A U.S. soldier from the 1st Armored Division stands guard at the site where a roadside bomb was detonated as a U.S. convoy passes by in Baghdad, Iraq, July 21, 2003. A U.S. soldier and his Iraqi interpreter were killed and three soldiers were injured when a roadside bomb was detonated as their convoy passed.
A U.S. soldier from the 1st Armored Division directs cleanup operations of the wreckage of U.S. Army Humvees in Baghdad, Iraq, July 21, 2003. A U.S. soldier and his Iraqi interpreter were killed and three soldiers were injured when a roadside bomb was detonated as their convoy passed.
A U.S. soldier from the 1st Armored Division stands guard as the wreckage of a U.S. Humvee is carried away in Baghdad, Iraq, July 21, 2003. A U.S. soldier and his Iraqi interpreter were killed and three soldiers were injured when a roadside bomb was detonated as their convoy passed.
Men seeking to get recruited into the new Iraqi Army stand in line as a U.S. Army soldier stands guard in Baghdad, Iraq, July 21, 2003. U.S. Gen. John Abizaid declared he planned to establish a nearly 7,000-strong force of Iraqis to patrol the country with U.S. soldiers. They will be trained by conventional U.S. forces, a job usually handled by American special operations forces.
Men belonging to the old Iraqi army stand in line to get paid alongside a sign pointing toward the new Iraqi Army recruitment center in Baghdad, Iraq, July 21, 2003.
U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees Ruud Lubbers, right, tours a Palestinian refugee camp in Baghdad, Iraq, with an unidentified camp official, July 20, 2003. Palestinians who thought they had found a haven in Saddam Hussein's Iraq have become refugees yet again since the end of the U.S.-led war. Lubbers spoke of the urgency of moving the Palestinians out of the searing heat into proper, cooler homes.
An unidentified Palestinian refugee child looks out from inside a tent at a refugee camp set up by the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees in Baghdad, Iraq, July 20, 2003.
U.S. Army specialist Ramon Herrera from the Bronx, N.Y., of the 1st Armored Division, plays with children at an amusement park in Baghdad, Iraq, July 19, 2003. The amusement park was reopened to the public under U.S. Army security.
Angry Shiite Muslims shout anti-American slogans at a protest outside the American headquarters in Baghdad, Iraq, July 19, 2003. The crowd was protesting reports that U.S. troops surrounded the home of a prominent cleric, Muqtada al-Sadr, in the southern holy city of Najaf.
Smoke is seen from a building belonging to a cousin of former President Saddam Hussein, in Mosul, Iraq, July 22, 2003, in this image made from television. U.S. military officials later confirmed that two of Saddam's sons, Odai and Qusai, were amongst four Iraqis killed when U.S. troops raided the house.
U.S. soldiers inspect a building belonging to a cousin of former President Saddam Hussein, in Mosul, Iraq, Tuesday July 22, 2003, in this image made from television. Saddam's sons Odai and Qusai were amongst four Iraqis killed when U.S. troops raided the house.
This is an undated photo of former Iraqi ruler Saddam Hussein with his sons, Odai, left, and Qusai. U.S. soldiers battled Iraqi gunmen inside a suspected hideout of high-ranking members of Saddam Hussein's regime in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, Iraq, Tuesday, July 22, 2003, killing four people.
Iraqi Shiite Muslims pray at the main Mosque Friday, July 25, 2003, in the holy Shiite city of Kufa, south of Baghdad, Iraq. Sheik Muqtada al-Sadr told some 50,000 worshippers gathered at the main mosque that after his "Imam Army" pushes the Americans out of Najaf and other Iraqi cities, the men will take charge of defending those cities.
U.S. troops guard outside of a children's hospital Saturday, July 26, 2003, in the city of Baquba, 43 miles north of Baghdad, Iraq. Earlier in the day, three U.S. troops were killed and four injured after a grenade was tossed by a passing car into the front square of the hospital.
U.S. troops guard a street while a car is towed away with bullet holes in its winshield resulting in numerous deaths after the driver went through the road block Sunday, July 27, 2003, in Baghdad, Iraq. Sunday afternoon, U.S. forces raided the home of Prince Rabiah Muhammed al-Habib in the upscale al-Mansour neighborhood of west Baghdad.
U.S. troops block off a street where special forces finished a search of Iraqi Prince Rabiah Muhammed al-Habib's home in the upscale al-Mansour neighborhood of west Baghdad, Sunday, July 27, 2003. U.S. forces, apparently searching for Saddam, raided the home of the prince, blocked the streets around the house, shot up three cars and killed an undetermined number of people, witnesses said.
Chairman of the U.S. Joint Chief of Staff Gen. Richard Myers, second right, talks to fellow soldiers who were part of a military welcoming party on his arrival in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday July 27, 2003. Myers spoke with reporters in Baghdad and said Saddam was moving around, trying to avoid capture and unable to direct the attacks against U.S. forces.
A bullet hole is left in the window of the home of Iraqi Prince Rabiah Muhammed al-Habib after a raid by U.S. forces Sunday, July 27, 2003.One hospital reported at least five Iraqis killed were killed in the raid. The prince, one of Iraq's most influential tribal leaders, was not there but told the AP he believed the Americans were searching for Saddam.
A friend of Iraqi Prince Rabiah Muhammed al-Habib is seen through broken glass of the home after a raid Sunday, July 27, 2003, in Baghdad, Iraq. Sunday afternoon, U.S. forces raided the home of Prince Rabiah Muhammed al-Habib in the upscale al-Mansour neighborhood of west Baghdad.
Press photographers take the pictures of Chairman of the U.S. Joint Chief of Staff Gen. Richard Myers' arrival in a Black Hawk helicopter, not in picture, as an escorting Apache helicopter lands, in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday July 27, 2003. Myers said that Saddam was moving around trying to avoid capture.