BAGHDAD, Iraq - Three more Marines were killed in battle in Iraq, the US
military said Friday, making December the deadliest month this year for American
troops in war-wracked nation with the toll reaching 106.
A US Army soldier from the 2nd Infantry Battalion, 17th Field
Artillery Regiment looks on before the start of a mission to monitor a
mosque during Friday prayers in Baghdad, Iraq, Friday, Dec. 29, 2006.
[AP]
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The Marines, all assigned to
Regimental Combat Team 5, died Thursday of wounds from fighting in western Anbar
province, the US military said. Their deaths pushed the toll past the 105 US
service members killed in October.
At least 2,993 members of the US military have been killed since the Iraq war
began in March 2003, according to an AP count.
In violence Friday, a suicide bomber killed at least nine people near a
Shiite mosque in Baghdad, and 32 tortured bodies were found across the country
as Iraqis braced for Saddam Hussein's execution.
American troops killed six people and destroyed a weapons cache in separate
raids in Baghdad and northwest of the Iraqi capital, the US military said. One
of the raids targeted two buildings in the village of Thar Thar, where US troops
found 16 pounds of homemade explosives, two large bombs, a rocket-propelled
grenade, suicide vests and multiple batteries, the military said.
Iraqi forces backed by US troops entered a mosque southeast of Baghdad,
capturing 13 suspects and confiscating weapons, the US military also said.
A suicide bomber wearing an explosives belt detonated himself near a Shiite
mosque in Khalis, 50 miles north of Baghdad, killing nine people and wounding
about a dozen, police said.
Twenty-two bodies showing signs of torture were found dumped on the streets
of the Iraqi capital Friday, and 10 more were found in Baqouba northeast of
Baghdad, police and morgue officials said.
The violence was not heavier than usual in Iraq on Friday, three days after
an Iraqi appeals court upheld Saddam's death sentence for the 1982 killings of
148 Shiites. The court said the former president should be hanged within 30
days, but his execution appeared likely to take place this weekend, American and
Iraqi officials said.
Those officials have also expressed concern about the potential for a spike
in bloodshed following Saddam's death.
Already, December was shaping up to be one of the worst months for Iraqi
civilian deaths since The Associated Press began keeping track in May 2005.
Through Thursday, at least 2,139 Iraqis have been killed in war-related or
sectarian violence, an average rate of about 76 people a day, according to an AP
count. That compares to at least 2,184 killed in November at an average of about
70 a day, the worst month for Iraqi civilians deaths since May 2005. In October,
AP counted at least 1,216 civilians killed.
The AP count includes civilians, government officials and police and
security. forces, and is considered a minimum based on AP reporting. The actual
number is likely higher, as many killings go unreported.
In more violence Friday, gunmen killed two oil company employees in Mosul,
225 miles northwest of Baghdad, police said. A civilian was shot dead near his
home in another attack in the same area.
Two more civilians and a policeman died in separate attacks in Musayyib,
about 40 miles south of Baghdad, police said.
A round of mortar shells slammed into al-Maidan square in central Baghdad,
wounding 10 people and damaging shops and buildings in the area, a police
officer at Rissafa police station said on condition of anonymity out of security
concerns.
A roadside bomb wounded three civilians in Balad Ruz, 45 miles northeast of
Baghdad, police said.