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Iraq
Fighting continues in western Iraq
2005-11-06
The US military has said its major offensive along the Syrian border in western Iraq has met with some resistance. Dubbed Operation Steel Curtain, the offensive comprises about 3500 troops and includes for the first time units of Iraq's military, numbering about 1000, in what the US insists are joint operations in the al-Anbar province. US and Iraqi forces say they "have encountered sporadic resistance - mostly small arms fire and improvised explosive devices". The US military also said only specific targets were selected and there were no reports of military or civilian casualties. There were fatalities among fighters, the US military added.

At least nine air strikes were called on positions described as "enemy strong points", and a separate strike was carried out against a suspected car bomb, a US military statement said. Iraqi scouts, described as "specially recruited soldiers from the al-Qaim region," are embedded with the frontline units "and are helping to identify fighter strong points and areas known to contain these homemade bombs". The operation involves 1000 Iraqi army soldiers as well as 2500 marines, sailors and soldiers in what the US military called "the largest concentration of Iraqi army forces to take part in an operation in al-Anbar this year".

Steel Curtain follows two earlier operations, Iron Fist and River Gate, also along the Euphrates valley in al-Anbar province. The US command said there were no reports of casualties among American or Iraqi government forces. Residents and local leaders say US bombardment in the Husaiba area were endangering civilians and could lead to greater instability throughout the country.
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Iraq
U.S. Forces Report Killing 20 Insurgents Sheltering Foreign Militants
2005-10-24
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - U.S. soldiers and warplanes killed 20 insurgents and destroyed five "safe houses" Saturday during an operation against militants who shelter foreign fighters for al-Qaida in Iraq near the Syrian border, the military said. Three U.S. Marines and an Army soldier were reported killed in three different areas of Iraq earlier this week as the American death toll in the war inched toward 2,000.

One Marine, who was assigned to Regimental Combat Team 2, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward), died in an explosion near Haqlaniyah on Friday. During the subsequent engagement fellow Marines killed four insurgents and destroyed a bunker adjacent to their position with an unknown number of militants firing from inside, the military said. The fighting occurred on the final day of Operation River Gate, an offensive that began Oct. 4 in western Iraq.

Elsewhere, two Marines assigned to Regimental Combat Team 8, 2nd Marine Division, II Marine Expeditionary Force (Forward), were killed Friday by a roadside bomb during combat operations near Amiriyah, 25 miles west of Baghdad, the military said. On Thursday, a U.S. Army soldier died of a "non-hostile gunshot wound" in central Baghdad. That term often is used to describe an accident or a suicide. The incident was being investigated, the military said.

The deaths raised to at least 1,996 the number of members of the U.S. military who have died since the Iraq war started in March 2003, according to an Associated Press count.

Meanwhile, defense lawyers in Saddam Hussein's trial rejected protection offered by the Iraqi Interior Ministry after the kidnap-slaying of a colleague. The attorneys suggested they wanted U.S. protection, being deeply suspicious that the Iraqi police force has Shiite Muslim elements behind killings of Sunni Arabs. The murder of lawyer Saadoun al-Janabi terrorized the 12 remaining attorneys who appeared at the first session of Saddam's trial Wednesday representing the ousted dictator and seven former officials from his Sunni-dominated Baathist regime.

In Saturday's fighting, 20 insurgents suspected of harboring foreign extremists were killed and one was captured by U.S.-led forces during raids on houses in Husaybah, a town near the Syrian border, the military said in a statement. Coalition forces raided two neighborhoods in Husaybah and discovered two large weapons caches containing small arms, ammunition, rocket-propelled grenades, mortar rounds, explosives and bomb-making materials that included radios and detonators, the statement said. The soldiers destroyed a car bomb found near one of the buildings, and Air Force planes then used precision-guided munitions to destroy the "safe houses," the military said.

In Washington, U.S. intelligence officials said Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, leader of al-Qaida in Iraq, has expanded his terrorism campaign from Iraq to two dozen groups scattered across almost 40 countries, creating a network that rivals Osama bin Laden's. The U.S. officials said the threat to American interests from al-Zarqawi compared with that from bin Laden, to whom al-Zarqawi pledged his loyalty a year ago.

In other violence Saturday, two roadside bombs and a drive-by shooting killed three Iraqi policemen and wounded four in Baghdad, authorities said. Gunmen also killed a former Iraqi soldier in front of his home in Karbala, 50 miles south of Baghdad, police said.

Iraqis were still waiting to learn the outcome of the Oct. 15 constitutional referendum. Initial returns indicated the charter passed, but an unusually high "yes" vote in some areas fueled charges of fraud from Sunni Arab leaders who opposed the constitution. A team of international and Iraqi experts pored over some of the results Saturday looking for any irregularities. The audit in Ninevah and three other provinces would delay announcement of the final results until at least Monday or Tuesday, the Electoral Commission said. Commission officials, however, insisted that no fraud had been uncovered. "We did not find any significant violations that would have any effect on the final results of the referendum," member Safwat Rashid said at a news conference in Baghdad.

