By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr. and ALI ADEEB
Published: June 26, 2007
BAGHDAD, Tuesday, June 26 — A suicide bomber on Monday assassinated four Sunni sheiks who were cooperating with Americans to fight Al Qaeda in Anbar Province. Witnesses said the bomber sneaked through security checkpoints, strode into a large Baghdad hotel and detonated an explosive belt just before lunchtime, killing 12 people including the sheiks.
The bombing struck at the heart of one of the rare bright spots for the American military. Just last year some senior military officers had all but given up on Anbar, the sprawling western province. But a group of Sunni sheiks banded together to fight Al Qaeda and supply young men to the police, bringing a significant turnabout. Anbar has allowed the American military to claim some success in its long-held ambition of splitting Sunnis away from the sway of Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia.
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The bombings underscored how easily insurgents can strike at fortified structures throughout the country, despite the huge increase in American troops over the past four months.
At the Mansour, bodies lay strewn about thick heaps of concrete and glass rubble as large chunks of ceiling dangled precariously, prompting one Anbar leader to suggest that a larger bomb had been planted in the room. Hotel staff members speculated that the attacker was one of the sheiks’ guards. The hotel houses the Chinese Embassy, several Western news organizations, and some members of Parliament.
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But he asserted that many in Mr. Maliki’s government take orders from Iran, and added: “There are people close to the government who are behind this. We expect to be targets of assassinations and attacks everyday. The government is helpless, and any government who can’t protect its people and its leaders has to pack and leave.”
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The improvements in Anbar finally appear to have reduced American casualties. While the Marines and other forces there had long suffered an average of almost 30 deaths per month, there were only three American deaths in Anbar in June, according to the Web site Iraq Coalition Casualty Count.
Meanwhile, fatalities in Baghdad and Diyala Province have soared. On Monday, an American soldier was shot to death south of Baghdad. Another soldier was killed by a roadside bomb in eastern Baghdad.
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