Archive for June 25th, 2009

The Cyclops, Day Four: Del Potro v. Hewitt

The Cyclops is our daily look at the one match you should make a point of following during the upcoming day at Wimbledon.

Juan Martin del Potro ARG (5) v. Lleyton Hewitt AUS, Centre Court, 1:00 p.m. GMT (8:00 a.m. ET)

It’s like 2001 all over again. Britney Spears is looking good, the Lakers won the NBA championship and Lleyton Hewitt is fine form on the tennis court.

Very, very quietly, the 2001 U.S. Open and 2002 Wimbledon champion is playing solid tennis and appears poised to make an upset run at fifth-seeded Juan Martin del Potro during their second round match on Centre Court today.

Last year was the first in a decade that Hewitt didn’t win a tour singles title. A hip injury plagued him throughout his 2008 campaign and eventually forced him to withdraw from the U.S. Open. So far in ‘09, Hewitt has steadily improved since then, a first round loss in the Australian begat a third round loss at Roland Garros to Rafael Nadal which preceded a tough game with Andy Roddick at Queen’s Club. This match-up with a grass court novice like del Potro figures to be a good way to fully get back on track.

The 6 feet 6 inch Del Potro is an enigma on grass. He rarely plays the surface and has had limited success when he has. In his previous two Wimbledons, the Argentinian has won just one match, even though he’s advanced to at least the quarterfinals in the other three Grand Slam events.

Del Potro is up-front about his struggles on grass. After his opening round win over Arnaud Clement, he said of his next match:

“I don’t know if I can win this tournament someday, but I’m trying. I want to improve my game on this kind of surface. Now I have a very good player in front of me, but I have my weapons, I have my game, and I am confident with that and try to beat him.”

Whenever somebody says they’re confident, it usually means they aren’t. Del Potro has been playing better on grass (the dispatching of Clement was thorough) and figures to one day contend at Wimbledon. But is this the year?

Del Potro often has advantages over smaller opponents (although, I guess almost all of his opponents are smaller), due in main part to a booming serve. But if Hewitt can run Del Potro from the baseline, it could be a very interesting match.

The seasoned veteran against the up-and-coming ace: A great storyline for Day 4 from the All England Club.

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Is the U.S. victory in the Confed Cup like the Miracle on Ice?

In the aftermath of the United States’ stunning 2-0 victory over Spain in the Confederations Cup, some are equating this remarkable upset with the Miracle on Ice. And, it’s true, there are plenty of similarities.

The U.S. was given virtually no chance in either game, the win came against the undisputed best team in those respective sports and both victories came in the semifinals of a tournament. But let’s not get crazy, folks. Likening today’s win with the 1980 U.S. hockey team beating the U.S.S.R. is like comparing making a paper airplane with walking on the moon. These things aren’t in the same solar system, let alone the same ballpark.

The Miracle on Ice involved a ragtag bunch of college players from across the nation coming together to defeat a state-sponsored machine that had won four straight gold medals and had just come off a 10-3 victory over the Americans three weeks earlier. It was literally men versus boys on the biggest stage in the world, the Olympics.

Conversely, the soccer team pitted professionals against professionals in a third-tier tournament played before a half-empty stadium in South Africa. This takes nothing away from the win, just from the comparison.

This also doesn’t feel like as much of an upset because, really, there’s no reason that the U.S. should be demonstrably worse than Spain in soccer, other than the fact that our country doesn’t value the game as much. The players on the 1980 U.S. hockey team were underdogs to the Soviet Union because the odds were almost completely stacked against them in every way. The 2009 U.S. soccer team was underdogs to Spain because they’re not as good at soccer. There’s a big difference.

The reaction to the victory is also completely different. Most people probably found out about today’s win on a sports website and thought, “Oh, nice. Way to go U.S. soccer team,” before clicking on a link and forgetting about it completely.

Ask anybody who was alive during the Miracle on Ice where they were when they found out about the result (the game was shown on tape delay), and I guarantee they’ll remember. (I just asked my next-door neighbor: “At the airport and a random man came up and told me that we had beat the Russians.”)

And that’s the other, much bigger reason, today’s soccer victory can’t touch what happened in 1980. The Cold War backdrop made the game about much more than who would advance to the gold medal game. It was years of atomic bomb worry, space racing and ideological battles playing itself out on the hockey rink.