Iraqi government officials met late Friday to discuss improving security for the defense lawyers in Saddam's trial. "We have decided to take some measures to protect the lawyers," Deputy Interior Minister Gen. Hussein Ali Kamal told The Associated Press on Saturday, though he refused to give details. But one of Saddam's two lawyers said the entire defense team rejected an offer of guards from the Interior Ministry. He said they were talking with U.S. officials about getting protection from American troops.

Khamees Hamid al-Ubaidi pointed to frequent Sunni Arab accusations that Interior Ministry forces or Shiite militias linked to the government have killed of Sunni Arabs. "We refused because of our lack of trust in the Iraqi security agencies," al-Ubaidi said. "Everyone knows there are elements in the Interior Ministry that assassinate Iraqis."

Al-Janabi, a lawyer for one of Saddam's co-defendants, was abducted Thursday night when men wearing police and military uniforms barged into his Baghdad office and took him away. Hours later, his body was found dumped on a nearby sidewalk, with two bullet wounds to the head and signs of torture. Police said the gunmen were wearing the uniforms as a disguise. But it was reminiscent of other abductions in recent months in which Sunni Arabs were taken away by men in uniform claiming to be with the Interior Ministry, only to turn up dead.

Sunni leaders have blamed those slayings on Shiite death squads in or linked to the ministry. The government denies any role, blaming the attacks on insurgents, who have been known in other cases to wear stolen uniforms to carry out attacks.
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Iraq
Second day of US-Iraqi offensive
2005-10-06
U.S. Marines and Iraqi forces began their second major offensive in four days in western Iraq on Tuesday, dropping bombs and recapturing a cluster of Euphrates River settlements at the hub of an insurgent infiltration route from Syria.

The U.S. military said five troops died Monday. A Marine, Cpl. John R. Stalvey, was slain in fighting in Karabilah. Three soldiers were killed outside Haqlaniya by a roadside bomb; they were not immediately identified. The troops were the first American casualties of the two offensives in Al Anbar province, an insurgent stronghold. Elsewhere in the province, a U.S. soldier died near Fallouja, far from the two offensives, the military said.

Residents of Haditha, the main target of the newest offensive, reported street fighting between insurgents and U.S. forces. They said American troops ordered people to stay indoors, opened fire from rooftops at motorists trying to leave town, and chased suspected insurgents into the hospital, where they detained the director and several patients.

In Baghdad, meanwhile, a suicide attacker set off a car bomb at the main entrance to the Green Zone, the heavily fortified district that houses Iraqi government ministries and the U.S. and British embassies. The blast killed three Iraqi policemen.

At least a dozen other Iraqis died in scattered violence across the country on the first day of Ramadan, the holy Islamic month of fasting. Al Qaeda in Iraq, the most violent and vocal insurgent group, urged its followers in a Ramadan message to intensify attacks and make it "a month of defeat" for U.S. and Iraqi forces.

The coming weeks in Al Anbar province will test the ability of Iraqi forces to protect cities and towns secured by U.S. forces.

The offensive launched Tuesday, codenamed River Gate, brought Marines back to Haditha and the adjacent villages of Haqlaniya and Parwana two months after driving insurgents out of the area 130 miles northwest of Baghdad. U.S. forces suffered heavy losses in that early August assault; 14 Marines and their interpreter died when an armored vehicle hit a landmine.

Days after American forces left, however, militants were back in control, dominating a region of 100,000 people with no government presence or police force. U.S. officials say Haditha is a smuggling crossroads for Al Qaeda in Iraq, linking its infiltration route from the Syrian border to roads leading to Mosul, Ramadi, Fallouja and Baghdad.

This time, the Marines brought along what U.S. officials called the largest contingent of Iraqi troops to join in an anti-insurgent assault. Army Lt. Col. Steve Boylan, a U.S. military spokesman, said that about half the 2,500 troops taking part in the offensive were Iraqis.

"What's different is there are more Iraqi forces in the field with more experience," Boylan said, adding that some of them would remain behind to keep the insurgents from coming back.

Residents contacted by telephone in Haditha, however, said they saw no Iraqi forces alongside the Americans.

The assault began with predawn strikes by U.S. warplanes and helicopters that knocked out a bridge across the Euphrates and cut off electricity to the city and neighboring villages.

Using loudspeakers to warn residents to stay indoors, troops went door to door arresting suspected insurgents, witnesses said, and flooded the city with leaflets urging people to turn in others. The troops told people that they had come to enable the Iraqi government to establish civilian authority in the area.

