Tragedy Puts Nineveh on the Map

What is the significance of the massive attack on an Iraqi minority?

ByABC News
January 8, 2009, 1:20 AM

Aug. 15, 2007 — -- Before Tuesday's devastating attacks few people had heard of Sinjar, a remote town in northwestern Iraq. Now insurgents have put it on the map as the scene of Iraq's most deadly attack this year.

Four coordinated suicide bombings targeted the minority Yazidi community, killing more than 200. The local mayor tells ABC News this number is likely to rise as rescue workers pull more bodies from the rubble.

This region of Iraq, Nineveh province, has, until now, been comparatively untouched by the sectarian violence which is a daily occurence in the capital Baghdad and other areas.

A few weeks ago, Col. Stephen Twitty, a U.S. commander on the ground in Nineveh, told reporters, "We're not seeing a lot of sectarian violence up here at all."

In the same briefing, he mentioned an incident, describing it as a "pretty much isolated" event that involved the Yazidis, a minority pre-Islamic religious sect that is predominately Kurdish.

Last April a group of Yazidi workers was pulled from a bus and executed. Local officials believe this was in retaliation for the stoning of a Yazidi girl. The Yazidi girl was stoned to death by her family and tribal leaders. Her crime? Falling in love with a Sunni Muslim.

Attacks by Sunni extremists on the Kurds and other ethnic minorities in the province is rising, most notably the Tal Afar bombings this March and the growng animosity between Sunnis and Kurds in Mosul, but on the whole Col Twitty saw "Nineveh province as a success story."

Just hours before the bombs exploded on Tuesday, U.S. Army Chief of Staff Gen. George Casey echoed this sentiment. Speaking at the National Press Club, Casey said that commanders on the ground thought they were "about ready" to hand over security in Nineveh to the Iraqis.

And Gen. David Petraeus, the U.S. commander in Iraq was, according to a report in the L.A. Times, expected to propose in his September status report to Congress a pull back of U.S. forces from certain areas in Iraq -- among them, Nineveh.

U.S. military commanders on the ground are keen to play down the significance of Tuesday's suicide attacks.

U.S. Army spokesman Maj. General Benjamin Mixon acknowledged the reality of policing Iraq, telling reporters in Baghdad, "It's virtually impossible to secure all small villages and farmland. This is a remote area with little coalition presence in this area. These Yazidis are peaceful farmers. This is a desperate act to gain international attention from the media."