Today was our soccer team beating a country that we are friendly with. There’s no conflict with Spain, other than the fact that we’re jealous of their beaches and siestas. There was nothing on the line today, other than a soccer game. It was a great and monumental victory for the United States soccer team, to be sure. But the Miracle on Ice it wasn’t.

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James Johnson: The NBA first round pick with quite a kick

It looks like The Ultimate Fighter 10 is going to showcase the first wave of former college football and NFL heavyweights trying their hand at the big leagues in mixed martial arts. If the guys on some of the leaked lists on the Internet have the skills, it makes sense from a size standpoint. Defensive ends and linebackers certainly have a fighter’s mentality. Would the same apply to a hoopster? Say a power forward? We may find out down the road if James Johnson’s NBA career is shortlived. The 6-foot-7, 257-pounder from Wake Forest is expected to be a first round pick on Thursday so he’s guaranteed a few years in the NBA. He’s got a possible backup plan if it doesn’t work out … fighting. Don’t scoff. We’re not basing this solely on size. Johnson comes from a big martial arts family in Cheyenne, Wyoming.

Johnson’s father Willie is a sixth-degree black belt kickboxer and his mother, Vi is also a black belt. He’s one of nine children, eight of whom are black belts. His 10-year old sister Kiandra is only a blue belt. Willie runs J & P’s martial arts in Cheyenne.

James Johnson is already 20-0 as a kickboxer and has MMA fight under his belt. That came as an 18-year-old against 31-year-old Damond Clark.

SI asked about that fight back in 2006 but presented it in the past tense, Johnson responded by saying he’s still a fighter:

“I’m not done fighting,” he says, throwing a few air jabs while exhaling sharply for effect. “I think about fighting all the time.”

His family’s involvement in martial arts is insane:

James was called Little Ali because of his footwork, but nicknames are standard in the family. Willie won five world and 10 national karate titles as Tuqik (pronounced TOO-quick). Vi, a Samoan immigrant who began street fighting as a teenage gang leader of the Krook City Bloods in Oceanside—”I would go after the bullies,” she says, “and beat up more men than women”—won five nationals as Vicious. Joseph (a.k.a. Baby Boy), 32; Jearamie (Hot Nickels), 28; Jessica (Bam-Bam), 26; Pal’e (the Legend); Scott (Nudo), 20; Mino (the Professor), 18; Nikko (Tuqik II), 15; and 10-year-old Kiandra have all also won national titles or been runners-up.

“[J&P's] was like our playground: Every night we’d go there and work on stuff,” says James. “Going to other people’s houses was weird for me. I’d be like, What do you guys do after dinner?”

Don’t believe James is legit? Ask Wake Forest alum and NBA all-star Chris Paul:

The Hornets point guard was teasing Johnson, saying, “I keep hearing about your fighting, but you’re way too big to be a fighter.” Johnson told Paul to stand still directly in front of him, and said, “I’m not going to kick you; I’m that good.” Then he did a roundhouse kick within inches of Paul’s face, causing Paul to step back and say, “O.K., I believe you.”

That’s all great, but how did he do in his one real MMA fight? He beat the 31-year-old Clark in less than 90 seconds. Clark shot for a takedown early and slammed Johnson. Clark went for the mount, Johnson transitioned to top control where he pinned down one of Clark’s arm and smashed him with a few punches for the finish. Good thing there’s millions waiting in the NBA, otherwise Johnson may be the prospect gaining fame from crushing Kimbo Slice on TUF 10.

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Poison control at risk in California, other states

Each day, skeleton crews of doctors, nurses and pharmacists field almost 900 calls a day around California from people such as a mother whose child swallowed flea repellant and an elderly man who accidentally doubled up on his medication.

But the poison control centers that have been a lifeline for millions of residents could go dark this summer under the governor’s plan for closing the state’s $24.3 billion deficit. That would make the nation’s most populous state the only one without poison control assistance.

The demise of the California program could have a domino effect throughout the country, officials say. Washington and Michigan centers already have been forced to downsize, and officials in Tennessee and Oregon also have proposed significant cutbacks. But here, the entire program sits on the chopping block, with some lawmakers hoping to reach a compromise to keep some of the money available.

