6 US Soldiers Killed in Iraq Monday

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Correction.

Six U.S. troops die in Iraq; insurgent attacks kill seven Iraqis
By Ravi Nessman, Associated Press, 8/3/2004 16:48

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) Insurgents killed seven Iraqi security personnel in a car bombing and other attacks Tuesday, and the U.S. military announced the deaths of six Americans, including four killed by guerrillas.

The American dead included two soldiers killed by a roadside bomb and two Marines who died after being wounded in fighting Monday. Two others died in non-combat-related incidents. The U.S. deaths brought at least 919 the number of U.S. service members who have died since the beginning of military operations in Iraq.

Also Tuesday, saboteurs set off a bomb at a key northern oil pipeline, sparking a fire and sending huge plumes of thick black smoke into the sky. The explosion had no immediate effect on exports, which had been halted for weeks from the north.

Iraqi Prime Minister Ayad Allawi blamed the continuing violence on ''evil powers ... trying to stop Iraq's march toward safety.''

''We expect that as Iraq's (security) capabilities increase, the crushing of these (armed) operations will increase,'' he told reporters Tuesday.

Meanwhile gunmen, apparently Sunni Muslims, shot Tuesday at an office belonging to the movement of Iraq's most senior Shiite cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Husseini al-Sistani, in the town of Yusifiya, about 15 miles south of Baghdad an area of frequent insurgent attacks.

The Shiite residents shot back, killing six of the attackers and capturing three, according to Col. Anwar al-Ubaidi, police chief of the nearby town of Mahmoudiya.

In the city of Najaf, south of Baghdad, forces loyal to radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr were holding 18 police hostage as leverage to force authorities to release their comrades, a police official said Tuesday on condition of anonymity.

The abductions reflected increasing friction that has threatened a fragile truce that ended two months of fighting that began in April between al-Sadr's Mahdi Army militia and U.S. troops. Marines and al-Sadr's militiamen engaged in a battle in Najaf on Monday that killed a woman.

Al-Sadr aides have accused police of targeting members of his Mahdi Army.

Najaf Gov. Adnan al-Zurufi confirmed that a number of policemen were kidnapped; Ahmed al-Shaibany, an al-Sadr spokesman, denied any police were locked up in al-Sadr's office or any of his quarters.

The deadliest insurgent attack Tuesday came in a car bombing north of the city of Baqoubah, when a truck raced toward an Iraqi checkpoint guarding Kharnabad Bridge, officials said.

The truck attempted to merge into a U.S. military convoy heading toward the bridge, but a soldier driving one of the vehicles forced it off the road before it detonated, said Maj. Neal O'Brien, a U.S. Army spokesman. No U.S. troops were injured, he said.

The blast killed four members of the Iraqi National Guard and wounded five others, said Maj. Gen. Waleed Khaled Abdulsalam, Baqouba's police chief.

''A U.S. convoy drove past us and just afterward there was an explosion,'' Cpl. Motaz Abood, whose back, arms and face were covered in burns, said from his hospital bed.

The U.S. military reported that two U.S. Marines with the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force were killed in fighting Monday in Anbar province, a volatile, Sunni-dominated region west of Baghdad.

One Marine was killed Monday, the other died Tuesday of wounds, the military said. A third Marine was killed Tuesday after suffering a non-hostile gunshot wound, the military said.

A roadside bomb in Baghdad killed two U.S. soldiers and wounded two others late Monday, the military said. A third soldier was killed Tuesday in a vehicle accident in Baghdad, the military said.

In other violence, a roadside bomb attack early Tuesday killed Col. Mouyad Mohammed Bashar, chief of al-Mamoun police station in Baghdad, along with another officer, officials said. A third officer was wounded in the blast.

Gunmen in the northern city of Mosul opened fire on a police station, killing one officer and injuring two others before fleeing, police chief Izzat Ibrahim said.

From April 2003 to May 2004 alone, 710 Iraqi police were killed out of a total force of 130,000 officers, authorities said.

The pipeline attack came when saboteurs exploded a bomb Tuesday alongside a pipeline that sends oil to Iraq's Beiji refinery as well as to Turkish port of Ceyhan, the main export line from Iraq's northern oil fields. The Ceyhan pipeline already has been idle for weeks due to constant attacks.

Huge plumes of black smoke billowed into the air from the raging fire on the pipeline near al-Fattah, about 135 miles north of Baghdad. The fire blazed all day and fire fighters left it still burning in the evening, witnesses said.

Iraq usually exports about 250,000 barrels of oil a day through Turkey from its northern oil fields. The bulk of Iraq's oil exports, roughly 90 percent, flow from its southern fields.


