Saturday, May 26, 2012


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Violence Soars As Political Crisis Paralyzes Iraq

A victim of the January 27 bombing in Baghdad lies on a stretcher after treatment. It was the latest in a wave of attacks that have killed more than 340 people over the past 30 days.

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By Charles Recknagel
Violence is increasing as Iraq goes through its worst crisis since U.S. troops left in mid-December.

The latest: A suicide car bombing which killed at least 31 people in Baghdad on January 27 at a Shi'ite funeral procession.

It's part of a wave of attacks that have killed more than 340 people over the past 30 days.

That's a death toll almost 50 percent higher than the average monthly figure last year.

Many see the escalating violence as part and parcel of political feuding in Baghdad.

The feuding pits Iraq's Shi'ite-led government against the largest Sunni-backed political bloc. And it's giving insurgents new incentives to carry out attacks.

Iyad Allawi is the leader of the Al-Iraqiyah bloc.
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Iyad Allawi is the leader of the Al-Iraqiyah bloc.
​​The insurgents' goal appears to be to stoke hatred between Shi'ite and Sunni extremists and try to gain strength in the chaos.

Paralyzed By Divisions

Iraq has been there before. It reached the brink of a civil war that was averted only by a surge of U.S. troops in 2007.

Today, the Iraqi government is on its own. But despite the mounting danger, it is paralyzed by its divisions.

The country's largest Sunni bloc, Al-Iraqiyah, is in open revolt against Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, whose ruling coalition is dominated by Shi'ite religious parties.

The leader of Al-Iraqiyah, Iyad Allawi, demands Maliki call early parliamentary elections or step down.

"[The options are to] form a new government to prepare for early elections, or the National Alliance (Shi'ite bloc) names a new prime minister who is able and qualified to manage the affairs of the country, or to form a government of national partnership based on a real, full implementation of [previous agreements]," Allawi said.

Behind the crisis is a collapse of trust that became dramatically public days after the last U.S. troops left.

Maliki accused a prominent Al-Iraqiyah member -- who is also one of Iraq's three vice presidents -- of using his bodyguards to assassinate political rivals.

Faced with arrest, Vice President Tariq al-Hashimi fled Baghdad and took shelter in Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region. There he accused Maliki of trying to "do everything he can to consolidate power in the executive body."

Now, with Iraq's Sunni and Shi'ite blocs showing no signs of backing down, it is a showdown with no end in sight.

But one thing is clear. Unless Iraq's politicians can rise to the challenge of working together, the violence is almost certain to grow worse.

with RFE/RL's Radio Free Iraq
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Comment Sorting
Comments
     
by: Eugenio from: Vienna
January 28, 2012 15:38
Wow, the gringos have really done a great job in Iraq in eight years: the arms of mass destruction have been found, oil has gotten cheaper (from about $ 30/barrel in early 2003 to more than $ 100/barrel today) and a vibrant participatory democratic system has been installed in the country - under the attentive supervision of George W. Obama.

by: Bill Webb from: Phoenix Arizona USA
January 28, 2012 23:39
The peaceful muslims are at it again, blowing each other up. The only time they calm down is when they're looking down the barrel of a gun The religion of death got the better of them.

by: Miles from: US
February 01, 2012 20:30
Mission Accomplished. Obama has snatched victory from the Iraqi people.

by: okbman from: canada
February 01, 2012 23:23
He, it's been going on for 1400 years and they will likely make up for all the time they lost during the UN intervention. When you breed hate you will die without knowing what life is all about. The female population better get used to the Burka, it will be the only outfit on the runway next year. Cults and government don't mix.

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