during the
Second Battle of Fallujah (November 2004)
2004 At the end of October 2004, al-Qaeda in Iraq kidnapped Japanese citizen
Shosei Koda. In an online video, AQI gave Japan 48 hours to withdraw its troops from Iraq, otherwise Koda's fate would be "the same as that of his predecessors, [Nicholas]
Berg and [Kenneth]
Bigley and other infidels". While Japan refused to comply with this demand, Koda was beheaded, and his decapitated body found on 30 October.
2005 According to internal documents seized in 2008, AQI began in 2005 systematically killing Iraqi tribesmen and nationalist insurgents wherever they began to rally against it. Attacks in 2005 claimed by AQI include: • 30 January: AQI launched attacks on voters during the
Iraqi legislative election in January. In 100 armed attacks,
44 people were killed, although some attacks may have been carried out by other groups.
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi said: "We have declared a fierce war on this evil principle of democracy (...)". • 28 February: in the southern city of Hillah, a car bomb struck a crowd of police and Iraqi National Guard recruits, killing 125 people. • 2 April: the group launched a
combined suicide and conventional attack on
Abu Ghraib prison in April. In a message posted on the Internet, al-Zarqawi said: "The Islamic court of the al-Qaeda Organization in the Land of Two Rivers has decided to refer the ambassador of the state of Egypt, an ally of the Jews and the Christians, to the
mujahideens so that they can execute him." • 15–17 July: a three-day series of suicide attacks, including the
Musayyib marketplace bombing, left 150 people dead and 260 wounded. AQI claimed that the bombings were part of a campaign to take control of
Baghdad. • 19 August: In the
Jordanian city of
Aqaba, a rocket attack kills a Jordanian soldier.
2006 • The
5 January bombings on Shi'ite civilians in Karbala and Ramadi, near a religious shrine and a police recruiting centre, were blamed by some residents on al Qaeda in Iraq. , one of the holiest sites in
Shia Islam, after
the first attack by Al-Qaeda in Iraq in 2006 • The
22 February 2006 al-Askari Mosque bombing was blamed by a U.S. intelligence officer in May 2007, on AQI. • On 3 June 2006,
AQI abducted and killed four Russian diplomats in Iraq. • 16 June 2006,
a U.S. checkpoint near Baghdad was attacked, one U.S. soldier killed and two abducted. Those abducted,
Thomas Lowell Tucker and
Kristian Menchaca, were found on 19 June, having been tortured and killed. The next day,
Mujahedeen Shura Council of Iraq (MSC)—an organization including Tanzim Qaidat al-Jihad fi Bilad al-Rafidayn—claimed to have "slaughtered" the two Americans. Three weeks later, MSC issued a video showing the mutilated corpses of Tucker and Menchada, purportedly as revenge for
the rape and murder of an Iraqi girl, in March 2006, by U.S. soldiers of the same brigade. Autumn 2006, AQI took over
Baqubah, the capital of
Diyala Governorate, and before March 2007, AQI or its umbrella organization '
Islamic State of Iraq' (ISI) claimed Baqubah as its capital. :''Further violent activities in Iraq after 13 October 2006 blamed on 'al Qaeda (in Iraq)' are listed in article
Islamic State of Iraq (ISI).'' == Sunni–Shia civil war ==