Forces capture would-be bomber in Iraq (Agencies) Updated: 2005-07-15 10:36
Iraqi and U.S. forces captured a suicide bomber before he could detonate his
explosive belt Thursday, and announced a key suspect in the kidnap-slaying of
Egypt's top envoy to Iraq had been arrested in what was hailed as a blow to the
terror network.
The thwarted suicide attack — just 150 feet from the Green Zone, the site of
the U.S. Embassy and major Iraqi government offices — was intended to be part of
coordinated assaults by a suicide car bomber and two pedestrians strapped with
explosives.
The attackers apparently planned to detonate the car bomb first. Then the two
pedestrians would blow themselves up in the midst of troops, police and rescue
workers rushing to the scene, U.S. officials said.
The car bomb exploded successfully. But one pedestrian bomber was killed
after an Iraqi policeman shot him, setting off his explosive vest, a U.S.
statement said.
The second pedestrian bomber was wounded by shrapnel from the blast before he
could detonate his own vest, and was in critical condition at a U.S. military
hospital in the Green Zone, the statement said.
Five policemen and four civilians also were wounded by the blasts and
gunfire, officials at Yarmouk Hospital said.
Would-be bombers are rarely captured in Iraq. A 19-year-old Saudi was taken
into custody after he somehow survived the explosion of his fuel tanker in
December, a blast that killed nine people. A Yemeni was arrested in 2003 when
his car bomb failed to detonate at a Baghdad police station.
There was no word on the identity of the failed bomber, but his arrest could
yield valuable intelligence on the shadowy network of Islamic extremists — many
of them believed to be foreigners linked to al-Qaida.
In another setback to insurgents, about 30 suspected al-Qaida members were
arrested in the past week, including a key suspect in this month's killing of
Egyptian envoy Ihab al-Sherif and attacks on senior diplomats from Bahrain and
Saudi Arabia, the U.S. command said.
Khamis Abdul-Fahdawi, known as Abu Seba, was captured Saturday after
operations in the Ramadi area west of Baghdad, the military said. He is a
suspect in the "attacks against diplomats of Bahrain, Pakistan and the recent
murder of Egyptian envoy" al-Sherif, the U.S. statement said.
Another top suspect, Abdullah Ibrahim al-Shadad, or Abu Abdul-Aziz, was
arrested during a raid Sunday in Baghdad, the statement said. It identified him
as the operations officer for al-Qaida in Iraq, led by Jordanian Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi. Abu Abdul-Aziz was cooperating with coalition forces, according to
the U.S. command.
In an Internet statement Thursday, al-Qaida in Iraq acknowledged that Abu
Abdul Aziz had been apprehended but played down his importance.
Al-Qaida also denied any role in the Baghdad suicide car bombing Wednesday
that killed 27 people, including 18 children and teenagers and an American
soldier. The bomber detonated his SUV as U.S. troops were distributing candy and
toys in a mostly Shiite Muslim area known as New Baghdad.
"We, the al-Qaida organization in Iraq, announce that we are not in the least
responsible for the New Baghdad operation that took place Wednesday," said the
statement posted and signed by Abu Maysara al-Iraqi, the al-Qaida spokesman.
"Our sheik, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi ... is very keen not to attack the rank and
file and he himself is the one who directly supervises, plans and direct all the
operations," the statement said.
The statement — whose authenticity could not be verified — suggests the
militant group is aware of the backlash against the Sunni-led insurgency that
the killings of so many children could generate — even among Iraqis who oppose
the presence of U.S.-led forces
"Such action has nothing to do with religion," Inaam Hassan, 38, said of the
attack. "This tarnishes the image of the true resistance. I demand that the
terrorists be executed in public to avenge the mothers who have lost their
children."
Salam al-Rubaiei, 33, said he regretted the deaths of so many children but
blamed their parents for allowing them to approach American soldiers.
"We know how reckless these forces are and how they can randomly open fire
when attacked," al-Rubaie said. "I want to know why these (American) forces were
present in a residential area."
In other violence late Thursday, gunmen killed an Iraqi soldier in Baghdad
and another outside the Taji air base north of the capital, police said.
Elsewhere, police said gunmen killed five Iraqi employees of an American base
in Baqouba, 35 miles northeast of Baghdad, as they were driving outside the
base. At least nine other policemen also were killed in separate attacks
nationwide.
However, figures obtained Thursday by The Associated Press from Iraqi
government ministries show violent deaths among Iraqi civilians far exceeded
those of soldiers or police during the first six months of this year.
Between Jan. 1 and June 30, 1,594 civilians were killed, according to the
Ministry of Health. By contrast, 895 security forces — 275 Iraqi soldiers and
620 police — were killed in bombings, assassinations or armed clashes with
insurgents, according to figures from the interior and defense ministries.
The number of insurgents killed during the six-month period was 781, the
government said.
According to an AP count, more than 1,700 people have been killed in violence
since April 28, when Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari announced his Shiite-led
government.
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