Al-Qaida's
front group in Iraq claimed Wednesday it was behind a wave of attacks that
killed 46 people across the country and said the violence shows how weak
government security is heading into next week's Arab League summit in Baghdad.
The attacks on Tuesday struck Shiite pilgrims in the holy city
of Karbala, set cars on fire near a police headquarters in Kirkuk and targeted
security forces and
government officials in Baghdad. In all, insurgents struck
eight cities in just under six hours, killing 46 and wounding 200 people.
The statement by the Islamic State of Iraq, posted on a militant
website Wednesday, said its "Sunni lions" targeted the plan of the
"fool government preparing" for the summit.
"Within
few hours, all the security measures adopted by the Shiite government have
collapsed and the enemy was taken by surprise," said the statement.
"Several government and security headquarters were attacked."
The government vowed not to be scared off from hosting the
summit — the first to take place in Iraq since 1990 and a chance to prove it is
moving toward normalcy after years of war.
On Wednesday, a bomb exploded near a liquor store in central
Baghdad and wounded five passers-by, said police and a hospital medic. Both
officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to
release the information.
The government said last week that Iraq would deploy an
unprecedented number of security forces to protect the capital for the summit.
An estimated 26,000 police and soldiers — including more than 4,000 from Iraq's
north and south — are expected to be deployed in Baghdad.
But citizens and lawmakers have questioned whether Baghdad would
be safe during the Arab meeting.
Extremists have launched large-scale attacks in Iraq every few
weeks for nearly a year. The violence now is nowhere as frequent as it was
during the tit-for-tat sectarian fighting a few years ago. But the attacks
appear to be more deadly than they were before American military's withdrawal
in late December.
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