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Bush: U.S. ready for new attacks in IraqWoman bomber kills 5 in Tal Afar
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YOUR E-MAIL ALERTSBAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- President Bush predicted Wednesday that insurgents would launch a new wave of attacks aimed at disrupting upcoming Iraqi elections, but he said that "our troops are ready for it." "The terrorists will fail. See, the Iraqis want to be free. They proved that last January when over 8 million citizens, in the face of violence and threats voted," Bush said. "The terrorists are going to fail this time, but we can expect they'll do everything in their power to try to stop the march of freedom." Bush spoke Wednesday in the White House Rose Garden after a meeting with Gen. George Casey, the top commander in Iraq, and Gen. John Abizaid, head of the U.S. Central Command. (Bush discusses Iraq gains -- 7:59) Bush said the two leaders would brief members of Congress on recent gains in Iraq. (Full story) He also hailed the killing Tuesday of al Qaeda in Iraq's No. 2 operative, calling him a "brutal killer," who was responsible for the recent upswing in attacks. Abu Azzam was killed early Sunday in Baghdad. (Full story) Bush said that Iraqi security forces were getting stronger and actually outnumbered U.S. troops involved in an operation to root out insurgents in the town of Tal Afar. The U.S. military says it was able to kill or capture hundreds of militants during an offensive there this month. Bush said that U.S. forces have been able to count on Iraqi forces to hold the city after the insurgents were driven out. In Tal Afar on Wednesday, a female suicide bomber killed five people and wounded 30 outside a center where residents had gathered seeking compensation after the recent offensive in the city, a senior Iraqi military source said. The woman detonated her explosive vest about 10 a.m. (2 a.m. ET), when she was not allowed to enter the building, officials said. It was the first known suicide attack by a woman during the Iraq insurgency. Women carried out at least one suicide attack before the fall of Baghdad, The Associated Press reported. Task Force Freedom said on Tuesday that "more than 500 claims have been processed since September 19, paying out more than $175,000," as part of an effort to repair Tal Afar and bring back more than 5,000 residents who fled the fighting. Meanwhile, a U.S. military patrol on the outskirts of Haqlaniya came under fire from rocket-propelled grenades and automatic weapons. In the ensuing firefight, five suspected insurgents were killed and one vehicle was destroyed, officials said. Haqlaniya is in western Anbar province close to the Euphrates River, and the train station near where the attack occurred has been the location of frequent attacks on U.S. and Iraqi forces. Nine people shot in headElsewhere, the bodies of nine people were found shot to death Wednesday in Baghdad and Baquba, emergency police sources told CNN. Seven bodies were found in the Shula neighborhood of northwest Baghdad. Each was shot once in the head and their hands were injured as though they had been tied up. Their eyes appeared to have been taped shut. Two bodies were also found in Baquba, north of Baghdad in Diyala province. They were killed in similar fashion, but the two incidents do not appear to have been related. On Tuesday, the bodies of 22 men were found in southern Iraq. They had been shot in the head with their hands tied, police in Baghdad said. The men may have been tortured, police said. The bodies were discovered in Jassan, a town in Wasit province near the border with Iran. Fleeing SamarraIn Samarra, several hundred residents were fleeing their homes because of fears that U.S. and Iraqi forces will launch an offensive against insurgents there, according to the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. A news release said citizens are reporting a buildup of Iraqi and U.S. forces in Salaheddin province -- the same province where Saddam Hussein was born. The statement, dated Tuesday, quotes an Interior Ministry official, Ahmed Diar, as saying the province "has been another worrying spot of insurgency in Iraq and we should have control over it to give security and comfort to Iraqis, but we do not have a certain date for operations and people should await our announcement to leave." The statement said "local residents in the city said insurgents could be seen walking freely carrying machine guns, forcing them to barricade themselves inside their houses." Other developmentsCNN's Enes Dulami, Kevin Flower, Kianne Sadeq and Barbara Starr contributed to this report. Copyright 2005 CNN. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Associated Press contributed to this report.
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