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Nickdfresh
04-29-2005, 03:36 PM
Three U.S. troops among 27 killed in Iraq
Italy differs with American conclusion on agent's shooting death

Friday, April 29, 2005 Posted: 2:25 PM EDT (1825 GMT)

http://i.a.cnn.net/cnn/2005/WORLD/meast/04/29/iraq.main/story.iraq.bombing.fri.03.jpg
A car burns in Baghdad on Friday after several bombs exploded.
Image:

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN (http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/meast/04/29/iraq.main/index.html)) -- A day after Iraq's new government began to take shape, a spurt of car and roadside bombings Friday killed at least 27 people, including three U.S. troops, and wounded 100 other people, officials said.

Many of the bombs went off after 8:15 a.m. (12:15 a.m. EDT) and focused on Iraqi police and army patrols in Baghdad. Two of the car bombs exploded within 50 yards and several minutes of each other.

At least seven Iraqi soldiers and six Iraqi police officers were among the more than two dozen killed Friday, police said.

Two U.S. soldiers assigned to the 155th Brigade Combat Team, II Marine Expeditionary Force died when a car bomb struck near Diyara, the Marines said. The Marines are based in Anbar province, west of Baghdad.

A car bomb also killed a U.S. soldier and wounded two others in northern Iraq near Taji, the U.S. military said.

The number of U.S. troops who have died in the Iraq war stands at 1,577, according to the military.

Thirteen people died and 50 were wounded when four suicide bombs exploded within a few hundred yards of each other in northern Baghdad neighborhoods in a 15-minute span, police said.

Minutes later, three suicide car bombings struck southeast Baghdad's al-Madain neighborhood, killing nine Iraqis, police said.

Near midday, two car bombs exploded, killing one civilian and wounding eight police officers.

Insurgents also targeted an Iraqi border patrol car in the southern city of Basra. The driver was killed and two officers wounded in the attack, an Iraqi army officer said.

Seven of the car attacks were suicide bombings, but the death toll does not include insurgents' casualties, police said.

The U.S. military took the unusual step of issuing a written statement about the violence.

According to the release, the United States wants to "reassure everyone back home" that the attacks do not appear to be directed at U.S. troops but against Iraqis. They appear to be tied to the announcement of Iraq's new government, the statement said.

On Thursday, Iraq's National Assembly chose a new government following three months of political wrangling in the wake of historic elections. The list of Cabinet members has several vacancies, and at least five appointments are temporary. (Cabinet list)
Purported al-Zarqawi warning

Two Islamist Web sites Friday posted an audio message purportedly recorded by Jordanian-born militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the most wanted insurgent in Iraq, in which he warned President Bush he would never give up.

Journalists familiar with previous messages said the voice on the tape sounds like al-Zarqawi, but CNN has not confirmed the recording's authenticity.

Much of the speech is filled with quotes from the Koran, and the speaker calls Bush "the dog of the Romans."

According to a translator, the speaker says: "We vow to God you will never reach a decision and your military forces will never feel at peace until we reach our target and as long as we have blood in our veins and our hearts are still beating. We are coming to you, God willing."

The commander of the U.S. Army's Third Infantry Division said the tape was a bad sign for insurgents.

"We know that [al-Zarqawi] posts these messages on a regular basis, and we know that he wants to step up the attacks, and I think it's out of desperation," Maj. Gen. William Webster said. (Full story)
Differing findings on checkpoint shooting

U.S. and Italian officials said Friday that investigators from both countries differ about a checkpoint shooting that led to the death of an Italian security agent.

The March 4 shooting death of Nicola Calipari strained relations between the United States and Italy, where the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq has never been popular with the public. Two other people in the car also were wounded as the vehicle approached a temporary U.S. checkpoint.

Giuliana Sgrena, a reporter for an Italian newspaper who had just been released by abductors, has said American forces deliberately fired on the vehicle, driven by another Italian agent. Sgrena was wounded in the shoulder.

"The investigators did not arrive at shared final conclusions even though, after jointly examining the evidence, they did agree on facts, findings and recommendations on numerous issues," said a statement from State Department deputy spokesman Adam Ereli.

Ereli said no joint report would be issued.

On Monday, a Pentagon official said that the investigation had cleared the U.S. soldiers involved and they would face no disciplinary action. Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said the next day that the investigation was not finished.
Other developments

# A bomb killed one U.S. soldier and wounded four others Thursday near Hawija, about 150 miles north of Baghdad, the U.S. military said.

# A week before Britain's general elections, Prime Minister Tony Blair authorized the release of a secret memo from the country's attorney general that Blair says supports his assertion that the Iraqi invasion was legal. Opposition party members said the document proves the opposite: that the war, led by the United States but heavily assisted by Britain and its troops, was not a lawful act. (Full story)

CNN's Caroline Faraj, Kevin Flower, Elise Labott, Octavia Nasr, Barbara Starr and Mohammed Tawfeeq contributed to this report

Seshmeister
04-29-2005, 06:23 PM
Time to come home.

kentuckyklira
04-30-2005, 09:22 AM
mission accomplished

:D

Nitro Express
05-01-2005, 02:26 AM
Shit, if I believed I would get 72 fresh pussies to bang in heaven for blowing myself and the enemies of the jihad up, I would do it. Shit why waste time on this rock if killing yourself get you that kind of payoff guarenteed?

