Helicopter downed in Iraq

Three die when U.S. troops reportedly fire on civilians

? Guerrillas fired small arms and rocket-propelled grenades at a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter after it came down Saturday in a field near Tikrit, wounding one soldier and causing the craft to explode in flames and spew a column of black smoke.

Near Fallujah, three civilians were killed and two wounded when their convoy came under fire. An American engineer and an Iraqi security guard said U.S. troops shot at their vehicles, but the military denied that.

In the incident near Fallujah, three SUVs of the European Landmine Solutions, a British-based private contractor, were hit by gunfire, according to an American engineer with the firm, David Rasmussen, who was hospitalized with wounds.

Asked where the shots came from, Rasmussen replied: “from the USA.”

The Iraqi security guard traveling with the convoy, Laith Yousef, gave the same account.

“We were the target of an attack by the Americans,” Yousef said. “They shot at our car. The translator burned to death in the car. A man with us was killed. He was going to get married next week.”

A U.S. command spokesman in Baghdad denied troops fired at the convoy, saying coalition forces went to the secure the area after the attack and evacuated the wounded.

Lt. Col. Charles Hardy, spokesman for the 82nd Airborne Division, which is responsible for the area, said the civilian convoy turned around after a bomb exploded ahead of it, and then was hit by another improvised bomb, rocket-propelled grenades and small-arms fire.

“U.S. forces arrived after the attack and treated the wounded,” he said. “This was not initiated by our forces.”

U.S. Army 4th Infantry soldiers look at a burning Black Hawk helicopter, background, in Tikrit, 120 miles north of Baghdad, Iraq. The U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter was apparently shot down Saturday by ground fire near Tikrit, a center of Iraq's anti-U.S. insurgency, U.S. officials said. At least one person was injured.

The Black Hawk came down at about 4 p.m. in a field near Saddam Hussein’s hometown of Tikrit. A preliminary report by U.S. soldiers said the helicopter was apparently downed by ground fire.

Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, on a three-day tour of Iraq, was in Tikrit on Saturday visiting a U.S. garrison.Before leaving, he told commanders he was hopeful troops would get more money to train Iraqis to assume a greater role in security as they fight resistance forces.”These young Iraqis are stepping forward to fight for their country along with us,” Wolfowitz said. “It is a wonderful success story that speaks volumes.”