February 11, 2009 4:46 PM

14 U.S. Soldiers Killed In Iraq In 3 Days

(CBS/AP)  The U.S. military announced Sunday that 14 American soldiers were killed over the past three days, including four in a single roadside bombing and another who was struck by a suicide bomber while on a foot patrol.

The blast that killed the four U.S. soldiers occurred Sunday as the troops were conducting a cordon and search operation northwest of Baghdad, according to a statement. Two other soldiers were killed and five were wounded along with an Iraqi interpreter in two separate roadside bombings on Sunday, the military said.

In the boldest attack, a U.S. soldier was killed Friday after the patrol approached two suspicious men for questioning near a mosque southwest of Baghdad, and one of the suspects blew himself up. Military spokesman Maj. Webster Wright said U.S. troops also fired at the second suspect after he began acting aggressively, detonating his suicide vest.

"Our initial analysis is that these guys were al Qaeda and were planning to launch attacks into Baghdad," Wright said in an e-mailed statement.

Seven other soldiers were killed in a series of attacks across Iraq on Saturday.

Combined with the previously announced death of a U.S. soldier in central Baghdad on Friday, it was a deadly start for June, which comes after the third-deadliest month since the war started four years ago.

A car bomb also exploded outside a U.S. base near the volatile city of Baqouba, leaving a number of troops gasping for air and suffering from eye irritations, the military said. It did not confirm a report in the Los Angeles Times that the car was carrying chlorine canisters and said the soldiers who were sickened had been treated and returned to duty.

The attacks came days after the Pentagon announced the completion of the troop buildup ordered by U.S. President Bush in January, raising the total number of troops in Iraq to about 150,000. That number may still climb as more support troops move in.

The Bush administration has warned that the buildup will result in more U.S. casualties as more American soldiers come into contact with enemy forces and concentrate on the streets of Baghdad and remote outposts. May was the third bloodiest month since the war began in March 2003, with 127 troops deaths reported.

In Other Developments:

  • Kurdish leaders urged Turkey not to stage a military incursion into northern Iraq as it builds up its border forces amid debate about whether to attack separatist Kurdish rebels that stage raids in southeast Turkey after crossing over from hideouts in Iraq.

  • American helicopter gunships attacked targets in Mahdi Army-dominated Shiite east Baghdad late Saturday, killing four suspected militants and destroying 10 rockets, the U.S. military reported, as the radical Shiite militia faced growing pressure to bow to central government authority.

    Sectarian violence persisted against Iraqis as well, with a car parked near a police station by an open-air market exploding shortly after noon in the predominantly Shiite enclave of Balad Ruz, in the volatile Diyala province of northeast of Baghdad, killing at least 10 people.

    Abu Hussein, a 35-year-old elementary school teacher, said the force of the explosion knocked a bag of vegetables out of his hands.

    He was not injured so helped to evacuate those who were, flooding the local hospital because they were afraid to take them to facilities in nearby Baqouba, which has become an insurgent stronghold.

    "I went back and forth many times to the site of the explosion to transfer the wounded with my private car," he said. "I saw men and women rushing to the scene searching for their relatives and loved ones. One was crying 'my brother,' one was saying 'my father' and a woman was crying 'my husband.' It was chaos."

    Gunmen at a fake checkpoint in Baqouba, 60 kilometers (35 miles) north of Baghdad, also killed two passengers and wounded eight others when they opened fire on three minibuses that sought to flee from the highway trap.

    At least 73 other Iraqis were killed or found dead nationwide, including 31 bullet-riddled bodies of men who were apparent victims of death squads usually believed to be run by Shiite militias.

    Meanwhile, Mahdi Army militiamen loyal to radical cleric Muqtada al-Sadr battled with Iraqi troops and local police searching for two militia leaders in the southern city of Diwaniyah as U.S. jets roared overhead. At least three people were killed and 24 wounded, official Iraqi sources reported.

    The clashes in Diwaniyah erupted Saturday evening after Iraqi soldiers and police cordoned off a market in search of two senior Mahdi Army figures wanted by U.S.-led coalition forces in connection with sectarian killings.

    Maj. Gen. Othman Ali, commander of the Iraq army's 8th Division, said his forces captured one of the men, but he escaped when fellow militiamen came to his aid.

