WORLD> Middle East
Truck bombing kills 5 US soldiers, 2 Iraqis
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-04-10 23:24

BAGHDAD -- A suicide bomber rammed his explosives-laden truck into a sandbagged wall surrounding a police headquarters in northern Iraq on Friday, killing five American soldiers and two Iraqi policemen in the single deadliest attack against US forces in more than a year, the US military and Iraqi police said.

Truck bombing kills 5 US soldiers, 2 Iraqis
Iraqi women run past an Iraqi soldier patrolling a street in Baghdad, April 8, 2009. [Agencies]

A sixth American soldier and 17 Iraqi policemen were wounded in the blast that took place near the national police headquarters in southwestern Mosul, Iraq's third-largest city and al-Qaida's last urban stronghold.

Suicide bombings, a hallmark of al-Qaida's attack style, continue to threaten the city, which US troops must leave by June 30 under an agreement with the Iraqis. The approaching deadline has raised fears about what will happen after American soldiers depart.

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Lt. Col. Michael Stuart, chief of US operations in Tikrit, an Iraqi city north of Baghdad, said the target was the Iraqi national police complex in Mosul and not the US patrol. He said the American patrol just happened to be on the same street when the attack occurred.

"It was just bad timing," Stuart told The Associated Press.

Friday's blast was the deadliest single bombing attack in more than a year. The US military said that the last time five US soldiers were killed in an attack was when a suicide bomber targeted an American patrol in Baghdad on March 10, 2008.

A suicide car bomb struck a US patrol in Mosul on Feb. 9, killing four American soldiers and their Iraqi interpreter. Four US soldiers were also killed Jan. 26 when two helicopters collided over the northern city of Kirkuk.

Friday's suicide bomber, who was driving a truck filled with grain, made a sharp turn as he approached the police complex, then rammed his truck through an iron barrier, hitting a sandbagged wall beyond it and detonating his vehicle near the station's main building, Iraqi police said.

The blast shook the entire complex and badly damaged nearby buildings, witnesses and police said.

A policeman, who identified himself as Abu Mohammed, said he saw the truck driving behind two US Humvees on the street leading to the police headquarters. The Humvees entered the complex, came to a stop, and within seconds, the truck turned and rammed the iron barrier, he said.

Iraqi police opened fire, but the truck kept moving until it reached the sandbagged wall where it detonated, just a few feet away from the Humvees, he said.

"The blast was very powerful and the situation was chaotic," he said.

The US military said two people were detained in connection with the attack, which is under investigation. The names of those killed were being withheld pending notification of families.

Although US combat troops have to leave of Iraqi cities by the end of June under the US-Iraqi security agreement that went into effect this year, the top US commander in Iraq, Gen. Raymond Odierno, told The Times of London this week that the American troops may have to stay in Mosul and another northern city, Baqouba, after the deadline because insurgents remain active there.

Mosul, about 225 miles (360 kilometers) north of Baghdad, had been relatively quiet in recent weeks compared to the Iraqi capital, where attacks killed at least 53 people this week.

American casualties have fallen to their lowest levels of the war since thousands of Sunnis abandoned the insurgency and US and Iraqi forces routed Shiite militias in Baghdad and Basra last spring.

However, fighting continues in Mosul and elsewhere in northern Iraq, a conflict that US officials say is driven in part by ethnic rivalries between Sunni Arabs and Kurds. Many Sunni extremists are believed to have fled north after being driven from longtime strongholds in Baghdad and central Iraq.