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Friday, 10/24/2003 11:16:32 AM

Friday, October 24, 2003 11:16:32 AM

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The photo lead to this story... and still
they wonder...

An Iraqi woman gestures as she tells U.S. Army soldiers that her son was playing with fireworks in a street of Tikrit, 193 km (120 miles) north of Baghdad, Iraq, Friday, Oct. 24, 2003. Soldiers from Alpha company, 1-22 infantry regiment, 4th Infantry Division, were on patrol when they were alerted by the sound of gunfire. (AP Photo/Ivan Sekretarev)
Iraq Violence Claims 3 More Troops' Lives
By TAREK AL-ISSAWI, Associated Press Writer

BAGHDAD, Iraq - Two U.S. soldiers were killed and four were wounded Friday in a mortar attack on their base north of Baghdad, and another American died in a shootout in the northern city of Mosul, the U.S. military said.

Elsewhere, 13 other soldiers were injured Thursday night in a mortar attack near Baqouba, 40 miles northeast of the capital, the command said. Witnesses reported that a roadside bomb wounded several other troops Friday in Fallujah in the sixth attack by insurgents there in as many days.


Separately, two children were killed and three adults wounded in a grenade attack on a police station in the northern city of Mosul, police said.


The latest U.S. deaths occurred when a mortar struck a forward operating base near Samara, 70 miles north of Baghdad, about noon Friday, the U.S. Central Command said.


In Mosul, a soldier from the 101st Airborne Division was killed by small arms fire before dawn Friday in the western end of the city, the command reported.


Names of the victims were withheld pending notification of kin.


The deaths bring to 108 the number of American soldiers killed by hostile fire since President Bush (news - web sites) declared an end to major combat May 1.


U.S. officials also said 13 soldiers, from the 4th Infantry Division, were wounded Thursday night when a mortar round struck at hangar at Camp War Horse near Baqouba, about 40 miles northeast of Baghdad.


Three were seriously wounded and evacuated but the others were treated at the local aid station, the command said. U.S. troops fired back and pursued the attackers, the command said, but there was no word on any insurgent casualties.


Also near Baqouba, a patrol was attacked by rocket-propelled grenades and small-arms fire Thursday night, the 4th Infantry Division. The Americans pursued the two Iraqi attackers into a house and killed them, it said.


Also Thursday, U.S. troops detained six men digging by a roadside near Beiji, 120 miles north of Baghdad, with the intention to place bombs there, according to the 4th Division.


In Baghdad, at least two Iraqis were killed and seven wounded when rockets fell on the Ad-Doura neighborhood of the capital, residents said. The rockets smashed into several stalls in the Ad-Doura market and also caused slight damage to the Ad-Doura power plant located about 200 yards away.


"About 10 p.m. we heard sound of explosions," said Odai Abdul Rahman, a baker. "We came out of the bakery and saw some destroyed shacks and injured people lying on the ground."


The U.S. military command in Baghdad had no comment about the attack in Fallujah, 40 miles west of Baghdad. However, Iraqi witnesses said it occurred Friday morning near a bridge at the western end of the city.


The witnesses said three injured U.S. soldiers were evacuated after American soldiers sprayed the area with gunfire. After the attack, troops detained several Iraqi civilians, including one who was dragged from his vehicle and punched repeatedly in the kidney as he fell to the ground.


"Immediately after the attack, which damaged a Humvee, troops fired randomly and two helicopters hovered overhead," said one witness, Youssef Mohammed. "The troops arrested five shopkeepers who were in their shops close to the location of the blast."


It was the sixth straight day of attacks against American forces in the restive city since gunners blasted a disabled ammunition truck there Sunday, causing no casualties but setting off thunderous explosions.


An American paratrooper from the 82nd Airborne Division was killed by a bomb the following day. Another soldier was wounded Thursday by a homemade explosive.

Fallujah is located in an arc of resistance that also extends north of Baghdad. The area is dominated by Sunni Muslims, the minority community from which ousted leader Saddam Hussein (news - web sites) drew most of his support.

Lt. Col. George Krivo, the U.S. command spokesman, said attacks on coalition forces have averaged about 26 a day over the past two weeks. About three-quarters of the attacks have occurred in an arc stretching from the west through Baghdad to the region north of the capital.

The attacks came as representatives of 77 nations gathered Friday in Spain to wrap up a two-day conference to raise money for Iraqi reconstruction. U.S. and Iraqi officials pleaded for billions to rebuild the nation.

The violence, six months after a U.S.-led force toppled Saddam's regime, has raised concern about prospects for a quick revival of Iraq (news - web sites)'s economy, despite the country's vast petroleum reserves.

After the $20 billion package now before the U.S. Congress, Japan offered the biggest pledge: $1.5 billion in grants for 2004 and 3.5 billion in loans for 2005-2007, Foreign Minister Yoriko Kawaguchi said.

Several other countries promised multimillion dollar promises, but France and Germany — two leading opponents of the U.S.-led war — were withholding new aid to register their disapproval of the U.S. blueprint for restoring Iraqi sovereignty.

_

Eds: Associated Press correspondents Katarina Kratovac in Tikrit and Mariam Fam in Mosul contributed to this report.
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=514&u=/ap/20031024/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iraq_450

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