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Date Posted: 23:51:29 05/27/03 Tue
Author: Drew Greyfox
Subject: Attacks On Troops In Iraq On Rise
In reply to: Drew Greyfox 's message, "Cut and Paste News" on 23:25:36 05/27/03 Tue

Attacks On Troops In Iraq On Rise

(CBS) Major U.S. combat operations in Iraq ended weeks ago, but American soldiers are still fighting and dying there, reports CBS News’ John Roberts.

Two American soldiers were killed and four others wounded Monday in two separate incidents in one of the deadliest days for U.S. troops in postwar Iraq.

The commander of U.S. forces in Iraq says not a day goes by without intelligence warnings about threats against his troops. Attacks on American soldiers are increasing in both frequency and ferocity, and ambushes, are their biggest worry, reports CBS News Correspondent David Hawkins.

In Northern Iraq, a U.S. Army supply convoy was ambushed on Monday: one American was killed and another wounded.

In a separate ambush in Baghdad, the lead Humvee in a convoy hit a homemade land mine, killing one soldier and wounding three others.

Pvt. Dustin Meeks was in the convoy. “The Humvee in front of us, it seemed like it hit a bump in the road and it exploded,” he recalls. “It's about the biggest explosion I've seen since the war started.”

Meeks opened fire on a group of Iraqi men he saw hiding in the bushes, but they all got away.

Pvt. Jason Kleinman, the driver of a trailing Humvee, recalls, “Then we just rushed out and tried to get them out of there.”

Kleinman and Meeks pulled two badly burned soldiers from the wreckage. A third man was thrown 15 feet, his arm blown off. Then there were dozens more explosions as ammunition and fuel caught fire. A fourth soldier was hurt in the explosions.

Pvt. Enrique Alvarado helped Kleinman and Meeks rescue the wounded. “We just did our best to get them as far away as possible from the vehicle before it exploded,” he says.

The wounded were evacuated by helicopter. The three who rescued them will get medals, says their commanding officer, Lt. Stephen Gleason. “They went in risking their lives to pull out their guys,” he says.

Even in Iraqi cities that have not seen such attacks, American troops feel far from secure.

In the western city of Hit, reports CBS National Security Correspondent David Martin, American frustration and Iraqi anger is coming together in a dangerous mix.

One of Iraq's most ancient cities, Hit is patrolled by the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, which is finding these streets as difficult to control as Baghdad's.

In three weeks American troops have not had to fire a single shot in anger, but Iraqis throw stones at U.S. troops.

One demonstrator told CBS News, “[You] destroy our country. Our homeland destroyed. We are against you.”

Capt. Ed Palacios says the people of Hit think they are being neglected. And the people are desperate, including the workers at a pumping station -- the only source of clean water for 150,000 -- with no paychecks and no money for repairs to keep it running. Or the father of a four-year-old girl dying of lymphoma who can find no medical care.

Dr. Nayef Enad, an Iraqi doctor, says these problems are now the fault and responsibility of the Americans.

“As long as they are in my country and they are occupying my country,” says Enad, “they have to give me drugs, food, anything.”

Iraq's civilian administrator, L. Paul Bremer, says troops have done a great deal to re-establish stability, including turning on water and electricity and improving basic services. He says the United States will start a program to help the nation rebuild its economy.

But he acknowledged: “There is still a lot to do, there's no doubt.”


In other Iraqi news:


- Some former Iraqi soldiers say a lot of people are out of a job because of the United States. About 100 former soldiers staged a protest in Baghdad against the U.S. dismantling of the Iraqi army and the Republican Guard last week. The former soldiers say the action leaves a million people jobless.

[A million people jobless? Well, I guess Bush can do for Iraq what he has done for the US!]

- Hundreds of Marines returned to Camp Lejeune, N.C., today from combat in Iraq. Families waited in the rain to welcome 2,300 Marines and sailors from the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit, the first major Marine Corps unit returning to the United States from combat in Iraq aboard three ships.

[Although thousands more troops will be sent to Iraq to continue the occupation.]

- The ongoing purge of Baath Party members from top positions of Iraq's government agencies has claimed one of the city's highest police officials. Abdul Razak al-Abasse spent the past three weeks helping U.S. forces rebuild this city's ravaged police department until he was ousted Sunday by order of Bremer.


- Former New York City police commissioner Bernard Kerik, who arrived in Baghdad a week ago to help establish a police force, says security in Baghdad was not as bad as he expected. “Are bad things going on? Yes, But is it out of control? No. Is it getting better? Yes.” He said the number of street patrols is increasing, and that between 7,000 and 9,000 Baghdad policemen have returned to work. All of them are vetted for close links to Saddam's Baath party, ties with organized crime or human rights abuses.


- The U.N.'s nuclear agency says nuclear inspectors will return to Iraq by the end of the week. They'll be checking on radioactive material at Iraq's biggest nuclear facility.

[The same nuclear facility that the Bush administration said was a possible location for WMD. So they left it completely unguarded until after it had been looted of radioactive materials.]

- The U.N. World Food program says it's buying some 1.3 million tons of mostly wheat and barley from Iraqi farmers in the coming months.


- Arabs and Turks in Iraq's main northern oil city of Kirkuk threatened to boycott a mayoral vote after an American general on Sunday approved the choice of six final members of a 30-member city council.


- Frustrated weapons hunters are turning away from U.S. intelligence leads, which have failed to turn up any evidence of chemical, biological or nuclear arms in Iraq after ten weeks. Teams are now moving toward their own intelligence gathering, based on interviews with Iraqi scientists, factory workers and even neighbors who lived near shadowy operations once run by Saddam Hussein.


- The United Nations says unsafe roads, urban banditry and illegal guns in the hands of civilians are hampering U.N. officials trying to get humanitarian aid back on track.



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  • U.S. Troops Again Under Fire -- Drew Greyfox, 23:55:37 05/27/03 Tue

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