Monday, July 23, 2012
OBAMA'S #EPICFAIL: DEADLIEST DAY IN
IRAQ,
103 PEOPLE KILLED IN JIHAD ATTACKS
More of the carnage and
bloodshed from Obama's catastrophic anti-freedom foreign policy failures. His
systematic surrender to jihad worldwide is an unmitigated disaster as the daily
Obama death toll mounts.
(AP) Coordinated Iraq attacks kill 103 By SINAN SALAHEDDIN and BUSHRA JUHI, Associated Press
BAGHDAD: Bombings and
shootings ripped across Iraq on Monday, killing at least 103 people in the
deadliest day this year. The coordinated attacks in 13 cities sent a chilling
warning that al-Qaida is slowly resurging in the security vacuum created by a
weak government in Baghdad and the departure of the U.S. military seven months
ago.
Though there was no immediate claim of responsibility, the leader of
al-Qaida in Iraq declared on Sunday a new offensive aimed at sowing instability
across the country.
Iraqi militants have kept up a steady drumbeat of deadly attacks since the U.S.
pulled out in December, ending nearly a decade of war. They have sought to
deepen the chaos created by the deepening sectarian political crisis that pits
Sunni and Kurdish leaders against Shiite political powers. The latest violence
bore most of the hallmarks of al-Qaida: the bombings and shootings all took
place within a few hours of each other and struck mostly at security forces and
government offices _ favorite targets of the predominantly Sunni militants.
Posted by Pamela Geller on
Monday, July 23, 2012 at 02:39 PM in Iraq: Central
Front
Monday, July 23, 2012
OBAMA'S #EPICFAIL: DEADLIEST DAY IN
IRAQ,
103 PEOPLE KILLED IN JIHAD ATTACKS
103 PEOPLE KILLED IN JIHAD ATTACKS
(AP) Coordinated Iraq attacks kill 103 By SINAN SALAHEDDIN and BUSHRA JUHI, Associated Press
Though there was no immediate claim of responsibility, the leader of al-Qaida in Iraq declared on Sunday a new offensive aimed at sowing instability across the country.
Iraqi militants have kept up a steady drumbeat of deadly attacks since the U.S. pulled out in December, ending nearly a decade of war. They have sought to deepen the chaos created by the deepening sectarian political crisis that pits Sunni and Kurdish leaders against Shiite political powers. The latest violence bore most of the hallmarks of al-Qaida: the bombings and shootings all took place within a few hours of each other and struck mostly at security forces and government offices _ favorite targets of the predominantly Sunni militants.
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