Iraq Soldier Backs U.S. On Deadly Raid
CBS News exclusive: Iraqi Commander Says Building Full Of 'Bad Guys'
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Play CBS Video Video Anger In Iraq Over U.S. Attack A particularly bloody day in Iraq was overshadowed by repercussions from a U.S.-Iraqi assault on what Shiites say is a mosque. Lara Logan has more.
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Video Iraq: 40 Killed In Attack At least 30 people were killed and 30 injured in a suicide bomber attack in northern Iraq. The attack follows a weekend of bloodshed, including a clash at a Baghdad mosque. Alison Harmelin reports.
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Video Hadley On Security In Iraq White House National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley offered the Bush administration's assessment of what's happening in Iraq, despite the public's concern of a potential civil war.
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Bodies of Iraqis are seen lying in a Shiite mosque, in the Sadr City area of Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, March 26, 2006, in this image made available by the Associated Press Television News. (AP)
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The Iraqi commander in charge of a controversial raid speaks to CBS News. (CBS)
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Iraqi firemen cover the bodies of the employees of a trading company after an attack which killed eight of the company's employees Wednesday March 29, 2006 in Baghdad. (AP)
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An Iraqi woman looks through a shattered window of a Baghdad building hit by a rocket attack, March 28, 2006. (AP PhotoHadi Mizban)
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Iraqi police and soldiers guard the site of a suicide bombing at a police station in Iskandariyah, March 28, 2006, the day after the attack. (AP Photo/Ali al-Maamori)
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Interactive Battle For Iraq The government, the insurgency, key players, background and photos.
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Interactive Saddam's Judgment Background on the former Iraqi leader's alleged crimes, his life and capture, plus video and photos.
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Interactive Held Hostage Details on foreign workers and soldiers captured by insurgents in Iraq.
In an exclusive interview with CBS News, the Iraqi commander says accusations that U.S. forces killed innocent civilians in Sunday's raid on a building in Baghdad were "not true."
Accounts of the Baghdad raid varied. Aides to radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr said 18 men were killed in the joint U.S.-Iraqi raid on a mosque. Police said 22 people were killed in the incident at the al-Mustafa mosque. The Americans said Iraqi special forces backed by U.S. troops killed 16 "insurgents" in a raid on a community meeting hall after gunmen opened fire on approaching troops.
The commander insisted his Iraqi Special Operations troops had to fight their way into the target building where they killed gunmen guarding a hostage and found various weapons including rocket launchers and heavy machine guns.
"We know this, the building, is used for to capture the civilians, the civilian people, by bad guys and they need money," the commander tells Logan.
A man who claims he was held hostage in the building, says of his captors, "They beat me, they kicked me and they used an electric drill on me. I thought I was going to die."
At one point during the emotional interview, he broke down and had to be comforted, Logan notes. When asked about the militia men who were holding him, he said he was too terrified to say anything about them.
"If you go to the streets and see all the people who have left their houses and if you go to the morgue and see all the bodies then you will understand," he says.
For security reasons, neither the Iraqi commander or alleged hostage would reveal their names or if they were Sunni or Shiite.
In other developments:
"I've been living a nightmare, worrying if she is hurt or ill," Katie Carroll said, according to a transcript released by the Christian Science Monitor.
"There is no one I hold closer to my heart than my sister, and I am deeply worried wondering how she is being treated," Carroll said.
Also Wednesday, gunmen lined up 14 employees of an electronics trading company in Baghdad on Wednesday and shot them all, killing eight and wounding six, police said.
Politicians working on forming a national unity government postponed talks scheduled for Wednesday, saying they needed more time to consult their political blocs about what the security powers of the prime minister should be.
The motive of the attack at the al-Ibtikar trading company in the upscale Mansour neighborhood was not immediately clear. According to survivors' accounts to police, the assailants first asked for the company's manager, who was not there, before shooting.
The survivors said the assailants, some of whom wore police uniforms, identified themselves as intelligence agents from the Interior Ministry.
Hundreds of Iraqis have been killed in sectarian violence and by death squads operating inside the Shiite-dominated ministry since the Feb. 22 bombing of an important Shiite shrine in Samarra set off a wave of revenge attacks. Usually, the victims are killed in secret, their bodies discovered hours or days later.
The assault Wednesday was the second to target a trading company in Mansour this week. On Monday, gunmen wearing military uniforms and masks kidnapped 16 employees from the headquarters of the Saeed Import and Export Co. Police said the assailants went through papers and computer files before leaving with their captives.
In Wednesday's attack, the gunmen arrived at the al-Ibtikar offices in five black BMWs about 8:15 a.m., police Lt. Maitham Abdul-Razzaq said. They burned parts of the facility, but didn't appear to have taken any money, he said. The dead included five men and three women.
"All these operations have one aim: to freeze life in Iraq and sabotage the democratic process. They want to take us back to the dictatorship," said Maj. Gen. Ahmed al-Khafaji, a deputy interior minister. He blamed al Qaeda and said, "We will work day and night to arrest them.
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Gen. Ray Odierno, head of multinational forces in Iraq, on progress there and plans for Afghanistan.