People in Haditha say they have lived in fearful tolerance of the insurgents only because there was no other consistent armed presence. But residents contacted by telephone Tuesday spoke harshly about what they called a heavy-handed military invasion.

"If they want to clean out our city, don't do it by shooting at our people," said Ali Abed Allah, 44. "If they want to bring in government officials, we can allow them to come in. There must be a more peaceful way."

U.S.-led forces were in the fourth day of a similar offensive affecting Karabilah and two other cities about 90 miles upriver, targeting insurgents who receive reinforcements and supplies over the nearby Syrian border. At least 57 suspected insurgents have been killed in that operation, the U.S. military said.

Sheik Usama Aljadaan, a tribal leader reached by telephone in Karabilah, said U.S. soldiers had sealed off the city Saturday, bombed it, and moved in ground forces Tuesday. Although Iraqi forces are also officially part of the operation there, he said he had not see any.

U.S. officials say a goal of the offensives is to help Iraqi authorities set up polling places so people in Al Anbar can vote, free of insurgent threats, in an Oct. 15 referendum on a proposed constitution. On Tuesday, Al Qaeda in Iraq repeated its call for a boycott of the vote.

The Bush administration is counting on a yes vote to advance its plan for democratic institutions and undermine the Sunni Arab-led insurgency. Sunni political leaders in Al Anbar, who are urging their followers to vote no, have accused the United States of timing the offensives to disrupt communities and displace people to prevent them from voting.

Boylan, the military spokesman, denied that intention. But he said, "You can't plan these operations to wrap up by a certain date."
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Iraq
US, Iraqi forces continued Operation River Gate in western Iraq
2005-10-06
US and Iraqi forces continued executing Operation River Gate on Wednesday in western Iraq, while the Iraqi government called upon residents of Haditha village to remain in their homes and cooperate with troops. A US Army statement said that some 2,500 US Marines and more than 3,000 Iraqi soldiers were taking part in regular purgation operations in villages in the province of Al-Anbar, western Iraq.

The statement also said that US fighter planes and helicopters shelled a number of bridges in western villages to prevent militants from escaping to Syria. Up to five US marines participating in Operation River Gate had been killed yesterday in the villages of Al-Haqlaniyah and Barawna in Al-Anbar province. Meanwhile, a US Army statement said 41 militants has been killed in the same operation, adding that the operation was launched ten days before the constitution referendum aimed at "liberating local residents from the death and terror campaign being executed by terrorists." For his part, official spokesman for the Iraqi Prime Minister Laith Kabbeh said in a press conference in Baghdad that more than 3,000 Iraqis were currently responsible for control, monitoring and search operations in the village of Haditha. He called upon residents to remain in their homes, stressing that security forces were searching for specific people and at specific locations.
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Iraq
Operation River Gate Launched
2005-10-05
The 2nd Marine Division launched Operation Bawwabatu Annaher, or River Gate in English, in the cities of Haditha, Haqlaniyah and Barwana Oct. 4.

Approximately 2,500 Marines, Soldiers and Sailors from Regimental Combat Team – 2 and Iraqi Security force soldiers are participating in the operation, making it the largest operation in the al Anbar province this year.

The operation’s goal is to deny al Qaeda in Iraq the ability to operate in the three Euphrates River Valley cities and to free the local citizens from the terrorists’ campaign of murder and intimidation of innocent women, children and men.

Haditha is an important crossroads for al Qaeda in Iraq’s smuggling activities from the Syrian border. Once in Haditha, smugglers can go north to Mosul or continue on to ar Ramadi, Fallujah or Baghdad. The city is home to approximately 75,000 Iraqis, a vital hydro-electric power plant, and 28 schools.

Coalition and Iraqi forces located in western al Anbar province have seen a recent increase of al Qaeda in Iraq violence in Haditha. Last Spring, terrorists attacked Haditha General Hospital, the largest in western al Anbar, with a suicide car bomb, destroying more than half of the building with the explosion and ensuing fire. Terrorists also established fortified firing positions inside the hospital and used patients and staff as human shields as they attacked Marines from the hospital and later retreated from the Marine counterattack.

More information will be released as it becomes available.
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Iraq
US launches biggest offensive of the year
2005-10-05
Thousands of troops have moved in on militants in and around Haditha in western Iraq, in the biggest offensive so far this year against the al-Qaeda-linked insurgency. Some 2,500 troops, backed up by helicopters and war planes, moved into towns along the Euphrates valley, Haditha, Haqlaniya and Barwana, in Operation River Gate. The US military says is designed to root out al-Qaeda insurgents from the area and "free the local citizens from the terrorists' campaign of murder and intimidation."

