U.S. Forces Hit Fallujah From Air and Ground
NewsMax.com Wires
Thursday, Nov. 4, 2004
BAGHDAD, Iraq U.S. forces pounded parts of Fallujah from
the air and ground Thursday, targeting insurgents in a city where
American forces were said to be gearing up for a major offensive.
Three British soldiers were killed in an attack at a
checkpoint in central Iraq.
Al-Jazeera television broadcast a threat by an unspecified armed
group to strike oil installations and government buildings if
Americans launch an all-out assault on Fallujah. The report was
accompanied by a videotape showing about 20 armed men brandishing
weapons, including a truck-mounted machine gun.
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The attack that killed the three British soldiers Thursday also
left a civilian Iraqi interpreter dead and eight British troops
wounded, said Lt. Cmdr. Ahmed Ajala, a British military spokesman
in Basra. Six of the wounded soldiers were released from a hospital
and the other two were expected to return to their regiment Friday,
he said.
British Armed Forces Minister Adam Ingram said in London that
the attack was carried out by a suicide car bomber. He said
soldiers at the checkpoint also came under mortar fire.
The British soldiers were part of an 850-strong unit who were
deployed closer to Baghdad last week to allow U.S. Marines to
reposition in Anbar province, home of guerrilla strongholds of
Fallujah, Ramadi, Hit and Husaybah.
The move from the relatively peaceful sector to the
American-controlled zone, where troops come under daily attack from
insurgents, carries the risk of higher casualties and is
politically sensitive for British Prime Minister Tony Blair. The
deaths Thursday raise the number of British troops killed in Iraq
to 73.
Early Thursday, U.S. aircraft fired on several barricaded
militant positions in northeast and southeastern Fallujah, the
military said. Later in the day, U.S. artillery batteries fired two
to three dozen 155mm shells at insurgent bastions in the city, the
military said.
Insurgents and U.S. forces also clashed briefly Thursday in
Ramadi, west of Fallujah, but there were no U.S. casualties, the
military added.
The fresh action followed overnight fighting on the southeastern
outskirts of Fallujah after insurgents fired a rocket-propelled
grenade at Marines. Two insurgents were killed while no U.S.
casualties were reported, said Lt. Nathan Braden, of 1st Marine
Division. Hospital officials in Fallujah reported three civilians
were injured in the overnight shelling.
U.S. forces are preparing for a major offensive in Fallujah,
west of Baghdad, and other Sunni militant strongholds in hopes of
curbing the insurgency ahead of January's election.
An Iraqi National Guard patrol was hit Thursday by a car bomb in
Iskandariyah, an insurgent hot spot 30 miles south of Baghdad,
killing three people and wounding 15, Iraqi hospital officials
said.
A suicide car bomber killed three and wounded nine others when
his explosive-laden vehicle barreled into the city government
offices in Dujail, 46 miles north of the capital, police said.
On Wednesday, a U.S. soldier was killed and another wounded in a
roadside bombing 12 miles south of the capital. A suicide driver
detonated his vehicle at a checkpoint near Baghdad airport,
injuring nine Iraqis and forcing U.S. troops to close the main
route for hours.
Gunmen killed a senior Oil Ministry official, Hussein Ali
al-Fattal, after he left his house in the Yarmouk district of
western Baghdad, police said. Al-Fattal was the general manager of
a state-owned company that distributes petroleum byproducts.
The violence served as a grim reminder of Iraq's rapidly
deteriorating security situation, which President Bush must address
now that he has been re-elected.
On Thursday, Al-Jazeera aired video of three Jordanian truck
drivers taken hostage by a militant group calling itself Jaish
al-Islam, or Army of Islam. The men appealed to their country to
warn its citizens against working with coalition forces in Iraq,
Al-Jazeera said, although their voices were not audible on the
tape.
They were part of a convoy of seven truckers who came under
attack Tuesday near Fallujah, according to an official at
Jordanian Truckers Association. One of the drivers was killed in
the attack, two others are still missing and a fourth man escaped,
he said.
More than 170 foreigners have been kidnapped and more than 30 of
them, including three Americans and a Briton, killed in Iraq
since Saddam Hussein's regime fell in April 2003. At least six of
the foreigners were beheaded by followers of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi,
a Jordanian militant who has sworn allegiance to al-Qaida.
Another militant group, Ansar al-Sunnah Army, posted a
videotape on a Web site showing the beheading of man it said was an
Iraqi army major captured in Mosul. The group called Maj. Hussein
Shanoun an "apostate" and said he confessed to participating in
attacks against insurgents.
Just before his death, Shanoun warned Iraqi soldiers and police
against "dealing with the infidel troops," meaning the Americans.
Insurgents have stepped up attacks on Iraq's U.S.-trained
security forces, who the Americans hope will assume greater
responsibility to enable Washington to begin drawing down its
forces, now at their highest levels since summer 2003.
More than 85 percent of the estimated 165,700 multinational
troops in Iraq are Americans, despite U.S. efforts to encourage
other countries to share the burden.
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