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U.S. Troop Toll In Iraq Tops 1,900

Four U.S. soldiers attached to the Marines were killed in two separate roadside bombings near the insurgent stronghold of Ramadi, the military said Tuesday, raising the number of American forces who have died in Iraq since the start of the war to 1,903.

The soldiers died in attacks on Monday during combat operations in the volatile western Iraqi city, 70 miles west of Baghdad, the military said.

The victims were U.S. Army soldiers attached to the 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force.

The names of the victims were not released.

Meanwhile in Mosul a suicide car bomber rammed a U.S. convoy, killing four Americans and wounding two others.

A U.S. official said the victims were a Diplomatic Security agent and three private security guards attached to the U.S. Consulate in Mosul, Iraq's third largest city.

Two weeks ago, a roadside bomb killed four private American guards who worked as security agents for the Bureau of Diplomatic Security in Basra.

Al Qaeda claimed responsibility for that attack.

In other developments:

  • The U.S. military has arrested two men it claimed were doctors aiding insurgents, blocking militant plans to set up a medical clinic for their fighters. Military officials said seven other suspected insurgents were captured around Baghdad, five of whom were caught Monday at a security checkpoint and two others in a raid Tuesday in the capital.
  • Iraqi lawmakers charge that hundreds of millions of dollars earmarked for reconstruction are either being stolen or squandered, with a focus on former Defense Minister Hazem Shaalan. Shaalan moved to Jordan shortly after he was replaced in office when a new government was formed following parliamentary elections in January.
  • British armored vehicles broke down the wall of a jail in the southern city of Basra during a raid to free two British soldiers who were later found in the custody of local militiamen elsewhere in the city. Britain's defense minister on Tuesday defended the raid as "absolutely right."

    After the day of violence in Basra on Monday, British authorities said their soldiers were being held illegally and that their captors had refused an order from Iraq's interior minister for their release. The commander of the operation to free the pair sought to minimize the extent of destruction at the jail.

    "Minor damage was caused to the prison compound wall and to the house in which our two soldiers were held," said Brig. John Lorimer, commander of the 12 Mechanized Brigade.

    Daylight pictures from the jail Tuesday showed a concrete wall broken through, several cars crushed — apparently by armored vehicles — an a number of prefabricated structures demolished.


    Mohammed al-Waili, the governor of Basra province, condemned the British for raiding the prison, an act he called "barbaric, savage and irresponsible."

    "A British force of more than 10 tanks backed by helicopters attacked the central jail and destroyed it. This is an irresponsible act," al-Waili said.

    British Defense Minister John Reid said laws under which the Iraqi government was given sovereignty in the summer of 2004 require that coalition forces detained by Iraqi authorities must be handed over to the U.S.-led multinational force.

    "I understand also that the Minister of the Interior, at the highest level, instructed that they should be (handed over), that the local judicial authorities said the same," Reid told the British Broadcasting Corporation.

    "And that is why, in the course of the day, while we were negotiating, in view of that fact that they weren't handed over, we got increasingly worried and the commander on the spot, with hindsight, was absolutely right to do what he did because we discovered they weren't in the police station, they were somewhere else, but are now safe," said Reid.

    Reid's comments contradicted earlier Defense Ministry statements in which British authorities said the two soldiers were freed through negotiations.

    Aquil Jabbar, an Iraqi television cameraman who lives across the street from the jail, said about 150 Iraqi prisoners fled as British commandos stormed inside to rescue their comrades. Iraqi and British officials said that was not true.

    While the Shiite-dominated south of Iraq, where 8,500 British troops are based, has been far quieter than Sunni regions to the north, Britons have come under increasingly frequent attacks in recent weeks. The British military has reported 96 deaths since the war began in 2003.

    That compares with the deaths of 1,899 Americans who are stationed nearer the violent insurgent regions around Baghdad and stretching west to the Syrian border.

    The latest violence in the oil city of Basra, 340 miles south of the capital, began early Monday when local authorities reported arresting the two Britons, described as special forces commandos dressed in civilian clothing, for allegedly shooting two Iraqi policemen, one of whom reportedly died.

    British armor then encircled the jail where the two Britons were held.

    Television cameramen from Arab satellite broadcasters in the Persian Gulf were allowed to photograph the two men, who appeared to be Westerners and were sitting on the floor in the jail in blue jeans and T-shirts, their hands tied behind their backs.

    One of the men had a bandage covering most of the top of his head, the other had blood on his clothes.

    Outside the jail, a melee broke out in the streets as angry demonstrators attacked the encircling British armor with stones and Molotov cocktails. During the chaos, one British soldier could be seen scrambling for his life from a burning Warrior armored fighting vehicle and the rock-throwing mob.

    Press Association reported that three British soldiers were hurt during the violence, but said none of their injuries was life-threatening. Iraqi authorities said three demonstrators were killed and 15 others wounded in the skirmishes.

    Lorimer, the brigade commander, claimed Monday's violence was blown out of proportion, saying the scene made for "graphic television viewing" but that "this was a small, unrepresentative crowd of about 200 to 300 in a city of 1.5 million."

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