Many states strapped for cash would like to see how California, which handles 10 percent of the nation’s poison calls, fares without a state-funded system, said Jim Hirt, executive director of the American Association of Poison Control Centers.

“This could jeopardize the nation’s entire poison control centers,” Hirt said.

With cuts, the growing alternatives would be hospitals and emergency rooms. In California, the deficit situation is so dire that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s office says they have to make tough choices, even if it means targeting important programs like poison control.

“While there were many incredible programs that we were able to fund in the past, like this one, we simply don’t have the revenue to sustain them today,” said Lisa Page, a spokeswoman for Schwarzenegger.

Poison control programs also provide data for health research.

Their reports, which are regularly fed to state health departments and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, alerted health officials to recent salmonella outbreaks in tomatoes and in peanut butter. Earlier this year, the CDC used the data to track a contaminated nutritional supplement distributed in about a dozen Southeast states.

The poison control database allows officials and researchers to better understand trends and the magnitude of an event, said Colleen Martin, a CDC epidemiologist in Atlanta.

“If certain states drop off the map, that’s going to affect our ability to provide national surveillance,” Martin said.

Closing California’s call centers — in Sacramento, San Francisco, Fresno and San Diego — would save about $5.9 million annually, but program officials say the state could end up paying much more than that in emergency room and other doctor visits. In the worst cases, they say, not having access to a poison control hot line could lead to deaths.

“Without assistance, people may do inappropriate or deadly actions,” Thomas Kearney, director of the San Francisco center, said noting that some common medications around the house can kill a child with only one pill.

Officials with the California Poison Control System, currently slated to close in September, estimate that eliminating the program would translate into $80 million in additional health care costs each year, as well as greater pressure on 911 call centers.

Page declined to comment on potential health care costs associated with a poison control shutdown.

In Washington state, lawmakers have pulled 35 percent of the poison control program’s budget, forcing the layoff of its medical director. Without that position filled, the program risks losing its accreditation, which is needed to qualify for federal money.

For now, outgoing director William Hurley plans to volunteer to help keep it afloat while officials scramble for funding and consider filling the position on a part-time basis.

“We’re hoping this is a temporary problem,” Hurley said. “These cuts don’t leave us in a long-term sustainable position.”

Since California’s statewide poison control system was established in 1997, it has faced several funding cuts, including a 15 percent budget reduction last year.

Before 1997, poison control services were provided through a combination of state, local and private funding. State finance director Michael Genest has suggested returning to a similar model.

“We did not have poison control centers some time back,” Genest said during a May 29 budget conference call. “There is certainly a chance that the poison control center information will remain available to people privately, or get picked up by others.”

But hard times have hit governments at all levels, meaning counties and cities are unlikely to be able to keep poison control afloat this time, program officials said.

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Op-Ed Contributor: Shifting America from sick care to genuine wellness

With the Senate health committee convening daily to craft a comprehensive health reform bill, the basic outline of this landmark legislation is now clear.

Yes, it will ensure access to affordable, quality care for every American. But, just as important, it will hold down health care costs by creating a sharp new emphasis on disease prevention and public health.

As the lead Senator in drafting the Prevention and Public Health section of the bill, I view this legislation as our opportunity to recreate America as a genuine wellness society – a society that is focused on prevention, good nutrition, fitness, and public health.

The fact is, we currently do not have a health care system in the United States; we have a sick care system. If you’re sick, you get care, whether through insurance, Medicare, Medicaid, SCHIP, community health centers, emergency rooms, or charity. The problem is that this is all about patching things up after people develop serious illnesses and chronic conditions.

We spend a staggering $2.3 trillion annually on health care – 16.5 percent of our GDP and far more than any other country spends on health care – yet the World Health Organization ranks U.S. health care only 37th among nations, on par with Serbia.

We spend twice as much per capita on health care as European countries, but we are twice as sick with chronic disease.

How can this be so? The problem is that we have systematically neglected wellness and disease prevention. Currently in the United States, 95 percent of every health care dollar is spent on treating illnesses and conditions after they occur. But we spend peanuts on prevention.

The good news in these dismal statistics is that, by reforming our system and focusing on fighting and preventing chronic disease, we have a huge opportunity. We can not only save hundreds of billions of dollars; we can also dramatically improve the health of the American people.

