An Iraqi woman waits outside the Abu Ghraib prison for information on her relative held in the prison, outside Baghdad, Iraq, Friday, May 7, 2004. Hundreds of Iraqis who have relatives being held in the prison demanded to see them after the release of pictures showing prisoners being humiliated by their U.S. captors.
U.S Army soldiers detain Iraqi men during a patrol in the center of Baghdad, Iraq, Friday, May 7, 2004.
An Iraqi man stands in the rubble of his destroyed house in Kufa, near Najaf, Iraq, Friday, May 7, 2004. The house was damaged on Thursday after U.S. soldiers clashed with Shiite militiamen loyal to a radical cleric in the holy city of Najaf. The battles left an estimated 40 Iraqis dead.
An Iraqi police officer inspects the car of two foreign journalists, after they were ambushed in the outskirts of Baghdad, Iraq, Friday, May 7, 2004. The two journalists, Pole Waldemar Milewicz, a correspondent for Poland's TVP television and his Algerian colleague, Mounir Bouamrane, 36, were killed in a shooting and bomb ambush, the Polish Embassy in Baghdad announced.
A car burns following a suicide bombing near a checkpoint to the main complex housing U.S. administrative offices in central Baghdad, Iraq, May 6, 2004, killing at least six Iraqi civilians, and one U.S. soldier and injuring 25 people, the U.S. military said.
An Iraqi family looks at the site where a car bomb exploded near a checkpoint to the main complex housing U.S. administrative offices in central Baghdad, May 6, 2004.
An Iraqi firefighter gestures as he stands in front of burning vehicles after a car bomb exploded near the main complex housing the U.S. administrative offices in central Baghdad in this image from television May 6, 2004.
The Sati family watches President Bush's interview broadcast on Arab television station Al Arabiya at their home in Baghdad May 5, 2004. President Bush said in the interview that the treatment of prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison was "abhorrent" and does not represent "the America that I know." Father Sati Mohammed right sits with his son Jassm Sati.
A U.S. Army Blackhawk helicopter departs the Abu Ghraib Prison after dropping off a fresh group of prisoners at the facility on the outskirts of Baghdad May 5, 2004.
U.S. soldiers walk through the halls inside the prison of Abu Ghraib, outside Baghdad May 5, 2004. Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Miller, commander of U.S.-run prisons in Iraq, apologized for the "illegal or unauthorized acts" committed by soldiers at the Abu Ghraib prison, where photographs showed Iraqi prisoners were abused by smiling American guards.
Iraqis wave their flag and chant anti U.S slogans outside Abu Ghraib prison May 5, 2004. Some 2,000 Iraqis demonstrated in front of Baghdad's Abu Ghraib prison, chanting "democracy doesn't mean killing innocent people" and demanding that the United States apologize for humiliating Iraqi prisoners.
Marines from Kilo Company of the 3rd Battalion, 24th Marines, search a truck carrying cement-making materials to the Abu Ghraib Prison on the outskirts of Baghdad, Iraq, Tuesday, May 4, 2004. Prison officials are building extra facilities to hold the large number of prisoners, many of whom were detained for attacking Coalition forces.
A U.S. Marine from Kilo Company of the 3rd Battalion, 24th Marines, tells family members of prisoners to back up from the entrance of the Abu Ghraib Prison on the outskirts of Baghdad, Iraq, Tuesday, May 4, 2004. The waiting list to visit prisoners is often months long, and many family members come daily in an effort to get in.
Lt. Cpl. William Blackmon of St. Louis, Mo., from Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion, 24th Marines, stands guard with a machine gun at a position at the entrance of the Abu Ghraib prison on the outskirts of Baghdad, Iraq, Tuesday, May 4, 2004.
Residents of Fallujah celebrate in the center of the city after the new Fallujah Brigade took over from U.S. troops in Fallujah, Iraq, Tuesday, May 4, 2004. The Iraqi force of up to 1,100 is to be led by one of Saddam Hussein's former generals. Many of the fighters are former soldiers and the force includes several who are believed to have fought against the Marines.
Armed Iraqi Shiite's show parts of a U.S. Army helicopter and the helmet of a crew member in the outskirts of Najaf, Iraq, early morning Tuesday, May 4, 2004. U.S. troops in Najaf clashed for hours with Shiite militiamen who barraged the Americans' base with mortars on Monday.
A U.S. soldier from the 2nd ACR (Armed Cavalry Regiment) shoots a Mark-19 grenade launcher at insurgents in Najaf, Iraq, Monday, May 3, 2004. The U.S. soldiers, based in two camps, Golf and Baker, in the city of Najaf, fired back after insurgents attacked U.S. camps with mortars, rocket- propelled grenades and other small arms.
Former hostage Thomas Hamill, center, is seen with two U.S. Army soldiers, shortly after his escape south of Tikrit, Iraq, in this picture released Monday, May 3, 2004.
U.S. soldiers ready their weapons aimed at a Mahdi army target in Najaf, Iraq, Monday, May 3, 2004. The U.S. soldiers, based in two camps, Golf and Baker, in the city of Najaf, fired back after Mahdi army members attacked U.S. camps with mortars, rocket-propelled grenades and other small arms.
U.S. troops enter Najaf to replace Spanish soldiers who are vacating the coalition base Golf, in Najaf, Iraq, Monday, April 26, 2004.