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11 US troops
killed on deadliest day in Iraq
Middle East Desk Report
BAGHDAD (Iraq)—The toll in one of the U.S. military’s deadliest days in
Iraq rose to 11 when the military said Thursday that another soldier had
died in fighting west of Baghdad.
At least seven Iraqis — six policemen and a 7-year-old girl — were
killed in a series of bombings and shootings. The U.S. soldier was shot
Wednesday while manning a machine gun nest on the roof of an outpost in
Ramadi, 70 miles west of Baghdad, the capital of the volatile Anbar
province, according to an Associated Press reporter on the scene.
The death came on the same day that 10 other U.S. troops were killed in
four separate incidents in Iraq, and a blue-ribbon panel in Washington
recommended gradually shifting U.S. forces from a combat to a training
role.
The military released details about five of the other troops killed on
Wednesday, saying they were Task Force Lightning soldiers who were
struck by a roadside bomb while conducting combat operations in the
vicinity of the northern city of Kirkuk. The soldiers were assigned to
3rd Brigade Combat Team, 25th Infantry Division.
The U.S. military gave no further details about identities or the other
deaths, pending notification of relatives. The attacks followed a
particularly bloody weekend and raised to at least 31 the number of U.S.
troops who have died in the first week of this month. At least 69 troops
were killed in November and 105 soldiers were killed in October — the
highest monthly toll since January 2005.
“Our thoughts are with all 11 families who lost family members
yesterday. Taking care of them right now is the military’s highest
priority,” U.S. spokesman Lt. Col. Christopher Garver said. The last
time 11 Americans were killed in one day was Oct. 17. At least 2,919
service members have been killed since the war started in 2003,
according to an AP count.
At least 75 people were killed or found dead across Iraq on Wednesday,
including 48 whose bullet-riddled bodies were found in different parts
of the capital. Gunmen also broke into a school in western Baghdad,
killing its Sunni headmaster in his office, then instructing teachers
not to return, an Iraqi army officer said, speaking on condition of
anonymity due to security concerns. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki on
Tuesday urged university professors and students to ignore a Sunni Arab
insurgent group’s warnings to avoid class, calling them “desperate
attempts.” The group had sent e-mails to students and posted signs at
schools and mosques saying students should stay away while it cleanses
the campuses of Shiite death squads, according to a statement from al-Maliki’s
office late Tuesday.
The Iraqi government said the U.S. Iraq Study Group’s report
recommending a change of course in Iraq did “not come as a surprise,”
and it agreed that Iraq must take the lead in its own security. “The
situation is grave, very grave in fact, and cannot be tolerated,” Deputy
Prime Minister Barham Saleh said on the pan-Arab satellite TV channel
Al-Arabiya. “Absolute dependence on foreign troops is not possible. The
focus must be on boosting the Iraqi security forces.”
Regular Iraqis on the streets of Baghdad greeted the Iraq Study Group
report with widespread skepticism. “This report is no different than
others we have received from national unity conferences or regional
conferences in the last three years, ones that came up with nice words
that had no effect,” said Khalid Abdel-Rahim, 42, a Sunni Arab employee
of Iraq’s Industry Ministry.
The U.S. report warned “the situation in Iraq is grave and
deteriorating.” It recommended the U.S. reduce political, military or
economic support for Iraq if the government in Baghdad cannot make
substantial progress toward providing for its own security.
On the highly emotional issue of troop withdrawals, the commission
warned against either a precipitous pullback or an open-ended commitment
to a large deployment. “Military priorities must change,” the report
said, toward a goal of training, equipping and advising Iraqi forces.
“We should seek to complete the training and equipping mission by the
end of the first quarter of 2008.” |