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Mosul suicide bombing probably inside job { December 23 2004 }

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   http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/iraq/la-122304mosul_lat,0,2438919.story?coll=la-home-headlines

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/iraq/la-122304mosul_lat,0,2438919.story?coll=la-home-headlines

Mosul Suicide Bombing Probably 'Inside Job'
Officials think bomber may have worn an Iraqi military uniform that helped get him through layers of security.
By John Hendren
Times Staff Writer

11:39 AM PST, December 23, 2004

WASHINGTON — The explosion that killed 22 people in a U.S. military mess hall in northern Iraq was apparently an inside job by a suicide bomber who may have worn an Iraqi military uniform, allowing passage through multiple layers of security, a senior military official said today.

"The question now turns to how did that happen, and I don't know the answer to that question," Brig. Gen. Carter F. Ham, who oversees 8,500 U.S. troops in Mosul, said in an interview with CNN.

He added, "What we think is likely, but certainly not certain, is that an individual in an Iraqi military uniform, possibly with a vest-worn explosive device, was inside the facility and detonated the facility, causing this tragedy. That's preliminary. We'll find out what the truth is and take necessary actions as we gain more information."

U.S. military investigators concluded that the blast near Mosul on Tuesday was caused by a suicide bomber rather than a rocket after finding remnants of material that might have served as the assailant's backpack or vest, as well as widely dispersed body parts that probably belonged to the bomber, a senior military official said.

In the deadliest attack on a U.S. military base since the war began in March 2003, the bomber apparently packed ball bearings around a bomb strapped to his body to maximize the amount of shrapnel that tore through the crowd at noon, when the greatest number of soldiers would be present, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Ham said he believed the bomber had help, but he stopped short of explaining why. "It is very difficult to conceive that this would be the act of a lone individual," Ham said. He added the suicide mission took some degree of planning, "perhaps days."

Military officials described their findings after a briefing by Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and Air Force Gen. Richard B. Myers, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Rumsfeld, in unusually somber remarks, also sought to alleviate criticism that he had treated troops and their families callously.

"I — and I know others — stay awake at night with concern for those at risk, with hope for their lives and for their success," he said, his voice cracking during opening remarks that he prepared himself. "And I want those who matter most — the men and women in uniform and their families — to know that."

Tuesday's attack occurred amid a rising campaign of intimidation by insurgents ahead of a national election set for Jan. 30.

Rumsfeld, warning that the election would not end the violence, echoed comments made by President Bush earlier in the week that the insurgents were having an adverse effect on efforts to stabilize Iraq.

"I think looking for a peaceful Iraq after the elections would be a mistake," Rumsfeld said. "I think our expectations level ought to be realistic about that."

Bush has had to defend Rumsfeld after the Defense secretary delivered what many considered to be a rebuff to a National Guard specialist who complained about inadequate protective equipment and after revelations that Rumsfeld used a signature machine for letters sent to families of slain troops. A CNN/USA Today/Gallup survey this week found that 52% of Americans believe Rumsfeld should resign.

Military officials said 14 U.S. troops, four U.S. civilian contractors and three Iraqi national guardsmen were killed in the attack, along with one unidentified "non-U.S." victim, apparently the bomber.

Sixty-nine people were wounded. They included 44 U.S. troops, seven U.S. contractors, five U.S. civilians working for the Defense Department, two Iraqi civilians and 10 contractors of other nationalities. The nationality and occupation of one could not be determined, officials said.

Dozens of victims arrived Wednesday at the Ramstein Air Base in Germany. Eight patients were listed as being in critical condition. Others had shrapnel cuts, broken bones and other non-life-threatening injuries. About 25 returned to duty, defense officials said.

The attack was the second time a suicide bomber managed to infiltrate a heavily fortified U.S. compound.

On Oct. 14, two suicide bombers detonated explosives-laden backpacks inside Baghdad's heavily barricaded Green Zone, killing six people and injuring more than 18. The area houses the interim Iraqi government and the U.S. and British embassies.

In a statement on an Islamic website, a group called the Ansar al Sunna Army claimed responsibility for the attack and said it was a suicide operation executed by a 24-year-old man who had worked at the base for two months. Military officials said they did not dispute the account, but also couldn't confirm it.

Officials at the base have been worried about the possibility of an attack since late November, when a suspect arrested in a roundup in Mosul's Old Town was found with a document that contained minutes of a cell meeting that described an attack on U.S. forces, according to an ABC News report.

The revelation that a bomber appeared responsible for the attack near Mosul evoked comparisons to past attacks on U.S. bases, including the 1983 suicide bombing of a Marine barracks in Beirut that killed 241 and the 1996 truck bombing of the Khobar Towers complex in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, in which 19 U.S. service members died.

The Mosul bombing was especially devastating because it occurred inside a crowded mess tent, an area where soldiers assume they are safe. Troops commonly toss their helmets and protective vests onto chairs and floors at base mess halls across Iraq.

Recent attacks suggest that the insurgents have deliberately targeted dining facilities during mealtimes. In Ramadi on Nov. 27, a rocket harmlessly hit the dirt about 50 yards from the main mess hall shortly before noon.

In Tikrit, where dud mortar rounds rained down on a mess hall parking lot earlier this year, soldiers said they were not entirely surprised.

"We know they're aiming for the chow halls," said Mitchell Vanderark, 19, a 1st Infantry Division soldier from Grand Rapids, Mich. "If you think about it, it had to happen eventually."

The real surprise, said one senior military official speaking on condition of anonymity, was that it hadn't happened sooner.

Times staff writers Edmund Sanders in Baghdad, Louise Roug in Tikrit, Jeffrey Fleishman in Berlin, Mark Mazzetti in Washington, special correspondent Roaa Ahmed in Mosul and Daryl Strickland in Los Angeles contributed to this report.




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Cia reports of deteriorating iraq situation { December 7 2004 }
Contractor pulls out of reconstruction concerned security { December 22 2004 }
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Falluja transformed into scifi police state { December 5 2004 }
Insurgents growing more effective
Insurgents set ablaze major pipeline { December 21 2004 }
Mess tent bomber was saudi student { January 4 2005 }
Mosul suicide bombing probably inside job { December 23 2004 }
Rocket hits US base in iraq killing 22 { December 21 2004 }
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