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Two US soldiers killed in Iraq


BAGHDAD (updated on: January 17, 2007, 21:00 PST): Insurgents killed two US soldiers in western Iraq's restive province of Al-Anbar, the military reported on Wednesday.

One soldier was killed on Monday and the other Wednesday, the military said, adding the casualties were taken in "enemy action."

Their deaths brought to 3,021 the number of US military fatalities inside Iraq since the March 2003 invasion, according to an AFP count based on Pentagon figures.

brecorder.com
 
Hassan Kazimi Qomi said the men were "kidnapped" by the US
Iran has accused the US of kidnapping five diplomats who were arrested in the northern Iraqi city of Irbil.
The US has denied the men were diplomats - it says they were linked to Iran's Revolutionary Guard and were arming Shia fighters in Iraq.

Iran's ambassador to Iraq called last week's arrests "a violation of Iraqi sovereignty and an insult to the Iraqi people". He demanded the men's release.

Hassan Kazimi Qomi denied Iran has been involved in the violence in Iraq.

He said the "kidnapped" men were diplomats engaged in legitimate tasks.

"These actions are against international conventions which guarantee diplomatic immunity and they are also against the framework of the agreement between Iraq and the Islamic Republic of Iran," Mr Qomi told the BBC's Andrew North in Baghdad.

He denied Iran had any interest in destabilising Iraq, saying the unrest and a flood of refugees could spill over Iran's border.

Diplomatic row

Mr Qomi's comments follow a similar statement made to the BBC on Wednesday by one of Iraq's most powerful Shia politicians, Abdel Aziz al-Hakim, who condemned the arrests as an attack on Iraq's sovereignty.

The five men were detained - along with one other who has now been released - at the Iranian liaison office in Irbil, in the northern, Kurdish part of Iraq.

Iran said the building was a consulate, but the US disagreed, saying it had no official diplomatic immunity, and nor did the men.

Mr Qomi said it was not the first such incident targeting Iranians in Iraq.

Late last year, US troops descended on Mr Hakim's residential compound in Baghdad and detained two Iranian officials. They were later released.

He said other diplomatic staff and Iranian businessmen had been detained in the past.

Washington has often accused Iran, or factions within the Iranian government, of aiding Shia groups in Iraq militarily and politically.

US Vice-President Dick Cheney said on Sunday that Iran was "fishing in troubled waters" by aiding attacks on US forces and backing Shia militias involved in sectarian violence.

President George W Bush has accused Iran of destabilising Iraq and warned that the US would make a tough response.

Tehran denies the claims and has demanded to see proof.
 
Legitmate talks?

Now isnt that bullshit? Malliki hasnt told he invited these "diplomats" for talks .So to whom were these diplomats talking to without the knowldge of the Iraqis and the Americans?

I still hold my line whats happening in Iraq is old scores being settled.

The shias are giving it back to the Sunnis, even the report that came out last week has pointed to the fact that majority of the dead were sunnis.

Now you neednt be a genius to guess as to who would be arming these shias?

And the Americans are caught in the middle.
 
US chopper crash kills 13 troops in Iraq


BAGHDAD (updated on: January 20, 2007, 23:38 PST): A US military helicopter crashed on Saturday near Baghdad, killing 13 personnel, in one of the worst such incidents since the US-led invasion of Iraq in March 2003.

The tragedy occurred as supporters of Moqtada al-Sadr vowed to secure the release of one of his close aides from US detention, a day after his capture.

"A military helicopter went down in the afternoon today north-east of Baghdad with 13 troops on board," including four crew and nine passengers, Lieutenant Colonel Josslyn L. Aberle said.

A separate statement confirmed that all board were killed, and that an investigation had begun.

The fatalities brought the total number of US dead inside Iraq since the invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein's regime to 3,039, according to an AFP count based on Pentagon figures.

The last fatal helicopter crash in Iraq was on December 3 when a Sea Knight helicopter went down by Qadisiyah lake in western Sunni Anbar province, killing four of the 16 people on board.

The worst US helicopter crash was on November 15, 2003 when two UH-60 Blackhawks crashed west of Mosul in northern Iraq, killing 17 soldiers.

Two weeks earlier 16 US soldiers died when their CH-47 Chinook was shot down by a ground-to-air missile near Fallujah in Anbar province.

Earlier on Saturday the military announced the deaths of three other soldiers in different attacks across Iraq.

The rising US casualties came after US President George W. Bush announced plans to deploy 21,500 additional troops in Iraq in a bid to stabilise Baghdad, which is currently engulfed in a bitter sectarian strife.

The bulk of US casualties 44 percent have come from roadside bombs, with Anbar province emerging as the deadliest region on the back of its raging anti-US insurgency.

Most of the new troops headed for Iraq will be stationed in Baghdad with a mission to take on militias accused of leading a sectarian conflict that left thousands of Iraqis dead last year.

On Friday, in what is seen as a major move to take on the Mehdi Army, the militia loyal to Sadr the radical cleric, US and Iraqi forces arrested one of cleric's top aides based in Baghdad.

Sheikh Abdul Hadi al-Darraji, a spokesman for the Sadr movement, was picked up along with four others in a pre-dawn raid on a religious site in which one person was killed.

On Saturday, Darraji's supporters vowed to secure his release.

"The arrest of Hadi al-Darraji was a great error that we will not allow to pass," Sheikh Hassan al-Zarqani, another top Sadr aide, told AFP from the Syrian capital Damascus.

However, he said the group will not use violent methods to achieve their purpose, explaining: "We will approach the media and use diplomatic and political means to obtain his release and not take to streets."

According to the US military, which did not identify Darraji by name, its detainee was "the leader of an illegal armed group punishment committee, involved in organised kidnapping, torture and murder of Iraqi civilians."

In another development, Iraq was deploying 8,000 policemen and security guards in and around the shrine city of Karbala for the Shiite mourning ceremony of Ashura, a frequent target of Sunni insurgent attacks.

Karbala governor Akil al-Khuzai said nearly three million pilgrims were expected to flock to the city for the ceremony, the holiest on the calendar, which begins on Sunday and culminates on January 30.

brecorder.com
 
Two US marines killed in western Iraq

BAGHDAD (updated on: January 22, 2007, 11:11 PST): Insurgents killed two US marines in the restive western Iraqi province of Al-Anbar, the military reported on Monday.

The marines died on Sunday from wounds sustained in "enemy action" while operating in the Anbar province, the military said.

The US military has lost 46 of its own since the start of January and Saturday was one of the deadliest days since the March 2003 invasion, with 25 service members killed across the violence-wracked country.

The latest fatalities brought the military's losses since the invasion to 3,052, according to an AFP count based on Pentagon figures.

brecorder.com
 
Please make threads for the conflict in Iraq. Thats why the forum is dedicated to it.

Thanks.
 
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