Iraq OK huh? Iraq casualties rise 36% in Feb

Spytheweb

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PAUL TAIT

Reuters

March 1, 2008 at 1:11 PM EST

BAGHDAD ? Violent civilian deaths in Iraq rose 36 per cent in February from the previous month after a series of large-scale bombings blamed on al-Qaeda, Iraqi government figures showed on Saturday.

A total of 633 civilians died violently in February, compared with 466 in January, according to figures released by Iraq's interior, defence and health ministries. It was the first increase after six consecutive months of falling casualty tolls.

Despite its sharp rise, the February 2008 figure was still dramatically lower than the 1,645 civilians who died violently in the same month a year ago. A total of 701 civilians were wounded, compared with 2,700 a year ago.

Declining civilian casualties have been hailed by Iraqi and U.S. military officials as proof that new counter-insurgency tactics adopted last year have been working and Iraq is safer.

February's casualty figures spiked after female bombers killed 99 people at two pet markets in Baghdad on Feb. 2 and a suicide bomber killed 63 people returning from a Shiite religious ritual south of Baghdad on Feb. 24.

Both attacks were blamed on al Qaeda, which U.S. commanders says has been resorted to new tactics, particularly the increased use of women in suicide attacks.

U.S. military officials said the suspected leader of a group that planned suicide bomb attacks had been detained in an operation on Friday near Khan Bani Saad, north of Baghdad. They said he was suspected of trying to recruit women, including his wife, to carry out bombings.

Officials say attacks across Iraq have fallen 60 per cent since last June, when an extra 30,000 U.S. troops became fully deployed as part of the new counter-insurgency strategy, which included moving troops out of large bases and into smaller combat outposts.

However U.S. commanders say al-Qaeda and other insurgents remain dangerous enemies especially in Iraq's north where they have regrouped after crackdowns on former strongholds in western Anbar province and around Baghdad last year.

In northern Mosul, police were searching for Paulos Faraj Rahho, the Chaldean Catholic archbishop snatched at gunpoint after he left a church on Friday. His driver and two guards were killed in the attack.

Police and representatives of the Chaldean church, a branch of the Roman Catholic Church which practises an ancient Eastern rite, said nothing had been heard about Mr. Rahho's fate.

Christians make up about 3 per cent of Iraq's 27 million mainly Muslim population and have been targeted several times in recent years. A Catholic priest and three assistants were killed in ethnically and religiously mixed Mosul last June.

"The situation for Christians is like that for other people in Iraq. We live in the same society and we are sharing the same suffering," Andraws Abuna, an assistant to the Chaldean patriarch of Baghdad, told Reuters.

U.S. military deaths fell after a spike in January. So far 29 U.S. soldiers have been reported killed in February, compared with 40 in January.

Both figures are much lower than a year ago, when 81 and 83 were killed in February and January 2007 as Iraq teetered on the brink of all-out sectarian civil war between majority Shi'ites and minority Sunni Arabs.

A total of 3,973 U.S. soldiers have been killed in Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion to topple Saddam Hussein in 2003.

Britain's Ministry of Defence said a British airman had been killed late on Friday in a rocket attack on its military base in the southern city of Basra. The victim was the 175th British serviceman to be killed in Iraq since 2003.

The latest Iraqi data showed 65 policemen and 20 Iraqi soldiers were killed, compared with 132 and 28 respectively in January, and that 235 insurgents had been killed and 1,340 detained.

Another factor in improved security has been the six-month ceasefire announced in August of the Mehdi Army militia of anti-U.S. Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr. That ceasefire was extended by another six months last month.
 

UGA12

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Only 786 more murders and they would catch up with the monthly average of a little known country called the USA. Image how bad that shit hole must be. BTW about 350 murders commited by Illegals each month. Not saying I agree with the war but lets keep some prespective.
 

smurphy

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Only 786 more murders and they would catch up with the monthly average of a little known country called the USA. Image how bad that shit hole must be. BTW about 350 murders commited by Illegals each month. Not saying I agree with the war but lets keep some prespective.

US is about 12 times as big as Iraq - so try and keep that in perspective. ...Just curious, where did you get the 350 murders by illegals stat? If both of your numbers are correct, then illegals account for nearly half of all murders in the US - and that is rather difficult to believe. According to DTB, all the murders are committed by Blacks. Somebody has bad numbers.
 

DOGS THAT BARK

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PAUL TAIT

Reuters

March 1, 2008 at 1:11 PM EST

BAGHDAD ? Violent civilian deaths in Iraq rose 36 per cent in February from the previous month after a series of large-scale bombings blamed on al-Qaeda, Iraqi government figures showed on Saturday.

