Awakening council members, a Sunni group fighting al-Qaida, stand around the bodies of six of their comrades killed in a U.S. air strike near Samarra, Iraq, Saturday, March 22, 2008. Police say a U.S. airstrike has struck checkpoints manned by U.S.-allied Sunni fighters north of Baghdad, killing six guards and wounding two. A police officer says the six members of the so-called awakening council were killed and two others were wounded when an airstrike hit two checkpoints about 100 meters (yards) apart. A local awakening council leader says the airstrikes came some two hours after U.S. soldiers stopped at the two checkpoints to meet with the Sunni fighters. (AP Photo/Hameed Rasheed)

Three US Soldiers Killed By Roadside Bomb, Death Toll Approaches 4,000

ROBERT H. REID | March 22, 2008 07:07 PM EST | AP

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BAGHDAD — A roadside bomb killed three American soldiers north of Baghdad on Saturday, pushing the U.S. death toll in the five-year conflict to nearly 4,000.

Also Saturday, Iraqi authorities reported that a U.S. airstrike north of the capital killed six members of a U.S.-backed Sunni group _ straining relations with America's new allies in the fight against al-Qaida.

Two Iraqi civilians also died in the roadside bombing, which occurred as the Americans were patrolling an area northwest of the capital, the U.S. military said in a statement.

Two of the soldiers were killed in the blast and the third died of wounds, the statement said. The soldiers were assigned to Multinational Division-Baghdad, the statement said, but gave no further details.

The latest deaths brought to 3,996 the number of U.S. service members and Pentagon civilians who have died since the war began on March 20, 2003, according to an Associated Press count. Rocket or mortar fire killed one U.S. soldier and wounded four others Friday south of Baghdad, the military said.

With the war entering its sixth year, President Bush paid tribute Saturday to America's fallen service members, saying in his weekly radio address that they will "live on in the memory of the nation they helped defend."

Speaking for the Democrats, however, Sen. Robert Menendez of New Jersey called on Bush to "face the reality" in Iraq and "tell us the truth" about the cost of the conflict as America is struggling with a faltering economy and mounting casualty tolls.

U.S. officials have pointed to a number of positive signs, including a 60 percent drop in violence since Bush ordered 30,000 U.S. reinforcements to Iraq early last year. Iraqis have also made some limited progress in power-sharing deals among rival Shiite, Sunni and Kurdish communities.

However, U.S. military commanders have been careful to point out that security gains are fragile and that major violence could erupt abruptly.

Much of the progress has been due to a move by thousands of Sunnis to abandon the insurgency and join pro-U.S. defense groups _ known as "awakening councils." Another was a cease-fire called last August by firebrand Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, leader of the feared Mahdi Army militia.

On Saturday, a U.S. attack helicopter fired on two checkpoints manned by U.S.-allied Sunni fighters near Samarra, 60 miles north of Baghdad, killing six and injuring two, Iraqi police said.

The U.S. military said an AH-64 Apache helicopter fired on the positions after five people were "spotted conducting suspicious terrorist activity" in an area notorious for roadside bombs.

"Initial reports suggested the attack may have been a Sons of Iraq checkpoint," the military said, using a term for the armed U.S.-backed groups. "The incident is currently under a joint Iraqi-Coalition Force investigation."

A local official of the U.S.-backed group said the attack occurred about two hours after American soldiers stopped at the two checkpoints to meet the Sunni fighters.

"They asked us general questions like: 'Have you gotten your IDs?' and 'Do you need anything?' and then they left," Sabbar al-Bazi told The Associated Press. "Two hours later, after I had gone home, I heard two explosions, probably caused by two missiles, and machine-gun fire from a helicopter."

Lt. Col. Dhiya Mahmoud Ahmed, an Iraqi military officer in charge of security in the area, said he told the Americans after the attack that he had been aware of the friendly checkpoints for two days.

AP Television News footage of the aftermath showed awakening council members loading bodies into a pickup. Their faces were masked and they wore bright yellow vests _ apparently to identify themselves for U.S. forces as members of friendly groups. Bloodstained rocks and bits of flesh could be seen around the checkpoint.

U.S.-funded awakening councils, which first sprung up in Anbar province west of Baghdad and spread to Baghdad and surrounding areas, are composed of ex-Sunni insurgents who turned against al-Qaida in Iraq and joined forces with the Americans.

But the Shiite-dominated leadership in Baghdad has been ambivalent toward the mostly Sunni councils, fearing they could turn against the government as America draws down its forces.

In Baghdad, members of Sunni awakening councils in the west of the capital have complained that they have not been paid for months and have threatened to withdraw their support for the government unless they receive their money within days.

At the same time, tensions have been rising within the majority Shiite community as rival factions maneuver for position ahead of provincial elections expected this fall.

A bomb exploded Saturday on a minibus in a predominantly Shiite area of eastern Baghdad, killing at least one passenger and injuring eight, including a woman, police said.

Late Saturday, bombs exploded at four offices of the Iraqi Red Crescent Society in the Mansour district of Baghdad, causing damage but no casualties. The Red Crescent Society is the Muslim world's equivalent of the Red Cross.

