U.S.-led forces strike al-Qaida stronghold (AP) Updated: 2005-11-06 08:49
BAGHDAD, Iraq - About 3,500 U.S. and Iraqi troops backed by jets launched a
major attack Saturday against an insurgent-held town near the Syrian border,
seeking to dislodge al-Qaida and its allies and seal off a main route for
foreign fighters entering the country.
People walk among
the rubble of a destroyed house in Baqouba, Iraq, Saturday, Nov. 5, 2005.
According to local residents the house was destroyed by U.S. troops after
a roadside bomb exploded near a U.S. convoy patrolling the area. One
civilian died and three were injured, eyewitnesses said.
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U.S. officials describe the town of Husaybah as the key to controlling the
volatile Euphrates River valley of western Iraq and dislodging al-Qaida in Iraq,
led by Jordanian terror mastermind Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
The U.S.-led operation includes about 1,000 Iraqi soldiers, and the offensive
will serve as a major test of their capability to battle the insurgents — seen
as essential to enabling Washington to draw down its 157,000-strong military
presence.
Thunderous explosions shook Husaybah early Saturday as U.S. Marines and Iraqi
scouts, recruited from pro-government tribes from the area, fought their way
into western neighborhoods of the town, 200 miles northwest of Baghdad,
residents said.
As fighting continued throughout the day, U.S. jets launched at least nine
airstrikes, according to a U.S. Marine statement. The U.S. command said there
were no reports of casualties among American or Iraqi forces.
However, the military said Saturday that three more U.S. troops had been
killed elsewhere in Iraq.
One soldier was killed Friday by small-arms fire south of Baghdad, and
another died the same day when the vehicle in his patrol was hit by a mine near
Habaniyah, 50 miles west of the capital. The third soldier was killed Saturday
in a traffic accident in southern Iraq.
Those deaths raised to at least 2,045 the number U.S. service members who
have died since the beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to an
Associated Press count.
Also Saturday, five Iraqi police were killed and three wounded when a
roadside bomb exploded in northern Baghdad, hospital officials said.
And 11 members of a Kurdish Shiite family — including an infant — were killed
and three wounded when gunmen sprayed their minibus with automatic weapons' fire
northeast of Baghdad, police said.
The relatives were returning to their home in the Baghdad area after visiting
a family cemetery near Balad Ruz, about 50 miles away. Shiite Muslims
traditionally pay their respects to their dead during the three-day Eid al-Fitr
holiday, which marks the end of Ramadan and ends for most Shiites on Sunday.
The attack's motive was unclear, but tensions between Shiites and Sunnis have
been on the rise in the area, with extremists from each community targeting the
other.
Elsewhere, a 65-year-old male detainee died Saturday of natural causes at a
U.S. military prison camp in southern Iraq, the U.S. military announced. Camp
Bucca is located near the southern port city of Umm Qasr near the Kuwaiti
border.
U.S. commanders hope the Husaybah offensive, code-named "Operation Steel
Curtain," will restore control of western Anbar province ahead of the
parliamentary election Dec. 15 and enable Sunni Arabs there to vote.
Sunni Arabs form the vast majority of the insurgents, and U.S. officials hope
that a strong Sunni turnout next month will encourage many of them to lay down
arms and join the political process.
However, some Sunni Arab politicians and tribal leaders complained that the
Husaybah operation was endangering civilians in the overwhelmingly Sunni area
and could lead to greater instability throughout Sunni sections of the country.
"We call all humanitarians and those who carry peace to the world to
intervene to stop the repeated bloodshed in the western parts of Iraq," said
Sheik Osama Jadaan, a Sunni tribal leader. "And we say to the American occupiers
to get out and leave Iraq to the Iraqis."
Husaybah, a poor Sunni Arab town of about 30,000 people, is the first stop in
a network of communities that the U.S. military suspects al-Qaida of using to
smuggle fighters, weapons and explosives from Syria down the Euphrates valley to
Baghdad and other cities.
Many Husaybah residents are believed to fled the town after weeks of fighting
between Iraqi tribes that support the insurgents and those that back the
government.
The U.S. military says foreign fighters comprise only a small percentage of
the insurgent ranks, which also include supporters of Saddam Hussein and Sunni
Arabs opposed to the Americans and their Shiite and Kurdish allies.
However, foreign Islamic extremists are blamed for many of the spectacular
suicide attacks that have killed hundreds of Iraqis in recent months. And
foreign extremists are seen as more likely to continue the fight regardless of
whether Iraqi Sunnis gain a measure of political power in the coming vote.
Most Sunni Arabs boycotted the Jan. 30 election of Iraq's current interim
parliament, but many members of the minority voted in the Oct. 15 referendum
that adopted the country's new constitution. Many Sunnis also plan to vote in
the Dec. 15 ballot, hoping to increase the low number of seats they control in
the National Assembly now dominated by Shiites and Kurds.
In Baghdad, Fakhri al-Qaisi, a prominent Sunni politician running on a
hardline ticket was shot Saturday as he was driving home. Doctors at Yarmouk
Hospital reported him in critical condition.
Meanwhile, suspected insurgents shot and killed a Palestinian working as a
security guard in Beiji, 155 miles north of Baghdad, police said. Insurgents
frequently target Iraqis and others working for the Americans.
Al-Qaida in Iraq warned this week that foreign diplomats should leave Iraq or
face attacks. The militant group also threatened to kill two kidnapped Moroccan
Embassy employees who disappeared Oct. 20 while driving to Baghdad from Jordan.
On Saturday, Arabic language Al-Arabiya TV showed interviews with the
families of the Moroccans, begging for their release.
"I plead with my brothers, the Muslim mujahedeen in the name of the Islamic
law and in the name of justice, because Abdelkrim is a religious man," said
Leqaa Abbas, wife of embassy staff member Abdelkrim el-Mouhafidi.
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