Seshmeister
05-01-2005, 10:02 AM
They must be very disappointed.

Nickdfresh
05-01-2005, 10:59 AM
Violence continues.

May 1, 10:06 AM EDT

Iraq Insurgents Continue Wave of Violence

By BUSHRA JUHI
Associated Press Writer

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -- Insurgents launched a third straight day of attacks in Iraq on Sunday, including ambushes, car bombs and a drive-by shooting, killing nine Iraqis and wounding more than 20, police said.

That raised the death toll from the latest wave of insurgent attacks that began on Friday to at least 79, including six U.S. soldiers. The violence was timed to deflate hopes in Washington and Baghdad that the installation of the Iraq's first democratically elected government would curb the uprising.

Iraqi forces backed by the U.S. military, meanwhile, detained a number of suspects in the abduction of a British aid worker believed killed last year, the U.S. military said.

Articles apparently related to Margaret Hassan, the 59-year-old director of CARE international in Iraq, also were recovered during the morning raid south of Baghdad, according to the British and U.S. embassies.

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Many of the recent attacks have been well-coordinated, and that was the case on a small road near Diala Bridge in eastern Baghdad, said police Lt. Col. Sabah Hamid al-Firtosi.

At 6:15 a.m., a pickup truck stopped near a checkpoint and insurgents jumped out, firing machine guns and rocket-propelled grenades, al-Firtosi said. Other insurgents appeared from behind nearby trees and joined the attack, he said. Five policemen were killed and one was wounded.

A car bomb later exploded in the Zafaraniyah neighborhood of Baghdad, killing four Iraqi civilians and wounding 12, police said.

Elsewhere in Baghdad, insurgents in three parked cars opened fire with hand guns on a police patrol in the western Jihad neighborhood, wounding four policemen, police Capt. Talib Thamir said.

A suicide car bomber also attacked near a water pump station in southeastern Baghdad, said U.S. Army Lt. Col. Clifford Kent, but no casualties were immediately reported.

South of Baghdad, a roadside bomb exploded on a main road north of Hillah, wounding four civilians, said police Capt. Muthana Khalid. In Hillah itself, a drive-by shooting on a police patrol caused no injuries, but the police arrested the four gunmen involved, he said.

U.S. and Iraqi officials had hoped to curb support for the militants by including members of the Sunni Arab minority in a new Shiite-dominated Cabinet that will be sworn in Tuesday.

Minority Sunnis, who held monopoly power during Saddam Hussein's rule are believed to be the backbone of Iraq's insurgency. Most stayed away from landmark Jan. 30 parliamentary elections - either in protest or out of fear of attack.

However, the lineup named by incoming Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari after months of political wrangling excluded Sunnis from meaningful positions and left the key defense and oil ministries - among other unfilled posts - in temporary hands.

Approval of the Cabinet Thursday was followed by an onslaught of bombings in the capital and elsewhere.

At least five car bombs rocked Baghdad on Saturday, the heart of the Iraqi government and American occupation, U.S. military spokesman Greg Kaufman said. Six more exploded in the northern city of Mosul, which also has seen frequent attacks.

U.S. military spokesman Maj. Darryl Wright announced the arrests in Hassan's abduction, but it was not immediately known how many suspects were detained.

The British Embassy in Baghdad confirmed that articles belonging to Hassan were found in the raid.

"We believe this is the first evidence that's been found regarding her since her death," said Martin Cronin, first secretary at the British Embassy in Baghdad.

Hassan, who also held Irish and Iraqi citizenship, was abducted in Baghdad on Oct. 19 on her way to work. Her captors later issued videos showing her pleading for Prime Minister Tony Blair to withdraw troops from Iraq and calling for the release of female Iraqi prisoners.

On Nov. 16, the Arab satellite television station Al-Jazeera said it had received a video showing a hooded militant shooting a blindfolded woman in the head. British officials said they believed the woman in the video was Hassan and her family said they believed she was dead, but no body was found.

Hassan had lived in Iraq for 30 years and was married to an Iraqi. She was renown for her work distributing food, medicine and supplies to Iraqis suffering under the sanctions of the 1990s.

Also Sunday, the Italian government said its own report on the killing of an Italian intelligence agent by U.S. soldiers in Baghdad will shed light on problems of coordination with authorities in Iraq and with rules of engagement for checkpoints.

The foreign ministry said the Italian report will be made public on Monday, providing its own version of the March 4 "friendly fire" shooting death of agent Nicola Calipari, who had just won the release of an Italian hostage, journalist Giuliana Sgrena.

The U.S. military cleared American soldiers in Calipari's death and recommended no disciplinary action in its own report released Saturday. The Americans contend the car Calipari was riding in as he headed to Baghdad airport with the ex-hostage didn't slow down at the checkpoint.

The two Italian experts who participated in the joint U.S-Italian probe of the shooting refused to sign off on the Americans' conclusions.

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Three Lock Rock
05-01-2005, 02:42 PM
Was david lee roth bombing in Bagdad on his latest tour like he is everwhere else?

FORD
05-01-2005, 04:41 PM
Originally posted by Three Lock Rock
Was david lee roth bombing in Bagdad on his latest tour like he is everwhere else?

No the insurgents were listening to Al Jazeera radio and the new Hagar single/tequila commercial came on, and it drove them to suicide :(