8 U.S. Soldiers Killed in Worst Iraqi Unrest Yet

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Rioting Sweeps Iraqi Cities; 8 U.S. Soldiers Killed

Salvadorans, Iraqis Die in Bloody Clashes Near Najaf


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American soldiers take cover Sunday as the Spanish base comes under attack outside Kufa, north of Najaf, Iraq.

(Associated Press/MSNBC)

NAJAF, Iraq - Supporters of an anti-American cleric rioted in four Iraqi cities Sunday, killing eight U.S. troops and one Salvadoran soldier in the worst unrest since the spasm of looting and arson immediately after the fall of Saddam Hussein.

The U.S. military on Sunday reported two Marines were killed in a separate “enemy action” in Anbar province, raising the number of Americans killed in the war to at least 610.

The rioters were supporters of anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. They were angry over Saturday’s arrest on murder charges of one of al-Sadr’s aides, Mustafa al-Yacoubi, and the closure of a pro-al-Sadr newspaper.

Near the holy city of Najaf, a gunbattle at a Spanish garrison killed at least 22 people, including two coalition soldiers — an American and a Salvadoran.

Fighting in the Baghdad neighborhood of Sadr City killed seven U.S. soldiers and wounded at least 24, the U.S. military said in a written statement.

U.S. Armor Advancing

A resident said two Humvees were seen burning in the neighborhood, and that some American soldiers had taken refuge in a building. The report could not be independently confirmed, and it was unclear whether the soldiers involved were those who died.

A column of American tanks was seen moving through the center of Baghdad Sunday evening, possibly headed toward the fighting.

The military said the fighting erupted after members of a militia loyal to radical Shiite Muslim cleric Muqtada al-Sadr took control of police stations and government buildings in the neighborhood.

Protesters clashed with Italian and British forces in other cities in a broad, violent challenge to the U.S.-led coalition, raising questions about its ability to stabilize Iraq ahead of a scheduled June 30 handover of power to Iraqis.

With less than three months left before then, the U.S. occupation administrator appointed an Iraqi defense minister and chief of national intelligence.

“These organizations will give Iraqis the means to defend their country against terrorists and insurgents,” L. Paul Bremer said at a press conference.

About three miles outside the holy city of Najaf, supporters of al-Sadr opened fire on the Spanish garrison during a street protest that drew about 5,000 people. The protesters were angry over the arrest of the cleric’s aide, said the Spanish Defense Ministry in Madrid.

The attackers opened fire at about noon, said Cmdr. Carlos Herradon, a spokesman for the Spanish headquarters in nearby Diwaniyah.

Hours of Gunfire

The Spanish and Salvadoran soldiers inside the garrison fired back, and assailants later regrouped in three clusters outside the base as the shooting continued for several hours.

Two soldiers — a Salvadoran and an American — died and nine other soldiers were wounded, the Spanish defense ministry said. No other details were available.

More than 200 people were wounded, said Falah Mohammed, director of the Najaf health department. El Salvador’s defense minister said several Salvadoran soldiers were wounded.

The death toll of at least 20 included two Iraqi soldiers who were inside the Spanish base, witnesses said.

Spain has 1,300 troops stationed in Iraq, and the Central American contingent is of a similar size. The Salvadorans are under Spanish command as part of an international brigade that includes troops from Central America.

Multiple train bombings in Madrid last month that killed 191 people have been blamed on al-Qaida-linked terrorists, who said they were punishing Spain for its alliance with the United States in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Spain: New Government, New Role

Spain’s new government, elected just days after the March 11 train bombings, has promised to make good on its pre-election promise to withdraw all Spanish troops from Iraq unless command for peacekeeping is turned over to the United Nations.

In El Salvador, the defense minister said the attack will not alter his country’s role in reconstruction efforts.

“It reinforces even more our decision to continue helping a country that is suffering,” Juan Antonio Martinez said Sunday.

The protesters were upset over the detention of al-Yacoubi, a senior aide to the 30-year-old al-Sadr, who opposes the U.S.-led occupation of Iraq. Al-Sadr is at odds with most Shiites, who hope to gain substantial power in the new Iraqi government.

Shiites comprise about 60 percent of Iraq’s 25 million people but were brutally repressed by the regime of Saddam Hussein, a Sunni Muslim.

At coalition headquarters in Baghdad, a senior official said on condition of anonymity that al-Yacoubi was detained Saturday on charges of murdering Abdel-Majid al-Khoei, a senior Shiite cleric who returned to Iraq after the U.S.-led invasion. A total of 25 arrest warrants were issued, and 13 suspects have been arrested, the official said.

Spanish-led forces said they did not participate in the arrest.

