US Troops In Iraq Into 2006?
Top Commander Says So; 11 Arrests Follow Deadly Day For 4 GIs
-
-
Iraqi boy points to soft drink offered by U.S.soldier atop his tank Saturday in Sadr City, the largest Shiite Muslim enclave in Baghdad (AP)
-
An Iraqi gunman stands beside a blood-stained doorway at the site of an overnight battle that left three U.S. military policemen and ten Iraqis dead, in a street in Karbala. (AP)
-
Iraqi police officers look at damaged car after the gun battle in Karbala. (AP)
-
-
Interactive Battle For Iraq The government, the insurgency, key players, background and photos.
-
Interactive American Heroes Profiles of U.S. soldiers who've died in Iraq, a look at the war's toll and pictures of mourning.
-
Interactive Saddam: Dead or Alive? See and hear the Saddam tapes and judge for yourself
Metz made the comments during a visit Friday to U.S. troops in Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit.
On Saturday, U.S. forces and Iraqi police raided an area west of Baghdad and arrested 11 people suspected of links to insurgents, witnesses said, following the bloodiest day of attacks against American forces in a month.
Eight men and three women were taken into custody during the raids, which began before dawn around the flashpoint town of Khaldiyah in the "Sunni Triangle" west of Baghdad, according to local residents. The Sunni Muslim areas north and west of Baghdad have been the scene of most attacks against American troops.
The raids took place one day after U.S. forces suffered four deaths in two separate attacks - the bloodiest daily death toll since Sept. 18, when three soldiers were killed in an ambush in Tikrit. Nearly 20 soldiers were reported wounded in several clashes across the country.
The ongoing bloodshed has raised questions about U.S. stewardship of Iraq, especially since the United States has been unable to find any weapons of mass destruction, whose alleged presence in Saddam Hussein's arsenal was cited as the major justification for the war.
With the latest deaths, the number of U.S. soldiers who have died by hostile fire since President Bush declared an end to major combat on May 1 has climbed to 101. A total of 211 soldiers have been killed in fighting and attacks in Iraq since the war began.
In other developments:
The four American deaths suffered Friday included Lt. Col. Kim S. Orlando, 43, the highest-ranking Army officer killed by hostile fire since the Iraq war started on March 20, said Maj. Steve Stover, an Army spokesman at the Pentagon. Orlando was commander of the 716th Military Police Battalion.
Three of the soldiers, including Orlando, were killed after a joint U.S.-Iraqi patrol confronted gunmen outside the headquarters of a Shiite Muslim cleric in the holy city of Karbala, 50 miles south of Baghdad. Ten 10 Iraqis were also killed, including two Iraqi policemen, U.S. and Iraqi sources said.
Another American soldier was killed and two were wounded by a roadside bomb Friday near Baghdad, and nine U.S. troops were wounded in a roadside bombing in the northern city of Mosul.
The other two killed in the clash in Karbala were Staff Sgt. Joseph P. Bellavia, 28, of Wakefield, Massachusetts.; and Cpl. Sean R. Grilley, 24, of San Bernardino, California, according to a statement by Fort Campbell, Kentucky. The name of the soldier killed in the Baghdad area was not released.
The bloody battle in Karbala took place intermittently over a 12-hour period starting about midnight on Thursday. It underscores the dangers of trying to disarm militias maintained by Shiite clerics who wield considerable influence in Iraq's largest religious group. The U.S.-led coalition has banned private militias and is committed to disarming them.
Pentagon officials said they were investigating how the shooting began. Iraqis insisted the Americans fired first.
Most of the violence directed against Americans has come from the minority Sunni Muslim community, which formed the base of Saddam's regime. The spread of anti-American violence into the Shiite community, which comprises about 60 percent of Iraq's 25 million people, would present a grave challenge to the United States as it strives to restore order and establish a functioning democracy.
İMMIII, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.




