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In a major embarrassment this month for Iraq's U.S.-trained forces, a suicide bomber was able to walk up undetected to an army recruitment station crowded with hundreds of applicants and kill 61 people. The Aug. 17 attack was the single deadliest act of violence in the capital in months. More than half of the 445 Iraqi security personnel killed this year -- including soldiers, police, police recruits and bodyguards
-- died between June and August, according to an Associated Press count. The prime minister seemed to recognize that security forces alone would not be able to stop the attacks, and he appealed to citizens to be vigilant. "We call on the nation to have open eyes to monitor the movements of those terrorists and keep such criminal gangs from halting the progress of our nation." Al-Maliki is locked in a power struggle to keep his job nearly six months after a parliamentary election that failed to produce a clear winner. The political coalition led by al-Maliki, a Shiite, narrowly came in second place to a Sunni-backed alliance in the March 7 vote. Iraq's political factions have been battling since to work out a power-sharing agreement. U.S. and Iraqi officials fear the political impasse could lead to increased violence. Iraqi military spokesman Maj. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi said the prime minister's statement aimed to embolden security troops who "will face challenges after the withdrawal of the American combat forces." "The terrorist groups are intending to escalate their terrorist operations during the coming days to influence the process of the American withdrawal, to cast doubt on the ability of the Iraqi forces taking charge of the security and to take advantage of political instability," al-Moussawi said.
[Associated
Press;
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