8 US Marines killed in Iraq's Anbar province (Agencies) Updated: 2004-12-13 16:23
Eight U.S. Marines were killed in violence in Iraq's restive Anbar province,
the military said Monday, a day after American warplanes pounded Fallujah with
missiles as insurgents battled coalition forces in the city.
The deaths Sunday equaled the highest number of Marines killed in a single
day since a car bomb killed eight outside Fallujah on Oct. 30, which was the
deadliest attack against the U.S. military in nearly six months.
![A column of smoke rises after a powerful car bomb exploded at a checkpoint leading into the so-called "Green Zone" in Baghdad December 13, 2004. The building in the foreground comprises part of the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, which was not directly affected by the blast. There were no immediate reports on injuries or deaths. [Reutrs]](xin_421201131631408114888.jpg) A column of smoke
rises after a powerful car bomb exploded at a checkpoint leading into the
so-called "Green Zone" in Baghdad December 13, 2004. The building in the
foreground comprises part of the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, which was not
directly affected by the blast. There were no immediate reports on
injuries or deaths. [Reutrs] | Early Monday, a suicide car bomber killed 13 people and wounded 15 at an
entrance to the Green Zone in Baghdad that houses Iraq's interim government and
foreign embassies, a hospital official said.
The official, who asked not to be identified, said all the casualties from
the bombing had been brought to the Yarmouk Hospital in western Baghdad.
The U.S. military confirmed that a car bomb exploded near one of the Green
Zone gates, but provided no further details.
The blast occurred when a vehicle that had been waiting in line to enter the
zone at its western Harthiyah gate exploded as it drove up to the checkpoint,
Iraqi police said. Fifteen other cars were destroyed in the blast.
It was unknown if the eight Marine deaths were connected to the fighting in
the volatile western Iraqi city of Fallujah. In a statement, the military said
the seven Marines with the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force died in two separate
incidents while conducting "security and stabilization operations" in Anbar
province, a vast region that comprises Fallujah and Ramadi.
The military had earlier reported another U.S. Marine death Sunday in Anbar.
The statement gave no other details about the deaths, saying the release of
more information could place U.S. personnel at risk.
As of Monday, at least 1,296 members of the U.S. military have died since the
beginning of the Iraq war in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.
Fallujah was the scene of a weeklong U.S.-led offensive last month to uproot
insurgents based in the city.
The latest violence began when American and Iraqi forces clashed with
guerrillas in several suburbs and ended with U.S. airstrikes on suspected
insurgent hideouts.
"The strikes were conducted throughout the day and were called in by troops
in (armed) contact with and observing the enemy moving from house to house,"
spokesman Lt. Lyle Gilbert said.
Fallujah resident Abdullah Ahmed said the fighting started after U.S.
soldiers brought 700-800 men into the city to clear rubble from damage caused by
November's offensive.
Meanwhile, several detained leaders of Saddam Hussein's regime began refusing
meals in apparent protest against their upcoming trials, U.S. military officials
and a lawyer said Sunday. Former Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein was not among
them.
In Jordan, Saddam's attorneys argued ahead of Monday's first anniversary of
his capture that the former president was being held illegally by U.S. and Iraqi
authorities.
"It was more of a forced abduction that later became compulsory concealment
and solitary confinement, acts rejected by all international conventions," said
a statement released Sunday by the team, which cited human rights conventions
Washington allegedly had violated.
Saddam's lawyers were appointed by his wife, Sajida, but have not been able
to contact their client. None were at his side when he was arraigned July 1 in
Baghdad on preliminary charges, including killing rival politicians, gassing
Kurds, invading Kuwait in 1990 and suppressing popular uprisings in 1991.
The military said Sunday a soldier was killed a day earlier in a roadside
bomb blast in the capital's northern suburbs. Three other soldiers also were
wounded in the ambush.
Iraq's postwar political hopefuls continued jostling for position ahead of
Jan. 30 elections, the first such polls to be held since Saddam's overthrow.
Two moderate, mainly Sunni Muslim parties announced they would field slates
for the polls, indicating an apparent strengthening of support for the vote
among the religious minority, despite calls from some Sunni politicians for a
boycott.
Sunnis traditionally have enjoyed significant privilege in Iraq, but have
lost their political ascendancy since Saddam's fall. The country's majority
Shiites — numbering 60 percent of the population — are expected to exploit their
weight of numbers and dominate the post-election legislature.
"They (the Sunnis) realized that there was no chance for postponing and that
it's better to participate," said Nehro Mohammed Abdul-Karim Kasnazan, a leader
of the Coalition of Iraqi National Unity, which is fielding a 275-member slate
for the polls.
The Constitutional Monarchy Movement, a moderate Sunni-dominated group
seeking the restoration of a constitutional monarchy, also announced a list of
275 election candidates. The slate is headed by Sharif Ali, a cousin of Iraq's
last king — who was killed in a 1958 military coup, and includes Kurds and
Shiites.
A former Governing Council member, Naseer al-Chadarchi, announced that his
Patriotic and Democratic Party, another moderate Sunni fringe movement, would
field at least 40 candidates, including Shiites from southern Iraq, according to
aide Omar al-Ma'arouf.
"Despite the party's insistence on postponing the elections, it will
participate with a separate list" of candidates, al-Ma'arouf said.
Iraq's U.S.-backed interim government has said the Jan. 30 vote must go
ahead, despite a rampant insurgency fueled mainly by Sunni extremists targeting
U.S. forces and Iraqi's nascent security forces in a bid to derail the
elections.
"We have a full desire that all Iraqis will participate, despite their color,
sex, race, religion or their political background, because Iraq belongs to all
Iraqis," interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi said on Iraqiya TV.
Elsewhere, two insurgents died after detonating their explosives-packed car
alongside an American M1 Abrams battle tank in Tikrit, 80 miles north of
Baghdad, at about 10:45 a.m., military spokesman Staff Sgt. Robert Powell said.
No soldiers were wounded and the tank sustained negligible damage.
Four decapitated bodies in civilian clothes were found south of Baghdad and
their identities were unclear, police said. The victims, believed to be Iraqis,
were found in Haswa, about 25 miles south of the capital.
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