Two U.S. Marines were killed and 22 wounded, two of them critically in
fighting in western Iraq, the U.S. military said Saturday. It was the biggest
number of American casualties from a single engagement in weeks.
US Soldiers and Iraqi
police secure the site of a car bomb explosion Friday April 14, 2006 in
Mosul, 360 km (225 miles) northwest of Baghdad, Iraq. A suicide car bomber
attacked a police station in Mosul wounding at least seven people when he
detonated his explosives. five civilians were among those wounded, police
said. [AP] |
A U.S. statement said the casualties were suffered Thursday as a result of
"enemy action" in Anbar province but gave no specific location or details of the
fighting.
One Marine was killed "at the scene of the attack," the statement said.
Another Marine died at a medical facility in Taqqadum, it added.
Eight of the wounded were flown to the main U.S. hospital in Balad. Two were
listed in critical condition and six were reported as stable, the statement
said. The others were taken to a U.S. clinic at Camp Fallujah, where four were
hospitalized for observation.
"Our hearts go out to the families of the dead and wounded Marines," said
Marine spokesman Lt. Col. Bryan Salas. "Our wounded Marines are receiving the
best care available, and we look forward to their speedy recovery."
U.S. casualties have begun to rise this month following a sharp drop in
March, which saw the lowest number of American dead in Iraq since February 2004.
Last month, 31 U.S. service members died in Iraq, but fatalities in April have
already passed 40.
Meanwhile, dozens of Iraqi police remained missing and nine were dead after
insurgents ambushed their convoy Thursday evening as they left a U.S. base where
they had picked up new vehicles, Iraqi and U.S. officials said.
Brig. Gen. Abbas Maadal complained that the Americans refused to allow the
police to spend the night at the base, just north of the capital. But U.S.
spokesman Lt. Col. Barry Johnson said no such request had been made and that the
Iraqis had not asked for American troops to guard the convoy.
The attack, the deadliest against police here in months, began about 7:30
p.m. Thursday as a convoy of 109 police was traveling through a sparsely
populated area near the Taji base heading back to Najaf, 100 miles to the south,
Maadal said.
Police heard cries of "Allahu akbar," or God is great, and "long live jihad"
broadcast by loudspeaker from a nearby mosque, Maadal said. Suddenly insurgents,
including some women, opened fire and triggered a roadside bomb.
Maadal said 37 policemen returned to Najaf late Friday and about 20 more were
en route. About 40 remained unaccounted for. At least nine policemen were killed
and three of the 12 vehicles were heavily damaged, Johnson said. One insurgent
was wounded and five were arrested, he added.
Although no U.S. troops were with the Iraqi convoy when it came under attack,
Johnson said American forces responded with helicopter gunships and ground
troops.
"Once the attack occurred we did respond," he said. "We helped engage and
brought this situation under control."
A U.S. patrol had passed along the same route shortly before the Iraqis and
called for help when they heard the firing, Johnson said.
It was unclear why the insurgents allowed the Americans to pass by without
attacking them. In recent months, insurgents have shifted their attacks to Iraqi
forces, which have less firepower than the Americans.
The overwhelming majority of police in Najaf are Shiites, and the area where
the attack occurred is populated mostly by Sunnis.
Sectarian violence has worsened in Iraq since the Feb. 22 bombing of a Shiite
shrine in Samarra. At least 11 people were killed Friday, including four who
died in a pair of roadside bombings outside two Sunni mosques in Baqouba, 35
miles northeast of Baghdad, police said.
One civilian died when a suicide bomber targeted a British patrol south of
Basra, wounding four Britons, police and British authorities said. Two brothers
were also gunned down in front of their elderly mother, who was wounded when
assailants stormed into their home in a mostly Shiite area of Baghdad, police
said.
In the northern city of Mosul, at least seven people were wounded in another
suicide car bomb attack on a police station, police said. Police saw the vehicle
coming and fired at the driver, preventing him from entering the compound, an
official said.
The others died in bombings and a shooting in Baghdad and Mosul, police said.
Delays in forming a new national unity government four months after
parliament elections has sharpened sectarian divisions.
Sunni and Kurdish opposition to the Shiite choice of Prime Minister Ibrahim
al-Jaafari for another term has blocked progress toward a new government.
Leaders of the Shiite alliance, the dominant bloc in the legislature, said
they would attend Monday's parliament session, called to break the political
logjam. Shiite politicians had earlier suggested they would boycott the session
unless the dispute over al-Jaafari as well as other political posts that require
parliamentary approval were resolved first.
But Shiite leaders said Friday they would attend even if no agreement had
been reached on al-Jaafari or the other posts.
"We will meet Saturday and Sunday to discuss the matters of the prime
minister nomination and the distribution of key posts," said Sabah al-Saedi, a
Shiite politician. "We are going to attend Monday, regardless of what happens at
the internal meetings."
Ridha Jawad Taqi, a leading figure of the biggest Shiite party, also said the
alliance plans to attend Monday's meeting.
In an interview Friday with a British television station, al-Jaafari repeated
that he would not step down.
"I was the legitimate and democratic choice," he told Britain's Channel 4
News. "I wouldn't have accepted the responsibility if I thought it was against
the will of the people. I don't see how I could repay my people's faith in me by
letting them down."
Although the parliament session may produce no deals at all, it is seen as a
sign that the parties are committed to forming a unity government. Boycotting it
would make the Shiites appear obstructionists.
Voters chose the 275-member assembly on Dec. 15, but the legislature met
briefly only once last month. The lack of progress has frustrated Iraqis,
especially as steady violence ¡ª much of it sectarian ¡ª continues to claim
hundreds of lives and threatens to push the country into a large-scale civil
war.