Iraqi police said on Friday 68 people were killed
in coordinated bombings blamed on al Qaeda in a packed shopping
area in central Baghdad on Thursday, making it the deadliest
attack in the Iraqi capital for nine months.
Another 120 people were wounded in the attack, the worst
in Baghdad since 87 people were killed in a car bombing at
a mosque last June. The U.S. military would not comment on
whether the attack would have any impact on planned troop
withdrawals.
On Thursday, the military said a brigade of 2,000 soldiers
was leaving Baghdad and would not be replaced. Another brigade
is due to leave the capital later.
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"In this case the U.S. and ISF (Iraq security forces)
can do everything right -- and still terrorists can commit
heinous acts," Lieutenant-Colonel Steve Stover told Reuters
via e-mail.
Iraqi and U.S. officials said a roadside bomb had exploded
first in Baghdad's mainly Shi'ite Karrada district, which
was crowded with shoppers and vendors on Thursday evening.
Minutes later, as Iraqi security forces and locals gathered
to tend to casualties, a second, larger bomb exploded. Women
and children were among the casualties.
Police and the U.S. military said they believed the second
blast was caused by a suicide bomber but Iraqi security officials
said it appeared to have been another bomb planted at the
scene.
"This crime shows the hatred of these terrorists against
the Iraqi people," Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki
said in a statement.
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