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IRAQ WARS
US says Baghdad is not under 'imminent threat' from IS
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 16, 2014


Iraq bombings kill at least 26
Baghdad (AFP) Oct 16, 2014 - Bombings in and around Baghdad, including a suicide attack, killed at least 26 people and wounded dozens Thursday, police and medical sources said.

At least 10 people were killed by car bombs near the frequently targeted Baghdad district of Kadhimiyah, while nine died in a suicide car bomb attack in Talbiya, a senior Baghdad police official said.

The double car bombing in a Dolai neighbourhood, also wounded 29 people.

It was claimed by the Islamic State (IS) in a statement circulated on social media.

The jihadist organisation said it targeted a group of Shiite volunteer fighters with the first car bomb and exploded the second one when the police arrived on the scene.

A hospital source confirmed the casualty figures.

The suicide bombing at a police checkpoint in Talbiya, near the sprawling northern neighbourhood of Sadr City, also wounded at least 26 people.

IS also claimed responsibility for an attack in the Shiite area of Kadhimiyah on Tuesday that killed 28 people, including a member of parliament who was also a senior commander in the Shiite Badr militia.

IS frequently carries targets members of Iraq's Shiite majority.

The group has overrun large areas of the country since June and also holds substantial territory in neighbouring Syria.

In further violence Thursday, a car bomb in Mahmudiyah, a restive town south of Baghdad in an area known as the "triangle of death," killed at least six people.

In Madain, just east of Mahmudiyah, a roadside bomb blast hit an army patrol, killing at least one soldier and wounding others.

The United Nations said more than 1,110 people were killed in acts of violence across Iraq in September. According to an AFP count, around 400 have already been killed this month.

While the bloodshed has mainly been on the front lines where federal, Kurdish and allied forces are battling to push IS back, blasts and executions in Baghdad continue to take a heavy toll.

The Iraqi capital Baghdad is not facing immediate danger from Islamic State jihadists despite battlefield gains by the group in the country's west and recent car bombings in the city, the US military said Thursday.

Pentagon spokesman Rear Admiral John Kirby acknowledged several deadly bombing attacks in Baghdad earlier Thursday, including one claimed by the IS group, but said the city's defenses were solid.

"We don't believe that Baghdad is under imminent threat," Kirby told a news conference.

"It's not the first time in recent weeks or even months that there's been IED attacks inside Baghdad," he said, using the military's abbreviation for an improvised explosive device or homemade bomb.

The car bomb blasts in and around Baghdad killed at least 26 people and wounded dozens, Iraqi police and medical sources said. One double car bomb attack was claimed by the IS group, which said it targeted a group of Shiite volunteer fighters.

But Kirby said Baghdad was not encircled or about to be overrun.

"There are not masses of formations of ISIL forces outside of Baghdad about to come in," he said.

Iraqi security forces "continue to stiffen their defensive positions in and around the capital, and in a very competent, capable way."

Despite a US-led air campaign in Iraq that began on August 8, the IS group has been steadily pushing back Iraqi government forces in western Anbar province, raising fears the militants could soon begin to pile pressure on the outskirts of Baghdad.

US military officers have said Iraqi forces have been struggling in Anbar but there have been few coalition air strikes in the area this week, while dozens of bombing raids have targeted the IS group near Kobane in northern Syria.

Kirby said "terrible" weather and sand storms in recent days had hampered US-led air strikes in Iraq.

"It's made it very hard for us to get intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance platforms up over to see what we're trying to do in Iraq," he said.

The poor weather had freed up American aircraft for additional bombing strikes near Kobane in Syria, where Kurdish fighters have been holding out for weeks against an assault by the IS group, Kirby said.

"One of the reasons you've seen additional strikes (near Kobane) in the last couple of days is because we haven't been able to strike quite as much or quite as aggressively inside Iraq," he said.

Local Kurdish leaders say they have pushed back the IS extremists in some parts of Kobane and US officials believed dozens of air strikes in recent days had helped halt the advance of the jihadists.

"While the security situation there does remain tenuous, ISIL's (IS's) advances appear to have slowed, and we know that we have inflicted damage upon them," Kirby said.

The Pentagon press secretary denied the ramped-up air attacks near Kobane represented a change in strategy and said IS forces had exposed themselves in their bid to seize the town.

He said Kobane was not necessarily strategic but was important because IS had put so much energy into taking it, and the plight of civilians in the area made it a humanitarian concern as well.

"What makes Kobane significant is the fact that ISIL wants it, and the more they want it, the more forces and resources they apply to it, the more targets are available for us to hit there," Kirby said.

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