Clashes, car bomb as Iraq launches Baghdad sweep   (AP)  Updated: 2006-06-14 20:17  
Clashes broke out between insurgents and Iraqi security forces and a car bomb 
killed at least two people in Baghdad on Wednesday as the government launched a 
security clampdown to root out al Qaeda militants.  
 
 
 
   Iraqi demonstrators throw a tyre as they set 
 fire to a small entrance of Iran's consulate in Basra, 550 km (341 miles) 
 south of Baghdad June 14, 2006. A crowd of demonstrators chanted slogans 
 outside the consulate and set fire to a reception area of the building 
 during a protest against an Iranian satellite station, accusing it of 
 insulting a Shi'ite cleric in Iraq. 
[Reuters] |   
Gunmen carrying automatic rifles blocked roads with stones and tree trunks 
and exchanged fire with Iraqi troops in Adhamiya, a Sunni insurgent stronghold 
that is one of Baghdad's most dangerous areas, a Reuters reporter at the scene 
said.   
 
 
 
Civilians fled the area but there were no immediate reports of casualties. 
Three Iraqi army tanks were dispatched to Adhamiya. The clashes subsided later 
on Wednesday. 
 In northern Baghdad, a car bomb targeting a police patrol killed two people 
and wounded seven. A Reuters photographer who was 10 meters (yards) from the 
blast saw a man and a teenager burning amid wreckage after the bomb caused a big 
fireball. 
 The clampdown, which included extra checkpoints and Iraqi security patrols 
backed by tanks and armored vehicles, came a day after President Bush met new 
Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, who is under pressure to rein in violence. 
 U.S. and Iraqi forces have carried out several such operations in the past 
but have failed to stem the bloodshed that has killed tens of thousands since 
the U.S.-led invasion in 2003, and pushed Iraq toward civil war. 
 Iraqi officials said the operation would involve more than 40,000 Iraqi and 
U.S.-led forces as part of a sweep to put further pressure on al Qaeda in Iraq 
following the killing of its leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi last week in a U.S. air 
strike. 
 In a surprise visit to Iraq, Bush, who faces low popularity ratings over a 
war that has killed nearly 2,500 U.S. troops, told Maliki the fate and future of 
Iraq was "in your hands." 
 "The decisions you and your cabinet make will determine as to whether or not 
your country succeeds, can govern itself, can defend itself, can sustain 
itself," Bush told Maliki, whose self-styled government of national unity took 
office last month. 
    
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