BAGHDAD, Iraq, Nov. 1, 2005

Bombs Kill 7 GIs, 20 Civilians

Attacks Cap Bloodiest Month For American Troops Since January

  • Play CBS Video Video Basra Car Bomb Attack Kills 20

    CBS News RAW: As people were taking part in Ramadan festivities in Basra, Iraq, a car bomb exploded in an area filled with shops and restaurants. At least 20 people died and 40 were wounded.

  • Video Deadly Month For Troops

    As Kimberly Dozier reports, American forces are suffering the worst month in terms of casualties since last January. In the latest attack, six soldiers were killed in two separate roadside bombings.

  • Video Iraqis Are Weary Of Violence

    As Iraq endured another day of deadly violence in and around Baghdad, the psychological toll is building on Iraqis who are sick of the fighting and bloodshed. Kimberly Dozier reports.

    • Iraqi firefighters work at the site of the blast after a car bomb exploded in Basra, Iraq, Monday, Oct. 31, 2005, killing at least 20 people and injuring about 40, a police official said.

      Iraqi firefighters work at the site of the blast after a car bomb exploded in Basra, Iraq, Monday, Oct. 31, 2005, killing at least 20 people and injuring about 40, a police official said.  (AP)

    • Scene after mortar attack in the Baladiyat district of Baghdad, Monday, Oct. 31, 2005 (video still).

      Scene after mortar attack in the Baladiyat district of Baghdad, Monday, Oct. 31, 2005 (video still).  (AP /APTN)

    • Iraqi children look at a destroyed vehicle after a car bomb exploded in the area between Kazimiyah and Shulla neighborhoods, west of Baghdad, Monday, Oct. 31, 2005.

      Iraqi children look at a destroyed vehicle after a car bomb exploded in the area between Kazimiyah and Shulla neighborhoods, west of Baghdad, Monday, Oct. 31, 2005.  (AP)

    • People gather at the site of the explosion in the Shiite village of Huweder, about 45 miles northeast of Baghdad, Sunday, Oct. 30, where a bomb hidden in a truck loaded with dates exploded Saturday evening, killing 30 people.

      People gather at the site of the explosion in the Shiite village of Huweder, about 45 miles northeast of Baghdad, Sunday, Oct. 30, where a bomb hidden in a truck loaded with dates exploded Saturday evening, killing 30 people.  (AP)

    • A U.S. soldier gestures from a humvee as he patrols a street in Baghdad Saturday, Oct. 29.

      A U.S. soldier gestures from a humvee as he patrols a street in Baghdad Saturday, Oct. 29.  (AP)

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  • 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 Attacks Map

    Details on the insurgency and terrorism that has continued to take lives since the fall of Saddam.

  • Interactive Iraq Votes

    Election results, facts on candidates and the polling, photos and more.

(CBS/AP) 
The insurgents continually search for new and more effective ways to use IEDs, di Rita said, while U.S. forces look for new ways to counter the threat.

"We're getting more intelligence that's allowing us to stop more of these things, find more of them. So we're learning from them and the enemy is learning from us, and it's going to be that way for as long as there is an insurgency," Di Rita said.

Monday's deadliest attack against U.S. service members came in an area known as the "triangle of death." Four soldiers from the U.S. Army's Task Force Baghdad died when their patrol struck a roadside bomb in Youssifiyah, 12 miles south of Baghdad.

Two other soldiers from the Army's 29th Brigade Combat Team were also killed in a bombing Monday near Balad, 50 miles north of the capital. The U.S. military also reported that a Marine died the day before in a roadside bombing near Amiriyah, an insurgent hotspot 25 miles west of Baghdad.

The U.S. military death toll for October is now at least 92, the highest monthly total since January, when 106 American service members died — more than 30 of them in a helicopter crash that was ruled an accident. Only during two other months since the war began has the U.S. military seen a higher toll: in November 2004, when 137 Americans died, and in April 2004, when 135 died.

The latest deaths brought to 2,025 the number of U.S. service members who have died since the Iraq war began in March 2003. The number includes five military civilians.

The ongoing violence has killed a far greater number of Iraqis.

"They're obviously quite capable of killing large numbers of noncombatants indiscriminately, and we're seeing a lot of that, too," Di Rita said.

Public safety has deteriorated in recent months in Basra largely because of feuding among rival Shiite extremist groups that have infiltrated the police and security services. The city had previously been much more peaceful than Baghdad or cities within the volatile central, northern and western areas of the country where the Sunni Arab-led insurgency rages.

Earlier Monday near the Syrian border, Marines backed by jets attacked insurgent targets in a cluster of towns and villages near the Syrian border. The raid was part of an ongoing operation in an area believed heavily infiltrated by al Qaeda in Iraq and foreign fighters.

A Marine statement said U.S. aircraft fired precision weapons, destroying two safe houses believed used by al Qaeda figures. The statement made no mention of casualties, but Associated Press Television News video from the scene showed residents wailing over the bodies of about six people, including at least three children.

At the local hospital, Dr. Ahmed al-Ani claimed 40 Iraqis, including 12 children, were killed in the attack. But the claim could not be independently verified, and figures from the area have sometimes proven exaggerated.

The footage from the scene showed Iraqi men digging through the rubble of several destroyed concrete buildings with a pitchfork or their hands. In the building of a nearby home, women wept over about half a dozen blanket-covered bodies lined up on a floor. Some of the blankets were opened for the camera showing a man and three children.

"At least 20 innocent people were killed by the U.S. warplanes. Why are the Americans killing families? Where are the insurgents?" one middle-aged man told APTN. "We don't see democracy. We just see destruction." He didn't give his name.


©MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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