the city in December 2006.
Campbell said Iraqi and U.S. forces have been raiding insurgency
strongholds and capturing weapons caches. He said that from Feb. 24 to March
2, the forces seized 74 weapon caches. This exceeded the previous week's
total by 11.
Officials said the security operation in Baghdad has increased the
coalition presence in
insurgency-ridden neighborhoods. They said Shi'ite insurgents, particularly
those from the Iranian-sponsored Mahdi Army, have gone underground, leaving
the Iraqi-U.S. forces to battle Sunni fighters.
The statistics were released as Sunni insurgents escalated attacks on
Shi'ite pilgrims in Iraq. Nearly 200 people have been killed since March 6
amid Sunni suicide strikes on Shi'ite processions through Sunni
neighborhoods. Officials have attributed the bombings to Al Qaida.
"Car bombs have targeted hundreds of Iraqis," Petraeus told a news
conference on Thursday.
Still, officials have maintained that Baghdad remained under coalition
control. They said the coalition has sought to accelerate reconstruction
projects for Baghdad neighborhoods.
"There are some very preliminary positive signs of things going on,"
Defense Secretary Robert Gates told a Pentagon briefing on Wednesday. "No
one wants to get too enthusiastic about it at this point. We're right at the
very beginning. But I would say that based in terms of whether the Iraqis
are meeting the commitments that they've made to us in the security arena, I
think that our view would be so far, so good."
In all, the Baghdad operation was meant to include an extra 90,000 Iraqi
and U.S. troops. On Wednesday, Gates said U.S. commander in Iraq, Gen. David
Petraeus has requested an additional 2,200 soldiers to help guard detainees
from the Baghdad operation.
"Security in Baghdad is generally under control, despite the fact that
some takfiris [Sunni extremists] are attacking women and children," Iraqi
Brig. Gen. Qassim Mussawi, spokesman for the Baghdad security plan, said.
"We had prepared all roads, but there are loopholes through which terrorists
infiltrate. As you know, those who wear explosive belts can die anywhere."
Copyright © 2007 East West
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