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Coalition forces kill 20
insurgents
By SAMEER N. YACOUB
Baghdad -
U.S.-led coalition forces killed 20 insurgents, including two
women, Friday in fighting and airstrikes that targeted al-Qaida in
Iraq militants northwest of Baghdad, the military said. The mayor of
the village, which was the site of a U.S. raid earlier this year,
said 19 civilians were killed, including seven women and eight
children.
In the south, more than 1,000
British and Danish troops conducted a pre-dawn raid in the outskirts
of Basra, coalition officials said, describing the operation as the
largest of its kind in the area since the war began. Five Iraqis,
described as members of "a rogue, breakaway" Shiite militia, were
detained.
In the coalition raid northwest of
Baghdad, near Lake Tharthar in the predominantly Sunni Salahuddin
province, ground forces were searching buildings when they were
attacked. They returned fire, killing two insurgents, the U.S.
military said.
Under continuing fire, the troops
called in air support, killing 18 insurgents, the command said,
adding that two women were among those killed. The military declined
to specify which branch of the coalition was involved, but the U.S.
provides the bulk of the air support in most of the country.
"Al-Qaida in Iraq has both men and
women supporting and facilitating their operations unfortunately,"
it said.
Searching the area, the coalition
forces found and destroyed several weapons caches, including AK-47s,
machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades, anti-personnel mines,
explosives, blasting caps and suicide vests, the command said.
The raid was conducted in an area
where intelligence reports had indicated that "associates with links
to multiple al-Qaida in Iraq networks were operating," U.S. command
said.
Amir
Fayadh, the mayor of the al-Ishaqi village, east of the lake, and
local police said 19 civilians were killed there during airstrikes
on two houses, and Fayadh said the dead included seven women and
eight children.
AP Television News video showed
more than a dozen charred and bloody bodies laid out and covered in
colorful wool blankets with concrete rubble left by the devastated
houses.
This spring, a U.S. military
investigation cleared American soldiers of misconduct in a March 15
raid in the village in which Air Force planes destroyed a building
believed to be hiding al-Qaida in Iraq insurgents. Villagers claimed
the soldiers killed 11 Iraqi civilians before calling for the
airstrike.
In Baghdad, a roadside bomb killed
an American soldier Thursday during a joint patrol with the Iraqi
army, the U.S. command said. The death raised to 33 the number of
U.S. forces killed so far in December.
In the south, more than 800 British
forces and 200 Danish troops fought Iraqis during a pre-dawn raid in
the Hartha area on the outskirts of Basra, coalition officials said.
British Maj. Charlie Burbridge, the
spokesman for the coalition in southern Iraq, said five Iraqis were
detained and described them as members of "a rogue, breakaway
element" of one of the many Shiite militias in the area. He said the
suspects were directly involved in several local attacks.
Burbridge called it the largest
search and detention operation that coalition forces have conducted
in southern Iraq since the war began in March 2003.
The Danish soldiers arrived from
the north, and British ones with armored vehicles arriving from the
south, Burbridge said. Other British forces reached the area on
boats traveling to the junction of the Garmat Ali River and the
Shatt al-Arab waterway in an operation that was supported by
helicopters and jets, he said.
Two large mosques were near one of
the houses that was searched, but the raid ended long before
residents began to travel to them on Friday, the day of worship in
mostly Muslim Iraq, said Capt. Tane Dunlop, another spokesman for
multinational forces in Basra, the city in southern Iraq where most
British forces are based.
The arms cache found in one of the
houses raided included Katyusha rockets, roadside bombs, rifles and
rocket-propelled grenades, Dunlop said.
In Fallujah, 40 miles west of
Baghdad, two U.S. Marines patrolling the city were wounded after
coming under insurgent fire Thursday, the U.S. command said. After
hearing that Fallujah's general hospital was seeking blood
donations, other Marines searched its wards Friday to see if wounded
insurgents were being treated. None were found, the military said.
On Thursday, a series of bombings
and shootings killed at least 23 people in Iraq, including a
7-year-old girl and two college professors, police said. Iraqi
police also found 35 bullet-riddled bodies that had been bound and
blindfolded and left in different parts of the capital. --
The
Associated Press
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