A roadside bomb targeting a police patrol also killed one passer-by and injured seven, including five officers, in the northern city of Kirkuk, police said.

An awakening council member in western Baghdad's Mansour neighborhood was killed and four others were injured in a mortar blast, police and hospital officials said.


 
 

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- MagisterLudi See Profile I'm a Fan of MagisterLudi permalink

Of course the invasion was unnecessary. Of course US should withdraw in an organized fashion. But while the troops are there, they need to be supported with money, weapons and good military leadership ( as civilian leadership is hopeless).

On a related note:

U.S. troops raided a suspected suicide bomber cell Sunday, killing a dozen militants, half of whom had shaved their bodies -- which the U.S. military says indicates they were in the final stage of preparation for a suicide attack... The troops returned fire, killing five men... then U.S. troops stormed the building killing seven more militants.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:26 PM on 03/23/2008
- internetresearcher See Profile I'm a Fan of internetresearcher permalink

In order to bring stability back to the U.S. and the world, the Congress must start impeachment procedures immediately. The Bush administration has brought already too much pain and enough suffering to many thusand families in this country.
Call or email to your representative in the House and the Senate and ask for the establishment of the impreachment procedures of the president. These are the preliminary procedures to determine the degree of culpability (if any) of the president, vice-president and others in the administration, but not necessarily will these procedures impeach any of the persons in question.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:32 PM on 03/22/2008
- amanda85 See Profile I'm a Fan of amanda85 permalink

The true goal of the "surge" was to keep the war off the news and any independent and foreign journalist away from Iraq. That's how it's "working." US soldiers wounded in Iraq but who die in a hospital in Germany or some other place outside of theatre are simply not counted. "Accidents" aren't counted either (and, of course, each and every helicopter that goes down is an "accident"...) New military regulations have been enacted, which are fully unconstitutional (and, of course, the cowardly dems are OK with those...) Like forbidding photojournalists from taking pictures of American casualties, unless they get a signed release (which, of course, it will never happen, since there would be dire consequences to any soldier who did that.) The TRUTH is that the reduction in violence (**IF** there ever was an actual one, we have no independent way to confirm that) was only obtained by **BRIBING** sheiks and warlords and obviously it can't go on forever. But, of course, it's OK if it only lasts until the elections...

Basically now we have a situation not dissimilar from what Germany was going through in WWII. German people could only rely on government propaganda telling them they were winning, even when the Soviets were only a few miles from Berlin...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:10 PM on 03/22/2008
- julescator See Profile I'm a Fan of julescator permalink

I feel deeply for these families. My own son was there for a year and we didn't sleep. He was in Baghdad. I can only hope we can bring these guys home as it is apparent that we do not have an end game. We can stay there for 100 years and the end result will be the same. they will kill more of us and more of them but they won't stop the fight. We need to get out of there but have allies guard the oil fields while they have the civil war they want and need. I can't see any other way. This is not working.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:16 PM on 03/22/2008
- civilbehavior See Profile I'm a Fan of civilbehavior permalink

Today in West Palm Beach about 100 people gathered to march and protest. Hundreds of cars drove by honking their horn in agreement.

NOT ENOUGH.

If 2/3rds of the American public actually is against this war then it is way past time for them to get up off their collectives asses and walk the talk. Starting with cutting back the pimped lifestyle they have become so accustomed to feeling entitled to using energy egregiously.

There is one reason why we went into Iraq. Oil. Only when the American public connects their lifestyle to the reason for death and destruction will this war become a priority. Until then it is possible for everyone to ignore their part in it.

There are a few of us who are going to try and meet once a month starting April to brainstorm ways to really change the mindset. Personally I think it begins by stopping romanticizing service in uniform to train kids for war. It's time for national service to be linked to providing help and assistance to the inner cities, the elderly, mentoring, the mentally ill and dysfunctional. It's time to teach life skills not death by destruction.

This is the 21st century. Evolution should have us at a level where war should be extinct.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:32 PM on 03/22/2008
- HamletsMill See Profile I'm a Fan of HamletsMill permalink

As a veteran I fully agree. Military force should now move on to strong humanitarian relief skills with a force component to provide armed security. WWII has been over for over 60 years. The problems of conflict are much more complicated today then leveling cities by air power and taking ground with tank armies.

My sister and brother-in-law have been on the ground in Afghanistan for almost seven years now running the medical relief effort for the United States at the village level. That project is now cut back. These were the real soldiers. The U.S. STILL does not have the right force mix in Afghanistan and with the deadlock in Iraq there will be NI CHANGE for the immediate future. It is too late now to really change the fate of these two wars.

With the MIC allied ideologically with the corporate MSM psychologically running the government of the United States since WWII the mindset is not going to change any time soon.

