Nineteen die in second worst day for US in Iraq ( 2003-11-03 09:32) (Agencies)
Nineteen Americans died in guerrilla attacks in
Iraq on Sunday, including 16 soldiers killed when a helicopter was downed
in the deadliest single strike on U.S. forces since they invaded to oust Saddam
Hussein.
It was the second deadliest day overall for Americans in Iraq since the war
started on March 20, after 28 soldiers were killed in various attacks on March
23. A total of 252 U.S. soldiers have died from hostile fire since the invasion.
A U.S. Army helicopter flies near the area
after a U.S. Chinook helicopter, believed to be carrying dozens of
soldiers to leaves abroad was struck by a missile and crashed west of
Baghdad, near Fallujah, Sunday, Nov. 2, 2003, killing 16 soldiers and
wounding 20 others, the U.S. command and witnesses reported.
[AP]
On Sunday, one U.S. soldier was killed in a
bomb attack in Baghdad and two American civilian contractors died in a roadside
mine blast in the town of Fallujah, a fiercely anti-U.S. center 30 miles west of
the capital.
The crippled Chinook helicopter carrying troops on their way for a rest break
came down in farmland at 9 a.m. (1 a.m. EST) near the village of Baisa, south of
Falluja. Another 21 soldiers aboard the Chinook were injured.
U.S. military officials and witnesses said the large transport helicopter was
shot down. Other helicopters circled above the smoking wreckage and American
troops rushed to secure the crash site.
Some Iraqis were jubilant. "The Americans are pigs. We will hold a
celebration because this helicopter went down -- a big celebration," said wheat
farmer Saadoun Jaralla near the crash site. "The Americans are enemies of
mankind."
The triumphal post-war glow in which President Bush once taunted Iraqi
militants by saying "bring them on" has faded to a grim determination against a
resistance growing more deadly.
"It's getting worse, in the sense that, as today...We've seen a much more
sophisticated use of improvised explosive devices against coalition forces," the
top U.S. civil administrator in Iraq, Paul Bremer, said on CNN's "Late Edition"
on Sunday.
ADMINISTRATION VOWS "NO RETREAT"
But the Bush administration vowed that it will not retreat, and Bush
continues to cite his Iraq policy as an accomplishment despite accusations of a
widening "credibility gap."
"Clearly it is a tragic day for Americans," Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
told ABC television. "In a long hard war we are going to have tragic days."
U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld
speaks on NBC's 'Meet the Press' during a taping at the NBC studios in
Washington, Nov. 2, 2003. Rumsfeld talked about the current situation in
Iraq and the latest attack on a U.S. Chinook helicopter outside Fallujah
that killed 16 soldiers.
[Reuters]
But he said the United States would
not be deterred and would win the war in Iraq.
White House spokesman Trent Duffy told reporters on Sunday at Bush's Texas
ranch: "The terrorists seek to kill coalition forces and innocent Iraqis because
they want us to run, but our will and our resolve are unshakable."
Bush vowed on Saturday to stand firm and said leaving Iraq prematurely would
strengthen the "terrorists" he blamed for recent suicide bombings. But he had no
comment after the downing of the helicopter a day later.
Rumsfeld said on Sunday: "I think the American people have a good center of
gravity. I think they get it. They would rather have us fighting terrorists
outside the United States of America than inside."
A U.S. spokesman said two Chinooks had been heading for Baghdad airport when
one was "shot down by an unknown weapon."
A witness, Dawoud Suleiman, said: "There were two American helicopters. They
fired a missile at one and missed, and then they hit the other, which crashed
and caught fire."
Some U.S. officials questioned why the helicopters had been flying through
such a dangerous area.
U.S. LONG FEARED MISSILE HIT
The U.S.-led administration has long feared that a shoulder-fired missile
could bring down an aircraft approaching Baghdad airport, and officials say this
is one reason for the delay in opening the airport to civilian traffic.
Earlier this year, U.S. troops based west of Baghdad offered a $500 bounty
for every shoulder-fired missile handed in.
The helicopter attack brought to 138 the number of U.S. soldiers who have
died in hostilities in Iraq in the past six months.
U.S. Army troops search a crash site where
a Chinook helicopter crashed into a field near Falluja Nov. 2, 2003.
[Reuters]
Guerrillas have killed 27 U.S.
soldiers in an eight-day surge in violence that began with last Sunday's
rocketing of a Baghdad hotel hosting Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz.
The next day 35 people died in four suicide attacks at the offices of the
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and three police stations in the
capital.
The attacks prompted the United Nations, the ICRC and other aid agencies to
pull more foreign staff from Baghdad and review their operations, in a fresh
blow to reconstruction efforts.
In Falluja, residents said a roadside bomb had hit a convoy of U.S. personnel
in civilian vehicles. The two Americans who died were members of the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers.
Television pictures showed a gleeful youth wearing a U.S. Army helmet. Others
danced on wreckage.
In Baquba, northeast of Baghdad, residents said a roadside bomb had exploded
as a U.S. convoy passed, hitting a bus carrying university students and wounding
two women.
IRAQ'S NEIGHBORS DISCUSS SECURITY
Iraq's six neighbors plus Egypt held security talks in Damascus, mindful of
U.S. assertions that Syria and Iran were not doing enough to prevent militants
crossing into Iraq.
In a statement, they condemned "terrorist" attacks on "civilians,
humanitarian and religious institutions, embassies and international
organizations" and vowed to cooperate with Iraqi authorities to "prevent any
violation of borders."
Iraq's interim foreign minister, Hoshiyar Zebari, had turned down a belated
invitation to attend.