Consider this: Right now, some 75 percent of health care costs are accounted for by heart disease, diabetes, prostate cancer, breast cancer, and obesity. What these five diseases and conditions have in common is that they are largely preventable and even reversible by changes in nutrition, physical activity, and lifestyle.

Listen to what Dr. Dean Ornish told our Senate health committee: “Studies have shown that changing lifestyle could prevent at least 90 percent of all heart disease. Thus, the disease that accounts for more premature deaths and costs Americans more than any other illness is almost completely preventable, and even reversible, simply by changing lifestyle.”

It’s not enough to talk about how to extend insurance coverage and how to pay for health care – as important as those things are. It makes no sense just to figure out a better way to pay the bills for a system that is dysfunctional, ineffective, and broken. We also have to change the health care system itself, beginning with a sharp new emphasis on prevention and public health.

We also have to realize that wellness and prevention must be truly comprehensive. It is not only about what goes on in a doctor’s office. It encompasses workplace wellness programs, community-wide wellness programs, building bike paths and walking trails, getting junk food out of our schools, making school breakfasts and lunches more nutritious, increasing the amount of physical activity our children get, and so much more.

I am heartened by the fact that the major players in this endeavor – Democrats and Republicans alike – all “get it” when it comes to prevention and public health. We all agree that it must be at the heart of reform legislation.

As President Obama said in his speech to Congress earlier this year: “[It is time] to make the largest investment ever in preventive care, because that’s one of the best ways to keep our people healthy and our costs under control.”

No question, comprehensive health reform is an extraordinarily ambitious undertaking. But what makes me optimistic is that all the major groups are playing a constructive role, including those that opposed the 1993-94 heath reform effort. Everyone agrees that the current system is broken.

Winston Churchill famously said that “Americans always do the right thing – after they’ve tried everything else.” Well, we’ve tried everything else, and it has led us to bad health and the brink of bankruptcy.

Comprehensive health reform legislation is our opportunity to change the paradigm. We are going to extend health insurance to every American. And we are going to give our citizens access to a 21st century health care system – one that is focused on helping us to live healthy, active, happy lives.

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Analysis: Why do politicians cheat?

What is it with philandering politicians?

Why do men in power — the ones on pedestals — think they are above us and can get away with cheating on their spouses, particularly when media scrutiny is so intense and peccadilloes are arguably more politically damaging?

There’s a long list of those who thought they could jet off to Argentina, or cruise on the Monkey Business, or check into a hotel under an assumed name or use an escort service and never get caught, never have to come clean.

The names quickly come to mind — South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford, Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev., Sen. David Vitter, R-La., former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., one-time Democratic presidential hopefuls John Edwards and Gary Hart, former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer, ex-New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, current New York Gov. David Paterson.

These days, the fallout can run the gamut. It can doom a career — former New Jersey Gov. Jim McGreevey — or unleash the fury of a special prosecutor, leading to impeachment — then-President Bill Clinton.

This wasn’t always the way it was. There are politicians, presidents even, who did the dalliance dance privately and didn’t pay publicly, John F. Kennedy and Franklin D. Roosevelt included.

No more.

It’s a different world — a public that feeds on the exploits of Paris, Lindsay and Britney documented in the tabloids, glossy magazines and at-your-fingertips Internet has developed an insatiable appetite for scandal.

That makes it all the more inexplicable that these men — and they are almost universally men, as politics remains mostly a man’s game — tempt fate. And, particularly, men with presidential aspirations.

One possible explanation, said Stanley Renshon, a political psychologist at City University of New York: “Narcissism is an occupational hazard for political leaders. You have to have an outsized ambition and an outsized ego to run for office.”

Or, perhaps, think you can stray from your marriage without consequence.

“I think too often, and for me in the political process, you begin to think of yourself as master of your own universe and your own set of ethical structures, your own sense of decision-making,” McGreevey, who resigned amid a scandal over his admission of a homosexual affair, said Thursday on NBC’s “Today” show.

To be sure, politicians don’t necessarily have different reasons for cheating than non-politicians, and they don’t necessarily cheat more often.

The difference: “They live their lives more in a fishbowl, and that has responsibilities and costs with it,” Renshon said, adding that an adulterous politician doesn’t just betray his family’s trust, he also betrays the public’s trust.

