Sunday, September 19, 2010

State law: the deterioration of security will continue as long as the political situation critical ...


19/09/2010

State law: the deterioration of security will continue as long as the political situation critical

Baghdad, A member of the state of law coalition led by Prime Minister outgoing Nouri al-Maliki on Sunday evening, said the deteriorating security situation in Baghdad and other cities due to the critical political situation experienced by the country during the current period.

Ihsan said Al-Awadi told Kurdistan News (Akaniwz) that "The security situation is interdependence the political situation in Iraq."

Noting that "as long as the political situation there will be a critical deterioration in security conditions."

He said al-Awadi, "The security situation is linked to agendas for Foreign Affairs and a lot of internal What we are witnessing breaches of security in Baghdad and other Iraqi towns proof that there are loopholes exploited by armed groups to carry out attacks." Adding that "the security services, control the security situation as much as possible and everyone to take responsibility this deterioration. "

And Al-Awadi said "the political blocs to speed up the formation of the government and ending the political and security vacuum that has afflicted the country."

The capital Baghdad this morning, an escalation of security remarkable after more than a week lull in all areas of the capital, where the Green Zone to a rocket attack did not know its losses so far, with several people killed and wounded an explosion in the neighborhood of the Arab-Mansour area in western Baghdad, and exploded a number of packaging adhesives west of the capital in the series of assassinations daily.

The Iraqi Defense Minister Abdul-Qader al-Obeidi said the need for the survival of some form of U.S. military presence in Iraq until 2016 to train and support Iraqi forces, as well as for the maintenance of a large number of arms and military equipment purchased by Iraq to the United States.

Although al-Qaeda in Iraq has lost many of its leaders after the killing of their leaders, Abu Ayyub al-Masri and Abu Omar al-Baghdadi in a raid by Iraqi and U.S. troops on the Thar Thar area months ago, but the organization began, it seems, activates slowly with a political vacuum in the country .

And growing fears of a return to sectarian violence in Iraq along the lines of what happened in 2006 and 2007 in light of stalled negotiations to form the next Iraqi government.

The concerns come in conjunction with the increasing frequency of attacks mined cars and roadside bombs in Baghdad and other provinces, particularly against the security forces during the past few months.

The process of delay in forming a government of concern to many Iraqis, especially with the end of combat missions for the U.S. Army, while Iraqi leaders warned of armed groups seeking to exploit the political vacuum, in order to bring Iraq into the cycle of sectarian violence again.

http://www.aknews.com/ar/aknews/2