WORLD / Middle East

Explosion kills 3 in Baghdad
(AP)
Updated: 2006-05-25 19:53

Gunmen wounded an Iraqi general Thursday in southeast Baghdad and a blast killed three people in the heart of the capital as President George W. Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair prepared for a meeting on Iraq strategy now that a new government is in place.

Brig. Gen. Khalil al-Abadi, head of the Defense Ministry logistics office, was ambushed as he was driven to work in the Zafraniyah district, police said. His driver was also wounded.

The blast in central Baghdad occurred in a building on Tahrir Square, killing three and wounding 11, police Lt. Ali Mitaab said. Police suspect the building housed a bomb-making factory.

In Mosul, 225 miles northwest of Baghdad, drive-by shooters killed a member of the city council, Muthana Thanon Jassim, and his driver, police Brig. Gen. Abdul-Hamid Khalaf said.

Bush and Blair are to meet Thursday and Friday in Washington, with Iraq strategy at the top of the agenda. Blair, who visited Baghdad this week, also will discuss Iraqi plans for an international conference to back its government and seek Bush's support for increased U.N. support, British officials said.

Both leaders have seen their poll ratings drop sharply and are under pressure to make troop cutbacks. But U.S. and British officials dampened expectations that the meetings would produce a timetable for withdrawal.

In Baghdad, the new Iraqi prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki, said he believes Iraqi forces are capable of taking over security around the country within 18 months, but he did not mention a timetable for U.S.-led coalition forces to leave.

"Our forces are capable of taking over the security in all Iraqi provinces within a year-and-a-half," al-Maliki said in a written statement, in which he acknowledged that security forces needed more recruits, training and equipment.

Al-Maliki told the U.S. television network NBC that his government would speed up training of police and soldiers and "considering our determination to build our forces, we will be finished by the end of 2007."

U.S. military officials have cautioned that transferring security responsibility to the Iraqis does not mean international troops would leave concurrently, although some reductions in troop levels might be possible.
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