Daring Daylight Raid In Iraq
Guerrillas overwhelmed an Iraqi police station west of Baghdad on Saturday, meeting little resistance as they went room to room shooting police in a bold, well-organized assault that killed 23 people and freed dozens of prisoners, officials said.
The fierce daylight attack in Fallujah raised questions whether Iraqi police and defense forces are ready to battle insurgents as the U.S. military pulls back from the fight in advance of the November U.S. presidential election.
Police in the Fallujah station complained they had only small arms - nothing larger than an automatic rifle in the face of dozens of fighters armed with heavy machine guns, hand grenades and rocket-propelled grenades. No U.S. forces took part in the battle.
Before the attack, the gunmen set up checkpoints and blocked the road leading to the police station, but residents did not notify police, Deputy Interior Minister Ahmed Kadhum Ibrahim said in Baghdad. Nearby storeowners were warned not to open Saturday morning, one shopkeeper in Fallujah said.
The battle left 17 policemen, two civilians and four attackers dead. At least 37 people were wounded, nearly all police. Two wounded attackers were captured, but the rest escaped.
In other developments:
One policeman wounded in the Fallujah assault, Qais Jameel, said he heard the attackers speaking a foreign language that he speculated was Farsi. Rumors were circulating that a Shiite Muslim militia with ties to Iran, the Badr Brigade, was behind the attack on this Sunni town.
The United States wants the police, civil defense forces and the military to take the front line against the persistent guerrilla war when U.S. administrators hand power over to a new Iraqi government on June 30.
U.S. troops will take a lower profile, pulling out of most towns. But their continued presence in the country would likely mean the insurgency, led by Saddam Hussein loyalists and foreign Islamic fighters, also will continue its campaign of violence.
Already, guerrillas have launched a stepped-up series of bloody attacks against the still rebuilding Iraqi security forces. Earlier this week, back-to-back suicide bombings killed 100 Iraqis, most of them volunteers looking to join the police or military in Baghdad and a town just to the south.
About 300 Iraqi security forces have been killed since they were re-established in May, according to the military.
In Saturday's attack, about 25 gunmen, some masked and shouting the Islamic slogan "There is no god but Allah," stormed the police station, witnesses said. At the same time, two dozen more attackers pinned down forces at a nearby compound of the Iraqi Civil Defense Corps with a barrage of RPGs and gunfire to keep them from coming to the aid of police, according to the witnesses.
At the police station, attackers broke into the jail, gunned down the guards and shot open the cell doors while others threw grenades in other rooms, said police Lt. Col. Jalal Sabri. Eighty-seven prisoners escaped.
ICDC officer, Daeed Hamed said the assault could have been launched to free two Kuwaitis and a Lebanese captured earlier this week on suspicion of being insurgent fighters. Hamed was unsure if the three foreigners were freed.
No civil defense members were killed - a sign of how much better protected their compound was, with concrete walls and sandbag blast barriers, than the police station.
The same compound came under attack only two days earlier by gunmen who opened fire from rooftops with RPGs and automatic weapons as Gen. John Abizaid, the top U.S. commander in the Middle East, was visiting. Abizaid was unharmed in the attack.
Police said two of the slain gunmen had Lebanese identification papers.
"I suspect (the attackers) were Arabs or Syrians or belonged to al-Qaida. They want to create instability and chaos," Sabri said.
With rumors of Iranian or Iraqi Shiite involvement spreading, some Fallujah men gathered outside the hospital and beat up two men, accusing them of belonging to the Badr Brigade, witnesses said.
In Baghdad, Ibrahim, the deputy interior minister, said recent attacks are aimed at tearing apart Iraqi unity. "I warn the Iraqi people against a civil war," he said, adding: "They have to unite and leave behind the personal and other interests to preserve Iraq."
Meanwhile, a prominent Kurdish leader said Saturday he expects the Iraqi Governing Council to take sovereign power June 30 if the dispute between the United States and the Shiite Muslim clergy over the timing of elections cannot be resolved.
Jalal Talabani, a member of the Governing Council, made the comment after meeting here with Grand Ayatollah Ali ali-Husseini al-Sistani, the prominent Shiite cleric whose demand for early elections has thrown the U.S. blueprint for transferring power into doubt.
Talabani told reporters that he expects the power transfer to take place on schedule and "we think that elections are the best way to express the opinions of the Iraqi people."
He did not specify when he thought those elections should take place. The United States wants to hand over power to a government chosen by a legislature selected in 18 regional caucuses.
Al-Sistani wants the legislature to be elected, something the Americans insist cannot be done by June 30. U.N. envoy Lakhdar Brahimi spent nearly a week here preparing recommendations for the U.N. leadership on the best way to proceed.