Associated Press
 

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Big deal - they enlisted on their own free will - they get what they deserve - now let's "Support the troops" and "Stay the course."
 

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7 Iraqis (not three as stated in this report) were also killed.
 

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you're a sick sadistic fvck Seymour. those guys don't deserve to die - they don't make policy. they should have known the chances of being sent to a dangerous place - yes. noone deserves to die
 

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Seymour if I'm not mistaken is being sarcastic. The mantra about troops serving in Iraq has been "so what they volunteered, they want to be there".


wil.
 

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I agree completely - those bastard baby killers got what they deserved

how DARE they volunteer for the military after what happened to people in one of our most populated cities

it shows american ignorance and apathy at its best

we all know that al queda would have never tried to get more funds/weapons/support/etc. from an innocent country like iraq - and even if they tried, we all know that the iraqi people would NEVER have fallen for it. Their leader was a great man and he of all men would not have even THOUGHT of supporting such US haters...
 

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I was kidding - it's the Republicans who use this type of shit anytime anyone shows any compassion for these poor kids - they love to say "they chose the military".
 

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I support the troops so much I actually want to sit this out for a limited amount of time and if Iraq can't get it together I want the kids to come home - no one who supports the troops would leave them in that hell for another 5 years - NO ONE - that is not supporting the troops.
 

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On the ground in Iraq.

Baghdad -- Rwaida's death hit everyone hard.

Partly because she was a buddy they had known for a long time. Mostly, because she was an innocent, brutally slain for the simple reason that she worked for the Americans.

"Rwaida was a pal, she was a running buddy," said Staff Sgt. Tom Kelly of New Orleans. In the Army, a running buddy is the best kind of friend. Someone you run with, hang out with.

Rwaida Al Shemre worked as an interpreter for the 3rd Battalion, 82nd Field Artillery Regiment in central Baghdad. On July 5, an Iraqi driver picked her up at her home and started toward the Army base near the airport. A car drove in front of them and blocked them in. Another pulled up behind. Someone approached the car and fired at Rwaida and the driver.

Rwaida was hit four times. She was shot once in the face. Another in the arm, a defensive wound. She died before she reached the hospital. She was 33.

Capt. Dave Minaschek, of Sierra Vista, Ariz., said soldiers are trying to find out who killed her. It means a lot to them, because Rwaida meant a lot to them.

This is the harsh reality for people who work with U.S. forces in Iraq. Some killings make the headlines, or the Internet. But many more happen on the streets and in the darkness, and almost no one knows about them.

Interpreters are particularly easy targets for insurgents, or anyone with a grudge against the U.S. forces. They are unarmed and often unguarded when they leave base.

The gunmen seem to target the female interpreters. Rwaida was one of four interpreters killed in the central and southern part of the city in the last two weeks.

Soldiers with the Army's Brigade Combat Team 5 said a female interpreter was kidnapped as she left the front gate in mid-July. Her father was killed in the street and she was taken away, only to be found dead later.

"God knows what they did to her," said one soldier who knew of the incident.

Going incognito

Some interpreters live with the soldiers in the Forward Operating Bases. Others live off-base. They all take great care to hide their identities while they translate exchanges between the Americans and Iraqis. Some men wear bandannas over their faces, and the women pull head scarves down low.

Some wear body armor; most don't. They never use their real names at work; the soldiers refer to them by American names like "Doris" or "Eric." Rwaida went by "Sally."

No one seems to know where she learned English. Kelly said Rwaida had a brother in Canada, and often added "eh?" to her sentences.

Rwaida, a hairdresser, first worked for the Army unit that preceded this one at the base. Capt. James Zoizack of the 4th Battalion, 1st Field Artillery, 1st Armored Division, heard her call out a greeting when he was on patrol and talked her into coming to work for the Americans. She made good money at it, by Iraqi standards: about $400 a month.

When she was working with Zoizack's unit, she once saw that a man had pulled a gun and was about to shoot an American. She tried to push the soldier out of the way, Kelly said, and ended up with a flesh wound in her abdomen.

When 3rd Battalion, 82nd Field Artillery came along, she became the interpreter. And she was a good one, Kelly said. She did more than just translate Arabic into English, he said, she explained things to both Iraqis and Americans. If she thought an Iraqi contractor was trying to cheat or lie, or if she heard one Iraqi tell another to cheat or lie in front of the soldiers, she would say so.

More than an interpreter

The soldiers learned to count on her for more than just language skills.

"She was one of us," Kelly said.