Indeed, when politicians get caught, they do so in extraordinary fashion and their actions raise questions about their judgment, character and integrity as a leader.

If they can lie to their loved ones, who is to say they won’t lie to everyone else? If they can’t stay faithful to their marriage vows, who is to say they’ll stay faithful to their oaths of office? And if they have secrets in their private lives, who is to say they don’t have secrets in their public lives?

“It does matter in public perceptions,” said Stephen Wayne, a Georgetown University government professor who has studied political psychology. When it comes to the highest positions in politics, he said, “we want to figure out who acts as a model for others.”

Presidents, senators, congressmen and governors who have extramarital affairs flunk that test.

On some level, it’s easy to see why they cheat.

Fred Greenstein, a Princeton University professor emeritus of politics, suggested adrenaline as the common denominator, saying, “For some individuals, the excitement of illicit sexual activity might feed the same desire” as “the excitement of politics.”

There’s also a clue in the kind of people drawn to politics.

These are men who love themselves deeply, need to be recognized and relish approval. These are men who adore getting praise and who often are surrounded by swarms of sycophants. These are men who, in some cases, need to exercise power and sometimes can become drunk from it. These are men who think the rules don’t apply to them and who think they’re untouchable.

As leaders, these are also the type of men who are likely to break promises, manipulate and cut corners. They probably are big risk-takers. And they’re prone to thinking of themselves first.

Just ask their wives, their mistresses — or the security details that often are privy to indiscretions.

Not a year seems to go by without a Washington sex scandal, and both Democrats and Republicans are guilty.

Last year, Edwards, Vitter and Spitzer came before the public to admit they erred.

This month alone, it has been Ensign and Sanford, two Republicans who have mentioned as possible 2012 presidential candidates as the out-of-power GOP seeks to rebound.

Those dreams are probably over, and the double disclosures of infidelity also may have brought short-term embarrassment to a party searching for a new leader.

Said Todd Harris, a Republican operative, “If this was supposed to be our farm team, we’d better start looking for a new farm.”

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New jobless claims rise unexpectedly to 627K

The number of people filing new jobless claims jumped unexpectedly last week, and the total unemployment benefit rolls rose to more than 6.7 million.

The Labor Department data released Thursday show jobs remain scarce even as the economy shows some signs of recovering from the longest recession since World War II.

The department said initial claims for jobless benefits rose last week by 15,000 to a seasonally adjusted 627,000. Economists expected a drop to 600,000, according to Thomson Reuters.

Several states reported more claims than expected from teachers, cafeteria workers and other school employees, a department analyst said.

The number of people continuing to receive unemployment insurance rose by 29,000 to 6.74 million, slightly above analysts’ estimates of 6.7 million.

The four-week average of claims, which smooths out fluctuations, was largely unchanged, at 616,750.

Economists expect the number of initial unemployment insurance claims, which reflects the level of layoffs, to slowly decline over the coming months as the economy bottoms out.

Still, claims remain far above levels associated with a healthy economy. A year ago they were 392,000.

Economists say any recovery is likely to be weak, and the unemployment rate, currently at 9.4 percent, is expected to top 10 percent by the end of this year.

Millions of Americans also are receiving jobless benefits through a federal extension enacted by Congress last year. For the week ending June 6, more than 2.4 million people received benefits under the extension, which adds 20 to 33 weeks on top of the 26 weeks typically provided by states.

About 288,000 people also are receiving benefits under state emergency programs, bringing the total jobless benefit rolls to nearly 8.8 million that week. The extended benefits data lags initial claims by two weeks.

Other recent reports indicate the economy could be bottoming. The Commerce Department said Wednesday that orders to factories for durable goods such as computers, machinery and aircraft increased 1.8 percent in May, much better than analysts expected.

But sales of new homes fell 0.6 percent last month, the government said, as the housing sector remains weak. Analysts had expected an increase in sales.

The Federal Reserve said Wednesday that the recession is easing, though the economy will remain weak enough to keep inflation in check. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has said the economy will begin to recover by the end of this year.

Companies have cut a net total of 6 million jobs since the downturn began in an effort to reduce costs.

Still, job cuts are slowing. Employers eliminated 345,000 positions in May, about half the monthly average of jobs lost in the first quarter.

