U.S. Military: Two Jets Missing
The U.S. military has lost contact with two jets flying in support of coalition operations in Iraq, military officials said.
The status of the two U.S. Marine F/A-18 Hornet aircraft and their crew is not known, the military said in a statement. Contact was lost at 10:10 p.m. Monday, a statement said. There were no initial indications of hostile fire in the area at the time.
Search efforts for the jets are underway.
Baghdad was dotted by bombings Monday as Iraq's incoming prime minister struggled to find a Sunni Arab to run the key Defense Ministry in time to join Iraq's first democratically elected government when it takes office the following day. A torrent of bloodshed — at least 140 killed in five days — followed the approval of a Cabinet that mostly shut out members of the disaffected Sunni minority.
At least 23 Iraqis were killed Monday, including eight soldiers cut down by a suicide attacker who detonated a truck packed with explosives at a checkpoint south of the capital, and six civilians caught in a car bombing that set fire to a Baghdad apartment building. A British soldier was also killed by a roadside bomb in the southern city of Amarah.
This week's government formation will mark the first time in nearly four centuries that Iraq's Shiite-majority will take charge. And CBS News Correspondent Mark Strassmann reports that
, who mostly boycotted the January elections and are now responsible for most of the indiscriminate terror sweeping Iraq.Prime Minister-designate Ibrahim al-Jaafari had promised to form a government that would win over Sunni moderates and reduce Sunni support for the insurgency. On Monday, al-Jaafari aide Laith Kuba said the incoming premier had filled six of the seven Cabinet seats left undecided last week, but disputes remained over the key defense ministry portfolio, which is destined for a Sunni.
In other developments:
In New York, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan issued a statement strongly condemning the "cruel and heartless" violence apparently aimed at undermining Iraq's newly formed government.
The skyrocketing attacks are blamed on an insurgency believed largely made up of members of Iraq's Sunni minority, who dominated for decades under Saddam Hussein but were excluded from meaningful positions in a partial new Cabinet announced Thursday.
Al-Jaafari's initial choice for defense minister was rejected by members of his Shiite-dominated alliance because of suspected ties to Saddam's Baath Party, which brutally repressed the majority Shiites and Kurds. Since then, rival Sunni factions have submitted a number of candidates for the job. Three Sunni lawmakers quit al-Jaafari's alliance, complaining he should look within his own coalition first to fill Cabinet posts.
Al-Jaafari wants to have all positions finalized before the new government is sworn in Tuesday, Kuba said. He declined to identify those already selected before they are presented to the interim National Assembly for approval.
On Jan. 30, millions of Iraqis risked their lives to elect the Shiite-dominated assembly, but many Sunnis boycotted the vote or stayed home for fear of attacks at the polls. After months of wrangling, al-Jaafari has drawn up a Cabinet that so far includes 15 Shiite Arab ministers, seven Kurds, four Sunnis and one Christian. Two of four deputy premiers have also been named, a Shiite and a Kurd.
But even with Sunnis in Cabinet, Iraqi insurgents have made clear there will be no letup in the unrelenting violence of recent weeks. The country's most feared terror group, al Qaeda in Iraq, has posted statements on the Internet saying any Iraqi government is a puppet of the U.S.-led coalition, and it will attack any Sunnis who join it.
On Sunday, Iraqi militants released a video purporting to show Iraq's latest foreign hostage: an Australian who said he is married to an American and lives in California.
The videotape obtained by Associated Press Television News showed a man identifying himself as Douglas Wood, 63, seated between two masked militants pointing automatic weapons at him.
Wood, appearing disheveled and shaken, said he was an Australian national living in the San Francisco area with his American wife. He said he came to Iraq almost a year ago to work on reconstruction projects with the American military. Wood's American wife, Pearl, said she had seen the tape and the man was indeed her husband.
The captive appealed to President Bush, Australian Prime Minister John Howard and Californian Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to order coalition forces out of Iraq and let Iraqis look after themselves, saying he did not want to die.
"My captors are fiercely patriotic. They believe in a strong united Iraq looking after its own destiny," Wood said on the tape.
Australian Prime Minister John Howard said he is setting up a special task force to try to win Wood's release.
Howard didn't say what action he may take, but did say Australia won't negotiate with terrorists.
A militant group calling itself the Shura Council of the Mujahedeen of Iraq claimed responsibility for the kidnapping. The group previously said it abducted a Turkish national who was freed in September.