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Khalid MohammedThe Associated Press An Iraqi soldier patrols the scene of a double car bombing in Baghdad on Monday, a day in which at least 74 people were killed or found dead across Iraq. A new security checkpoint emerged on the city's north side Monday, and police began moving into the Mahdi Army stronghold of Sadr City — signals that President Bush's plan to secure Baghdad is getting underway.
Khalid MohammedThe Associated Press An Iraqi soldier patrols the scene of a double car bombing in Baghdad on Monday, a day in which at least 74 people were killed or found dead across Iraq. A new security checkpoint emerged on the city’s north side Monday, and police began moving into the Mahdi Army stronghold of Sadr City — signals that President Bush’s plan to secure Baghdad is getting underway.
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Baghdad, Iraq – Bombings and mortar attacks killed dozens across Baghdad on Monday as Iraqi troops set up new checkpoints and an Iraqi general took command – indications that the much-awaited operation to restore peace to the capital is gearing up nearly a month after it was announced.

With little sign of an end to the carnage, many Iraqis have begun complaining that the security drive has been too slow in starting, allowing extremists free rein to launch spectacular attacks that have killed nearly 1,000 in the past week.

Monday’s death toll supported their frustration. At least 74 people were killed or found dead across the country – all but seven of them in Baghdad.

Iraqi politicians – Shiite and Sunni alike – urged the government to speed up implementation of the plan, which President Bush announced Jan. 11. The operation would put thousands of U.S. and Iraqi troops on the streets to protect civilians against sectarian bombers and death squads.

In a sign that the crackdown is near, Iraqi troops manned a major new checkpoint Monday at the northern gate to Baghdad, searching cars and trucks heading to and from Sunni insurgent areas to the north.

Elsewhere, Rahim al-Daraji, a senior official in Sadr City, said police were already moving into the capital’s sprawling Shiite slum, stronghold of the notorious Mahdi Army militia.

And Lt. Gen. Abboud Gambar, who will direct the operation, took charge of his still- unfinished command center Monday in a former Saddam Hussein palace inside the American-controlled Green Zone.

The city will be divided into nine districts, each with as many as 600 U.S. soldiers to back up Iraqi troops who will take the lead in the security drive.

In announcing the plan, Bush said he was sending 21,500 additional American troops mostly to Baghdad in what is widely seen as a last chance to quell the sectarian violence ravaging the capital and surrounding regions.

U.S. officers offered assurances that once the operation gets rolling, Iraqis will begin to see a difference.

“It’s going to be much more than this city has ever seen, and it’s going to be a rolling surge,” said Col. Douglass Heckman, the senior adviser to the 9th Iraqi Army Division.

Monday’s slaughter killed 15 people in back-to-back car bombings at a gasoline station in Sadiyah, a mostly Sunni neighborhood of southwestern Baghdad, police said. Eight people were killed when a bomb exploded in a garbage can in a Sunni enclave in central Baghdad, according to police.

Four mortar shells exploded about sundown in a Shiite part of Dora, killing seven, police said.

The U.S. military reported the deaths of two American soldiers, both killed Sunday north of Baghdad.

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