An Iraqi man drives a bomb-damaged car away from the scene of a car bomb, which exploded outside the main gate to the headquarters of the U.S.-led coalition in Baghdad Sunday, Jan 18, 2004, killing nearly 20 and injuring more than 60.
Lt. Col. Marshall Hagen, left, listens to the interrogation of an Iraqi man, with the assistance of Iraqi translators, about the whereabouts of the man's brother who is suspected of attacks on coalition forces, during a raid on his house by the 82nd Airborne Division Sunday, Jan. 18, 2004, near Fallujah, Iraq.
An Iraqi Shiite muslim boy and his mother exit the Kadimiyah shrine beneath a giant mural of important Iraqi Shiite clerics in Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday Jan. 17, 2004.
U.S. soldiers inspect destroyed vehicles after a massive suicide car bomb blew up at the main gate to the US-led coalition headquarters in the Iraqi capital of Baghdad Sunday, Jan. 18, 2004.
An image from TV of a U.S. soldier yelling near the blast scene after a suicide bomber detonated 1,000 pounds of explosives in a pickup truck outside the headquarters of the U.S.-led coalition in Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday Jan. 18, 2004. The blast killed about 20 people and injured more than 60 - most of them Iraqis.
Two U.S. soldiers react after an improvised explosive device detonated next to them in Baghdad in this image taken from TV Friday Jan. 16, 2004. The soldiers were uninjured but two Iraqi children were hurt in the incident.
A U.S. soldier watches from his vehicle as Iraqi families protest from the roadside in the Arasat al-Hindia neighborhood of Baghdad Friday Jan. 16, 2004. The family members, who have been squatting in abandoned homes in the area after being left homeless since the war in 2003, claim that American troops have given them a three-day deadline to leave because there is a U.S. military base adjacent to them.
Iraqi families watch from the balcony of their apartment building as a U.S. soldier stands guard after a roadside bomb exploded in the area injuring two Iraqi children Friday Jan. 16, 2004. The explosion occurred after U.S. soldiers approached a suspicious device to inspect it, but no American casualties were reported.
Iraqi women walk through a makeshift camp set up in Safwan, Iraq along Iraq's border with Kuwait where Iraqi pilgrims, on a journey to Mecca, wait for immigration procedures so they can cross into Kuwait on their way to Saudi Arabia Friday Jan. 16, 2004. Iraqis will try to make the hajj via Kuwait for the first time since Saddam Hussein's invasion of its neighbor in 1990.
An elderly Iraqi woman waves to family members from behind a bus window as she leaves Baghdad on a journey to Mecca with fellow pilgrims Thursday Jan. 15, 2004. 2003. The Muslim pilgrimage, known as hajj, must be performed by any able-bodied Muslim that can afford it at least once in a lifetime as one of the five pillars of the Muslim faith.
Iraqis protest in the streets of the southern city of Basra carrying posters of Shiite leaders including Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Husseini al-Sistani , far right, the top cleric of Iraq's Shiite majority Thursday Jan. 15, 2004.
An Iraqi man, suspected of involvement in attacks on coalition forces, is questioned in the living room of his home during a raid by the 82nd Airborne Division Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2004, near Fallujah, Iraq.
Soldiers with the 82nd Airborne Division spread documents and other objects on the floor while looking for evidence during a raid on an Iraqi house Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2004, near Fallujah, Iraq. The owner of the house is suspected of being responsible for attacks on coalition forces.
A soldier with the 82nd Airborne Division keeps watch over a 16-year-old Iraqi boy during a raid while his father is questioned in another room Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2004, near Fallujah, Iraq. A raid was conducted on the house of a man who is suspected of attacks on coalition forces.
Iraqi men look into the window of a car in Baghdad Tuesday Jan. 13, 2004, which was riddled with bullets the day before killing the driver and a 10-year-old boy according to relatives of the victims. Relatives say that U.S. soldiers opened fire at the car moments after an Army vehicle was hit by a roadside bomb on the street. One U.S. soldier was killed in the bombing, the U.S. military said.
The shadow of an officer for the Iraqi civil defense, guarding the area near the Baghdad Hotel, is cast next to a explosion crater Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2004. U.S. soldiers said at least two mortar rounds detonated near the Baghdad Hotel late Monday with one round landing in the Tigris River and the other exploding on the bank. There were no casualties, the Americans said.
An Iraqi woman waits in a room with other women and children as Iraqi police officer Mohammed Abid Mohammed stands guard at the door Monday, Jan. 12, 2004 while U.S. soldiers from the 1st Infantry Division search the house near Ramadi, Iraq for a suspect man who they believe is responsible for attacks on coalition forces.
Iraqi Civil Defense soldiers patrol in front of Ibn Taimiyah Sunni mosque in Baghdad Monday Jan. 12, 2004.
Lt. Taylor Ray, right, and Staff Sgt. Ryan Waller of the 1st Infantry Division question an Iraqi family about the whereabouts of one of their relatives Monday, Jan 12, 2004 near Ramadi, Iraq. The wanted man is suspected in several attacks on coalition forces. Ray is from Columbia, M.D. and Waller is from Buffalo, NY.
United States soldiers with the 1st Infantry Division patrol through a palm grove while looking for a site that was used to fire mortars at their camp earlier in the morning Monday, Jan. 12, 2004 near Ramadi, Iraq.