US soldier killed, four hurt in Baghdad attack ( 2003-06-28 17:02) (Agencies)
A US soldier was shot in the
head and critically wounded while shopping in a Baghdad store on Friday, the
latest target in a surge of attacks that analysts say could explode into open
revolt.
The soldier, a specialist assigned to try to win over the civilian
population, was shopping for digital video disks in the Kazimiyah neighbourhood
in the northwest of Baghdad when he was shot in the back of the head, residents
said.
"He took out dollars from his pocket and as I looked at the money I heard a
bang. He froze and then fell backwards," the shop owner told Reuters Television,
refusing to give his name. "Two other soldiers came in, picked him up and took
him away."
The soldier was evacuated to a military hospital in Iraq and had undergone
surgery. "The shooter was not apprehended," a US military spokesman said. One
local resident said he saw a young man shoot the soldier in the head at close
range.
The US military said the soldier was one of its civil affairs specialists,
trying to help communities with civilian projects. They have a key role in what
Washington calls its battle for Iraqi hearts and minds.
US officials blame die-hard supporters of fallen leader Saddam Hussein for
attacks on their troops but many Iraqis say there is widespread anger at the
occupation and the failure to provide basic services and security.
Apart from the mounting toll from hit-and-run strikes, the US military is
struggling to prevent sabotage of oil and power facilities and may now have to
rethink troop movements with two missing soldiers feared abducted.
US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld brushed off suggestions US-led forces
were facing a guerrilla war, saying the attackers were mostly common criminals
released by Saddam before the war began in March.
"Those people are out there," Rumsfeld said. "They're doing things that are
unhelpful to the Iraqi people."
But in a sign of the growing concern in Washington and among foreign
companies eyeing Iraq, the Pentagon sent a group of private experts to assess
postwar reconstruction.
A US defence official said the five-person team will be in Iraq for up to 12
days and report to Paul Bremer, the US civil administrator.
"This team was not dispatched to go rescue Bremer because Bremer does not
need rescuing. He is open to having assistance," said Lawrence Di Rita, special
assistant to Rumsfeld.
The visit follows a report issued this week by Kroll Inc., a risk consulting
company, which told corporate clients that an Iraqi revolt against occupying
forces was one of two most likely scenarios in 2003. The other was a so-called
wobbly landing with some instability but not outright revolt.
BUSH MOURNS
Leader of Iraq's Shi'ite Muslim majority Ayatollah Mohammed Baqir al-Hakim
called during Friday prayers in the holy city of Najaf for Iraqis to try
peaceful means of resistance first.
"However, if they do not get any results, then the people of Iraq may resort
to military action," he said, as quoted by the Voice of the Islamic Republic of
Iran and monitored by the BBC.
"The Iraqis will have to choose their own future and determine the destiny of
their own country," said Hakim, leader of the Iranian-backed Supreme Council for
Islamic Revolution in Iraq.
The White House said US President George W. Bush was determined to stay the
course despite mounting casualties.
"The president mourns the loss of every American, every Briton who was
killed," White House spokesman Ari Fleischer said.
Twenty-one US soldiers have been killed since Bush declared major combat in
Iraq over on May 1.
On Thursday, two soldiers and an Iraqi driver were killed in separate attacks
on US military targets. Six British soldiers were killed in the south on
Tuesday. Nearly 20 US and British soldiers were wounded in those incidents.
US forces are also searching around the town of Balad for two soldiers feared
abducted after they went missing around 40 km (25 miles) north of Baghdad on
Wednesday. The military said it had detained three Iraqis over the
disappearance.
US military spokesman Major William Thurmond said commanders may now be more
wary of putting a few soldiers in isolated locations.
"They were not within visual sight of any other soldiers -- that's why they
were not noticed immediately," he told reporters in Baghdad. "That might cause
commanders on the ground to make changes as far as disposition of forces."