U.S. Soldier Killed In Northern Iraq
20 Wounded In Suicide Car Bomb Attack Targeting U.S. Base
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(CBS/AP)
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Photo Essay Week In Iraq Photos A daily diary with scenes of the latest attacks and snapshots from the effort to rebuild a nation.
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Interactive Iraq: 5 Years At War Five years after the U.S.-led invasion, the war wears on.
Eighteen of the wounded were American soldiers and two were Iraqi contractors working at the base in Tamim province, according to a brief statement from the military.
Tamim has a mixed population of Arabs, Kurds and Turkomen, with the oil-rich city of Kirkuk as its capital. Three American soldiers were killed last Wednesday by gunfire in Tamim.
Brig. Gen. Sarhat Qadir, a senior officer in the Kirkuk police department, said the bomber targeted a U.S. patrol base in a mostly Sunni Arab residential area in Rashad, about 25 miles southwest of Kirkuk.
The suicide attacker rammed his vehicle into blast walls outside the gates of the small U.S. base, located in a residential neighborhood of Sunni Arabs, Qadir said. He added that the explosives were concealed under tanned animal hides.
Earlier, the U.S. military issued a statement saying an American soldier died late Saturday when his vehicle was struck by a roadside bomb in eastern Baghdad.
At least 4,094 members of the U.S. military have died in the Iraq war since it began in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.
In Baghdad, four police recruits were killed in a blast at the National Police headquarters, authorities said.
Another 22 people were wounded near the building's gate where recruits were gathering, they said. Police gave conflicting reports about whether the attack used mortars or a roadside bomb.
A mortar shell landed just outside Baghdad's Green Zone on Sunday, killing three civilians and wounding seven others, police said. The mortar was apparently targeting the Defense Ministry, which is inside the U.S.-guarded diplomatic zone, but fell short, they said.
Mortar and rocket attacks were once a daily occurrence in the Green Zone in central Baghdad, but have fallen off in recent weeks.
Another civilian was killed by a roadside bomb Sunday in northern Baghdad, police said. Five others were wounded in the attack, which took place about 100 yards (meters) from the Turkish Embassy. The target was believed to be a passing police patrol and not the embassy building.
Meanwhile, six shepherds were killed execution-style before dawn Sunday by suspected militants linked to al Qaeda masquerading as fellow herders east of Baghdad, police said.
The killings took place in a sprawling desert area where such militants are believed to have sought refuge after U.S.-Iraqi offensives against them in western Anbar province and in Baghdad, police said.
In Basra, Shiite extremists fired 10 rockets Sunday morning at the British base at the city's airport in the first attack there in nearly a month. No casualties were reported, but the attack raised concern that Shiite militias were trying to regroup after U.S. and British-backed Iraqi forces gained control of the city from extremists.
The U.S. command also announced that American soldiers in Baghdad captured an Iraqi arms dealer and "assassination squad" leader responsible for trafficking Shiite extremists in and out of neighboring Iran for training.
The arrest followed long-standing U.S. allegations that Iran arms, trains and funds Shiite Muslim militiamen inside Iraq - charges that Tehran denies. The arrest also coincided with a two-day visit to Iran by Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, his second such trip in a year.
The Iraqi prime minister, himself a Shiite, is struggling to keep Washington happy while reassuring Iran, the largest Shiite nation, that a proposed U.S.-Iraqi security agreement would not make his country an American launching pad for attacks on Iran.
U.S. arrests against Shiite militiamen with alleged ties to Iran was likely to be on the agenda for al-Maliki's talks with Iranian officials.
U.S. soldiers, acting on intelligence from other Shiite militiamen already in custody, captured the Basra-based "special groups" leader late Saturday at a hideout in eastern Baghdad, according to a military statement.
"The wanted man is alleged to be a commander of an assassination squad in Basra, an arms dealer with connections to Iran and a document counterfeiter," the statement said.
He also arranges transportation of criminals into Iran for training, and then back into Iraq, it said. One of the leader's aides was also arrested without incident.
The U.S. military uses the term "special groups" to describe Shiite fighters defying a cease-fire order from anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, whose militiamen fought American and Iraqi forces for seven weeks until a May truce.
The military said in another statement that it captured six more suspected Sunni extremists Sunday in the northern city of Mosul, including an alleged al Qaeda in Iraq leader and another man who is a wiring expert in charge of a bombing cell there.
Two women were injured when American soldiers "breached the door of a target building" during the arrest raid, the statement said. Both were treated at the scene and then transported to an Iraqi hospital, it said.
Mosul is believed to be one of the last urban strongholds of al Qaeda in Iraq, and U.S. and Iraqi forces have battled with militants there in recent months.
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- Another American soldier dies for Doofus and Butthead. Was it worth it to all you bushies out there?
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- Al Qaeda-Hussein Link Is Dismissed
By Walter Pincus and Dana Milbank
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, June 17, 2004; Page A01
The Sept. 11 commission reported yesterday that it has found no "collaborative relationship" between Iraq and al Qaeda, challenging one of the Bush administration''s main justifications for the war in Iraq. - Reply to this comment
- Senate report: No Saddam, al-Qaida link
Long-awaited analysis also finds that anti-Saddam group misled U.S.
updated 3:31 p.m. ET, Fri., Sept. 8, 2006
(AP) WASHINGTON - There%u2019s no evidence Saddam Hussein had ties with al-Qaida, according to a Senate report issued Friday on prewar intelligence that Democrats say undercuts President Bush%u2019s justification for invading Iraq. - Reply to this comment
- U.S. Military Concludes No Saddam Link to Al Qaeda
March 11, 2008 9:49 AM
ABC News'' Jonathan Karl Reports: ABC News has obtained a comprehensive military study of Saddam Hussein''s links to terrorism. The study, which is due to be released Wednesday, is based on the analysis of some 600,000 official Iraqi documents seized by US forces after the invasion. It is also based on thousands of hours of interrogations of former top officials in Saddam''s government who are now in U.S. custody. - Reply to this comment
- No proof links Iraq, al-Qaida, Powell says
Chief weapons inspector reportedly about to quit
NBC, MSNBC and news services
updated 8:11 p.m. ET, Thurs., Jan. 8, 2004
WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Colin Powell reversed a year of administration policy, acknowledging Thursday that he had seen no %u201Csmoking gun [or] concrete evidence%u201D of ties between former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein and al-Qaida - Reply to this comment
- Rumsfeld sees no link between Saddam Hussein, 9/11
WASHINGTON (AP) %u2014 Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said Tuesday he had no reason to believe that Iraq''s Saddam Hussein had a hand in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States. - Reply to this comment
- Floyd that''s not what your leaders Osama and Al Zawahri state.
- Reply to this comment
- Bush: No Saddam Links To 9/11
WASHINGTON, Sept. 17, 2003
(AP) President Bush said Wednesday there was no evidence that Saddam Hussein was involved in the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 %u2014 disputing an idea held by many Americans. - Reply to this comment
- floyd, what you miss and others purposley ignore is there would be no war anywhere if it were not for terrorist Muslim brothers.
Posted by notblue at 10:35 AM : Jun 09, 2008
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What you refuse to acknowledge is that Iraq had nothing to do with terrorism. Nonexistent WMD, remember? No ties to Al Qaeda, rememeber? Bush admitted it himself.
Jesus doesn''t like your lying buddy. - Reply to this comment
- floyd, what you miss and others purposley ignore is there would be no war anywhere if it were not for terrorist Muslim brothers.
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