If a soldier was sick, Rwaida would bring a special Iraqi soup, the local version of chicken soup, to make him better.

She was a single mother. Her husband had left her not long after her daughter was born. She had sent her 10-year-old daughter to live in Jordan with a sister while she worked for the Americans. Soldiers would flirt with her, ask her if she would consider marrying an American.

"How much money you got, eh?" she would ask, then laugh.

But working with the Americans, and perhaps because she was an assertive woman in an area where women are supposed to be docile, she caught the attention of various Iraqis. There were veiled threats. Sometimes soldiers would notice a certain body language between her and the Iraqis. Later, Rwaida would tell the soldiers that she had been asked things like, "Why are you working for the Americans?" and "Where do you live?" or "Don't I know you, what's your name?"

At least twice, she was threatened outright: "Don't work with the coalition," Capt. Minaschek said.

She never listened. But she did make plans to leave the country to make a better life for her daughter. She had gotten papers to move to Canada to live with her brother and was preparing to leave at the end of the year, after the battalion returns to the United States.

"She said she liked the battalion and she didn't want to leave while we were still here," Kelly said. "She didn't even want to leave Iraq, really. She said she wanted to come back in a couple of years and live here."

Soldiers miss her presence

The day of her death, the news stunned the soldiers. At first they heard that she had been wounded, and the driver killed. They rushed to the hospital and found a harried doctor.

Where could they find Al Shemre?

"That one is dead," the doctor said.

The soldiers stood in stunned silence. They asked to see her body and were taken to the morgue.

"She was laid out on the floor," Kelly said. "We told them to put her on a bed. Her family was on their way to see her."

The soldiers put together a memorial ceremony at their compound. Dozens showed up, including 15 members of her family -- her daughter Doa'a; her mother; two sisters; a brother; and various cousins. Off at the side was a table with a photo of Rwaida and some of her belongings.

When a soldier dies in combat, his or her comrades walk past the memorial -- usually a rifle stuck in the ground with helmet on top -- and salute. After Rwaida's ceremony ended, the soldiers walked past the table and saluted.

"Her death hit me harder than anything I've experienced over here," said Capt. Evans Hanson of Houston, who worked closely with her.

"Rwaida went out with troops hundreds of times and faced dangers everywhere she went," Hanson said at her memorial service. "She looked powerful men in the eye and faced them without fear, because she knew they were up to no good. No one could say she wasn't a strong woman."

Caring influence

But she had a soft side, too.

"Near a school in Yarmouk, we found a family living between mud walls with no food or shelter," Hanson said. "Sgt. Kelly asked if we should stop and help. I callously said, 'Forget it. We can't help everyone. All we have is toothpaste anyway.'

"Rwaida said, 'No, help them a little bit just!' That day, we made some lasting friends just by listening a little. Rwaida taught me how to care."

Two days after Rwaida was killed, a young woman showed up, looking for a job as an interpreter. Kelly interviewed her.

"I felt like I had to explain the situation, and make sure she understood the danger," Kelly said. "I told her that a previous interpreter had just been killed. She just said, 'God will protect me.' "

The new interpreter, who the soldiers call Nadia, studied English at a local university. She's 22, the oldest of four children, the only girl. She wants to go to the United States someday.

"I am not afraid," she said. "I know this is my duty and that I should do that."

She said she appreciates the money she earns, but the amount is not material. "Morals should be the most important thing for everyone."

"I have great respect for the Christian people," she said. "They respect God and I love God. Too many Muslims hurt each other."


John Koopman SFGATE.com
 

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Volhound, all the troops need to know is that our country would NEVER put them in harms way unless it was absolutely necessary - as in the last recourse - or so they thought.
 

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"Their leader was a great man and he of all men would not have even THOUGHT of supporting such US haters"

guys

come on now...
 

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Seymour

I agree with your last post. I guess I just didn't get the joke you were kidding about-- still don't
 

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Vol, do this and you will understand - find a staunch right winger and tell him you are concerned about the troops - tell him their security is paramount in your eyes - tell him deaths bother you - first thing he will tell you is these kids enlisted on their own free will - they made a choice to join the military and such a decision obviously has inherent risks - it's like they could give a FVCK less about these kids whose asses are on the line - not too mention they have to go live in a desert for, if Bush has his way, at least 7 years.
 

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Amazing to me, and sadly a sign of the times when 6 US soldiers die on the same day in a foreign country and it is hardly news.


wil.
 

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Will, it's no longer news - after 4 kids get killed everyday for an extended period of time you just expect it to happen and pay no attention.
 

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