• Posted on Tuesday, August 14, 2007
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Bombs kill 175, gunmen seize hostages as lull in Iraq violence ends

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BAGHDAD — A week of relative calm in Iraq was shattered Tuesday when at least two truck bombs blew up in northern Iraq, killing as many as 175 people, and another truck bomb leveled a key bridge north of the capital.

Gunmen in military uniforms kidnapped five officials from a Ministry of Oil building in the capital in what may have been a sectarian attack, and five U.S. service members were killed in Anbar when their helicopter crashed.

Meanwhile, a tribal leader announced the arrest of a follower of Shiite cleric Muqtada al Sadr in the deaths over the weekend of the governor and police chief of Diwaniyah province, at least one of whom was a member of a rival Shiite group.

Details of the truck bombings in Nineveh province were unclear. A U.S. military official said that two vehicles blew up near a bus station in the town of Qahataniya, 75 miles west of Mosul. The U.S. official, who agreed to discuss the attacks under condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to speak publicly, said at least 30 people were killed and 60 were wounded.

Other news reports placed the number of truck bombs at four and said that as many as 175 people had been killed. If those figures are correct, it would be the worst one-day total since the U.S. began the current troop surge in February.

The truck bomb that destroyed the Thiraa Dijla bridge, north of Baghdad, was the first major attack on a bridge since June. Police said the blast killed 10 people and injured six. At least three cars fell into the river.

Insurgents had bombed at least a dozen bridges between March and June in what appeared to be an effort to cut traffic arteries that allowed U.S. and Iraqi troops to respond quickly to trouble spots. But those blasts had tapered off in the weeks since the U.S. launched a major offensive to seize car-bomb factories and arrest suspected car-bomb rings.

The kidnapping at the oil ministry's marketing building in east Baghdad was a return to a tactic that hadn't been seen in recent weeks. Police said the gunmen were wearing military uniforms. They kidnapped Deputy Minister Abdel Jabar al Wagaa, four general directors and two guards, police said.

The group exchanged gunfire with the ministry's guards, injuring five of them. It was unclear if any of the gunmen were injured.

Oil Minister Hussein al Shahristani, a Shiite Muslim, told state television that he didn't believe the violence was part of Iraq's Sunni-Shiite tensions, but an oil ministry official who spoke on condition of anonymity said that four of the five kidnapped officials, including Wagaa, are Sunni. Only one of the officials is Shiite.

Sayd Hussam al Musawi, a member of a southern Iraqi tribal council, said Iraqi and U.S. troops arrested Sheik Abu Rusil, who's also a tribal council member and who represents Sadr's political movement, in connection with the Friday assassinations of Diwaniyah Gov. Khalil Jalil Hamza and the province's police chief, Maj. Gen. Khalid Hassan.

Hamza was affiliated with the Badr Organization, the armed wing of the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council, Iraq's largest political party and a bitter rival of Sadr's Mahdi Army. The two organizations have clashed frequently in Diwaniyah. It wasn't clear if Hassan also had been affiliated with Badr or the Islamic Council.

The U.S. military said the helicopter carrying the U.S. troops crashed in Anbar during a routine post-maintenance test flight and that an investigation had been launched to determine the cause.

Meanwhile, the U.S. military said it had detained 16 suspected terrorists in various cities in Diyala province, north of Baghdad, as part of its latest offensive against both Sunnis and Shiites.

(Collins reports for The Fresno Bee. Special correspondents Jenan Hussein and Laith Hammoudi contributed to this report.)

McClatchy Newspapers 2007
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