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January Iraq death toll highest in four months

US envoy seeks means to 'finish the job' in Iraq
Washington (AFP) Feb 1, 2011 - The US ambassador in Baghdad, James Jeffrey, on Tuesday urged the Senate for the means to "finish the job" in Iraq after the complete withdrawal of American troops at the end of the year. "The Department of State is ready to take the lead. But we need the support and resources to finish the job," Jeffrey told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He evoked "a historic opportunity" to find in Baghdad a "strategic partner and a force for stability" in the region, but warned a sudden drop in the US effort could allow Al-Qaeda and other "dangerous" influences to fill the void.

"We need to have platforms around the country to carry out key transitional missions for the next three to five years," Jeffrey said. "These include work, political, economic, security and other officials throughout the country, especially in key areas, such as Kirkuk and Mosul." Jeffrey said the State Department budget for Iraq would continue to increase but that it was far less than the military budget, which is now decreasing with its declining role. The committee, chaired by John Kerry, a former presidential candidate, published a report on Iraq raising questions about the transition from the US military to civilian presence.

"It is unclear whether the State Department has the capacity to maintain and protect the currently planned diplomatic presence without a degree of US military support," it concluded. "Uncertainty about the nature of US military presence in Iraq after 2012 is complicating all other aspects of the transition and must be clarified," it said. "The bureaucratic integration between the Departments of Defense and State remains incomplete, and the unity of effort in Baghdad has not been matched in Washington," it said. "A creative and sustainable funding mechanism is needed to pay for the diplomatic mission in Iraq," it added.
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) Feb 1, 2011
More Iraqis were killed in attacks in January than any month since September, figures released Tuesday showed, after a surge in violence over a two week period shattered a relative calm in the country.

Data compiled by the ministries of health, defence and interior showed that a total of 259 people -- 159 civilians, 55 policemen and 45 soldiers -- were killed in violence last month.

That figure was the highest since September 2010, when 273 people died. January's death toll broke a string of five consecutive months when the overall number of people killed fell.

The data was published two days after a US watchdog said shortfalls in the capabilities of Iraq's security forces could undo security gains after American troops leave at the end of the year.

The Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction (SIGIR) noted that while Baghdad's forces had made major improvements, they suffered from poor logistics capabilities, and that corruption within the police and army had hampered their development.

"This quarter, several US observers noted real or potential gaps in Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) capabilities that could affect its ability to lock in hard-won security gains," SIGIR said in its quarterly report released Sunday.

Violence in January also left 263 people wounded -- 178 civilians, 95 policemen and 90 soldiers, according to the figures. A total of 65 insurgents were killed and 295 arrested.

The death toll was pushed higher primarily during a two-week period when attacks across the country left around 200 people dead, beginning on January 18 when a suicide bomber blew himself up in the middle of a crowd of police recruits in the central city of Tikrit, killing 50.

The next day, another suicide attacker rammed an explosives-laden ambulance into a security headquarters in the town of Baquba, killing 13 people, followed by a spate of blasts on January 20 against Shiite pilgrims on the outskirts of the holy shrine city of Karbala that killed 45.

And on January 27, a massive car bomb ripped through a funeral ceremony in a Shiite district of north Baghdad, leaving 48 dead.

The surge in violence came around a month after Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki named a new cabinet, ending a nine-month political impasse following parliamentary elections in March.

British NGO Iraq Body Count said in its 2010 annual report published a month ago that violence in Iraq, despite falling compared to previous years, may have reached an "impassable minimum".

"Taken as a whole and seen in the context of immediately preceding years, the 2010 data suggest a persistent low-level conflict in Iraq that will continue to kill civilians at a similar rate for years to come," it said.

A total of six US soldiers died in January, also the highest figure since September, according to independent website www.icasualties.org, though one of the deaths was in a non-combat incident.

Among the American troops killed were two who died when an Iraqi soldier gunned them down at a training centre on January 15. Another US soldier died on the same day, the deadliest for American forces in Iraq since July.

Their deaths were a stark reminder that, despite Washington having declared combat operations over in August, its 50,000-odd troops still stationed in Iraq remain at risk.

The remaining US soldiers in Iraq must withdraw from the country by the end of the year, per the terms of a bilateral pact.



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IRAQ WARS
Gaps in Iraq forces may hamper security gains: US report
Washington (AFP) Jan 30, 2011
Shortfalls in the capabilities of Iraq's security forces could undo security gains after US troops leave at the end of 2011, a US watchdog said in a report published Sunday. The Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction (SIGIR) noted that while Baghdad's forces had made major improvements, they suffered from poor logistics capabilities, and that corruption within the police and army ... read more







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