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U.S. soldier dies in Iraq mortar
attack
Baghdad -
Anti-American insurgents fired mortar rounds at a military camp,
killing one American soldier and wounding 34 others, the U.S. command
said.
Six mortar rounds exploded about 6:45
p.m. Wednesday at Logistical Base Seitz west of Baghdad, in the
so-called Sunni Muslim triangle that is a stronghold of resistance to
the U.S. occupation of Iraq, a spokesman said.
Thirty-five soldiers were wounded in
the attack, and one of them died overnight, a spokesman for the
U.S.-led coalition said Thursday.
"The wounded soldiers were given
first aid and have been evacuated from the site for further medical
treatment," the statement said. The Pentagon added that the soldiers
were from the Army's 541st Maintenance Battalion, based in Fort Riley,
Kan., and part of the 3rd Corps Support Command.
The mortars hit "a living area where
they have their sleeping quarters," the spokesman said.
A Pentagon spokesman said that some
of those wounded returned to duty shortly after the attack, while
others were hospitalized. The spokesman, Lt. Col. James Cassella, said
he did not know how many were seriously or lightly wounded.
Earlier Wednesday, U.S. troops said
they destroyed a home in Fallujah, the center of the anti-American
insurgency west of Baghdad, where enraged neighbors said a married
couple was killed and their five children were orphaned.
The neighbors insisted the couple was
innocent in an attack on the troops that led them to shell the house.
"This is democracy? These corpses?"
Raad Majeed asked at the hospital, gesturing at the remains of the
couple, on gurneys covered with bloody sheets. "It's a crime against
humanity."
The 82nd Airborne Division said its
paratroopers acted after receiving "two rounds of indirect fire"
around 9 p.m. Tuesday.
"Paratroopers from our Task Force
engaged the point of origin with a grenade launcher and small arms,
causing two personnel to flee into a nearby building, which was also
engaged and destroyed," division spokeswoman Capt. Tammy Galloway said
in a statement.
"The building was searched and no
weapons or personnel were found. Upon questioning, civilians in the
area reported two dead personnel were taken to a nearby hospital," the
statement said.
Civilian deaths in the
counterinsurgency campaign have enraged many Iraqis at a time when the
U.S.-led coalition is trying to win popular support. On Wednesday, the
coalition announced it was freeing 506 of 12,800 prisoners in a
goodwill gesture also aimed at encouraging more Iraqis to come forward
with intelligence against anti-American guerrillas.
Officials offered rewards for the
capture or information confirming the deaths of 30 more wanted Iraqis,
putting bounties of $50,000 to $200,000 on their heads. That is in
addition to bounties for the 13 remaining fugitives at large from the
original 55 most wanted Iraqis whose pictures appeared on a deck of
cards.
There's a bounty of $10 million on
the head of the most wanted man since Saddam Hussein's capture, Izzat
Ibrahim al-Douri, one of the ousted dictator's chief lieutenants.
In Fallujah, neighbors said U.S.
soldiers were on a routine search for suspects and arms when they were
fired on. The paratroopers then fired at the house of Ahmed Hassan
Faroud.
Associated Press Television News film
showed a wall of the house collapsed into a rubble of concrete bricks
and two walls splattered with blood that neighbors said belonged to
Hassan, 37, and his wife Suham Omar, 28. They said the couple's five
children were in bed in an adjoining room and survived Tuesday night's
attack uninjured. Fallujah is about 30 miles west of Baghdad, the
capital.
"They just brought in their tank and
fired at their house from 200 meters (220 yards) away," Majeed said.
"What did these people do wrong?"
Tuesday's attack came as coalition
officials said they would become "increasingly aggressive with the
die-hards," while simultaneously making conciliatory gestures to
moderates or fence-sitters.
Elsewhere in Iraq, a British soldier
died in a training accident in southern Basra, bringing the toll for
British troops to 53, a British military spokesman said.
In the northern city of Kirkuk,
insurgents struck an Iraqi police vehicle with a rocket-propelled
grenade Tuesday night. One officer was killed and two were wounded in
that attack, one seriously, police said. Rebels regularly target
police and other Iraqis who cooperate with the U.S.-led occupation
authorities, as well as the oil installations that victims of the
attack were assigned to protect.
Also in Kirkuk, a grenade hit the
office of the Kurdistan Socialist Party, wounding one person and
causing slight damage, police said.
Kurdish party offices in Kirkuk have
come under attack several times recently as fears mount amid demands
from Kurds that the oil-rich city become part of the autonomous state
that they have controlled in northern Iraq under British and U.S.
aerial protection since the end of the Gulf War in 1991.
Syria's vice president on Wednesday
accused Israel of trying to divide Iraq. Syria, Turkey and Iran all
are concerned that Kurds may start demanding an independent state to
include parts of their countries that hold Kurdish populations.
"The most dangerous thing that
threatens Iraq is that some foreign forces, particularly Israel, are
seeking to break up (Iraqi) national unity," Vice President Abdul
Halim Khaddam told reporters after meeting with an Iraqi tribal
delegation.
The Iraqi delegation, from the large
Jbour tribe, called on all international forces to work to "rid Iraq
of the (U.S.-led) occupation and prevent partition, sectarianism and
racism in the country." -- Associated
Press
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