Troubles in the automotive sector also may cause unexpected fluctuations in the claims. General Motors Corp. filed for bankruptcy protection June 1, joining Chrysler LLC, which filed April 30.

Companies are still shedding jobs. Monsanto Co., the world’s biggest seed maker, said Wednesday that it will lay off about 900 workers, or about 4 percent of its work force, as its third-quarter profit fell 14 percent.

Among the states, Florida had the largest increase in claims of 8,383, which it attributed to greater layoffs in the construction, trade, service, manufacturing and agriculture industries. The next largest increases were in Pennsylvania, Missouri, Puerto Rico and California. The state data lag initial claims by a week.

Michigan had the largest drop in claims of 5,414, which it attributed to fewer layoffs in the auto industry. The next largest decreases were in New York, North Carolina, Tennessee and Ohio.

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Air France: Flight 447 pilot’s body retrieved

Search crews in the mid-Atlantic have retrieved the bodies of the chief pilot of Flight 447 and a flight attendant, Air France said Thursday.

The two are among 50 bodies pulled out of the ocean in the international search for remains of the 228 victims and wreckage of the May 31 crash.

Air France, in a statement on its Web site, said the pilot and male flight attendant have been identified but did not release their names. A pilots’ union named the flight captain as Frenchman Marc Dubois.

Earlier this week the international police agency Interpol said 11 of the 50 bodies retrieved had been identified: eight Brazilians, one with joint Brazilian-German citizenship, one Brazilian-Swiss and a Briton.

On Wednesday Germany’s Foreign Ministry said three Germans — two men from Bavaria and a woman from Hamburg — have been identified. The ministry did not release their names.

The Airbus A330 plane came down in the Atlantic after running into thunderstorms en route from Rio de Janeiro to Paris. The Brazilian military has led the search and recovery efforts for bodies and debris, while the French are in charge of investigating the crash and the hunt for the flight recorders, or black boxes.

The cause of the crash is unclear. The plane’s two black boxes could be key to determining what happened.

But the boxes will only continue to emit signals for a few more days. They send out an electronic tapping sound that can be heard up to 1.25 miles (2 kilometers) away.

French officials said this week that military ships searching for the wreckage have detected sounds in the Atlantic depths but they are not from the flight recorders.

Two French-chartered ships are trolling a search area with a radius of 50 miles (80 kilometers), pulling U.S. Navy underwater listening devices attached to 19,700 feet (6,000 meters) of cable. A French submarine is also searching.

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Police say bomb kills 7 in southwest Baghdad

A bombing at a bus station in a Shiite neighborhood in southwest Baghdad on Thursday killed at least seven people and wounded 31 others, police said, the latest in a series of deadly attacks ahead of a U.S. military withdrawal from cities next week.

Another three bombs and a mortar killed two more people around the capital. The U.S. military said nine American soldiers were wounded in two roadside bomb attacks against a convoy in eastern Baghdad. The attacks were latest is a series of deadly bombings mostly targeting Shiites in the past week.

The bombing occurred when a parked car bomb exploded inside the Baiyaa district’s buses station, police officials said. They could not be named because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

The bombings came as police sifted through the bloody debris of an explosion late Wednesday that killed 78 people, trying to determine how such a massive bomb was smuggled into the teeming heart of Baghdad’s Shiite Sadr City.

U.S. and Iraqi officials have warned that more bombs and attacks are to be expected in the days before and after U.S. troops complete a withdrawal from cities and major urban center on June 30. Most of the attacks so far have targeted Shiites or communities with predominantly Shiite populations. The killing spree began on June 20 with a massive truck bomb that killed 82 people in a mainly Shiite town near the northern city of Kirkuk, which was the deadliest bombing so far this year.

More than 160 people have died in bombings over the past five days.

In a statement, U.S. Ambassador Christopher Hill and top military commander Gen. Ray Odierno condemned the Sadr City bombing and said that “we deplore the senseless deaths and injuries of innocent Iraqi citizens.”

Besides killing 78, the attack Wednesday in Sadr City also wounded 143 people. It was the deadliest in more than two years in the area, which is heavily controlled and where people entering the district have to pass through numerous checkpoints manned by Iraqi army and police.

