|
||||||||
|
Iraq2 U.S. soldiers killed as attacks in Iraq intensifyBy Associated Press© St. Petersburg Times published June 27, 2003 BAGHDAD, Iraq - American troops and helicopters scoured the desert Thursday for two U.S. soldiers who were apparently abducted from an observation post north of Baghdad. Ambushes and hostile fire elsewhere in Iraq killed two U.S. soldiers and two Iraqi civilians and wounded eight other Americans. A day after a U.S. Marine was killed responding to an ambush on Americans, reports of attacks on U.S. troops appeared almost hourly - too frequent for military press officers to keep up with. Most of the information came from witnesses at the attack scenes. Between Wednesday and Thursday, assailants blew up a U.S. military vehicle with a roadside bomb, dropped grenades from an overpass, destroyed a civilian SUV traveling with U.S. troops, demolished an oil pipeline and fired an apparent rocket-propelled grenade at a U.S. Army truck. Officials played down the violence, but with shattered glass, blood stains and mangled vehicles littering the landscape, the upsurge in attacks is causing concern that the U.S.-led occupation of Iraq could be turning into a guerrilla war. In the latest and most serious reported attacks: A member of a U.S. special operations force was killed and eight were wounded Thursday morning by hostile fire southwest of Baghdad, the U.S. military said, giving no further details. A bomb exploded on the Baghdad airport road, killing a U.S. soldier and wounding another, the military said. The road - heavily used by U.S. forces - has been the scene of several attacks using trip wires dangling from overpasses or grenades tossed from bridges. In another ambush, assailants threw grenades at a U.S. and Iraqi civilian convoy in west Baghdad, killing two Iraqi employees of the national electricity authority, U.S. soldiers and Iraqi police said. The convoy had U.S. Humvees at the front and the back and two Iraqi civilian vehicles in the middle. The victims were traveling in the same car. A military spokesman, Maj. William Thurmond, said the spate of ambushes could be a response to recent U.S. raids on Baath party strongholds. "There have been more attacks recently, but it's probably premature to say this is part of a pattern," Thurmond said. "We've kicked open the nests of some of these bad guys." An Iraqi police official, Brig. Ahmed Khazem, called the ambushes "isolated actions ... carried out by individual mercenaries." The Arab satellite station Al-Jazeera, however, aired statements Thursday from two previously unknown groups urging assaults on U.S.-led forces in Iraq. One, by a group calling itself the Mujahedeen of the Victorious Sect, claimed responsibility for recent attacks and promised more. The other, by the Popular Resistance for the Liberation of Iraq, called for "revenge" against America. Al-Jazeera said it could not verify the statements. Two U.S. officials familiar with intelligence information said they had not previously heard of the groups issuing the statements and had no way to know whether they were credible. Meanwhile, Pentagon officials said Thursday that two American soldiers were apparently abducted. The men and their Humvee were stationed at an observation post near the town of Balad, north of Baghdad, when they were noticed missing Wednesday night, the Pentagon officials told the Associated Press on condition of anonymity. A search by Apache attack helicopters began immediately. Even before the latest violence began, U.S. intelligence officers had warned ground commanders to expect an increase in attacks against U.S. forces between June 25 and July 10. It was not clear on what intelligence the warning was based. The U.S. military has blamed attacks on isolated remnants of Saddam Hussein's regime and his Sunni Muslim followers, claiming there was no organized resistance. But the attacks have now spread to Shiite areas south of Baghdad that had been largely free of the violence plaguing the Sunni areas north and west of the capital - where Hussein had enjoyed a degree of support. On Tuesday, gunmen furious over the killing of five civilians during a demonstration, allegedly at the hand of British soldiers, shot and killed six British troops in the southern town of Majar al-Kabir. A day later, an ambush wounded three Marines in Hillah, 45 miles south of Baghdad. The names of the victims of the latest attacks were not immediately released. The killings raised the American death toll to 196 since the start of the war on March 20. At least 20 U.S. soldiers have died as the result of hostile fire since major combat was declared over in May. © 2006 • All Rights Reserved • Tampa Bay Times
490 First Avenue South St. Petersburg, FL 33701 727-893-8111
|
From the Times wire desk Iraq Nation in brief World in brief
From the AP |
![]()