| January 29, 2008 Suicide car bomb targeting U.S. patrol kills 1 Iraqi
|
MOSUL, Iraq (AP) - A suicide car bomber targeted a U.S. patrol
Tuesday in Mosul, killing at least one Iraqi and wounding as many
as 15, the military and police said, a day after a roadside bomb
killed five American soldiers in the increasingly lawless northern
city.
At a U.S. base outside Mosul, scores of American troops and an
honor guard stood at attention on the airfield tarmac as five
coffins of their slain comrades were loaded onto a plane for the
journey home.
A cold wind blew as the bleak ceremony began. Five groups of
eight pallbearers each took turns unloading a flag-draped coffin
from the back of five Humvee ambulances, as about 75 members of the
fallen soldiers' unit stood at attention.
At least 100 other soldiers stood erect and silent through the
30-minute ceremony. Even civilian workers at the airport of Forward
Operating Base Marez on the outskirts of Mosul formed an honor line
as the dead soldiers bodies' were loaded into a gray C-130
transport plane.
Soldiers refused permission to photograph the ceremony, saying
the pain of the sudden loss of five comrades was too great, and
that not all the families had been notified.
"President Bush should be out here watching this ramp ceremony
to see what it is really like," said one soldier, who asked not to
be identified.
"The people who created this war need to be thinking about the
families of these 18-year-olds who are dying."
In the attack that killed the five Americans, a roadside bomb
blew apart a Humvee and gunmen opened fire from a mosque. A fierce
gun battle erupted as U.S. and Iraqi soldiers secured the area, the
military said. Iraqi troops entered the mosque but the insurgents
had already fled, according to a statement.
Monday's attack on the American patrol was the deadliest
roadside bombing since Nov. 5, when four soldiers were killed by a
blast that destroyed their Humvee in the northern Tamim province.
It was the deadliest single fatal incident since six soldiers
perished Jan. 9 in a booby-trapped house north of Baghdad - raised
the Pentagon's January death count to at least 36.
The toll so far is 56 percent higher than December's 23 U.S.
military deaths and marks the first monthly increase since August.
But the figures remain well below monthly death tolls of more than
100 last spring.
There was other fighting in the neighborhood. An Iraqi officer,
declining to be identified because he was not authorized to release
the information, said three civilians were wounded and helicopters
bombarded buildings in the district, the scene of frequent attacks
on U.S. and Iraqi forces.
Also Monday, insurgents attacked four policemen heading home
from work south of Mosul, killing two and wounding the other two,
Nineveh provincial police said.
Iraqi reinforcements, along with helicopters, tanks and armored
vehicles, have converged on Mosul for what Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki pledged would be a decisive battle against al-Qaida in
its last major urban stronghold.
In the Tuesday morning suicide attack in Mosul, the bomber
detonated his explosives-laden car, killing one civilian and
wounding 15 in a predominantly Sunni area in eastern Mosul, a
police officer said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he
was not authorized to release the information.
The U.S. military said no American casualties were reported.
Tensions in Mosul, Iraq's third largest city, have spiked after
an explosion last week in an abandoned apartment that authorities
say was used to stash insurgents' weapons and bombs. As many as 60
were killed and 200 injured.
The unrest in Mosul stands in sharp contrast to a significant
decline in bloodshed most elsewhere in Iraq in recent months. The
relative calm has been credited to a U.S.-led security crackdown -
along with a Sunni revolt against al-Qaida in Iraq and a cease-fire
order by radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr for his powerful
Mahdi Army militia.
In Baghdad, a female suicide bomber detonated an explosives belt
hidden under her all-encompassing black robe at a checkpoint,
killing at least two women and wounding five, police said.
The attack occurred just after noon as women were being searched
before being allowed to enter a commercial street in the
predominantly Sunni Amariyah neighborhood in southwest Baghdad,
according to police officials.
Such checkpoints have been erected across Baghdad as U.S. and
Iraqi authorities have walled off entire neighborhoods as part of a
security crackdown that has helped to bring the levels of violence
in the capital down more than 50%. Women are usually
searched separately by female guards because of Islamic
sensitivities.
Elsewhere in Baghdad, police reported at least 16 people wounded
in roadside bombings and a mortar attack.
One roadside bomb struck a police patrol near the University of
Technology in central Baghdad, wounding three officers and four
civilians, including two university students.
Another struck an Iraqi army patrol near the central Tahrir
Square, wounding three soldiers and three civilians.
In eastern Baghdad, a mortar shell slammed into a highway,
wounding three Iraqi police commandos, officials said.
Associated Press staff members in Mosul and Baghdad and the News
Research Center in New York contributed to this report.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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