http://www.comcast.net/news/index.jsp?cat=GENERAL
<http://www.comcast.net/news/index.jsp?cat=GENERAL&fn=/2007/05/20/668005.htm
l> &fn=/2007/05/20/668005.html

Car Bomb in Ramadi Kills 2, Injures 9





BAGHDAD - A suicide bomber exploded a tanker truck near a police checkpoint
outside a market west of Baghdad on Sunday, killing at least two officers
and injuring nine people, police said.

Police said they suspected chlorine gas was used in the attack in a town
just outside the turbulent city of Ramadi, 70 miles west of Baghdad. But the
U.S. military said it had no reports chlorine was used.

Police grew suspicious of the truck as it approached the checkpoint and
opened fire when it was still yards away. But the bomber still managed to
detonate the explosives, police said.

Later Sunday, a bomb planted under a parked car exploded in the central
Baghdad neighborhood of Bab al-Sharji, near the Zahraa Shiite mosque, police
said. The blast killed two civilians, wounded 10 and damaged nearby houses
and the mosque, police said.

Several hours later, a mortar shell landed in a commercial area in central
Baghdad, killing one person and wounding three, police said.

Meanwhile, President Jalal Talabani left Iraq on Sunday for a trip to the
United States that was expected to include a medical checkup. The trip came
four months after Talabani was rushed to a Jordanian hospital where doctors
said he was suffering from exhaustion and dehydration caused by lung and
sinus infections.

"I will go to the U.S.A and stay nearly three weeks to lose weight and have
some rest and relaxation ... away from meetings and work," Talabani, a
73-year-old Sunni Kurd, said before boarding a plane in the Kurdish city of
Sulaimaniyah, 160 miles northeast of Baghdad.

A senior Kurdish politician close to the Iraqi leader said Talabani was
going for a checkup at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., that had been
scheduled for weeks. The politician spoke on condition of anonymity because
he was not authorized to discuss the president's plans.

Azad Jindyani, spokesman of Talabani's Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, denied
the president had health problems.

"Talabani's health is very good, but he felt tired recently ... because of
the work and meetings," he said.

Talabani was the second top Iraqi politician to fly to the United States for
medical reasons in four days.

Senior Shiite politician Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim flew there aboard a U.S.
military aircraft Wednesday for further tests to determine if he is
suffering from lung cancer, according to members of his staff.

South of Baghdad, thousands of U.S. soldiers kept up their search for three
missing comrades, more than a week after they were abducted.

At least one U.S. soldier was killed Saturday and four were wounded as
insurgents attacked the searchers with guns, mortars and bombs. The military
reported a dozen other U.S. troop deaths in Iraq since Thursday.

The search for the missing soldiers involves some 4,000 troops who "will not
stop searching until we find our soldiers," said Lt. Col. Christopher
Garver, a U.S. military spokesman in Baghdad. "We're using all available
assets and continuing to assault the al-Qaida in Iraq network," he said.

An al-Qaida front group has claimed responsibility for the May 12 attack in
Quarghuli, about 12 miles south of Baghdad, that resulted in the kidnapping
and the deaths of four American soldiers and an Iraqi aide.

Army Gen. David Petraeus, the senior American commander in Iraq, told the
Army Times newspaper in an interview Friday night that U.S. forces were
focusing on an insurgent who is "sort of an affiliate of al-Qaida."

He said an informant provided U.S. forces with names of those who took part
in the raid and kidnapping but they were still at large.

"We've had all kinds of tips down there. We just tragically haven't found
the individuals," he said.

Petraeus said he did not know whether the three missing soldiers from the
Army's 10th Mountain Division were alive. But "as of this morning, we
thought there were at least two that were probably still alive," he said.

"At one point in time there was a sense that one of them might have died,
but again, we just don't know."

An Iraqi army intelligence officer, who said he helped interrogate two
suspects detained in recent days in Mahmoudiya, said they confessed to
participating in the raid. Mahmoudiya is the largest town in the search
area.

They said 13 insurgents conducted the surprise attack and then escaped in
two groups. The leader of the group, along with some gunmen, took the
kidnapped soldiers to an unknown destination, he said.

He added that the two detainees gave interrogators the hiding place for
weapons used in the ambush and U.S. troops confiscated them.

 



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