However, it was announced in a statement on Tuesday that four marines have been killed in the operation. Three died on Monday in Haqlaniya, while a fourth was killed on the Syrian border, taking the total US military death toll since the invasion of Iraq in 2003 to 1,936.

Local residents in the areas targeted by the offensive told journalists that helicopters dropped troops into the area and a bridge linking Haditha and Berwana was bombed, along with several houses which were believed to have been used by the insurgents. Troops also went house-to-house making arrests. US vehicles were reported to be patrolling the streets, urging local people to give them information about the militants, who had taken control of the towns and were said to have imposed Taliban-style Islamic rule.

Meanwhile, since Saturday another thousand troops have been working to root out al-Qaeda militants near Qaim on the Syrian border, further west from Haditha in Operation Iron Fist. These are the latest in a series of operations by US and Iraqi troops targeting certain towns, such as Fallujah and Samarra, which had become rebel strongholds. Each offensive has prompted hundreds of families to flee the towns.

Last week hundreds of families were reported to have started fleeing Samarra following an announcement from the Defence Ministry that preparations had started for an offensive against insurgents there.

Humanitarian workers say around 800 families have already fled al-Qaim to escape the violence. Several hundred residents from the town are reported to have crossed the border into Syria to seek refuge there. Health workers in the area say there have already been many civilian casualties in the fighting between the militants and the US-led forces. The Iraqi Red Crescent Society says it will sent a relief convoy to western Iraqi on Wednesday with tents, blankets, food parcels and medical supplies for those displaced by the violence.
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Iraq
U.S. Military Launches New Iraq Offensive
2005-10-04
Some 2,500 U.S. troops along with Iraqi forces launched their second major offensive in western Iraq in a week Tuesday, sweeping into three towns to take them back from insurgents who had killed Marines there last month. The U.S. military announced its first casualties of the offensives, with four troops killed by roadside bombs during the fighting and a fifth elsewhere.
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The military launched its latest offensive in a cluster of cities in the Euphrates River valley about 140 miles northwest of Baghdad. Code-named "River Gate," it was the largest U.S. offensive in the troubled Anbar region of western Iraq this year, the military said. It also included hundreds of Iraqi troops, the largest such contingent of any of the offensives this year.

Airstrikes by U.S. warplanes and dozens of helicopters set off explosions that lit up Haqlaniyah, Parwana and Haditha before dawn Tuesday. Barrages of gunfire also were seen in the night sky. Large sections of Haqlaniyah's power were knocked out. Some of the strikes took out bridges across the Euphrates in the area to prevent militants from escaping over them into the desert, said Lt. Col. Christopher Starling, the operations officer in Regimental Combat Team 2, which is leading the offensive.

Dozens of roadside bombs were encountered on the main arteries into the towns as U.S. troops moved in, Marine commanders said. Later in the day, U.S. snipers took positions on rooftops in Haqlaniyah as troops blared warnings on loudspeakers ordering residents to stay inside their homes, witnesses said.

The military launched a similar offensive on Saturday, 93 miles upriver, by the Syrian border. Operation "Iron Fist," which continued Tuesday, concentrated in the towns of Sadah, Karabilah and Rumana, aiming to uproot al-Qaida in Iraq insurgents who receive reinforcements and supplies from Syria. At least 57 militants have been killed in that operation.

The military said a Marine was killed Monday by a roadside bomb in Karabilah, the first U.S. death in Operation Iron Fist. In the hours before Operation River Gate began, a roadside bomb hit U.S. troops in Haqlaniyah on Monday, killing three, the military said. Elsewhere, a soldier was shot Monday morning near Taqaddum, a town close to the city of Fallujah, also in Anbar but away from the two offensives, the military said. The killings raised to at least 1,941 the number of U.S. military members who have died since the beginning of the war in 2003, according to an Associated Press count.

The towns of Haqlaniyah, Parwana and Haditha, with a combined population of 100,000, have no Iraqi police or troops based in them, leaving their streets open to roving insurgent groups. On Aug. 1, an ambush by insurgents in Haditha killed six U.S. Marine snipers, and a large roadside bomb on the outskirts of the city on Aug. 3 killed 14 Marines and an Iraqi interpreter.

Last spring, Haditha General Hospital, the region's largest, was heavily damaged by a suicide car bomb that set fire to the building, and insurgents used staff and patients as human shields during fighting with Marines that followed. In addition, the U.S. military has said that Iraq's most wanted terrorist, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the head of Al-Qaida in Iraq, once had a home in Haditha. Earlier this year, hundreds of U.S. forces conducted individual sweeps in the three towns.

The newest operation is "step forward to eliminating insurgents and giving the country back to the Iraqi people," said Col. Stephen W. Davis, who added it would help residents in the Haditha area freely vote in the constitutional referendum.
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