We are in very big trouble.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:57 PM on 03/22/2008
- dr4Will See Profile I'm a Fan of dr4Will permalink

we are just too busy watching American Idol and fawning over obama say the media--we could care less about Iraq-after all we get free passes and interviews with other events--the war is boring for the media whores!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:55 PM on 03/22/2008
- leftLibertarian See Profile I'm a Fan of leftLibertarian permalink

Why hasn't the Democratic Party impeached the criminals Bush and Cheney?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:32 PM on 03/22/2008
- GhostintheMachine See Profile I'm a Fan of GhostintheMachine permalink

Because they can't

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:19 PM on 03/22/2008
- MetalCanuck See Profile I'm a Fan of MetalCanuck permalink

Because they won't, they are just as corrupt. They are false opposition...they fool Liberals.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:37 PM on 03/22/2008
- timetorevolt See Profile I'm a Fan of timetorevolt permalink

But MSM and McCain report that the surge has been a success. I guess when you have MICROPHONE you can define SUCCESS anyway you like.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:09 PM on 03/22/2008
- provgrays See Profile I'm a Fan of provgrays permalink

The nearly 4,000 Americans who have died in our criminal wars of late is a small number compared to the civilians we have killed as an occupying imperialist force. We deserve no sympathy. The soldiers themselves should refuse to make Exxon Mobil's profits possible by refusing to carry out the will of an insane tyrant.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:27 PM on 03/22/2008
- mcnary See Profile I'm a Fan of mcnary permalink

You know the US controls the Iraq oil fields, it was one of our first objectives, the Pentagon is bursting their buttons I'm sure, 4000 is way below the model they originally looked at. wanna bet?... thats why they keep labeling this crime a success.

Hillary to blame? how about you millions of well informed Americans who still sit on your collective asses, watching the boob tube, voting on American Idol, Final Four, Baseball, football, cell phones , video games, and all the other crap that you are being fed.

Its Not Hillary, its you, the majority of you chicken shit Americans, you are the enablers you dim wits,
I feel sorry for Barack , if he wins look at the sheep he inherits. And you'll expect him to save your sorry asses.
Take another cruise maybe the war will be over when you get back!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:26 PM on 03/22/2008
- Irons See Profile I'm a Fan of Irons permalink

Did Mr. Potato Head and Dick-free fooled the American people, didn't they? Remember the WMD? LMAO.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:21 PM on 03/22/2008
- GhostintheMachine See Profile I'm a Fan of GhostintheMachine permalink

God Bless them and may they rest in peace

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:18 PM on 03/22/2008
- HumeSkeptic See Profile I'm a Fan of HumeSkeptic permalink


Personally, I can do witthout God's blessings and resting in peace if, to get it, I must first die for the cause of increased profits for some corporations.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:28 PM on 03/22/2008
- riverhouse See Profile I'm a Fan of riverhouse permalink

Be curious to see how Hillary and McCain deal with the news of 4000 dead. Maybe they can explain how their little cakewalk of an war hasn't been the tea party they predicted, given all the experience and soundness of judgment they proclaim they have.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:54 PM on 03/22/2008
- BPCentrisAmerican See Profile I'm a Fan of BPCentrisAmerican permalink

Vote for McCain and we well be in Iran. Population 76 million, population of the capital city 15 million, mountainous terrain, controls southern access to central and northern Iraq, with an intact military, not a great military, but intact. By comparison Iraq will look like a cakewalk. Attack Iran and every moderate middle class Iranian who wants to shed Mahmoud Ahmadinejad"s rule as much as we want to see George W. Bush gone, will be radicalized against the United States. Detonate one nuclear devise on Iranain soil and the world will be against us.

I was watching the News Hour and I heard the same passionate debate from centrist and moderate Iranians who have no malice against the West, and hate their current Religious based conservative government. I heard rhetoric like the silient majority etc. If we set one foot on Iranian soil, all those possibilities will fade. I don"t understand the disconnects in conservative thinking or non-thinking, such as fighting a 2 protracted conflicts without the mobilization of solders from all walks of life, without the mobilization of recourses and taxes to pay for it. I thought conservatives were the grown ups, I was wrong.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:50 PM on 03/22/2008
- lornejl See Profile I'm a Fan of lornejl permalink

Can this occupation get any more romantic ? Neo-Cons having orgasms all over the world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:48 PM on 03/22/2008
- HumeSkeptic See Profile I'm a Fan of HumeSkeptic permalink


McCane is pretty clear. He sees no problem in sacrificing these and who knows how many more of our soldiers for the benefit of U.S. oil corporations. He sees nothing wrong in continuing this fraud called Iraq war for continued war profiteering by some defense contractors.

But, what about Hillary?

Hillary also has supported this fraud. Consistently.

She now wants the votes of those who were opposed to this fraud from the beginning and, therefore we hear her plans for withdrawal from Iraq. And yet, at the same time, she still proposes a continuation of the classic NeoCon approach of dividing the world into "good" and "evil", and refusing to talk to the evil. She continues to side with the NeoCons.

Frankly, I am just speechless hearing Democrats supposedly opposed to the NeoCons, expressing grief at the deaths of these soldiers, but supporting Hillary.

Are they just completely out of their minds, or are they hypocrites?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:44 PM on 03/22/2008
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