Baghdad Bombings Boost Resolve Against ISIS, White House says

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Mourners react during a funeral of a victim who was killed in a suicide car bomb in the Karrada shopping area in Baghdad, during the funeral in Najaf, south of Baghdad, Iraq, on Sunday. Alaa Al-Marjani/Reuters

The White House on Sunday condemned bombings in Baghdad that killed nearly 120 people and wounded 200, saying the attack only strengthened the United States' resolve to confront Islamic State (ISIS) militants.

"We remain united with the Iraqi people and government in our combined efforts to destroy ISIL," the White House statement said, using another acronym for ISIS.

A refrigerator truck packed with explosives blew up in Baghdad's central district of Karrada, killing 115 people and injuring at least 200. In a second attack, a roadside device exploded around midnight in a market in al-Shaab, a Shi'ite district, killing at least two people, police and medical sources said.

ISIS claimed responsibility for the bloodshed in a statement circulated online by supporters of the extremist Sunni group. It said the truck blast was a suicide bombing.

The attack on the shopping area of Karrada is the deadliest since U.S.-backed Iraqi forces last month cleared ISIS militants from their stronghold of Falluja, an hour's drive west of the capital.

The weekend market bombing was the deadliest so far this year.

The head of the CIA, John Brennan, has said ISIS may find targets away from battlefields where the group has faced losses.

"To compensate for territorial losses, ISIL will probably rely more on guerrilla tactics, including high-profile attacks outside territory it holds," Brennan told lawmakers last month.

Republican critics have faulted President Barack Obama for his administration's handling of the current turmoil in Syria and Iraq, with some calling for a more aggressive approach, more troops on the ground.

Senator John McCain, chairman of the Armed Services Committee, on Sunday said U.S. soldiers could help eradicate ISIS in Iraq.

"What we need to do is go to Iraq and kill them," McCain said on CBS Face the Nation. "And you can do that with 10,000 of a 100,000 person contingent using American capabilities."

The United States said in April it would send more troops to Iraq and put them nearer the front lines to advise Iraqi forces in their campaign against extremist militias.

The increase raises the authorized troop level in Iraq to 4,087, not including special operations personnel, some logistics workers and troops on temporary rotations.

Since December, Iraqi forces have taken back territory from ISIS, which seized swathes of Iraq and Syria in 2014.

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