A total of 633 civilians died violently in February, compared with 466 in January, according to figures released by Iraq's interior, defence and health ministries. It was the first increase after six consecutive months of falling casualty tolls.

Despite its sharp rise, the February 2008 figure was still dramatically lower than the 1,645 civilians who died violently in the same month a year ago. A total of 701 civilians were wounded, compared with 2,700 a year ago.

Declining civilian casualties have been hailed by Iraqi and U.S. military officials as proof that new counter-insurgency tactics adopted last year have been working and Iraq is safer.

February's casualty figures spiked after female bombers killed 99 people at two pet markets in Baghdad on Feb. 2 and a suicide bomber killed 63 people returning from a Shiite religious ritual south of Baghdad on Feb. 24.

Both attacks were blamed on al Qaeda, which U.S. commanders says has been resorted to new tactics, particularly the increased use of women in suicide attacks.

U.S. military officials said the suspected leader of a group that planned suicide bomb attacks had been detained in an operation on Friday near Khan Bani Saad, north of Baghdad. They said he was suspected of trying to recruit women, including his wife, to carry out bombings.

Officials say attacks across Iraq have fallen 60 per cent since last June, when an extra 30,000 U.S. troops became fully deployed as part of the new counter-insurgency strategy, which included moving troops out of large bases and into smaller combat outposts.

However U.S. commanders say al-Qaeda and other insurgents remain dangerous enemies especially in Iraq's north where they have regrouped after crackdowns on former strongholds in western Anbar province and around Baghdad last year.

In northern Mosul, police were searching for Paulos Faraj Rahho, the Chaldean Catholic archbishop snatched at gunpoint after he left a church on Friday. His driver and two guards were killed in the attack.

Police and representatives of the Chaldean church, a branch of the Roman Catholic Church which practises an ancient Eastern rite, said nothing had been heard about Mr. Rahho's fate.

Christians make up about 3 per cent of Iraq's 27 million mainly Muslim population and have been targeted several times in recent years. A Catholic priest and three assistants were killed in ethnically and religiously mixed Mosul last June.

"The situation for Christians is like that for other people in Iraq. We live in the same society and we are sharing the same suffering," Andraws Abuna, an assistant to the Chaldean patriarch of Baghdad, told Reuters.

U.S. military deaths fell after a spike in January. So far 29 U.S. soldiers have been reported killed in February, compared with 40 in January.

Both figures are much lower than a year ago, when 81 and 83 were killed in February and January 2007 as Iraq teetered on the brink of all-out sectarian civil war between majority Shi'ites and minority Sunni Arabs.

A total of 3,973 U.S. soldiers have been killed in Iraq since the U.S.-led invasion to topple Saddam Hussein in 2003.

Britain's Ministry of Defence said a British airman had been killed late on Friday in a rocket attack on its military base in the southern city of Basra. The victim was the 175th British serviceman to be killed in Iraq since 2003.

The latest Iraqi data showed 65 policemen and 20 Iraqi soldiers were killed, compared with 132 and 28 respectively in January, and that 235 insurgents had been killed and 1,340 detained.

Another factor in improved security has been the six-month ceasefire announced in August of the Mehdi Army militia of anti-U.S. Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr. That ceasefire was extended by another six months last month.

You omitted title of Article--

Iraq casualties rise again after Qaeda bombs

Yours and liberal media rant has been on military deaths previously--but that won't work this month so you find another issue--
Hmm Wonder if the battle up north with Kurds and Turks had any bearing--article didn't say did it?

but it is all in eye of beholder and what they are looking for.

Personally I found the 25% reduction in military deaths quite encouraging and that could/should have been headline--but wouldn't fit your/liberal media's political agenda--would it.


I highlighted some references to A-Q Spy that you might want to forward to Obama camp--he's apparently has prob acknowledging AQ is in Iraq :)
 
Last edited:

Spytheweb

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You omitted title of Article--

Iraq casualties rise again after Qaeda bombs

Yours and liberal media rant has been on military deaths previously--but that won't work this month so you find another issue--
Hmm Wonder if the battle up north with Kurds and Turks had any bearing--article didn't say did it?

but it is all in eye of beholder and what they are looking for.

Personally I found the 25% reduction in military deaths quite encouraging and that could/should have been headline--but wouldn't fit your/liberal media's political agenda--would it.


I highlighted some references to A-Q Spy that you might want to forward to Obama camp--he's apparently has prob acknowledging AQ is in Iraq :)

American deaths this year 69. How many soldiers died before Bush invaded Iraq zero, how many car bombs went off before America invaded Iraq, zero. America brought terror to Iraq and al-qaeda (the base) followed.
 
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