'Qaida Fighters' Kill 27 Police in West Iraq

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Suspected al-Qaida gunmen, some wearing army uniforms, raged through a western Iraq city on Monday in a pre-dawn shooting spree that killed 27 policemen, including two officers killed execution-style.

The assault, launched at about 2:00 am (23:00 GMT on Sunday), saw insurgents dressed in military uniforms simultaneously attacking two checkpoints in the east and west of Haditha before storming other security posts and raiding the homes of the two officers.

Monday's violence, the deadliest in Iraq since February 23, comes just weeks before an Arab League summit due to be held in Baghdad at the end of the month.

"We received 27 dead bodies, all of them policemen, and treated three policemen who were wounded," Fadhil al-Nimrawi, director of Haditha's hospital, told Agence France Presse. He added that the hospital also received the body of a gunman.

Haditha police spokesman Major Tareq Sayeh Hardan described the attack as beginning when "several armed men wearing security uniforms and carrying forged arrest warrants attacked several checkpoints."

"Al-Qaida is responsible for this," Hardan said, noting that investigators found al-Qaida literature in a vehicle that the attackers left behind.

Officers offered conflicting accounts of whether the attackers were riding in stolen army vehicles, or 4x4s with fabricated insignia.

Security forces in the town imposed a vehicle curfew and shut down several main roads, an AFP journalist said, while reinforcements were being called in from the rest of Anbar province as police and soldiers hunted for the attackers.

According to police Lieutenant Colonel Owaid Khalaf, who said he was involved in some of Monday's firefights, the gunmen first attacked checkpoints at the eastern and western edges of Haditha.

"They then entered the town and were distributed throughout Haditha, where other gunmen were waiting for them in civilian cars," said Khalaf.

"More than 50 gunmen altogether started attacking checkpoints all over the town," he added, noting that at least one attacker was killed in the gunfights.

Khalaf said the attackers also targeted two senior police officers' homes -- Colonel Mohammed Shauffeur and Captain Khaled Mohammed Sayil. They killed three bodyguards at each of the officer's houses, and kidnapped both.

Shauffeur's body was found in a Haditha marketplace and Sayil was discovered in an alleyway, blindfolded with fatal gunshots to the head.

The attack in Haditha, 210 kilometers northeast of Baghdad, is the first major instance of violence in the town since a suicide bomber blew himself up inside a bank, killing nine people and wounding eight others in March 2011.

Monday was Iraq's deadliest day since a wave of attacks killed 42 people on February 23, and the first major attack on security forces since a suicide bomber struck a Baghdad police academy on February 19.

The violence comes ahead of a March 29 Arab League summit in Baghdad, the first non-emergency meeting of the 22-nation body to be held in the Iraqi capital in more than 30 years.

Haditha is in western Sunni Arab Anbar province. It was one of several towns along the Euphrates valley that became al-Qaida strongholds after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein.

However, in 2006, local Sunni tribes sided with the U.S. military and unrest dwindled in Anbar as rebel fighters were ejected from the region.

Violence across the country is down from its peaks in 2006 and 2007, but attacks remain common. A total of 150 Iraqis were killed in February, according to official figures.

Comments 6
Thumb jcamerican 05 March 2012, 11:27

The war against terrorism is really working. What a waste of money. All the plans are falling apart. Maybe we have to use nukes, maybe it will work.

Default-user-icon MUSTAPHA O. GHALAYINI (Guest) 05 March 2012, 11:55

the americans,stupid as usaual since 50 years in foreign policy,created the moujahideen.. the qaeda.. the sunni/shii rift.. and now the rewards.perhaps they will use nukes against tornadoes????

Default-user-icon Leo (Guest) 05 March 2012, 12:32

@Mustapha, Your comments don't make any sense. Or, you just don't have the education to communicate in a clear and concise manner.

Default-user-icon MUSTAPHA O. GHALAYINI (Guest) 05 March 2012, 14:24

leo, u want more tangible examples, what about siding with the syrian regime since 1975 against the prosperity of bilad el arz and creating a civil war in lebanon? all that to initiate the stupid idea of "tahaluf el aqallyat"which in fact terrorized the aqalliyet starting with irak?...do u imagine the terror the "aqalliyet" in syria are living in if or when the syrian state collapses?if this dosnt make sense to u then...

Default-user-icon +oua nabka + (Guest) 05 March 2012, 15:21

Abu steif , (tahalouf el 2akaliat) as u say its against whom this tahalouf ?????
and do walid beik came back as the master of the game ?

Default-user-icon MUSTAPHA O. GHALAYINI (Guest) 05 March 2012, 17:03

@ oua nabka:
tahalouf el akallyat is against national arabism, ( being transformed now and very sadly to sunni salafi wahaby)
and walid beik is missing now : THE TRUST ,he lost the trust=he lost the game, but he was master b4 following esteez.