Attacks , on 22 August 2003 ings were a common form of attack in Iraq during the Coalition occupation
2003 After the
U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and the establishment of a governing
Provisional Authority, an insurgency quickly emerged. Dozens of insurgent attacks were claimed by, or attributed to, JTJ in the following months. On 7 August 2003, the Jordanian embassy in Baghadad
was bombed, killing 17 and injuring at least 40.
The Jamestown Foundation considered
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi and Jama'at al-Tawhid wal-Jihad responsible. On 12 November,
a truck bombing in
Nasiriyah killed 17
Italian paramilitary policemen partaking in the U.S.-led '
Multi-National Force', as well as 10 civilians. It injured at least 100.
The Jamestown Foundation considered JTJ responsible. On 19 April, there was a failed attempt to explode
chemical bombs in
Amman, Jordan, which was reportedly financed by JTJ. On 24 April, in a statement published on the Islamist web site
Muntada al-Ansar, Zarqawi took responsibility for a series of suicide boat bombings of oil pumping stations in the
Persian Gulf. On 18 May, the
Iraqi Governing Council President,
Ezzedine Salim, was assassinated in Baghdad by a car bomb. JTJ stated on an Islamist website that they were "determined to lift the humiliation from our nation (...) Another lion has removed the rotten head of those who betray God and sell their religion to the Americans and their allies"
. On 18 June, a
car bombing suicide attack in Baghdad near an Iraqi Army recruitment center killed 35 civilians, and wounded 145. JTJ was blamed. On 1 August, six churches in Baghdad and Mosul
were attacked, killing 12 people and wounding 71. Iraq's national security adviser,
Mowaffaq al-Rubaie, blamed the attacks on Zarqawi. On 14 September,
a car bomb killed 47 and injured nearly 100 police recruits on
Haifa Street in Baghdad. On 30 September 2004,
a bombing in Baghdad killed 41 people, mostly children. JTJ claimed responsibility for unspecified attacks on that day, but it was unclear if this included the bombing. On 3 December 2004, there was a failed attempt to blow up an Iraqi–Jordanian
border crossing, for which al-Zarqawi and two of his associates were sentenced to death
in absentia by a Jordanian court in 2006.
Inciting sectarian violence Alleged sectarian attacks by the organization included the
Imam Ali Mosque bombing in 2003 and the 2004
Day of Ashura bombings (
Ashoura massacre) and Karbala and Najaf bombings in 2004. These were precursors to a more widespread campaign of
sectarian violence after the organization transitioned to become
al-Qaida in Iraq, with Al-Zarqawi purportedly declaring an all-out war on Shias, while claiming responsibility for the Shia mosque bombings.
Beheading/killing non-Iraqi hostages • 7 May 2004:
Nick Berg, American civilian beheaded. A video of the killing was published on the Internet; the
CIA said it was likely that Abu Musab al-Zarqawi personally had wielded the knife • 22 June 2004:
Kim Sun-il,
South Korean civilian, executed by beheading. • 8 July 2004: Georgi Lazov and
Ivaylo Kepov,
Bulgarian civilians beheaded • 2 August 2004:
Murat Yuce,
Turkish civilian shot dead, by
Abu Ayyub al-Masri. It was shown in
Fitna, a LiveLeak film in 2008. • 21 September 2004:
Jack Hensley, American civilian beheaded. Presumably by Zarqawi and his men. == U.S. fighting Jama'at ==