http://arabnews.com/middleeast/article89591.ece

Al Qaeda claims responsibility for attacks in Iraq
By REUTERS 

Published: Jul 24, 2010 21:48 Updated: Jul 24, 2010 21:48 



BAGHDAD: Al Qaeda in Iraq has claimed responsibility for two attacks against 
its former Sunni Muslim allies which killed at least 43 people last Sunday.

In the deadliest attack, a suicide bomber struck members of the 
government-backed "Sahwa" militia as they lined up to be paid on Baghdad's 
southwestern outskirts, killing at least 39 and wounding 41, Iraqi security 
sources said.

In the second, a suicide bomber killed four and wounded six at a meeting of 
local Sunni militia leaders in western Iraq, near the Syrian border, police in 
Anbar province said.

In a statement posted on a website often used by Islamists, Al-Qaeda said it 
had conducted the attacks as part of action against "leaders of apostasy," a 
term used for Sunni fighters who once allied with Al-Qaeda but turned on the 
militant group in 2006/07, helping US forces turn the tide in the war.

"A lion of the Islamic State managed to intrude among the cattle after they 
were blinded by pickings of money thrown by the ... government and they fell 
into the torture of God," the statement said.

Sunni insurgents linked to Al-Qaeda have sought to exploit the political vacuum 
created by a failure of Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish factions to agree on a 
coalition government following an inconclusive March 7 parliamentary election, 
and have carried out a series of attacks since the vote.

Sahwa leaders have been among the primary targets. Some of the attacks have 
been attributed to acts of revenge by former fellow insurgents, while others 
have been blamed on long-running blood feuds between families.

The sectarian conflict between once dominant Sunnis and majority Shiites that 
began after the 2003 US-led invasion has largely subsided but a Sunni Islamist 
insurgency persists.

The US military has increasingly taken a backseat role since pulling out of 
Iraqi urban centers in June last year and US troops will end combat operations 
formally on Aug. 31, before a full withdrawal next year.

US military leaders say Al-Qaeda's capabilities in Iraq have been severely 
degraded in recent months.

GEN. Ray Odierno, the top US military commander in Iraq, said in early June 
that 34 of the top 42 Al-Qaeda leaders in Iraq had been killed or captured in 
the previous 90 days.

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