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LA TIMES

U.S. Raid on Insurgents Kills 2 Women, Child

They say more care should have been taken in the assault on homes where 
insurgents may have been poised to attack troops.
By Julian E. Barnes and Raheem Salman, Times Staff Writers
July 22, 2006

BAGHDAD — At least five people, including two women and a child, were killed 
early Friday in a raid in Baqubah by U.S. special operations forces 
targeting suspected insurgents.

U.S. military officials said two of the men killed in the city, northeast of 
Baghdad, were believed to be associates of a senior leader of the Al Qaeda 
in Iraq group, previously headed by Abu Musab Zarqawi, who was killed in 
June by a U.S. airstrike. At least 25 people were wounded in the raid 
Friday.

In Mahmoudiya, south of Baghdad, seven Iraqi police officers and soldiers 
were killed in a raid in which 60 suspected insurgents were captured, 
military officials said.

Although local officials praised the raid in Baqubah, the operation was met 
with fury.

Baqubah residents and political leaders accused the United States of 
excessive force, saying there was no need to fire missiles, bombs or 
artillery shells.

"They demolished three houses with children in them just because they wanted 
two insurgents?" said Raad Dahlaki, the chief of the Baqubah municipal 
council. "Why couldn't they just detain the men? Why did they have to 
demolish these three houses?"

Lt. Col. Barry Johnson, a U.S. military spokesman, said American forces used 
"aerial fires" — an assault by helicopter, fighter plane or artillery — to 
attack several houses in Baqubah after the troops were fired on from 
rooftops and men were seen on the roofs possibly positioning themselves for 
an attack.

"They were twice given verbal instructions for all occupants to exit the 
buildings and failed to do so," Johnson said.

Although the neighborhood has seen violence before, it had grown calmer 
recently and residents were beginning to work with the Americans, Dahlaki 
said. The death of the women and the child, however, threatens to turn the 
area against the U.S. forces.

"That neighborhood is going to change their attitude; they are going to be 
more anti-American," Dahlaki said. "Once again there will be roadside bombs 
targeting Americans."

U.S. officials said the men targeted in the attack had connections with 
foreign fighters operating in the area and had been linked to attacks on 
Iraqi civilians. U.S. forces detained four men in the operation, officials 
said.

Witnesses said afterward that an interpreter working with the Americans said 
he had repeatedly called for people to leave the building. Some residents 
said they were not able to hear any such instruction. Others said they did 
not realize the attackers were American and thought they were part of a 
militia aligned with radical Shiite cleric Muqtada Sadr.

Residents said the raid occurred about 3 a.m. The mayor of Baqubah, Khalid 
Sanhari, said he wanted to know why the American troops could not have 
waited until after dawn, when it would have been clear who was conducting 
the assault. The neighborhood where the raid took place is mostly Sunni, and 
Sanhari said the Americans would have acted more judiciously in a Shiite 
neighborhood.

"This is an excessive use of force," he said. "If this village was Shiite 
and people were shooting at the Americans, I am certain nobody would bomb 
it."

As sectarian violence has escalated into an undeclared civil war in Iraq, 
Sunni residents in Baqubah have been increasingly fearful of Shiite death 
squads.

Fawzi Ahmed, a 45-year-old neighbor, said at least some members of the 
military unit that carried out the attack were not dressed in standard 
uniforms. When he spotted the unit before the attack, he thought it might be 
a militia group. Ahmed said he realized they were U.S. forces only when he 
heard them speak English.

"We did not recognize them as Americans, because some of them were wearing 
black shirts," Ahmed said.

Army Special Forces personnel do not always wear standard uniforms in Iraq 
and some grow mustaches or beards.

An Army spokesman said 25 people were treated at a U.S. military medical 
center, and 17 of the most seriously injured were taken to the American 
military hospital in Balad.

Dahlaki, the council member, said U.S. forces entered a known insurgent home 
about a week ago and killed two men. He said there was no anger over that 
operation.

"People think the Americans have the right to kill people who kill 
Americans," Dahlaki said. "But they cannot kill or injure innocent people."

Omer Mijbil Dulaimi, who lives about 300 yards from the scene of the raid, 
said the child killed in the attack was the 3-year-old grandniece of the 
owner of the homes, who was also killed.

U.S. military officials said they regretted the deaths of the civilians.

"It is always tragic when noncombatants are caught up in these raids," 
Johnson said. "And we regret the loss of civilian lives when going after Al 
Qaeda members or any other terrorists or insurgents."

The raid in Mahmoudiya was praised by local officials, who said the Iraqi 
security forces had shown their ability to operate independently and deal a 
severe blow to Sunni insurgents. Mahmoudiya Mayor Muayed Fadil praised the 
police and army for avoiding civilian casualties while disrupting the 
insurgents and fighting with little help from the Americans.

"This is the largest operation we have seen in this area," he said. "It will 
take the insurgency a while to recover…. And the success today will 
strengthen the confidence of the police and army."

U.S. military officials said soldiers with Iraq's 6th Army Division had 
received a tip that 10 to 15 armed men were attacking a house in Mahmoudiya. 
Officials said five insurgents were killed in the fighting and the others 
tried to flee in a truck, pursued by Iraqi security forces.

The insurgents abandoned the truck, which was destroyed by a U.S. attack 
helicopter, and ran into nearby canals.

Mahmoudiya Police Chief Ali Adnan Younis said that after the initial patrol 
was fired on, police and army units sent reinforcements and the fight was 
joined by 80 police officers and about 100 soldiers.

Fighting was fierce as the Iraqi security forces picked their way through an 
orchard and reed-choked canals looking for the fighters.

U.S. officials said five insurgents were killed, 13 wounded and 47 arrested. 
Iraqi officials put the insurgent death toll at 12. U.S. ground forces did 
not directly participate in the fight, Iraqi officials said.

"The insurgents never expected the police and army would go through the 
thick reeds on foot," Younis said. "This is the biggest blow to terrorists 
in our sector so far." 

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