Chopper Shot Down, 2 GIs Dead
Two U.S. soldiers were killed when their helicopter was shot down and crashed in central Iraq, the military said Friday, as the government announced a massive crackdown against insurgents in Baghdad.
U.S. officials were investigating Thursday's crash involving a two-seater OH-58 Kiowa helicopter that crashed near Buhriz, a former Saddam stronghold about 35 miles north of Baghdad.
The armed U.S. reconnaissance helicopter was flying in support of combat operations in Buhriz. The slain soldiers were with Task Force Liberty, under the command of the Tikrit-based 42nd Infantry Division.
The military said small-arms fire downed the helicopter, while another returned to base safely despite being hit.
In other developments:
Iraqi authorities are preparing to launch the largest show of force in the capital since Saddam's ouster in a bid to curb the rampant insurgency, which has killed more than 650 people since the country's new government was announced April 28.
More than 40,000 Iraqi police and soldiers, backed by American troops and air support, will set up hundreds of checkpoints, raid houses and search vehicles as part of Operation Lightning, Iraqi's interior and defense ministers announced Thursday.
In a reminder of the deadly insurgency, violence claimed at least 15 lives Thursday across Iraq, including a Baghdad car bomb that exploded near a police patrol, killing five people.
Iraqi authorities did not say how long Operation Lightning would last, and it was uncertain if the Iraq security services are capable of mounting a sustained operation.
Iraq has 89,400 security personnel, including commando units, in the Interior Ministry, according to the U.S. military. The figure may include some deserters. Another 75,800 forces are in the Iraqi military, mostly the army.
"We will establish, with God's help, an impenetrable blockade surrounding Baghdad like a bracelet surrounds a wrist," Defense Minister Saadoun al-Duleimi said.
Baghdad will be divided into two sectors, Karkh on the west bank of the Tigris river that separates the city, and Risafa on the east. Karkh will be split into 15 sub-districts and Risafa into seven. Security forces will operate 24 hours a day.
American authorities, meanwhile, are investigating the killing of three Iraqis who died when U.S. soldiers shot at their van in southeastern Baghdad on Thursday, military spokesman Master Sgt. Greg Kaufman said.
Soldiers shot at the vehicle after its driver failed to respond to warnings to stop, Kaufman said. Soldiers had seen several Iraqis flee in the vehicle after acting suspiciously near a car tire on the road, raising suspicions they may have been planting a roadside bomb. No explosive devices were found.
Iraqi police Sgt. Najim Aboud said two of the slain Iraqis were brothers and that their mother was also in the van.