According to Iraqi Army Maj. Gen. Qassim Atta, the bomb was built using about 200 kilograms (441 pounds) of high explosives packed with steel bearing and other metal objects. It was apparently loaded on a motorcycle pulling a cart.

“Most of victims of the explosion that occurred in Sadr city had small steel balls and nails in their bodies,” said Dr. Mahmoud Mizaal at Sadr City hospital.

The increase in violence has raised concerns about the ability of Iraqi forces to protect their people after the withdrawal of U.S. forces, part of a security agreement that will see all American troops out of Iraq by 2011.

The explosion in Sadr City came only a few days after the U.S. military handed over to Iraqis its main base on the edge of the former Shiite militia stronghold. The district was the scene of fierce fighting between U.S. troops and Shiite militants last year.

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Ahmadinejad compares Obama to Bush

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad accused Barack Obama on Thursday of behaving like his predecessor toward Iran and said there was not much point in talking to Washington unless the U.S. president apologized.

EDITORS’ NOTE: Reuters and other foreign media are subject to Iranian restrictions on their ability to report, film or take pictures in Tehran.

Obama said on Tuesday he was “appalled and outraged” by a post-election crackdown and Washington withdrew invitations to Iranian diplomats to attend U.S. Independence Day celebrations on July 4 — stalling efforts to improve ties with Tehran.

“Mr Obama made a mistake to say those things … our question is why he fell into this trap and said things that previously (former U.S. President George W.) Bush used to say,” the semi-official Fars News Agency quoted Ahmadinejad as saying.

“Do you want to speak with this tone? If that is your stance then what is left to talk about … I hope you avoid interfering in Iran’s affairs and express your regret in a way that the Iranian nation is informed of it,” he said.

About 20 people have died in demonstrations following the disputed June 12 election. Police and militia have flooded Tehran’s streets since Saturday, quelling the most widespread anti-government protests since the 1979 Islamic revolution.

Analysts say the battle has now moved off the street into a protracted behind-the-scenes struggle within Iran’s clerical establishment, facing an unprecedented public rift.

Opposition leader Mirhossein Mousavi, who says he won the poll, has the backing of such powerful figures as former presidents Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and Mohammad Khatami, and senior cleric Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri.

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who normally stays above the political fray, has sided strongly with Ahmadinejad.

“My personal judgment is that this is a country deeply split and emotionalized,” a Western diplomat in the region said.

Khamenei has upheld the result and Iran’s top legislative body, the Guardian Council, has refused to annul the elections. State Press TV quoted a spokesman for the council as saying they were “among the healthiest elections ever held in the country”.

MOUSAVI SAYS TO KEEP FIGHTING

Mousavi said on Thursday he was determined to keep challenging the election results despite pressure to stop.

“A major rigging has happened,” his website reported him as saying. “I am prepared to prove that those behind the rigging are responsible for the bloodshed.”

He called on his supporters to continue “legal” protests and said restrictions on the opposition could lead to more violence.

Mousavi supporters said they would release thousands of balloons on Friday imprinted with the message “Neda you will always remain in our hearts” — a reference to the young woman killed last week who has become an icon of the protests.

Obama had previously been muted in his criticism.

But on Tuesday he said that, “the United States and the international community have been appalled and outraged by the threats, the beatings, and imprisonments of the last few days.”

Before the election, Obama had tried to improve ties with Iran — branded by Bush as part of an “axis of evil”.

Washington had been hoping to convince Tehran to drop what it suspects are plans to develop nuclear bombs, while also seeking its help in stabilising Afghanistan.

It had invited Iranian diplomats to attend Independence Day celebrations for the first time since Washington cut diplomatic ties with Tehran in 1980. The move to withdraw the invites was largely symbolic as no Iranians had even responded.

Mohammad Marandi, who is the head of North American Studies at Tehran University, said mistrust of the United States and Britain was rife.

“In the short term relations will definitely get worse, but in the long term the U.S. really has to re-think its policy and to recognize that regime change is not possible in Iran.”

British Foreign Secretary David Miliband said the problems came from within Iran rather than from the outside.

“I think the truth is that there is a crisis of credibility between the Iranian government and their own people. It’s not a crisis between Iran and America or Iran and Britain, however much the Iranian government wants to suggest that,” he said.

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