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Army chopper crashes in Iraq; 2 on
board
By PAUL GARWOOD, Associated
Press Writer
Tikrit
- A U.S. helicopter crashed in the Tigris river while searching
for a missing soldier on Sunday, and the aircraft's two crew members
were missing, the military said.
It did not say what caused the crash
of the OH-58D Kiowa Warrior helicopter, attached to the 101st Airborne
Division.
The helicopter was searching for a
soldier missing when the boat he was in capsized earlier Sunday while
on patrol. The other three soldiers in boat were safe, but two Iraqi
police officers and an Iraqi translator were confirmed killed in the
incident, said Maj. Josslyn Aberle, a spokeswoman for the 4th Infantry
Division.
She said the search for the two
pilots was underway. U.S. troops and Iraqi police sealed off the area
and established checkpoints to secure the search and rescue operation.
U.S. troops rushing to the scene came
under "limited and ineffective small arms fire," the spokeswoman said.
An Iraqi policeman manning one of the checkpoints was killed in a
drive-by shooting, witnesses said.
It was the fifth helicopter crash in
Iraq this month — three of them due to hostile fire.
U.S. troops arrested nearly 50 people
Sunday in raids in the Sunni Triangle after attacks in the volatile
region killed six American soldiers.
Most of the arrests occurred in
Baqouba, 35 miles northeast of Baghdad, where 46 people were detained
in a series of raids, the U.S. military said. Three were arrested for
alleged anti-coalition activities and the rest for illegal weapons
possession.
Soldiers of the 4th Infantry Division
also seized 220 hand grenades in a raid on a house in the town of
Mukayshifa, located south of Saddam Hussein 's hometown Tikrit,
according to spokeswoman Maj. Josslyn Aberle.
The raids in the Sunni heartland
followed a series of bombings and attacks Saturday in which six
soldiers were killed. One of them, from the 4th Infantry Division,
died Sunday of wounds suffered when insurgents fired a rocket
propelled grenade at his Bradley vehicle in Beiji on Saturday.
Five other U.S. soldiers were killed
in two separate bombings Saturday in Khaldiyah and Fallujah, both
located in the Euphrates River valley west of the capital. A blast
Saturday in Samarra to the north of Baghdad narrowly missed an
American convoy but killed four Iraqis and wounded about 40 others,
including seven Americans.
A roadside bomb exploded Sunday near
a U.S. patrol in Baghdad, but a U.S. soldier, speaking on condition of
anonymity, said there were no U.S. casualties.
The latest deaths raised to 513 the
number of U.S. service members who have died since the United States
and its allies launched the Iraq war March 20. Most of the deaths have
occurred in the insurgency by Saddam Hussein loyalists since President
Bush declared an end to active combat May 1.
The Bush administration launched the
war, claiming Saddam had violated U.N. resolutions requiring Iraq to
destroy its weapons of mass destruction.
Nine months after the collapse of
Saddam's regime, no such weapons have been found. On Sunday, David
Kay, the former top U.S. weapons inspector in Iraq, said he believes
Saddam had no weapons of mass destruction before the U.S.-led
invasion. Kay said the challenge for the United States now is to
figure out why intelligence indicated that the Iraqi president did
have them.
"We led this search to find the
truth, not to find the weapons," Kay said on the National Public Radio
program "Weekend Edition." "The fact that we found so far the weapons
do not exist, we've got to deal with that difference and understand
why."
The Bush administration is now
embroiled in a political dispute with the country's powerful Shiite
Muslim clergy over the blueprint for returning sovereignty to the
Iraqis by July 1. Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Husseini al-Sistani wants
members of a new legislature chosen by the voters, rather than
selected in regional caucuses as the United States plans.
U.S. officials say the continuing
violence and the absence of an electoral roll or a census make it
impossible to hold early elections. However, the United States cannot
afford to offend the Shiite leadership, because Shiites are estimated
to comprise about 60 percent of Iraq's 25 million people.
Muwafaq
al-Rubaei, a Shiite member of the U.S.-installed Governing Council,
told reporters Sunday following a meeting with al-Sistani that the
ayatollah is sticking to his demand for elections and believes they
can be held before July 1.
"The clerics' opinion is the opinion
of the Iraqi people in general," al-Rubaei said. "The constitution
shall be written by Iraqis elected by Iraqis and not by foreigners.
Al-Sistani's call is still in place to hold elections."
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan
is expected to announce this week whether to send a team to Iraq to
assess if early polls are possible. Washington hopes that the
involvement of the United Nations will help break the deadlock
and satisfy the Shiites. --
Associated Press
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