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Air-Strikes in Iraq Kill Over 50
Militants in Sadr City
‘Pakistan
Times’ Monitoring Desk
BAGHDAD (Iraq): U.S. forces
backed
by airstrikes raided Sadr City, Baghdad's main Shiite district, killing at
least 50 militants on Sunday as they targeted a militia leader accused in
high-profile kidnappings, the military said. Iraqi officials said women and
children were among the dead.
The Iraqi reports followed other recent claims of civilian deaths as a
result of U.S. military action or shootings by private Western security
teams protecting American diplomats and aid groups. The military said it did
not know of any civilians killed.
Tensions also rose in northern Iraq after Kurdish rebels ambushed a military
unit near Turkey's border with Iraq, killing at least 12 soldiers. Turkey's
government has threatened to take action against the rebels based in
northern Iraq if the U.S.-led coalition in Iraq does not stop the Kurdish
attacks on Turkish forces.
Hours after the ambush, an Iraqi army officer from the border guard forces,
Col. Hussein Rashid, said Turkish forces fired about 15 artillery shells
toward Kurdish villages in the border area in northern Iraq. But there were
no casualties.
In Sadr City, the U.S. military said "an estimated 49 criminals" were killed
in three separate engagements during a raid targeting a suspected rogue
Shiite militia leader specializing in kidnapping operations for which he
sought funding from Iran.
U.S. troops returned fire after coming under sustained attack from automatic
weapons and rocket-propelled grenades from nearby buildings as they began to
raid a series of buildings in the district, according to a statement, which
added that some 33 militants were killed in the firefight. Ground forces
then called in airstrikes, which killed some six militants.
The U.S. troops were then attacked by a roadside bomb and continued heavy
fire as they left the area, killing another 10 combatants in subsequent
clashes.
"All total, coalition forces estimate that 49 criminals were killed in three
separate engagements during this operation. Ground forces reported they were
unaware of any innocent civilians being killed as a result of this
operation," the military said in the updated statement.
Iraqi police and hospital officials put the death toll at at least 13 and
said a woman and three children were among the dead from the pre-dawn raid
in the sprawling district. They said 52 people were injured.
Photos showed the bodies of two toddlers, one with a gouged face, swaddled
in blankets on the floor of the morgue. Relatives said they were killed when
helicopter gunfire hit their house as they slept. Their shirts were pulled
up, exposing their abdomens. A diaper showed above the waistband of the
shorts of one of the boys.
Several houses, cars and shops were damaged in the fighting, which witnesses
said lasted two hours.
Iraqis have routinely claimed civilians were killed as U.S.-led forces
stepped up raids to try to root out extremists in Sadr City and other Shiite
strongholds as part of an 8-month-old security operation to quell sectarian
violence.
But the reported death toll in Sunday's strike was among the largest.
On Aug. 8, the U.S. military said 32 suspected militants were killed and 12
captured in an operation targeting a ring believed to be smuggling armor-piercing
roadside bombs from Iran. Iraqi police and witnesses claimed nine civilians,
including two women, were killed in that raid.
The sweeps into Sadr City have sent a strong message that U.S. forces plan
no letup on suspected Shiite militia cells despite risks of upsetting the
Shiite-led government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and its efforts at
closer cooperation with Shiite heavyweight Iran.
An Iraqi military spokesman, Brig. Gen. Qassim al-Moussawi, said the
government would ask the military for an explanation about Sunday's raid and
stressed the need to avoid civilian deaths everywhere.
The government has had mixed reactions to the raids and airstrikes,
particularly when they target Sunni extremists.
U.S. troops backed by attack aircraft also killed 19 suspected insurgents
and 15 civilians, including nine children, in an operation Oct. 11 targeting
al-Qaida in Iraq leaders northwest of Baghdad.
In that case, al-Maliki's government said the killings of the 15 women and
children were a "sorrowful matter," but added that civilian deaths are
unavoidable in the fight against al-Qaida.
Relatives gathered at Sadr City's Imam Ali hospital as the emergency room
was overwhelmed with bloodied victims and the dead were placed in caskets
covered by Iraqi flags.
An initial military statement e-mailed to The Associated Press said the
raids were targeting "criminals believed to be responsible for the
kidnapping of coalition soldiers in November 2006 and May 2007."
However a later release said only that U.S. troops, acting on intelligence,
raided a number of buildings in an operation targeting a rogue Shiite
militia leader specializing in Iranian-funded kidnappings.
The military said it was targeting a member of a breakaway faction of the
Mahdi Army militia that is nominally loyal to Muqtada al-Sadr. The
anti-American cleric has called on his fighters to stand down.
APTN video showed a U.S. helicopter flying over the area while black smoke
rose into the sky.
Other footage showed three bloodied boys sitting on hospital tables and an
elderly man being treated for a head wound.
Mourners tied wooden coffins onto the tops of minivans with the plume of
smoking rising in the background.●
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