Gunmen kill four Iraq police, newlyweds shot
By Michael Georgy
BAGHDAD (Reuters) – Insurgents killed four Iraqi police in
Baghdad on Friday and wounded another officer in an attack that
killed his wife just a day after their wedding.
The government also came under pressure again on the
diplomatic front as Algeria sought information on the fate of
two of its diplomats snatched near their mission on Thursday.
“As long as there are no claims of responsibility from
those behind the kidnappings we have to wait. We don’t know who
is behind it,” Algerian Foreign Ministry spokesman Abdelhamid
Chebchoub said.
Kidnappings, suicide bombings and assassinations are part
of a guerrilla strategy to topple the U.S.-backed government,
which is overwhelmed by violence.
Yarmouk hospital said one of its patients was a critically
wounded police lieutenant who was married on Thursday. His
bride was shot dead in the attack.
In the New Baghdad district of the capital, gunmen shot and
killed two policemen in their car near a bridge, police said.
Insurgents also struck in eastern Baghdad, killing two
traffic policemen, police said. The U.S. military reported one
Marine had been killed on Thursday by a roadside bomb.
The government has promised Iraqis that it will improve
security forces so they can take over from American soldiers.
But relentless attacks that have killed hundreds of
security forces suggest they have a long way to go before they
can stand up to insurgents and militants.
A U.S. military assessment made public on Thursday found
that only half of Iraq’s police battalions are capable of
carrying out operations against insurgents, while two-thirds of
army battalions and the rest of the police are no more than
“partially capable,.”
WEAK SECURITY FORCES
“Only a small number of Iraqi Security Forces are taking on
the insurgents and terrorists by themselves,” according to an
unclassified assessment provided to the Senate Armed Services
Committee by Marine Corps Gen. Peter Pace, vice chairman of the
U.S. military’s Joint Chiefs of Staff.
The Bush administration has said U.S. forces cannot leave
Iraq until American-trained Iraqi security forces are capable
of protecting their own country.
Insurgents have targeted diplomats. Algeria has not yet
received any claim of responsibility from the kidnappers of two
diplomats snatched on Thursday, its Foreign Ministry said.
Eight gunmen grabbed mission chief Ali Belaroussi and
diplomatic attache Azzedine Belkadi from the street.
“They had just left the embassy on their way to lunch when
they were intercepted in their car some 60 meters (yards) from
the embassy building,” Chebchoub told Reuters.
Earlier this month, Egyptian envoy Ihab el-Sherif was
kidnapped by al Qaeda’s Iraq wing, which later said it had
killed him and vowed more attacks on diplomats in Baghdad.
Only days after he was kidnapped, gunmen fired on cars
carrying the envoys of Pakistan and Bahrain, triggering an
exodus of diplomats. Some embassies have scaled back their
operations over security fears.
Iraq’s Shi’ite-led government is hoping to draw Arab Sunnis
into the political process to defuse the Sunni-led insurgency.
But the process was dealt a blow on Tuesday when a Sunni
member of the committee drafting the constitution and an
adviser were gunned down in front of a Baghdad restaurant.
Other Sunnis in the committee have suspended their
membership and demanded better protection and an international
investigation into the killings. But a U.S. official said he
was still hopeful that the Sunnis could be lured back in time
to sign off on a draft constitution, due by Aug. 15.
“The murder of two members of their group is a shock to
them but they are looking to come back,” the U.S. official in
Baghdad told journalists under condition of anonymity.
