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Iraqis, U.S. dispute deadly raid in new friction
08 Dec 2006 20:19:19 GMT
Source: Reuters

(Adds Annan, Rumsfeld comments)

By Ibon Villelabeitia

BAGHDAD, Dec 8 (Reuters) - Iraqi and U.S. officials disputed each others' accounts of an overnight raid and air strike on Friday that killed up to 20 people in a new sign of friction over allegations of American troops killing civilians.

The U.S. military said ground forces with air support killed 20 suspected al Qaeda militants, including two women, in an area where the Sunni Arab insurgency is strong.

Police and officials in Ishaqi, 90 km (50 miles) north of Baghdad, said the bodies of 17 civilians, including six women and five children, were found in the rubble of two homes.

"The Americans have done this before but they always deny it," Ishaqi Mayor Amer Alwan told Reuters by telephone. "I want the world to know what's happening here."

Complaints that unjustified killings by U.S. troops are common have soured Iraqis' sentiment toward the U.S. presence in Iraq and prompted Shi'ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki earlier this year to say he was losing patience over such reports.

This week an elite panel in Washington, exploring alternatives for U.S. President George W. Bush's Iraq strategy, recommended the primary mission of U.S. forces evolve to one of training to let Iraqi forces take over combat responsibility.

Former Secretary of State James Baker, co-chair of the panel, urged Congress and the White House to accept most of the report's recommendations.

"I hope we don't treat this as a fruit salad, and say, 'I like this but I don't like that'," Baker said on Thursday.

But the White House on Friday dismissed his appeal.

White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said the Iraq report would be considered along with internal reviews being conducted by the Pentagon, State Department and National Security Council.

Terje Roed-Larsen, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan's special envoy on Syria-Lebanon issues, said the report was flawed as it assumes there is a common interest among states in the Middle East to stop a slide into chaos in Iraq.

Bush, who has meetings next week with Pentagon and State Department officials, is due to outline his new Iraq policy before Christmas, but has already rejected direct talks with Iran and Syria, a central recommendation of the panel.

More than 2,900 U.S. troops have died and tens of thousands of Iraqis have been killed since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein

CHILDREN'S BODIES

Iraqiya state television on Friday said Iraq would hold a national reconciliation conference on Dec. 16. It gave no details and it was not clear if Sunni Arab militant groups who oppose the political process would take part.

In Ishaqi, grieving relatives showed the bodies of five children wrapped in blankets to journalists.

In a statement, the U.S. military said the operation in Salahaddin province followed intelligence reports that al Qaeda militants operated in the area. It said rocket-propelled grenades and explosive suicide vests were found.

Only a handful of complaints involving civilian deaths in Iraq have led to criminal investigations by the U.S. military.

"I can promise you that, in every one of these incidents, they will be fully investigated," Lieutenant General Peter Chiarelli, the second-ranking U.S. general in the country, told Pentagon journalists by video-link.

Annan warned on Friday that the worsening conflict in Iraq is increasing the odds of a regional war in the Middle East.

"It is increasingly clear that soaring violence in Iraq affects not only that country but also threatens to "aggravate a range of underlying tensions in neighboring countries," he said.

As a result, "the prospects of all-out civil war and even a regional conflict have become much more real" since his last report, issued three months ago, said Annan.

Outgoing U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld pleaded for patience, and said in his farewell speech on Friday that it would be a "terrible mistake" for America to leave Iraq now.

In the largest operation of its kind since the U.S. invasion, British and Danish troops backed by tanks seized five suspects accused of attacks on coalition forces in the southern city of Basra, the British military said.

Some 1,000 troops launched raids on five homes in the northern al-Hartha district of Basra, where rival Shi'ite militias are battling for control of the city's oil wealth and coalition troops are sometimes attacked. (Additional reporting by Ghazwan al-Jibouri in Ishaqi and Mariam Karouny and Ross Colvin in Baghdad, Steve Holland and Andrew Gray in Washington, David Clarke in London)
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A bomb blast victim waits for treatment at Imam Ali hospital in Baghdad's Sadr city February 3, 2007.A suicide bomber killed 135 people on Saturday in the deadliest single bombing in Iraq since the 2003 war, driving a truck laden with one tonne of explosives into a market in a mainly Shi'ite area of Baghdad. Picture taken February 3, 2006