Protesters in Baghdad

In central Baghdad’s Firdaus Square, police fired warning shots during a protest by hundreds of al-Sadr supporters against al-Yacoubi’s arrest. At least two protesters were injured, witnesses said.

In Kufa, near Najaf, al-Sadr supporters took over a police station and seized guns inside. No police were in sight.

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A wounded man is carried after crowds of anti-American protesters marched Sunday on a Spanish garrison near Kufa, Iraq. At least 20 people were killed and hundreds wounded in clashes between Spanish-led forces and Iraqi protesters and militiamen near Najaf.

In the southern city of Nasiriyah, Italian troops traded fire with militiamen demonstrating against al-Yacoubi’s detention, said Lt. Col. Pierluigi Monteduro, chief of staff of Italian troops in the region. One Italian officer was wounded in the leg.

Also in the south, British troops clashed with protesters in Amarah, according to the Ministry of Defense in London. It was unclear whether there were casualties.

Sit-in Planned

Al-Sadr’s office in Baghdad issued a statement later Sunday calling off street protests and saying the cleric would stage a sit-in at a mosque in Kufa, where he has delivered fiery weekly sermons for months.

Al-Sadr supporters also were angered by the March 28 closure of his weekly newspaper by U.S. officials. The Americans alleged the newspaper was inciting violence against coalition troops.

The two U.S. Marines, both assigned to the 1st Marine Division, were killed by an “enemy action” in Anbar province Saturday, the military said. One died Saturday and the other Sunday, the statement said without providing details.

Anbar is an enormous stretch of land reaching to the Jordanian and Syrian borders west of Baghdad that includes Fallujah, a city where four American civilian contractors were slain Wednesday.

At a checkpoint in Samarra, about 60 miles north of Baghdad, that was manned by Iraqi Civil Defense personnel, a bomb killed three security officers and wounded another, workers at Samarra General Hospital said.

In Kirkuk, also in the north, a car bomb exploded, killing three civilians and wounding two others, police said.

Bremer on Sunday announced the appointments of Ali Allawi, the interim trade minister, as the new defense minister and Mohammed al-Shehwani, a former Iraqi air force officer who fled Iraq in 1990, as head of the Iraqi National Intelligence Service.

Late Sunday, U.N. envoy Lakhdar Brahimi and a team that will assist Iraqis in the political transition to an interim Iraqi government arrived in Baghdad, the United Nations said.
 

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Iraq: Deadliest days since end of combat
By The Associated Press, 4/4/2004

A look at some of the deadliest days in Iraq since major combat was declared over on May 1, 2003:

--April 4: Clashes between rioters and troops in four cities kill at least 22 Iraqis, eight U.S. troops and one Salvadoran soldier.

--March 31: Bomb explodes under U.S. vehicle in Anbar province, killing five troops. Four U.S. contract workers are killed and their bodies mutilated in a separate attack in Fallujah.

--March 17: A car bomb destroys the Jabal Lebanon Hotel in central Baghdad. The U.S. military says seven people are killed.

--March 2: Coordinated blasts strike Shiite Muslim shrines in the southern city of Karbala and in Baghdad, killing at least 181 people.

--Feb. 23: A suicide bomber detonates an explosives-packed vehicle outside a police station in the northern city of Kirkuk, killing at least eight other people.

--Feb. 18: Two bomb-laden trucks blow up outside a Polish-run base in Hillah, killing at least 10 people, including the two drivers. Some 65 people are wounded, including Iraqis, Filipinos, Poles, Hungarians and an American.

--Feb. 11: A suicide attacker blows up a car packed with explosives in a crowd of Iraqis waiting outside an army recruiting center in Baghdad, killing 47 people.

--Feb. 10: A suicide bomber explodes a truckload of explosives outside a police station in Iskandariyah, 30 miles south of Baghdad, killing 53 people.

--Feb. 1: Twin suicide bombers kill 109 people in two Kurdish party offices in the northern city of Irbil.

--Jan. 31: At least nine killed, 45 wounded by car bomb outside police station in the northern city of Mosul.

--Jan. 18: Suicide car bombing near main gate to U.S.-led coalition's headquarters in Baghdad kills at least 31 people.

--Jan. 8: U.S. Black Hawk medevac helicopter apparently shot down, crashes near Fallujah killing all nine soldiers aboard.

--Dec. 31, 2003: Car bomb rips through restaurant holding crowded New Year's Eve party, killing eight Iraqis, wounding 35.

--Dec. 27: Suicide bombers and assailants with mortars and grenade launchers blast coalition military bases and governor's office in coordinated attacks in southern city of Karbala, killing 19 people, wounding nearly 200.

--Dec. 14: Suspected suicide bomber detonates explosives in car outside police station west of Baghdad, killing at least 17, wounding 33.

