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by Beth Rowen
| Jan. 1, 2008 |
In the worst attack in Iraq in months, a suicide bomber kills
30 people at a home where mourners were paying their respects to the
family of a man killed in a car bomb. |
| Jan. 12, 2008 |
Parliament passes the Justice and
Accountability Law, which will allow many Baathists to resume the
government jobs they lost after the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.
The measure creates a new committee to determine if lower-level
Baathists, former members of Saddam Hussein's party, are eligible to
be reinstated to their previous posts. Passage of the law, which must
be approved by the presidential council, would be the first major
benchmark of political progress reached by the Iraqi
government. |
| Feb. 1, 2008 |
At least 65 people die when two women suicide
bombers attack crowded pet markets in eastern Baghdad. |
| Feb. 13, 2008 |
Parliament passes another round of
legislation, which includes a law that outlines provincial powers and
an election timetable, a 2008 budget, and an amnesty law that will
affect thousands of mostly Sunni Arab prisoners. A divided Iraqi
Presidency Council vetoes the package, however. |
| Feb. 24, 2008 |
More than 50 people, who are headed to the
shrine of Imam Hussein in Karbala to celebrate Arbaeen, are killed in
a suicide attack at a rest stop. |
| March 19, 2008 |
On the fifth anniversary of the U.S.-led war
in Iraq, President Bush insists that the outcome of the war will be
worth the sacrifice, yet he admits the cost of war had exceeded
expectations in money and loss of life. "Five years into this battle,
there is an understandable debate over whether the war was worth
fighting, whether the fight is worth winning, and whether we can win
it," he says. "The answers are clear to me. Removing Saddam Hussein
from power was the right decision, and this is a fight that America
can and must win." |
| March 23, 2008 |
A roadside bomb in Baghdad kills four U.S.
soldiers, bringing the death toll of American troops to 4,000.
President Bush said of the losses, "I have vowed in the past, and I
will vow so long as I'm president, to make sure that those lives were
not lost in vain -- that, in fact, there is an outcome that will merit
the sacrifice." |
| March 25, 2008 |
About 30,000 Iraqi troops and police, with
air support from the U.S. and British military, attempt to oust Shiite
militias, particularly the Mahdi Army led by radical cleric Moktada
al-Sadr, that control Basra and its lucrative ports in southern Iraq.
Sadr declared a cease-fire in August 2007, but has allowed his forces
to fight in self defense. Four days into the operation, the Mahdi Army
maintains control over much of Basra. The assault, ordered by Prime
Minister Nuri al-Maliki, is criticized for being poorly planned and
executed. Fighting spiills into the Sadr city section of Baghdad.
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| March 31, 2008 |
After negotiations with Iraqi officials,
Moktada al-Sadr orders his militia to end military action in exchange
for amnesty for his supporters, the release from prison of his
followers who have not been convicted of crimes, and the government's
help in returning to their homes Sadrists who fled fighting. The
compromise is seen as a defeat to Maliki, who is criticized for poorly
organizing the invasion. In addition, more than 1,000 Iraqi soldiers
and police officers either refused to participate in the operation or
deserted their posts. |
| April 8, 2008 |
At a Congressional hearing, Gen. David Petraeus advises against
further drawdowns of American troops until at least 45 days after the
one underway is completed in July. He also reports that progress in
Iraq has been "significant but even." He also said, "We haven't turned
any corners. We haven't seen any lights at the end of the tunnel."
Petraeus blamed some of the turmoil in Iraq on the "destructive role
Iran has played." |
| April 13, 2008 |
About 1,300 soldiers who either refused to fight or deserted the
military's March operation in Basra to oust Shiite militias are
dismissed. |
| April 19, 2008 |
The Mahdi Army retreats from the last districts of Basra under its
control. Iran endorses the assault on the Mahdi Army, a group which it
once supported. |
| April 24, 2008 |
After a boycott of almost a year, the largest Sunni block in
Iraq's government, Tawafiq, announces it will return to the cabinet of
Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki. Tawafiq's leader, Adnan al-Dulaimi,
says by passing an amnesty law and launching an assault on Shiite
militias, the government has met enough of its demands to end the
boycott. |
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