    The fighting on the east side of the city, 130 kilometers (80 miles) south of Baghdad, resumed about 9 a.m. Sunday with the support of U.S. jet fighters and helicopter gunships skimming over Diwaniyah's rooftops, police said.

    Ali said his forces raided two locations in "fierce" fighting that lasted three hours. They didn't find their target suspects, but did find weapons caches at the site, he said.

    Police and medical sources said 20 wounded Iraqis, including two policemen, were brought to the local hospital from Sunday morning's fighting. The clashes erupted anew around 1:30 p.m, and one soldier and two other people were killed, and three civilians wounded, an army officer said on condition of anonymity, since he was not authorized to speak with the media. The U.S. military had no immediate report on the action.
  • © 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
    Add a Comment See all 133 Comments
    by bearalumni June 6, 2007 1:48 PM EDT
    'm an advisor in one of the Iraqi units just south of Baghdad. I don't see the violence quelling due to increased security. When we increased security the insurgents just adjust their tactics. The fight we are in is many satellite fights with different motives. It is like tracking down five different murderers all at once.
    The American battalion next to us has been averaging one U.S. soldier death every two weeks. I hope it is all worth it. Nobody seems to get along here, just a major domestic squabble. No one wins
    Reply to this comment
    by bearalumni June 6, 2007 1:47 PM EDT
    'm an advisor in one of the Iraqi units just south of Baghdad. I don't see the violence quelling due to increased security. When we increased security the insurgents just adjust their tactics. The fight we are in is many satellite fights with different motives. It is like tracking down five different murderers all at once.
    The American battalion next to us has been averaging one U.S. soldier death every two weeks. I hope it is all worth it. Nobody seems to get along here, just a major domestic squabble. No one wins
    Reply to this comment
    by jn122736 June 4, 2007 11:56 AM EDT
    namesnames;
    Did it ever occur to you that daily automobile traffic on our streets and highways is a necessary and accepted part of our lives, while the Iraq fiasco is just the opposite?
    Reply to this comment
    by bluestardad June 4, 2007 11:50 AM EDT
    MULTIPLE INDENPENDENT RESEARCH FACTS ARE THE ENEMY OF BUSH AND HIS CHICKEN HAWK NEOCONS THAT SELL OUT AMERICAN SOLDIERS FOR THE POLICY OF ISRAEL! WHO HIDE BEHIND PROBLEMS THEY HAD IN EUROPE 70 YEARS AGO!

    THERE ARE MILLIONS OF OTHER GOOD PEOPLE IN THE MIDDLE EAST THAT DESERVE A VOICE JUST NOT AMERICAN LIVES!

    "Gen. William Odom discusses the %u201Cworst strategic disaster in American history,%u201D the war in Iraq: the view of most generals that the war is wrong, the failure of the politicians to see the consequences of their actions, the centrality of the neoconservatives and the Israel lobby in pushing for the Iraq invasion, the %u201Csurge,%u201D

    www.antiwar.com/bl
    og/2007/05/10/gen-william-odom

    EVEN AS AMERICAN MILITARY AID LANDS IN LEBANON, President Bush is funding Al Qaeda in Lebanon with funds from Iraq!

    http://www.newyorker.com/
    fact/content/articles/070305fa_fact_hers
    h

    READ AIPAC BRAG ABOUT THEIR INFLUENCE
    ON AMERICAN POLITICIANS!

    http://www.aipac.org/for
    ms/join_aipacClubs.htm
    Reply to this comment
    by itchyb-2009 June 4, 2007 10:52 AM EDT
    "...while every tragedy on the battlefield is amplified because the media can sell more ad space."

    No, every tragedy is not amplified, but reported. The "tragedy" is not to sell more ad space, which is convoluted logic, but to inform the American people and the world of the "progress" in Iraq, compliments of Bush, Cheney & Company. These are not accidents, they are deaths by design. Your apples and oranges comparison is absurd.
    Reply to this comment
    by namesnames June 4, 2007 10:23 AM EDT
    "Out of 140,000 troops in Iraq, 14 dies in the past three days. Mathematically, that's like 30,000 people dying on the highways of America in three days.

