2004 in Iraq

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2004
in
Iraq

Decades:
See also:Other events of 2004
List of years in Iraq

Events in the year 2004 in Iraq.

Incumbents

Events

January

  • January 10 – Protests in the city of Amarah because of an unemployment crisis. Police officers and soldiers open fire on demonstrators.
  • January 15 – The United Nations call direct elections in advance of July impractical, due to continuing disorder and other factors.
  • January 18 – A
    suicide bomber detonates a pickup truck packed with 1,000 pounds of explosives outside the headquarters of the US led coalition killing about 20 people and injuring more than 60 – most of them Iraqis
    .

February

March

April

May

  • May 17 – A suicide car bomb in Baghdad kills the head of Iraq's Governing Council Abdul-Zahra Othman Mohammad, a prominent Shi'ite politician from Basra also known as Izzedin Salim. More than a dozen others were also killed in the blast at the gates of the fortified Green Zone in Baghdad.
  • May 28 –
    Iyad Allawi
    is chosen as the prime minister for the interim Iraqi government. The handover is scheduled to take place on June 30.

June

Paul Bremer signs over limited sovereignty to Iraq's interim government, June 28
  • June 28 – Two days ahead of schedule, control and sovereignty of Iraq is handed over from the United States to an interim Iraqi government. Allawi becomes the prime minister, and Paul Bremer leaves the country. A slightly modified form of the flag is used.

July

August

The new flag of Iraq

August 5 – Marines from 1st Battalion 4th Marines begin battle in Najaf, Iraq. A new flag is created for the country.

  • August 8 – United States Marine Jonathan Collins of Crystal Lake, Illinois was KIA in Al Ramadi, located in the Al Anbar Province.[citation needed]

September

  • September 14 – A car bomb near a crowded market and police station in a Shi'ite area of Baghdad kills at least 47 people and wounds 114.
  • September 30 – Insurgents detonate three car bombs killing 41 people (34 of them children) in the Shi'ite Amil area of southern Baghdad. The blasts, which wounded 139, occurred shortly after U.S. troops had celebrated opening a new sewage system and distributed sweets to children.

October

  • October 1 – An early morning coordinated invasion of Samarra by 3,000 US troops and 2,000 Iraqi troops begins. Iraqis take two religious sites by force. Americans claim to have killed as many as 125 insurgents.
  • October 5 - An American soldier is killed after driving over a landmine in
    Latifiyah
    .
  • October 9 –
    Major-General Tim Cross
    is appointed the new General Officer Commanding, Theatre Troops, commanding all British forces deployed in the country.
  • October 10 – Tawhid and Jihad claims responsibility for two car bombs in Baghdad, killing at least 11 people including an American soldier, and wounding at least 16.
  • October 12 –
    Muqtada Al Sadr
    .
  • October 12 – Germany's defense minister, Peter Struck, indicated that Germany might deploy troops in Iraq if conditions there change. This gesture appears to provide backing for John Kerry, the US Democratic presidential challenger.
  • October 13 -
    • A suicide attack and roadside bombings kills six American soldiers.
    • al-Zarqawi
      , release a video via internet showing the beheading of two Iraqis: Fadhel Ibrahim and Firas Imeil, believed to be members of the Iraqi National Intelligence.
    • In a refusal of orders, American Army reservists participating in the Iraq War refused an order to drive a convoy of fuel tankers lacking armour plates through Baghdad on a "suicide mission".
  • September 28 -
    • U.S. troops swept into the Sunni stronghold of
      Baqouba
      .
    • Investigators uncovered more than 100 bodies in a mass grave near the northern Iraqi village of
      Kurds killed during Saddam's crackdown in 1987–1988. The bodies includes those of small children and their mothers with bulletholes in their skulls. [2]
  • October 14 -
    • Two
      al-Zarqawi, claim responsibility. The bombers are reportedly Jordanians. This is the first successful attack in the green zone. AP
    • Ansar al-Sannah Army posts a video showing the beheading of a Turkish driver. AP
    • The U.S. responds to the suspension of talks with more air, artillery, and ground attacks. AP
  • October 15 – A platoon in the 343rd Quartermaster Company refuses orders to convoy supplies from Tallil, Iraq to Taji, Iraq, citing safety concerns. They claim that their vehicles were unsafe and that the convoy isn't adequately protected. The Army launches an investigation. AP
  • October 25 – Nearly 380 tons of conventional high-explosives are found missing from an Iraqi site formerly used by Saddam Hussein for his dismantled atom bomb program, that was never secured by the United States Army. It is reported by MSNBC that the site was looted in April 2003, before coalition troops reached the area. US troops reported at the time that the explosives were missing. MSNBC

November

December

  • December 19 – A suicide car bomb blast in Najaf, 300 metres from the
    Imam Ali shrine
    , near crowds of people, kills 52 and wounds at least 140. On the same day, a car bomb exploded in Kerbala, killing 14 and injuring at least 52.
  • December 21 a huge explosion rocked a US-base in the northern city of Mosul killing 22 people (14 U.S. soldiers, 4 U.S. contractors and 4 Iraqi National guards) and wounding more than 70 people. At first, there were reports of a rocket attack but later it was said to be a suicide bomber. The Ansar al-Sunnah army in Iraq claimed responsibility. It was the deadliest single-attack on Americans (soldiers and civilians) in Iraq since the war ended on May 1, 2003.
  • December 21, the French hostages Georges Malbrunot and Christian Chesnot were released, after having been taken hostage in August.
  • December 27 – A suicide car bomber kills at least 13 people outside the offices of the
    Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq
    (SCIRI), one of the largest Shi'ite parties in Iraq in the upscale Jadiriya area of Baghdad. Its leader Abdel Aziz al-Hakim said it was a failed attempt on his life and blamed the bombing on Sunni militants.

Notable deaths

See also

References

  1. ^ "Secretary of Defense Interview with Bob Woodward – 23 Oct, 2003". United States Department of Defense: News Transcript. 2004-04-19. Archived from the original on 2006-07-30. Retrieved 2006-08-09.
  2. ^ "Group 'kills second US hostage'". BBC News. September 21, 2004.

External links