BAGHDAD —
Bombers and gunmen launched an apparently coordinated string of attacks
against Iraqi government forces on Wednesday, killing at least 46 people
a day after the number of U.S. troops fell below 50,000 for the first
time since the start of the war. The violence highlighted
persistent fears about the ability of Iraqi troops to protect their own
country as the American military starts to leave. There were no
claims of responsibility for the spate of attacks. But their scale and
reach, from one end of the country to the other, underscored insurgent
efforts to prove their might against security forces and political
leaders who are charged with the day-to-day running and stability of
Iraq. The deadliest attack came in Kut, 100 miles (160 kilometers)
southeast of Baghdad, where a suicide bomber blew up a car inside a
security barrier between a police station and the provincial
government's headquarters. Police and hospital officials said 16 people
were killed, all but one of them policemen. An estimated 90 people were
wounded. Government employee Yahya al-Shimari, 40, was headed to work when the blast hit. "I
rushed to the scene to help evacuate the people, and saw body parts and
hands scattered on the ground and dead bodies of policemen," al-Shimari
said. "I also saw a traffic policeman lying dead on the ground. There
were about 15 cars that were burnt." An eerily similar attack came
in a north Baghdad neighborhood, where a suicide bomber detonated a car
bomb in a parking lot behind a police station. Fifteen people
were killed in that attack, including six policemen. Police and hospital
officials said another 58 were wounded in the explosion that left a
crater three yards (meters) wide and trapped people beneath the rubble
of felled houses nearby. Four others, including an Iraqi soldier and a police officer, were killed in small bursts of violence in Baghdad. A
senior Iraqi intelligence official raised the possibility that some of
the attackers had inside help. The official, who spoke on condition of
anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media, said the
Baghdad suicide bombing bore the hallmarks of al-Qaida, but said unnamed
political factions helped coordinate some of the other attacks. He
refused to elaborate. Since Iraq's March 7 elections failed to
produce a clear winner, U.S. officials have feared that competing
political factions could stir up widespread violence. Iraqi leaders so
far have tried to end the political impasse peacefully. But U.S.
and Iraqi officials alike acknowledge growing frustration throughout the
nation, nearly six months after the vote, and say that politically
motivated violence could undo security gains made over the past few
years. "What is going on in the country?" said Abu Mohammed, an
eyewitness to a car bombing near Baghdad's Adan Square that killed two
passers-by. "Where is the protection, where are the security troops?" Still,
some security forces proved to be on guard. Police in the northern city
of Mosul said Iraqi soldiers shot and killed a suicide bomber Wednesday
afternoon as he sought to blow up his car outside an army base. From
the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk to the holy Shiite shrine town of
Karbala, scattered bombings killed and wounded scores more. They
included: —A local council building in Muqdadiyah, north of the
capital, was hit with a car bomb. Three people were killed and 18
wounded, said Diyala police spokesman Maj. Ghalib al-Karkhi. —In
the former insurgent stronghold of Fallujah, police said a soldier was
killed and 10 people wounded when a suicide bomber rammed his car into
an Iraqi army convoy. —Car bombs in Kirkuk, Iskandariyah, Dujail
and Mosul killed six and wounded 29. A roadside bomb in Tikrit, Saddam
Hussein's hometown, killed a policeman on patrol and wounded another. —A
car bomb near police station in Karbala wounded 28 people but no
fatalities were immediately reported. Two people in the southern port
city of Basra were also injured by a car bomb. While violence has
subsided significantly since the height of the sectarian bloodshed in
2006 and 2007, militants continue to target members of Iraq's nascent
security forces, undermining their ability to defend the country as the
U.S. ends combat operations. ___ Associated Press Writers Qassim Abdul-Zahra, Hamid Ahmed and Lara Jakes contributed to this report.



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