    When our highways get that dangerous, I'll walk.

    That is only one of the many ways that analogy stinks to high heaven."
    Posted by Iceman_1960 at 12:06 AM : Jun 04, 2007

    So you are saying the individual lives are not as important as the ratio? The point I was trying to make is that highway fatalities have become acceptable and are not "news worthy", while every tragedy on the battlefield is amplified because the media can sell more ad space.
    Reply to this comment
    by bigsk8fan June 4, 2007 9:56 AM EDT
    Another baker's dozen towards GWB's goal to kill 50,000 American soldiers, just like Vietnam and Korea. Not until then, will the Republicans be happy with their "steadfastness".
    Reply to this comment
    by ahrats June 4, 2007 9:54 AM EDT
    The only reason I can see that we are still in Iraq is so Bush/Cheney can make more money for their suporters and the extreme right of their party. An old military saying "nothing is going to happen on my watch" but 9/11 happened on their watch and they are blaming everyone but themselves. Saddam needed to go but to invade the country was the only way? Now our solders are cannon fodder for every insugent in Iraq. How did Saddam keep control, by arresting anyone who opposed him, essentially marshal law. The U.S. government has tried to run this war on a buget and has never put the proper effort into making things better over there. Close the borders to keep insugents out. Take a census throughout the country and arrest or kick-out anyone who is not a citizen of Iraq. To do this there is not enough military force between the U.S. and Iraq combined.
    The sectarian violenece will continue whether we are there or not. Walking around with guns will not change peoples minds and hearts. Make the Iraqies lives better( food, water, electricity and safer streets) and maybe they will start change for themselves. They may realize that they believe in the same god and it does not matter which proffet showed them the way.
    Reply to this comment
    by bluestardad June 4, 2007 9:42 AM EDT
    AMERICA IS STILL THE LAND OF THE FREE HOME OF THE BRAVE!

    AMERICA IS NOT THE UNITED STATES OF ISRAEL! THIS MIDDLE EAST MESS IS NOT IN AMERICAS INTEREST!


    "Gen. William Odom discusses the %u201Cworst strategic disaster in American history,%u201D the war in Iraq: the view of most generals that the war is wrong, the failure of the politicians to see the consequences of their actions, the centrality of the neoconservatives and the Israel lobby in pushing for the Iraq invasion, the %u201Csurge,%u201D

    www.antiwar.com/bl
    og/2007/05/10/gen-william-odom


    Iraq war supporters are under the influence of AIPAC. AN ISRAELI POLITICAL LOBBY GROUP!

    HERE ARE SOME OF AIPAC DEMOCRATIC SUPPORTERS! CONTACT THEM!

    Levin, Carl- (D - MI)
    269 RUSSELL SENATE OFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON DC 20510
    (202) 224-6221
    Web Form: levin.senate.gov/contact/index.cfm

    Steny Hoyer
    http://hoyer.house.gov/contact/



    READ AIPAC BRAG ABOUT THEIR INFLUENCE
    ON AMERICAN POLITICIANS!

    http://www.aipac.org/for
    ms/join_aipacClubs.htm

    REMEMBER THE AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE IS RUN BY PRO ISRAELI GROUP! THEY ARE THE ONES WHO CAME UP WITH THIS SURGE IDEA!

    EVEN AS AMERICAN MILITARY AID LANDS IN LEBANON, President Bush is funding Al Qaeda in Lebanon with funds from Iraq! http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/ar
    ticles/070305fa_fact_hersh



    IRAQIS STILL DONT HAVE METERS ON THEIR OIL PROCESS! SO NO ONE CAN TRACK THE AMOUNT OF OIL PRODUCED!
    Reply to this comment
    by mcvet June 4, 2007 8:45 AM EDT
    14 MORE families in the United States are now suffering the loss of someone very close. Why? Would one of you Southern Nazi's please answer me that and don't pretend to be American doing it. This was NOT necessary, this WAR was not necessary and EVERYONE knows it so why? Why do you continue to support your "Party" and your Fuhrer over your Country? Haven't you poor fools had enough of that after all? At long last haven't you had enough of it? Sieg Heil Y'all.
    Reply to this comment
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