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The War Profiteers - War Crimes,
Kidnappings, Torture and Big Money |
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November 7th,
2007 - 2007 Is Deadliest Year for U.S. Troops in Iraq |
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2007 Is Deadliest Year for
U.S. Troops in Iraq By Damien Cave New York Times November 7, 2007 Baghdad, Nov. 6 - Six
American soldiers were killed in three separate attacks in Iraq on Monday,
the military said Tuesday, taking the number of deaths this year to 852. The
toll makes 2007 the deadliest year of the war for United States troops. Military officials announced
the discovery of a mass grave holding 22 bodies in a rural area north of
Falluja. They also said that nine Iranians being held in Iraq would soon be
released, including two of the five who were detained during a January raid
of a consulate office in Erbil. Five of the American
soldiers died in two roadside bomb attacks on Monday near Kirkuk, said Rear
Adm. Gregory Smith, director of the communications division of the
Multinational Force-Iraq, the formal name for the United States-led forces. A sixth soldier died Monday
during combat operations in Anbar Province, according to a military
statement. The deaths occurred only a
few days after the military announced a steep drop in the rate of American
deaths this year. In October, 38 American service members died in Iraq, the
lowest monthly tally since March 2006, according to the Iraq Coalition
Casualty Count (icasualties.org), an independent Web site that tracks
military deaths. November’s total, if the current pace continues, would be
higher, but still below the war’s average of 69 American military deaths per
month. Despite the decline,
American commanders acknowledged that 2007 would be far deadlier than the
second-worst year, 2004, when 849 Americans died, many of them in major
battles for control of insurgent strongholds like Falluja. Military officials attribute
the increase this year to an expanded troop presence during the so-called
surge, which swelled the American force to more than 165,000 troops in Iraq,
and sent units out of large bases and into more dangerous communities. Commanders contend that
despite the cost in terms of lives lost, the strategy has improved security
in the country and created a “tactical momentum” that could stabilize Iraq
permanently. The pending release of the
Iranians may reflect American approval of some signs that Iran is cooperating
with the United States’ demand that it stanch the flow of materials into Iraq
used to make deadly roadside bombs known as explosively formed projectiles,
or E.F.P.’s. Admiral Smith said that the
E.F.P. components found recently during raids “do not appear to have arrived
here in Iraq after those pledges were made,” suggesting that Iran has limited
trafficking of the weapon parts across the border after promising to do so. American commanders have
stopped short of declaring that Iran has in fact complied with the United
States’ demands, and Admiral Smith on Tuesday described the plan to release
nine Iranian prisoners not as a diplomatic reward, but rather as the
perfunctory end to a criminal investigation. “These individuals have no
continuing value, nor do they pose a further threat to Iraqi security,” he
said. Admiral Smith did not say
why the two Iranians who were among five captured in January at an Iranian
Consulate office in Erbil had been held for nine months, after Iran insisted
that they were harmless government workers. The military did not identify any
other Iranians who were released or still being held. Iraqi officials welcomed the
announcement of the prisoners’ release. Muhammad al-Haj Hamud, Iraq’s deputy
foreign minister, said the release would “improve the relations between”
Iraq, Iran and the United States before another round of planned meetings on
security. “We want good relations with
Iran and for Iran to avoid conducting any actions inside Iraq,” he said. “At
the same time, the Iraqi government is keen to maintain its relationship with
its first and strongest ally, the United States of America.” Violence against Iraqis
continued Tuesday. The mass grave was found Saturday during a joint
American-Iraqi operation in the Tharthar Lake area, a desolate rural region
near the site of another grave, holding 25 bodies, that was found less than a
month ago. Local police officials said
the bodies had been dumped in and around an abandoned building. “Some were buried in wells,
and some were left in rooms used as prisons,” said a police officer who
helped clear the graves. “These corpses are part of what we expect to find
more of in the future.” Just south of Kirkuk, the
police said that clashes with Iraqi and American forces on Tuesday left four
gunmen dead. In a separate attack, gunmen killed the mayor of a small village
about 30 miles south of Kirkuk, and wounded his son, as they drove to a
neighboring town. A member of the governing
council in Mosul was assassinated in a neighborhood on the city’s outskirts,
the authorities said, and six police officers died when they were ambushed
while driving to work. In Baghdad, the police found
four dead bodies: two east of the Tigris River, and two to the west. A
roadside bomb exploded near an American patrol near Zawra Park in western
Baghdad, and a second bomb exploded in Karada, a central Baghdad
neighborhood, an Interior Ministry official said. The official said it was
unclear if there were any casualties. South of the capital, in
Latifiya, a bomb set for a joint Iraqi-American foot patrol killed one Iraqi
soldier. North of Hilla, the authorities found the body of a man in his 20s
floating in a small river. He had been stabbed to death. Ahmad Fadam contributed
reporting from Baghdad, and Iraqi employees of The New York Times from
Falluja, Kirkuk, Mosul and Hilla. External link: http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/07/world/middleeast/07iraq.html |