Civilian deaths from violence in Iraq rose in August, with 1,773 people killed, government data showed today, just days before the US Congress gets a slew of reports on President George W. Bush's war strategy.
The civilian death toll was up 7 per cent from 1,653 people killed in July, according to figures from various ministries.
Nearly a quarter of the August total comprised 411 people killed in massive truck bombings against the minority Yazidi community in northern Iraq on August 14th.
Without the Yazidi attack, the death toll would still be higher than the June number of 1,227, which had been the lowest monthly total since a US-backed crackdown began in February.
The figures showed 87 Iraqi security forces were killed in August, a big drop from the previous month when 224 were killed.
Mr Bush, under pressure from opposition Democrats and some senior Republicans to begin pulling US troops from Iraq, urged Congress yesterday to wait for the assessments on Iraq's security and political situation before making any judgements.
"The stakes in Iraq are too high and the consequences too grave for our security here at home to allow politics to harm the mission of our men and women in uniform," Mr Bush said in a statement after visiting military officials at the Pentagon.
The US military says sectarian attacks have fallen since 30,000 more American troops deployed under Bush's plan to give Iraqi leaders "breathing space" to foster reconciliation between warring Shia and Sunni Arabs.
The US commander in Iraq, General David Petraeus, told an Australian newspaper in an interview this week there had been a 75 per cent fall in religious and ethnic killing since last year.
But while some security gains have been achieved, no key laws aimed at healing deep sectarian divisions have been passed, and Shia Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's cabinet has been hit by the withdrawal of nearly half his ministers.
An assessment of the "surge" of troops along with Iraq's political situation will be the focus of a series of pivotal reports to the US Congress in the coming two weeks that could prompt a shift in Washington's war policy.