--Nov. 29: Assailants ambush team of Spanish intelligence agents, killing seven. Two Japanese diplomats shot to death after insurgents ambush their car near Tikrit.

--Nov. 22: Attackers strike two police stations with back-to-back car bombings northeast of Baghdad, killing at least 12 Iraqi bystanders.

--Nov. 15: Two Black Hawk helicopters collide and crash in Mosul, apparently hit by ground fire, killing 17 American soldiers. U.S. military's worst single loss of life in Iraq conflict.

--Nov. 12: Suicide truck bomber attacks headquarters of Italy's paramilitary police in southern city of Nasiriyah, killing more than 30 people -- including 19 Italians.

--Nov. 7: Army Black Hawk helicopter apparently downed by rocket-propelled grenade, killing six U.S. soldiers aboard.

--Nov. 2: U.S. Chinook helicopter carrying troops headed for leave is struck by missile and crashes west of Baghdad, killing 15 soldiers, wounding more than 20.

--Oct. 27: Four suicide bombings target International Red Cross headquarters and four Iraqi police stations in Baghdad, killing 40 people, mostly Iraqis.

--Oct. 9: Suicide bomber drives Oldsmobile into police station in Baghdad's Sadr City district, killing nine bystanders.

--Sept. 12: U.S. forces kill eight Iraqi police and Jordanian security guard, wound nine others.

--Aug. 29: Car bomb explodes outside mosque in Shiite Muslim holy city of Najaf, killing more than 85 people including Shiite leader Ayatollah Mohammed Baqir al-Hakim.

--Aug. 19: Truck bomber strikes United Nations headquarters in Baghdad, killing 23 people including top U.N. envoy to Iraq, Sergio Vieira de Mello.

--Aug. 7: Car bomb explodes outside Jordanian Embassy, killing 19 people including two children.

--June 24: Firefight kills six British soldiers training police in southern Iraq. Eight others wounded when Iraqis ambush patrol and helicopter.
 
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How about the US uses some of those massive bombs that we put our tax dollars towards and levels the hell out of any city with all of this anti-American sentiment. (New York not included)

Drop one of those Daisy cutters on Fallujah and it may quell a few riots.
 

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Problem with a daisy cutter is that it was designed for defoliazation. 2,000 pounders used to clear LZs by exploding about 6 feet above the ground. They would not be that useful in urban enviornment. Sure they would level some buildings, but not what they were designed to do.

wil.
 

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Pentagon better get their head out of their ass,20 year old kids getting killed for nothing.These kids are warriors not hall monitors...Grab these ragheads by the balls and their heads and asses WILL follow...Either play to win or don't play...fxckin stupid!!
 

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posted by Patriot:
<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>
Pentagon better get their head out of their ass,20 year old kids getting killed for nothing.These kids are warriors not hall monitors...Grab these ragheads by the balls and their heads and asses WILL follow...Either play to win or don't play...fxckin stupid!!
<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>


Or, you know, we could just leave. No more twenty-year-olds killed for nothing.


Phaedrus
 

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Well if their idea of 'winning' was to bring an American style democracy/republic to Iraq then they were delusional to begin with. Allow free elections and they will elect a Shiite Muslim government. Then civil war would probably break out with the Sunnis and the Kurds. DUMB DUMB DUMB DUMB, 100 billion and more down the tubes.
 

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Not to mention over 600 American lives and THOUSANDS OF mentally and physically injured soldiers.
 

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Let these Iraquies kill themselves and get all of our soldiers home. After all, the vast majority of them hate the United States.
 

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This is rapidly becoming the worst possible scenerio.Pat,almost agree with you here.If the US is gonna do this shit,they may as well do it right.
 

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<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>Either play to win or don't play <HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

Americans lack of will in getting dirty and doing it right was known before we went into this venture. Our Army is not allowed to play by these dirty rules and this was a huge oversight on the Admins part.

You cannot defeat sick, suicide MFers being Kind, thus it should have been considered upfront and realized.

Fuk
 

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They did know this ahead of time.They dont give a damn.All they want to do is profit by it,no matter what the cost in lives or the damage to this country.This will go on until this administration is replaced.
 

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What's bothering me is our men and women are dying over absolutely nothing. This is not a worthy or noble cause. I'm sure they could give a damn about the freedom of the Iraqi people at the cost of their lives. There are many oppressed people throughout the world and we just sit and watch but many of them don't have oil fields
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Bush's agenda is becoming apparent everyday and his cause for war is taking hits even from within his adminstration now.

I will agree with you on this Patroit, if we are going to continue doing this (which is done and we're already over there), we need to grab these MFers by the ball and stomp them sons of bitchs and stop being cute. It's just hard to do that when you're over there for just oil though and using our soldiers as pawns
icon_wink.gif
 

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