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US says bombs house after clash in Iraq's Samarra
26 Aug 2007 15:28:52 GMT
Source: Reuters
BAGHDAD, Aug 26 (Reuters) - U.S. forces said they bombed a house in the Iraqi city of Samarra on Sunday after fighters attacked them, and police said five children and two women were among the dead.

"At approximately noon today, 12 men in a white truck got out of the truck, ran into a house where we had soldiers in an overwatch position and attacked our soldiers," Lieutenant-Colonel Michael Donnelly, spokesman for U.S. forces in northern Iraq, said in an e-mail.

He said the attackers fled to another house and were tracked from the air by a U.S. surveillance drone.

"We dropped a precision guidance bomb on the house following positive identification," he said, adding that he could not confirm the number killed.

"If there are innocent injured, it is regrettable for sure, but not surprising that AQI put innocent civilians in harm's way. It's the only thing they do routinely -- take innocent Iraqi lives," he said. AQI refers to al Qaeda in Iraq.

Saadoun Mohammad, a police officer at Samarra General Hospital, said the hospital's morgue had received the bodies of five children and two women killed in the strike. He said eight people were wounded, including three children and a woman.

Samarra has been the scene of fighting between U.S. forces and al Qaeda Sunni Arab militants. Washington says it is having success against al Qaeda fighters in the area.
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A woman wearing a quote attributed to U.S. Army Gen. David Petraeus listens as peace activists read letters they say are from people around the country against the war and the administration of President George W. Bush - some calling for his impeachment - during a We Will Not Be Silent rally organized by several anti-war groups under the umbrella organization Activist Response Team on the west front lawn of the U.S. Capitol in Washington September 11, 2007. The protest was going on at the same time that Petraeus was delivering a report on the Iraq war to the U.S. Senate.



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