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Suicide bomber kills 35 in Baghdad

BAGHDAD—A suicide bomber killed 35 people at an Iraqi police recruiting center in Baghdad on Sunday, in the latest attack that undermines U.S. and Iraqi government efforts to bolster the country’s security forces.
Interior Ministry sources said 58 people were also wounded in the attack after a bomber wearing an explosive-laden vest walked into the recruiting center for police commandos and blew himself up among a crowd of young men.
The attack, the bloodiest in months targeting recruits, comes as U.S. President George W. Bush’s top generals prepare recommendations for a shift in strategy following a defeat for his Republicans at Congressional elections last Tuesday.
Sunni Arab insurgents frequently target recruits hoping to join Iraq’s fledgling security forces, which are a key part of Washington’s plan for an eventual withdrawal of its troops. In January, a suicide bomber blew himself up among a crowd of police recruits in the western city of Ramadi, killing 70.
Washington has focused on training and reinforcing Iraq’s security forces in the hope of being able to hand over responsibility for security and draw down its 150,000 troops. But Iraqi security forces are underequipped and frequently attacked by insurgents, deterring recruitment. There were attacks on police in Kirkuk, Baquba and Baghdad on Saturday.
With growing U.S. pressure not to leave its troops suffering daily casualties in Iraq indefinitely, the establishment of a credible, forceful and independent Iraqi security force is key.
However both the police and the army are frequently accused by both sides of being infiltrated by people more interested in promoting the interests of their own sectarian group than acting impartially.
The Pentagon’s top general, Peter Pace, has said U.S. military leaders are preparing to recommend changes in Iraq strategy. The Iraq Study Group, led by former secretary of state James Baker and former congressman Lee Hamilton, is also looking at alternative approaches.
While indicating he wants new ideas, Bush has insisted a quick withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq is not on the table despite the resignation by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, the main architect of the war.
The Shi’ite- and Kurdish-dominated government of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has struggled to balance the demands of its various coalition members, and has yet to come through on pledges to crack down on militias linked to some of its allies.
The biggest challenge for former CIA director Robert Gates, expected to replace Rumsfeld, will be halting a slide into sectarian civil war. Police on Sunday were looking for a group of Shi’ite travelers who were kidnapped after gunmen stopped their buses south of Baghdad on Saturday in the so-called Sunni “Triangle of Death” because of the large number of attacks against U.S. and Iraqi troops.
Police in Diwaniya, the town where the travelers came from, said 58 were kidnapped. However, Interior Ministry sources and police in Latifiya, the town where the attack took place, said 13 people were snatched from the buses.
Mass kidnappings in dangerous roads near mixed areas has become a feature of sectarian violence. Many kidnap victims are later found dumped on the road. “We demand that the government take quick action to send troops there in order to know the fate of those kidnapped,” al-Anzi said.
Along with those killed, five bodies — all blindfolded and bound at the wrists and ankles — had also been recovered in various parts of eastern Baghdad early Sunday, police said. All had been mutilated by torture, marking them as victims of death squads that regularly kidnap rivals from Iraq’s Muslim Sunni and Shiite sects.—Agencies

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