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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Road Walker who wrote (178299)11/22/2003 11:36:07 AM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1578927
 
Army Is Planning for 100,000 G.I.'s in Iraq Till 2006

John, military experts not owned by the White House are saying 5 years minimum!

ted



To: Road Walker who wrote (178299)11/22/2003 11:43:32 AM
From: tejek  Respond to of 1578927
 
<font color=brown>Its clear very little of the country is secure........and its surprising how frequently they are able to mount attacks.

Our guys are sitting ducks!<font color=black>

ted

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Suicide Car Bombs Kill 14 in Iraq
At Least 20 Injured in Attacks; Cargo Plane Reportedly Hit by Missile

By BASSEM MROUE, AP

KHAN BANI SAAD, Iraq (Nov. 22) - Suicide attackers detonated bomb-packed vehicles Saturday at police stations in two towns, killing at least 14 people, officials said. In Baghdad, a civilian cargo plane was forced to land with its wing ablaze, apparently hit by a shoulder-launched missile.

The plane, flown by the Belgium-based delivery company DHL, was trailing thick smoke and missing part of its wingtip as it made an emergency landing at Baghdad International Airport. A military source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the plane was struck by a SAM-7 surface-to-air missile.



Insurgents have used such shoulder-launched weapons to shoot down military helicopters in central Iraq. The military said it was still investigating the cause of the fire. In the past, planes have been targeted - but not hit - by rockets as they went in and out of Baghdad airport, a main hub for U.S. forces and humanitarian supplies, the military said.

The attacks on the police stations in Khan Bani Saad and nearby Baqouba - which occurred within a half hour of each other - came after U.S. intelligence reports warning of an upsurge in attacks near the end of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, which comes to a close in a few days.

In Khan Bani Saad, a market town on the northeastern outskirts of Baghdad, 10 people were killed, including six policemen, three civilians and the vehicle's driver, according to Capt. Ryan McCormick of the 4th Infantry Division. Iraqi police said one of the dead was a 5-year-old girl. Ten people were wounded, McCormick said.

McCormick said a police guard fired on the approaching vehicle but could not stop the blast. He said there were no U.S. or other coalition casualties.

''I was standing at the gate of the station, washing my car, when I saw a Chevrolet Caprice speed toward the gate,'' said Sgt. Aqil Suheil, who was wounded in the Khan Bani Saad attack. ''I heard a loud explosion. I found myself under the car. I got out quickly and ran toward the street and then lost consciousness.''

In Baqouba, about 12 miles to northeast of here, three policemen and the driver were killed. One policeman was missing, Lt. Wisam Ahmed said. Officials said at least 10 civilians were hurt.

Police Sgt. Ammar Ahmed said he saw a white Nissan Land Cruiser approach the police station at normal speed. As the driver approached the gate, police signaled him to stop but instead he detonated the vehicle.

''There was a driver inside the car,'' Ahmed said.




There have been five vehicle bombings in Iraq since Wednesday, mostly targeting Iraqis who support the coalition.

A bomb Wednesday night exploded at the home of a pro-U.S. sheik in Ramadi. On Thursday, a blast occurred at the offices of a U.S.-allied Kurdish political party in Kirkuk. Late Friday, a truck blew up near the office of a British de-mining company in Irbil.

In New York, Human Rights Watch criticized the insurgents for attacking Iraqi civilians perceived to be cooperating with the U.S.-led occupation.

''All Iraqi civilians are protected by the Geneva Conventions,'' Joe Stork, an official with the human rights watchdog, said in New York. ''It doesn't matter whether they sympathize with the U.S. occupation or the insurgents.''


U.S. military officials said they were warned by intelligence reports to expect an upsurge in attacks, particularly in the province that includes Baqouba, toward the end of Ramadan. Lt. Col. Steve Russell, a battalion commander in the 4th Infantry Division, said U.S. intelligence officials fear that religious extremists may try to commit ''good works'' at the end of the holy month by attacking Americans.

Khan Bani Saad and Baqouba are part of the so-called ''Sunni Triangle'' north and west of the capital that has seen fierce resistance to the U.S.-led occupation.

The DHL plane had been headed from Baghdad to Bahrain, with three crewmembers on board, when it turned around to make an emergency landing at the Iraqi capital's international airport, said Xavier De Buck, a DHL spokesman in Brussels, Belgium.

The U.S. military and DHL said the cause of the fire was still being investigated. But a military source said the plane had been struck by a SAM-7 missile, and the damage appeared consistent with effects of such an explosion. A photograph taken from the ground showed flames at the spot where the ailerons and flaps meet on the left wing's trailing edge.

After the emergency landing, DHL canceled its next flight into Baghdad, De Buck said. The delivery company has been making two or three flights a day into Baghdad since June.




The airport, which has been turned into a base for U.S. forces, has not been fully reopened to commercial flights, but civilian freight carriers operate there. The only commercial airline serving Baghdad, Royal Jordanian, said it would suspend flights for three days, but didn't give a reason. AirServ, a South African organization that flies mainly aid workers, said it would continue flights to Baghdad.

In recent weeks, insurgents have shot down five U.S. helicopters using shoulder-fired missiles and rocket-propelled grenades. About 40 U.S. servicemen were killed and nearly two dozen injured.

The car bombings occurred a day after guerrillas fired more than a dozen rockets from donkey carts at the Oil Ministry and two hotels used by foreign journalists and civilian defense contractors.

One civilian contractor was wounded when the rockets exploded at the Palestine Hotel and at the nearby Sheraton. There were no casualties at the Oil Ministry, which was closed for the Muslim day of prayer.

The attacks on some of the most heavily guarded buildings in the center of the capital appeared designed to demonstrate that the guerrillas retain the ability to strike at will despite the overwhelming presence of U.S. and Iraqi security forces.

''They're trying to break our will. They're trying to seize the headlines ... but they're militarily insignificant,'' Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt, the U.S. military deputy director for operations, said of Friday's attacks.

However, Kimmitt acknowledged the attacks point to ''a very clever enemy who knows that we don't have the best intelligence in the world.''

11-22-03 0953EST

Copyright 2003 The Associated Press.